4 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, December 6, 1988 !' l " T' f f! t r r r e! t r rr Can You Offer a Creative Contribution to Your Field? INN I r' * F r . Enter the, Zenith Data Systei MASTERS of INNOVATION COMPETITIOf Win a $5,OOO* Zenith Data Sysi We're searching for tomorrow's innovat If you've developed or used softwar hardware-that is compatible with Ze Data System products-to creatively a dress a problem or task in your field study, we want to hear from you. You could win a $5,000* Zenith Data Systems computer system for yourse $5,000 worth of computer equipmen for your college campus given in yot name, and national recognition from your peers. For More Information And Official Ru Call1-800-553-0301 Competition Ends March 1,1989. Void Where Prohibited. 4 0 ns tem ors. eor nith d- of lf, it r des, 4 Who says you can't make it big majoring in English? Ex-Blake buff Michael Doucet and his fiddle lead Beausoleil to a sound that's as Cajun as skillet-blackened fish. Beausoleil: Hot stuff BY MARK SWARTZ ANY Cajun cooks worth their cayenne pepper will tell you that the most important rule is that it can't get too hot. The name of the game here is to light a con- flagration on the palate, to make diners fall to their knees for a teaspoon of icewater. Michael Doucet, leader and fiddler of Beausoleil, Louisiana's spiciest Cajun band, follows the same recipe. Drawing from and building on the Cajun tradition, Beausoleil cooks up a blend of turn-of-the-century Louisiana sounds and contemporary blues rhythms that will make your eyes water. The songs are in French, but the language of music - as you've been told countless times - is universal. "What a musician does," Doucet explains, "is trans- late cultural ideas into appropriate sounds. Words and music reach people and communicate feelings which provide a common denominator in a cultural society." If that sounds more erudite than what you'd expect to come out of a fiddler's mouth, it shouldn't surprise you that little Mikey Doucet wanted to be an English major when he grew up. Plans to study Romantic po- etry in graduate school, however, were forever lain to rest when he heard Cajun street musicians in France. "I traded Blake for (Cajun forefathers Will and Dewey) Balfa," he remembers. Beausoleil is, to steal blatantly from Washington, D.C.'s City Paper, to Southern Louisiana what Los Lobos are to Nortena and the Chieftains are to tradi- tional Ireland: preservationists with a revisionist free- dom to experiment and modernize. (Plagiarism ends here.) Live, they take this freedom to all its logical and illogical extremes. Doucet's fiddling is a fearsome py- rotechnical display, and the music might just set your mouth on fire. BEAUSOLEIL L4.rns the Ark down twice tonight at 7:30 and 10 p.m. Tickets are $11. Icewater will be provided. movie are like his singing itself: en- dearing and faintly annoying. But like his voice, there is a core of gen- Michigan Daily Continued from Page 7 uine feeling to Big Time, and it is ARTS unmistakably real. A T Big Time is a captivating film because it is Tom Waits. The BIG TIME is currently showing at 763-0379 stylistic embellishments of the the Ann Arbor Theatre. . A PAI di 0 unfu0J1-, Ikk/ HIGHEST PRICES ARE PAID FDA BOOKS RE-USED AT MICHIGAN *ILLNE DR gol.S TO!E BUYINGI MONDAY -TH FRIDAY SATURDAY SI IkIRAOV BACK BOOKS URSDAY 9:30- 6:30 9:30 -4130 10:30- 3'30 I