9.- ARTS I. , fit: Lii --.. .. " +e Michigan Daily Monday, February 29, 1988 Page 8 Pae8 r3 f I-4 Spring Break: Fy Jennifer Kohn ; c a As Theatre Editor at the Daily I' re become a victimized observer. Xi It is almost impossible for me to fi1k to people without being aware of facets of their performances or cdticisms of their scripts. This spring break was no exception. I ttivelled in a car through towns I'd ever seen before and met people I'll never see again. Even as I met them 'attained a walk-on role in the webs of their lives. None of these incidental, arbitrary encounters will ejer be performed again, but as they stand they are comparable to travel- 4ng medieval road-shows. I'll consider the production "My Ride Through Canada." (It served as a landbridge between Ann Arbor and Ithaca, New York). I attended the performance with one friend. The privacy of the car allowed us to con- stantly review the performance, the circumstances of Canadian country- side surrounding us. We began the 20-hour show at 2 a.m. the Sunday night spring break began. There was a four day intermission, (the bulk of our break,) and a second ten hour act. We paid our admission at the Windsor border, but the action didn't begin for around an hour. In that hour we were enveloped by the scenery. The plot was lead by the constant stream of road markers: 3's topped with crowns (we did not be- lieve there is actually any Canadian royalty). The first cop we saw was parked in front of a Seven Eleven- at risk of incurring a ticket for my average 87 m.p.h., I said to my companion, "Let's go in and say hi, so he doesn't stop us later." We en- tered while he was talking to two store workers who were betting whether we worked at a nearby fac- tory. They laughed at our heading for New York, and let us use their re- stroom. A few hours later we ran out of gas. First we almost ran out of gas at 5 a.m. in a town called Aylmer. I entered an all-night donut shop, and again I was center stage. Puzzled on- lookers discussed the predicament of our gaslessness and directed us to the Police station, adjacent to the Ken- tucky Fried Chicken (Kentucky gets more respect in Canada than in the States). The Police Station was closed. An older man with four teeth and a padlock on his car offered us the gas from his chainsaw and a dis- cussion about local weather condi- tions. Then we really ran out of gas. It was 6 a.m. and we were in front of a TheF donut shop in Delhi. A fat cop and a woman named Jo smoked each other's cigarettes and laughed at us. They told us about the town and themselves. It was a pretty quiet town, they said, except at tobacco harvest. I said, "at least they harvest only tobacco." The cop didn't get it, but continued to warn us against si- phoning gasoline. After a hour, not wasted, but certainly slow on action, we had the tank filled by a man and his dogs. It seemed likely that he opened the filling station early, in an effort to escape his wife for the company of those dogs. The point is, for an average of 20 minutes each, we were the center of these peoples lives and they were the center of ours. Essentially no im- pressions were made, all the way around; we were really spectacles to these observers and they definitely production were to us. But, even as each indi- vidual encounter or scene ended, it was as if it could have occurred no other way. Had anything happened differently, the overall impression the production left on us would have changed. The ride home was less eventful because we ran out of gas while still in New York State. The high point of the second act was a 20 minute respite at a Kentucky Fried Chicken. We stopped in Aylmer for old time's sake. The store was over- run with teenagers, who in true the- atrical tradition ignored the audience, us, completely. The intrigue of the scene involved their friends who were in the parking lot behind the store, probably stealing chicken and spitting in our "thrifty meals." The final border cross back to the .3 U.S. was itself a climax and s- nouement. The total of 20 hours jp this car, through this country, leftus confused but sated. In moments of wisdom, I can see beyond this the- atrical perspective. I had the brief opportunity to meet people and re- ally listen to what they had to say, when I wasn't trying to hold on to my identity. (It was only the nightl slept in the car behind a bowling al- ley that I really felt confused wie and detached from myself.) The fgt is, the game of being an objectiv, observer, or audience as the case may be, is an overimposition of powg; the people I met were not there f4r my benefit, but to live their olyp lives. As my father said when, passed my driving test, and the tesp didn't care about my success, "Why should he care, you're nothing to him." 9r I. ETwc Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung By Lester Bangs Alfred A. Knopf $19.95/hardcover To even try to review, let alone provide a fair overview, of the works of rock music's most famous critic and malcontent Lester Bangs is no fair task for any person. It would probably even risk defeating the purpose of Bangs' writing. Without Lester Bangs there wouldn't be Chuck Eddy, Byron Coley... even our own Mike Rubin. But before I jump out and into the stratosphere of my own self- in- dulgent ramblings (also made tolera- ble by the ground Bangs so brazenly broke), let me just say that even as- sembling a collection of Lester Bangs' record reviews (which always rock n rollers tell their tales u a :s . .. , ... i .ua- reviewed much more than anything actually on the vinyl) must have been as hopelessly difficult for Bangs' longtime editor Griel Mar- cus. Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung, a collection of his works from Creem, The Village Voice, and some unpublished pieces, is an inside glimpse at the wheels and cogs of Bangs' wild imagination at work. It is a vivid, funny, and at times even terrifying attempt to un- derstand 20th century culture, and it doesn't always have all that much to do with music (although it also pro- vides a terrific lesson in rock his- tory). Lester Bangs' downfall was that he was so serious about not taking rock music seriously that he unwill- ingly lent a hand in killing the mu- sic (while killing himself). In retro- spect, there is a simple irony in this thinking so hard about music when The work of Lester Bangs, rock critic/cultural commentator, is chronicled in the essay collection 'Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung'. all that really mattered to him was its feeling. When he died in 1982, it was before the arrival of MTV or Sigue Sigue Sputnik. And yet, Bangs' essays aptly prophesized the future of rock and roll. In the "heart of (his) funky soul," Lester Bangs knew that the '80s were inevitable; for proof of his prophetic powers, just look at the technical pop pro- ductions of Mitch Easter, or the complex and precise guitar lines of today's heavy metal. The reviews reprinted in Psy- chotic Reactions desperately reach back to Bangs' youth, vehemently trying to recapture the heart and soul of the music in everything he wrote about while trying to come to an understanding of it, too. He loved the primal shriek of the Stooges and the pure ecstasy of John Coltrane's saxophone (which he, himself tried to imitate in one hilarious escapades reprinted in Reactions). Bangs' witty analysis is at its best in his "Kraftwerkfeature," which originally ran in a 1975 issue of Creem magazine. He explains: "The Germans invented 'speed' for the Americans (and the English - leave us not forget Rick Wakeman and Emerson,Lake & Palmer) to destroy themselves with, thus leaving the world of pop music open for ulti- mate conquest." Marcus has also given us a whole section of articles detailing conversations with Bangs' idol Lou Reed that are scarier than aiything Reed's ever put on vinyl. In charac- teristic style Bangs unabashedly ad- mits, "Lou Reed is my own hero principally because he stands for all the most fucked up things that I could ever possibly conceive of. Which probably only shows the limits of my imagination." What follows is a surrealistic battle be- tween the two, written at the height (depth?) of Reed's addictions, in which Bangs and the guitarist have some chilling arguments over Metal Machine Music while dealing vi- cious blows to one another's respec- tive careers. "There are many here among us for whom the life force is best represented by the livid twitching of one tortured nerve, or even a full- scale anxiety attack," Bangs wrote later in his career. That nerve is still alive and twitching throughout Psy- chotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung. If you can make your way through it, I can't say you'll come out a better person - but you'll probably find yourself at least one step closer to understanding the rea- son that nerve is twitching. -Beth Fertig E Normandie Flowers 1104 S. UNIVERSITY 996-1811 2 for 1 Sweetheart Roses SWITHTHIS COUPON (Good until 3/4/88) L-. one. per m-n r pwc I'm With The Band," (Confessions of a Groupie) By Pamela Miller Des Barrffl Beech Tree Press $16.95/hardcover In her heyday as one of rock's most famous groupies, Miss Pamela (Miller Des Barres) knew almost ev- eryone and did almost everythin4. She lived in L.A., N.Y., and Lon- don, and spent time with people as diverse as Woody Allen and Charles Manson's accomplice, Bobby Beaud- soleil. The recent death of Des Bat- res' father prompted her to compile her memoirs, and with the help oif old photographs and diary entrieg, she has catalogued her modt interesting adventures in a book entitled I'm With the Ban$ (Confessions of a Groupie): Suffice it to say, Des Barresjs not shy about recounting her releaq tionships. Her book describes tryst4 with Mick Jagger, Don Johnson: Keith Moon, Jim Morrison ante Jimmy Page - to cite just a few --K in loving detail. The ins and outs oP Des Barres' love life make for enters taining reading material, and hey: stories are enhanced by their ar- rangement and presentation. I'm With the Band combine excerpts from Des Barres' teenage diaries with supplementary in-retro- spect insights. She begins chaptep" one by describing her pre-pubescent dismay at seeing tv footage of Elvis':' army haircut. Later, as a teenage Beatles fan, she lies awake at nighto tormented by the thought of Pau f dating "that creepy freckle-facet bowwow, Jane Asher." Des Barren presents herself as a typical young, teen; she feels comfortable fantasizes ing about distant rock stars but be4 comes a bit more hesitant whern' confronted by a flesh-and-blodT boyfriend: "My virginal image (of4 penis) was that of a cross betweena sleepy pink baby worm and a vengeful billy club with one crazed" eye." Soon enough, Miss Pamela loses all fear and begins to pursue male; companionship with a vengeance. She is befriended by Captain Beef-, heart, who leaves her determined to, "plunge ahead into unknown realms: of hipness," and then singled out by:; Frank Zappa -"I knew he must;' See BOOKS, page 9 U~M~ME [.SOB FAIRMARCH 9h 1~1 extended PRE-REGISTRATION February 1 - March 4 :. t ::. SA Qzteions Cal 764746. 7U Albert Terrace 1700 Geddes Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Phone# for Albert Terrace (313)761-1717 Affordable Rates! 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