Page 8 -.The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 15, 1988 6 Spirita Courtney Pine leads; BY LIAM FLAHERTY The Michigan Union, late on a Sunday night, is not a place one flocks to for spiritual regeneration. It is a tenuous, unsteady atmosphere, with the sounds of bil- liard balls cracking against a quiet wall of studying. But last Sunday Courtney Pine was in the house, large and intense, hunched over his tenor sax. He began his second set as if it was his last ever, diving into the depths of his instrument, stretching for boundaries be- Pine has a big horn, big enough to con- tain the spirits that held court that night; Rollins, Webster, Young - and 'Trane, always 'Trane - speaking through this miraculous young man. yond its metal curvature. At first, he floated upon his rhythmic bed; Julian Joseph running the keys, Mark Mondesir speaking a multitude of tongues behind the drum kit, Delbert Felix on bass, intently stoking the furnaces below. Pine kept reaching, building, finally slipping into a space larger than himself, taking his audience outside j ourney a trip to jazz heaven themselves. Pine has a big horn, big enough to con- tain the spirits that held court that night; Rollins, Webster, Young - and "Trane, always 'Trane - speaking through this miraculous young man. Pine struck fertile land, a beautiful, ephemi-ral place where those who are not yet afraid to feel can mingle with those who have. He went to an ecstatically fast composition, con- trolling time. He slipped in and out of his rhythm sec- tion's standard pace, racing ahead and creeping up like an ebullient child. He went to the soprano for a while, allowing for precious interludes from his sidemen. Joseph punched out deliberate, relentless melodies, followed by Felix's quivering bass lines. Pine then slowed things up for an unspeakably gor- geous ballad, embracing and enfolding the listeners in his huge tenor. Finally he took us to "Zaire," which he said was a "song to move the spirit a bit." Classic British under- statement. He began, with drums percolating, bass working furiously down low, piano spilling out exotic chords. Pine stepped to the mike and started blowing on the soprano, face clenched orgasmically, up and down his instrument, shrieking and bellowing, a continent rising out of harmony, opening up a flower, an African flower bursting - he dragged up all those within his reach, willing or not, for a spiritual journey supreme. Records Continued from Page 7 Oingo Boingo Boingo Live MCA Records This is supposed to be a double live album of Oingo Boingo's "greatest hits" - and even before playing it, I had to ask - what in the world would make OB think that they have four sides worth of great hits? I got my reply when the needle hit the vinyl - the speakers barked "OB doesn't have any great hits," again and again. _I curse myself for wasting time on this one, but my fingers just get too sticky when the records come in. Besides the fact that they insist on overkill use of keyboards ("Violent Love"), continue to drown their songs in their syrupy use of a sappy horn section ("On the Out- side"), and overuse their token poppy' vocal style (a cross between Roland Orzabal from Tears for Fears and' Leonard Phillips from the Dickies), this "too long" album epitomizes the non-existence of this band's imagination. The only song of theirs I remember being any good, "Only a Lad," sounds almost exactly as it does on the album which was re- leased five or six years ago. So, ei- ther the band lacks imagination live, or the album is way over-produced. And since a member of the band produced it, I guess the band is the sole guilty party for this pop poop - a bumper crop of the homoge- neous Oingo Boingo sound.1 --Robert Flaggert Nightnoise . At the End of the Evening Windham Hill Nightnoise features Michael Tri- ona Ni Dhomhnaill (the English pro- nunciation is "O'Donnell"), founders of the important Irish revisionist-trad group, the Bothy Band. There is also Brian Dunning, a Dubliner known for his work with Puck Fair, and Billy Oskay. Heaven knows, Irish traditioal music is not the fast road to riches.4 It's a fast road, if anything, to drint. And it's a hard road to travel. So it's not surprising (though disappointing) that the O'Domhnaill sibs are doing this mellow Irish-jazzy knockoff. And the result? Very bland. The playing is very nice and polite, the tunes qoiit but not vapid, touches of an Irish phrase jazzed up here and there, but completely unmemorable. It also has too much going on to be used a;a record to sleep to. Sure, the pressing's excellent, but if I have to listen to this kind of stuff, I'd rather listen-to pianist Philip Aaberg. -V.J.Beauchamp Th'ey Continued from Page 7 apart from the main concept, shows little imagination. Characters sud- denly appear with no explanation, and the movie is filled with trite constructs: the love interest, the ten- der childhood recollection, and at the very end - as if they almost forgot - the nudity scene. As for the theme, Carpenter is FIRE!TH AMERICAS fORGIN A REVOLUTIONARY ARE$M certainly trying to comment on the poor, the economic structure of the United States, and the corporate invasion of Third World countries, but his ideas are poorly conceived and lost among Piper's rampages. I must admit, however, that the fight scene with Piper's full-body inverted back- slam rivals any I've seen in a movie. The all-important make-up artist of They Live has said that he wants people to wonder if "this could be No revolution will suc- ceed, the authors assert, that does not combine an emphasis on class with a genuine alliance bringing together proponents of lib- eration theology, women, people of color, and mem- bers of what they refer to as the "third force": in- tellectuals and profession- als who, despite their class background, often work to support revolutionary struggles. Fire in the Americas: Forging a Revolutionary Agenda By Roger Burbach and Orlando Nunez Verso $12.95/paperback Fire in the Americas opens with a remarkably simple thesis: the political pessimism that the U.S. Left frequently feels as it works within what Che referred to as "the heart of the beast" can be overcome if it would begin to think more seri- ously about the connections between its own struggles and those of its al- lies throughout the Western Hemi- sphere. With breath-taking brevity and extraordinary penetration, Bur- bach and Nunez proceed to outline exactly what those connections are. More importantly, their remarkable' manifesto is filled with an optimism which leaves the reader believing' such solidarity is a distinct possibil- ity, albeit one that will have to be fought for.' The authors stake their claims on a number of conditions that have changed the contours of international relations in the Western Hemisphere. The deteriorating state of the U.S. economy makes it increasingly diffi- cult for Washington to support mur- derous and exploitative regimes with the kind of material and military re- sistance necessary to keep them in power. Nor does it allow U.S. banks to come up with the funds necessary to bail Latin America out of its se- vere debt crisis, itself largely a cre- ation of U.S. economic policies which legalize theft under the eu- phemism "free trade." Most importantly, the economic immiseration that the U.S. has foisted upon Latin America has spawned an increasingly volatile re- sistance from sectors of the popula- tion there that traditionally had noth- ing to do with radical politics: women, Indians (especially in Guatemala), and growing proportions from the erstwhile reactionary Catholic Church infrastructure. The consequence is a genuine empower- ment and radicalization of large parts of the population, and the inspiring revolutions they are capable of pro- ducing in countries such as Nicaragua. "This work owes its existence," write the authors, "to the Nicaraguan Revolution." Their analysis of post-- revolutionary Nicaragua demonstrates why. Instead of just voting for a ? President every four years (as U.S. citizens do, under the illusion that these elections offer a choice), the people of Nicaragua not only vote in national elections, such as those held in 1984, but also serve on neighbor- hood committees and work in women's associations and on agricultural cooperatives. Rather than just pulling a lever and letting others make all of their decisions for them, the Nicaraguan people have been given the chance to practice a democracy through which they make important decisions, every day. Burbach and Nunez see this Revolution as a model from which socialists can learn to join their eco- nomic and political analyses concerning the importance of the class struggle - with which the au- thors fully concur - to an apprecia- tion of the needs and priorities of happening even now." When I th* of the people who thought this film was great, and combine this with h fact that it was the top-grossing movie the weekend it opened, I won- der if it could be that: "Roddy IsA Great Actor," "The Plot Is Inventive And Interesting," and "They Live,I The Best Film Of The Year"? Nah. THEY LIVE is playing at Showcase Cinemas and the State Theater. ulist energies within a socialist framework, are themselves occasion- ally guilty of sacrificing too much of their revolutionary vision for the "art of the possible." Their belief that you can teach U.S. citizens about revolution by appealing to the "spirit of 1776" denies both the viruleiit xenophobia associated with that sen- timent as well as the inherently con- servative nature of the American Revolution.- x More seriously, they demonstrit an almost naive faith in Jacksoxfls Rainbow Coalition and of fht "inside/outside" approach the Coali- tion claimed it was using in worling with the Democratic Party. To be fair, the book was written before Jackson's astounding sell-out at thp Atlanta Convention, which clearly demonstrated how little impact the Rainbow's progressive agenda cqold have on a Party which is avowedly capitalist. These criticisms notwithstanding, Fire in the Americas is one of Ihe most exciting and politically con- structive books written on Lafip America in a long time. Rather than become fixated on the moral prob- lems of U.S. intervention, disgusting as its long history has been, Burbqci and Nunez propose a positive ratber than merely reactive political agendi. Solidarity replaces mere anti-inter- ventionism, providing hope that some day in the 21st century, a gen- uine community between women and men north and south will replace the climate of mistrust fostered by al- most two hundred years of Yankee imperialism. -Mike Fischet IWGERBURBACH ORLANDO NUftZ t V.« those peoples and struggles often ex- cluded from such analyses. Steering between the Scylla of re- formism and the Charybdis of ultra- leftism, however, is not always easy, even for two authors so committed to exactly this project. In their first chapter, a long review of the left's failure to capitalize on potentially revolutionary situations in Latin America throughout the 20th cen- tury, Burbach and Nunez offer harsh criticisms for Communist Parties which, throughout the hemisphere, refused to adapt their rigid and fre- quently Eurocentric programs to the local populations and situations out- lined above. The second chapter, conversely, warns of the dangers involved in go- ing too far in the other direction. In a brilliant analysis of revisionism and reformism, the authors excoriate groups such as the Democratic So- cialists of America, who persist in the illusion that they can forego a strategic socialist vision for the ba- nalities of electoral politics in a one- party system of Demicans and Re- publocrats. The inevitable result, they warn, is a movement prepared to compromise time and time again. Without clearly defined principles and a long-term vision, it is all too easy to fall into the habit of thinking in terms of what seems "practical" or immediately realizable rather than in terms of what is just. , The authors themselves, in their valiant attempt to incorporate pop- rn U Interested in Public Policy? and The Career of a Wharton Graduate? Earn a Ph.D., M.A., or M.B.A. in Public Policy and Management at And Take Your Place As One of Tomorrow's Leaders. For information about these programs, write to: Admissions Coordinator Department of Public Policy and Management - Box 3 The Wharton School University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA 19104 PLASA $Earn e Earn $20 on your firs up to $120 a month. $240. Repeat donors the last 30 days recei for return visit. DONORS - _ --7W xtra cash $ t donation. 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