The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, December 13, 1988 - page 9 Chenlles Continued from Page 8 The group initially started when Grace landed a job playing at a local bar, but lacked a band to perform with. So she called up Connie, then just a musical ac- quaintance. "I wanted to get a band together really bad," says Grace. "I was kind of acquaintances with Connie, so I called her up and asked her if she wanted to be in this band with me. She said 'Sure, I'd love to, who else is in it?' And I said, 'Well, just you and me, but don't worry, we'll find some more people!' We had a month to get something together." They wanted to perform Aretha Franklin's "Respect," but needed another singer to help Connie with oackground vocals. They spotted Cheryl in the "We haven't really come up with a good definition (of our style)... we're going to let other people do that." -Chenille Sister Grace Morand audience and had her come up on stage to perform the song with them. The group liked what they heard and started to get together and learn songs in their living rooms. Success came quickly. The happy hour spot they acquired at the Old Town Saloon drew such a large crowd that the restaurant had to hire bouncers for their Thursday night performances. Shows at the Ark and the Ann Arbor Folk Festival followed, providing the exposure that landed them a spot on Kelly and Com- pany.. "We really wanted to make a splash," recalls Dawdy, "so we wore our prom dresses. The person who was designing the set was told that we were 'down- home' girls. So it was a barnyard setting with this split rail fence in the background, and fake grass." "It was like a Hee Haw set," says Grace. "And it was seven o' clock in the morning. The audience just didn't get it." As funny as they are, The Chenilles are very serious performers. They are extremely talented musicians who love what they do and strive for perfection. "As much fun as they have," says James Dapogny, professor at the School of Music and head of his own jazz band (James Dapogny's Chicago Jazz Band), "they are as se- rious about their music and about making, it come out the way they want it to. They know exactly what they want to do with their music and their performances and they do it very well." So well, in fact, that the demand for the Chenilles is growing so fast that bookings, originally handled by Grace, warranted their hiring of agent Donna Zajonc. "The get more requests now than ever before," says Zajonc. "They are getting so popular that they get too many calls and just can't take them all." But the Chenille Sisters are bursting with talent, energy, and ambition. The month of December promises excitement to fans both old and new. Their second album, At Home With the Chenille Sisters, was just released. Their second solo concert, The Son of the Big Show, is on Saturday at the Michigan The- atre. Their goal, to leave their day jobs and become full-time-performers, seems close at hand. So the Chenilles wait patiently and happily. Satis- fied with their success, they refuse to become obsessed with stardom. You will not hear about them being consumed and destroyed by the stilted dreams co many artists suffer from. They love to sing and are happy doing it both at home and on stage. "You should always be very careful about what you do, and don't spend a lot of time doing things you don't enjoy doing," says Connie. "It's just going to make you unhappy. Even if you perform only four times a year, and if they are really choice performances, then that's great. You should always be careful so that it stays something that you really love." And if there is one thing the Sisters love more than singing, it is being together. Insisting that they really are sisters, but just have different parents, they value their friendship more than anything else. "Our music is based on our friendship, and our friendship is based on our music," says Cheryl. "We were friends before we were doing this," adds Grace. "I don't see how the two could ever be sepa- rated." "For me, it's a very important element," says Con- nie. "I don't think that I could do this if I weren't close to the people I performed with." Beaming, the Sisters nod their heads in agreement. If heads can nod in perfect unison, the Chenilles can also do it in perfect harmony. THE CHENILLE SISTERS perform Saturday night at the Michigan Theater. Tickets are $12.50 and are available at Ticketmaster Outlets. Jett* a<*1 /ifr accAYe 6eer~ af °i at WXo01 r 0 A zt* 0 Zenith's battery powered The portable that takes3 i Dogma Continued from Page 8. the outsider as to how it can possibly stay together. In the case of Walk the Dogma, there's an even greater sense of wonderment that the band can ne- °gotiate, within a single set, the hair- pin course from the nervous, staccato pop of rhythm guitarist Gary Sos- nick's "Bumblebee" to the smooth, sax-tinged "Edge of Night" to the dirty 4/4 rock of "The Heater" while not only not suffering whiplash, but actually sounding good on each. How do they pull it off? Democ- racy in action again - they hammer out their differences in subcommit- tee. "We listen to each others yeas and nays, with the object being that the overall band sound is what we're trying to elevate," says Schuster. Overall? Yes, Virginia, there re- ally is a Walk the Dogma sound. For all their meanderings, it's still the same five musicians playing on each song. Much like XTC (one of the few bands each member professes' listening to), the Dogma manages to insinuate a certain unknown element into each known quantity (e.g., rockabilly, ethnic waltzes, jazz fu- sion) that they base their work on. The result is a repertoire not so tight- knit as a family or disparate as an orphanage, but rather like a pack of neighborhood kids none of whom are related but each of whom bear a faint resemblance to a certain mail carrier. And then there's the voice - oh, that voice. Jurgutis, formally trained as an opera singer, has one of those rich, forceful altos that will forever be compared to Natalie Merchant's or Grace Slick's for a lack of female referents in the popular conscious- ness. Capable of delivering despair ("Guilty"), whimsy ("Why Oh Why"), and good-old-fashioned lust ("Bumblebee") with equal gusto, Ju- rgutis' voice is the musical Philoso- phers' Stone that unites the band's five elements into one. "Asta's voice is so exquisite that we don't even have to come up with a melody line; (we) just come up with the words and play the chords behind it," says Sosnick. The band, which hopes to release an EP in February was formed last summer by Jurgutis and Sosnick from the ashes of their former band, Of All Things; the two, along with bassist William Lamb, were students here at the University. But although the band members say they draw on their education in their songs (musically in their taste for exotic chords and meters, and lyrically in songs like "The Politics of Mind," about the turmoil in Central Amer- ica), their first mission is to be a rock 'n' roll band... ("It's pointless writing music that's going over everybody's heads -- " says Sosnick, quoting Schuster. "-- we think a lot, but I wouldn't want us to be construed as an 'art band,"' continues Lamb with mock horror, "we want people to sweat and dance. We may write a song like 'Politics of Mind' about Central American farmers, but -" "- we want them to dance while they get the message," finishes Gluckman.) .albeit a democratic one. WALK THE DOGMA will play at the Blind Pig Wednesday, Dec. 14 at, 10 p.m. Cover is $4. Lamb guaran- tees that anyone who goes to the show instead of studying for finals will do 15 percent better. A1 ____ .., ..-- ;0 1 SuperSport. you where you're going. N/7Ndata systems gr 8088 Portable PC " 8088 processor " 8/4.77 MHz dual speed " 640K memory expandab * Dual 3.5" 720K floppy or " 1 serial, parallel, RGB & " 5.25" floppy interface " 10.5" diagonal backlit L( " Expansion chassis conn " Rechargeable-detachabl 0 MS-DOS® included '1 It I i 7 ~ XA1NAM XXYXAXAAANV XxXXXXXXXXXXAXA MW PLASMA DONORS $ Earn extra cash $ Earn $20 on your first donation. You can earn up to $120 a month. Couples can earn up to 4 3r $240. 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