.1i1. Y .". "T'Y:'ti :"t: :t ti "'*""S 1 y'."1y - "1ti :: The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 9,1989 - Page 9 ' - A Where there's smoke... I felt like some kind of bad spy. It was as if I were some poor rip-off of the real thing, like Don Knotts playing Kevin Costner's role in No Way Out. Like any spy, I had on a Marine-green trenchcoat, and had dis- *creetly tucked my weapons, two spe- Oial spy/journalist notebooks, into my inside pocket. Hunched and hud- died, I glided smoothly to the Blind Pig. I almost didn't get in. The con- versation went something like this: "Can I see some I.D. please?" "I'm not 19, I freely admit it, but uh..." " . You gotta be 19 to get in." "I know that, but I, umm, well, Ier, you see... I write for the Michi- gan Daily." Plan A accomplished, I thought. "You're wearing penny loafers," she said. What was it that I had risked life and limb to see? A sight not seen by many came to the Pig that night, and the hardcore fans gathered to see Nirvana, Steel Pole Bath Tub and the Flaming Lips crawl from the depths of grunge into its dim light. Nirvana went through ten songs before they finally got warmed up. Sure, heads were bobbing and bodies Were swaying, but one wondered if this was just a muscular twitch common to all who heard this type of music. Sweat was gleaming on bassist Chris Novoselic's face, but it may have just been hot stage lights. Finally, and with much anticipation, there came a change. Kurdt Kobain's eyes could be seen glaring intensely from behind his wall of hair. He be- gan to writhe, his body bending and contorting, stringily hunched over MOUL D :Continued from page 8 ,chic impression reader and his guitar :a murderer's ice pick. a "I don't know which one is the areal me. I think it's a combination of both," he says. "I'm not really a boisterous kind of rock musician type. I've never liked people like that... the stage is the only place where I feel comfortable doing 'Ahings like that. That's my way of getting those thoughts out of my ;system, of dealing with those partic- ular demons." the guitar. Nirvana had finally come alive. Yet it appeared as if the change came too late. Even the guitar bash- ing couldn't quite rile up the crowd as it might have under other circum- stances. It seemed almost an apol- ogy. Given another half hour, Nir- vana, no doubt, would have been able to create the delirium they are known for. They did, however, set the stage nicely for Steel Pole Bath Tub. The Tub came out roaring, jaw muscles set and neck veins throb- bing, picking up the energy for which Nirvana had been the catalyst. They slammed through the first five songs at incredible speed. It wasn't until five or six songs later that this seemingly impossible pace began to relent. In an effort to add the icing to what was, for the most part, a very good cake, the Tub pulled out the special effects. Fire was the effect of choice. First, the drum set was set ablaze. This was followed by the scorching of somebody's hair and another guitar bashing ritual. This brought the damage total to four gui- tars, multiple amps, a drum set, and one head of very frizzy hair. Jim, who sat next to me, casually re- marked that the members of the band didn't care. This seemed obvious. The Flaming Lips were lucky that there was a stage left to play on. Following in the special effects at- mosphere, they sent smoke whirling so thickly around the room that no one could see the stage. With a sin- gle strobe light beating nonstop, they worked their way patiently through the first four songs. Pa- tiently is a good word to describe their entire performance. With none of the deliberate in your face pound- ing of their predecessors and with And Mould says that on this tour, he is once again starting to ex- orcise them with noise. "This tour, it's shaping up to be a lot more ag- gressive, guitar-wise," he says - his three-week mini-tour in May was more subdued. His backing band has remained the same, though, with the excep- tion of ex-dB's guitarist Chris Stamey, who leftsto work on a solo album and was replaced by Mould's friend Jim Harry. Rounding the group out are drummer Anton Fier of the Golden Palominos, and some impressive tempo changes, they proceeded to control the audi- ence. The crowd, near to slam danc- ing one moment, was stilled to glazy-eyed wonder the next as the Lips played a 15 minute version of "Right Now" off their latest, Tele- pathic Surgery. When the lights finally came back on some four hours later, the world may have breathed a collective sigh of relief. Perhaps they were thankful on Tuesday night for a cur- few law that kept the bands from playing well into the morning. I, for one, would have stuck around. -Kevin Fencil Strings intertwined This is a review of the Guarneri String Quartet backstage made pos- sible not through inside connections to the artists themselves but through the film High Fidelity - The Ad- ventures of the Guarneri String Quartet, which had its Ann Arbor premiere Friday night. High Fidelity documents and celebrates the oldest original quartet in the world. The four men who met up at the Marl- borough Festival and who decided to organize a quartet in 1964 have re- mained together since - to the plea- sure of innumerable audiences. High Fidelity is a film of juxta- positions. We see the Guarneri mu- sicians in rehearsal, in performance, traveling from one engagement to another, attending the obligatory so- cial events for guest artists, resting at home, and being interviewed for the film itself. The result is a well- produced and quickly-paced documen- tary. The image which emerges is that of long and frequent conversa- tion - musical and verbal. The conversation is not the sort to drone on in a dull monotone. The personalities of the Guarneri mem- bers - Arnold Steinhardt (violin), John Dalley (violin), Michael Tree (viola), David Soyer (cello) - are too diverse. Disagreements over phrasing, musical interpretation, choice of program, distribution of parts (who is to play viola, who vio- lin) seem at times to brush at a per- manent rift. Compliments to each other are kept at a minimum. Criti- cism appears nearly perpetual. But if discussion pushes against the borders of the group's cohesive- ness, it also is the ideal training ground for an art form which knew its first home in the salons of late 18th century Europe where talk was the order of the day. Haydn's genius was to impart such an atmosphere into the music of the string quartet itself. The skill and artistry of the Guarneri Quartet has been to keep alive the tension between dissonance and tonality among themselves and in the music which they play. The question which arises at the opening of High Fidelity, and which becomes indeed the recurrent, unre- solved theme of the film, is why dissonance has never taken prece- dence in the history of the Guarneri. How has it managed to stay together for a length of time unmet by any other string quartet? Soyer easily answers "profit," and few professional musicians can deny that impetus to artistic loyalties. Still, there is a sense that the Guarneri's longevity lies to a certain extent outside the control of its members. "You can talk till you're blue in the face," says Dailey, but when the moment of performance comes the music takes a direction no amount of rehearsal time can ade- quately predict. The Guarneri musicians all claim that 25 years of playing together have in no way tired them of the quartet literature. They count them- selves extremely fortunate to be able to devote their careers to its offer- ings. Artur Schnabel, the noted pi- anist, once defended his characteriza- tion of himself as "one-sided" to a; protesting admirer by saying that "it is not yet a self-degradation to say that one is one-sided. It depends en- tirely on the side to which one be- longs. It may even be a very arro- gant statement." For the Guarneri, as Nigh Fidelity makes clear, the "one- sidedness" of chamber playing is an enviable position to be in. -Ellen Poteet Critical Crows "The highest intelligence in the freest body." This ideal of Isadora Duncan was amply demonstrated by the Crows- feet Dance Collective performance on Friday at the Dance Department. The group's five women advocated political awareness through dance as well as spoken text, song, and American Sign Language. Opening the program, "Trail of Tears," performed by Marcia S. Gubelbank, personifed the pain of Native Americans forced from their homelands. Her confident projection and deftness of movement set the tone for the evening, leaving the au- dience eager for more. The second piece began with masks symbolizing the miners of Bolivia, the Appalachian mountains and South Africa unified under the theme of human suffering for the powerful. Cleverly, the dancers used props such as miners' headlamps, tin can puppets, and half-masks of ex- ploitative businessmen to evoke the miners' plight. But while' each episode showed a different side ofethe issue, they failed to reach any cumu- lative effect, quickly dissipating from the space as each idea was dropped for the next. Suchi Branfman's solo, "Journey," choreographed by Liz Lerman, fulfilled every promise of the company's uniformly luxuriant and assured dancing. With the convo- luted text by German playwright Peter Handke matching her convo- luted movement, Branfman embodied the wonders of sentience. The sim- plest perceptions that we take for granted every day, of differentiation, of self image, became miracles once again as Branfman's movement poured fully, saturating the audience. With the entire company address- ing homelessness in "Eviction Alert," dancers Carole Reid and Regina Hawkins stood out for their ample ease in movement. Even though the choreography only sug- gested the frightening insecurity of homelessness, the lack of narrative integration worked in the piece's fa- vor this time as two characters kept building cardboard skyscrapers, oblivious to the action around them. Marel Malaret proved the com- pany's beauty of actuality in her solo, "Como Nos Ven? Vemos?" choreographed by Merian Soto. In this comedy of ethnic misconcep- tions based on her life as ,a Puerto Rican, Malaret's beauty stemmed not from society's artifical ideals but from her complete acceptance of her body - her actual self. Excerpts from "Barbie's Re- venge" literalized the point the com- pany had already made through their quality of performance in the other pieces. Intending to satirize the "plastic values" symbolized by the Barbie doll, the piece included a commercial for condoms. Branfman even led the audience in chanting, "Safe sex is for everyone." While socially relevant, the amusing piece seemed to cross the fine line between politically conscious art and mere propag -Anita Cheng Oil f " ALL YOU CAN EAT PIZZA! $4.00 . bassist Tony Maimone, late of Pere Ubu, all old biz friends of Mould's. "It's getting to sound more like a band every time we play," he says. Along with the entire new LP, Mould says the. band will play Workbook outtakes, songs slated for his second solo LP, and "a few fun songs." But sorry, die-hards, don't count on hearing any Husker DO ma- terial, although he says he "won't rule anything out." Actually, Mould's reluctance comes from anticipation of the fu- ture, not bitterness over his past. "I don't want to knock my old band," he says. "I enjoyed it. I saw every show." He laughs, and says he has to go. It's moving time. BOB MOULD, with opening act BIG DIPPER, will play the Nec- tarine Ballroom tonight at 10 p.m. Tickets are $13.50 in advance. (Every Tuesday & Wednesday) 6:00 - 9:00pm ALL YOU CAN EAT SPAGHETTI! (Every Sunday) 5:00 - 9:00pm WE DELIVER!! $4.50 CORNER OF STATE AND HILL 994-4040 . t' I_ ..\ AOO k aOSuLLivaIls featey&puB MoNtAY ocroB 'R9 - ATURPAY ocWr1eR 14 11AM - lAM 105 IMpotb B6- LARbEST i NtcNIiGAN. $1'50' i95 z. muSs ofuLmBatChCn bank $2.95 knockwuRst ott BRatwust ana qezman potato salab atnit TH1S ATNERisEMENTI IN F R A INFO*FEST '89 COMING SOON TO A DORM NEAR YOU! I Tuesday, October 10 Hill Campus Markley Hall 5:00 - 7:00 pm Wednesday, October 11 Central Campus South Quad 5:00 - 7:00 pm Thursday, October 12 North Campus Need to satisfy a sweet tooth? Like to win prizes? Then you'll love what we have in store for you. But wait, there's more! We also have practical things planned. Visit our Study Skills booth, and get some helpful hints on how to manage your time. Or take a look at our CD-ROM display, and get a chance to play with a computer. We also have campus maps, give- aways, and lots of valuable information on the library. pRee 1. LARGE. WARM I Qei~man PrEtEL li SI I WITH ANY ORDER. I FF E R E X F'IF0 MXTOWR A Ilteq I1 1 ".,zL . aa4% Mi AM I I