The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 29, 1990 - Page,7 REVIEW Continued from page 5 palachian bluegrass/jazz, then drop- ping into a nimble rendition of a tra- ditional breakdown, then crossing to commercial-format Nashville coun- try about love "going once, going twice, going gone." On "Standing by the Bedside of a Neighbor," Krauss sang passionately, approach- ing the style of Loretta Lynn. Brown's guitar solo was quiet but distinctive and ranging. Up for a Grammy this year, this group has arrived. Still, in a few more years they will have found the power lacked in this performance to bowl audiences over. Wainwright loped out, tall, rugged, in a black T-shirt with a printed leaping figure over red burst, and olive drab pants. Grimacing, his left foot rising with the first strummed chord, he tilted back pre- cipitously, knee jerking up, tongue lolling out. The crowd, anticipating his antics, roared. He sang about recovering from a split-up: "Last night was definitely not one of the worst I've ever had." "Holiday Song" brought guffaws with the line "Give us the strength to stomach as much as our stomachs are able," and "If I argue with a loved one, please make me a winner." Wainwright picked at the wounds that don't bleed. He introduced a new song about arts censorship, singing: "If Jesse don't like it then its proba- bly not art.... That statue of David is okay with Jesse, 'cause Michelan- gelo gave him such a tiny pee- pee...." (refrain): "Jesse's favorite painting is one of a clown, with a daisy in his hand and a tear rolling down." Sweet Honey in the Rock sang deep apd true, twining harmonies in recurring patterns evocative of South African singing, fired with gospel- shouting and blues growls. Once the politics were off the deck and the music given full stage, the deep, throbbing voice of Ysaye Maria Barnwell commanded several num- bers, while Aisha Kahlil worked up an arm-twisting tough blues with beautiful range and youthful enthusi- asm like Valerie Wellington. At their peak, with tambourine, marimabas, shakere and claves all shaking and thumping, the six- woman troupe made a vision of mu- sic built from risen spirits. Michael Hedges climbed all over his guitar with harmonies as tough as drill bits, soaked with spidery fills. He danced and hovered on a bil- lowing carpet like a spark on cats' feet. Joel Mabus got laughs from the early-buzzing crowd. He sang, "I'm just holding things together, singing the duct-tape blues." Free Hot Lunch featured Gumby (human-sized) on pink Telecaster guitar. A mix of Mungo Jerry and the Kingston Trio from the land of cheese, they provided -serviceable music and a few laughs. Owen McBride was a passable emcee, though his traditional humor occasionally raised the heckles of some feminists in the crowd. Josh White offered inspired sing- ing and rapid narrrative on topics of cigarette filters, Oral B-40 tooth- brushes, and the merits of flossing with unwaxed dental floss. He con- cluded to shrill cheers, indicating he's still a local favorite and wel- come to perform here anytime. -Mark Webster Affairs falls short of goals For imaginative Musical Theatre seniors Brad Godette and Robb McKindles, this weekend was a moment long awaited: three perfor- mances of their first music/theatre collaboration, Modern Affairs. The workshop production gave the young writers the chance to gauge audience reaction and to figure the next steps in sharpening their creation. Unlike most musicals, the story- line of Modern Affairs was not derived from an existing source. McKindles himself invented the tale of two married couples, Sandy and Dan and Carol and Mike, who switch spouses for one-time liaisons unbeknownst to each's other half. There is also a single friend, Jane, who outwardly enjoys her freedom, and a chorus of yuppie friends who awkwardly bop in and out of the scene. In addition, McKindles has included a character named Pandora who functions as a cynical Greek chorus, instigator, referee, con- science, and all of Jane's many boyfriends. The intimate confines of the Trueblood Theatre were host to the 450 audience members over the weekend and the sparse setting of a dining table and chairs and the sem- blance of a living room with a bar. The simple set doubled as the homes of both couples, distinguished by *moving a chair and toss.ng a fabric on the couch. McKindles, who directed the pro- duction, received able support from his cast. As Jane, Jen Thompson gropes her way on stage with an emotionally confused, good-time-girl ambivalence that is most poignant in an introspective, embittered bal- lad. A fidgety Becca Daniels, soft- spoken Juliet Ewing, combustive Drew Frady and groomed Ian Knauer as Carol, Sandy, Dan and Mike make the best of the often flat script. The sense is frequently that the characters are not doing what the authors wanted them to do. Dialogue runs on without providing us the in- sight needed to make sense of these characters in these situations. Who are they? How do they know one an- other? What do they do for a living? We don't know enough about them to really care about their situation. The show desires that those in the audience examine their values and change accordingly, and in a des- perate effort, the Pandora figure heavy-handedly shoves this down our gullets. In addition, the superfluous chorus' final, preachy song hits us from some forgotten '70s sensibil- ity: the psychosis of the Me genera- tion as it liberates itself. The program says the story is set in 1980s New York City, but the evening felt more retro. Brad Godette's musical compositions spanned the realm of rock ballads from mellow and sentimental to harder fare. The most accomplished song is "Love Between Friends," heard as each person in the adulter- ous couples realizes his/her sexual attraction to the other. The musical moment is the climax of the scene and takes us beyond what has been said. Many of the other songs are in - trospective, and although they reveal emotion, there was little action to them and they don't inform the char- acter as best as they could. The bal- lads that Godette has written also have similar progressions and struc- tures that leave them rather monotonous by show's end. Despite the show's various prob- lems and the similarities between it and shows like Company, Romance! Romance!, and even Pippin, the moments that indeed have vital life will likely guide these young artists to developing their vision into all that it can be. -Jay Pekala GUILD Continued from page 5 mor into her work, presenting it "as a weapon to hurt people, a defense, and a band-aid." If you're witnessing the onset of a very violent storm, what do you do? Would you pray, or say "the weather forecast states that it is not life-threatening?" Lisa Poneck will invite you to answer your own ques- tions as she explores the potency of the uncanny. And watching Chi- canos wave knives at a storm from their doorway "to keep the storm from coming in," as Poneck has, opens the eyes to the strange as it flashes at stage center in cultural and personal everyday life. The mythological features of our lives are all too cloaked in the mores of society. We often act without thinking, or without seeing the im- plications behind the scenario of which we play a part. But Poneck fleshes them out, sniffing out the "unexpected things...when some- thing surprising happens...(in)...the way people interact with each other." "People have said my writing is very surprising or original in ordi- nary situations," says Poneck, who won a Hopwood last year for "Better Homes," "Grey Friar's Bobby," "Having Grandmmo's Baby," and the ever-popular "Touching Cheval." But Poneck's willingness to step back from the scene of action, allow- ing people to interact with the story, makes readers more responsive to her work. Though Poneck's previous satire left readers emotionally unin- volved, her commitment to "mixing (our) own lives with imagined things," lets readers experience a psychic landscape in her work. Poneck's lucid imagination par- ticularly enriches her work through intimacy with character, exemplified by the exercises in her creative writ ing .class. The graduate of the Uni- versity's MFA writing program asks her students to "pick an obituary out of the paper, and imagine what the person looked like, where they live." LISA PONECK and ELISA LICHT- ENBAUM will read at 8:30 p.m. at Guild House, 802 Monroe. 3rd Bass The Cactus Album DefJam The second crew of rappers that happens to be Caucasian call them- selves 3rd Bass, referring to the Ab- bott and Costello act "Who's On First?" They kick off their debut reg- ulating and dis(respect)ing many a Fisher-Price MC, as bold a kicking- down of the door as can be. A ruthless barb against "DefJam rejects" the Beastie Boys could be considered timely (on "Sons of 3rd Bass"), but who would've expected lines like "black cats mean bad luck/ bad guys wear black/ must've been a white guy who started all that/ give 'em the gas face, for those little white lies/ my expression to those mountainous blue eyes?" Or a role- reversal sermon on racism like "Triple Stage Darkness," with the Prime Minister begging the ques- tion, "How can hatred uplift a race?" The duo constantly draws razor-sharp lines for tolerance, as one of them expresses, "We're Professor Griff- meaning, we're outta here." Producers Prince Paul (De La Soul), Hank Shocklee, Eric Sadler (Public Enemy), and Sam Sever (Run-DMC) assemble an impressive assortment of noises to soundtrack the Cactus sound, some difficult to trace, others not so obscure. The elaborately industrial beat of NWA's "Straight Outta Compton" finds its way onto the catchy, hypnotic "Wordz of Wizdom," while the groove that first turned up on BDP's "My Philosophy," then again on Mellowman Ace's "Hip Hop Crea- ture," becomes the backup for "Soul in the Hole." It would seem that with the sampling range limited only to the imagination, this beat- swapping could be diminished. Mu- sical interchangeability hardly justi- fies stealing grooves. In other words, popular music will eat itself. Also, there is an annoyingly large number of minute-long snip- pets on the LP, a lot of which didn't necessarily have to be listed: "Stymie's Theme" kicks off the first side, while a ridiculously whimsical track called "Desert Boots" pokes fun at a repeated target, Dante "The Scrubb" Ross, an associate of De La Soul. Otherwise, the second side of- Cactus is somewhat more relevant, for the title track with its phallic symbolism and sexual innuendo; "Brooklyn-Queens," an ode to inner- city golddiggers; and a Satchmo farce titled "Flippin' Off the Wall Like Lucy Ball." Last semester, this critic praised the Beastie Boys, giving them ample credit for their meticulous Beat mu- sic and trippery. But these hardcore B-boys rend that eccentricity to pieces, then ren- der it utterly useless. -Forrest Green III BOOKS Continued from page 5 greater things from its author in the future. But for the present, most of Hernandez' promises are false ones, served up by her contorted plot line. A novel that begins with a terrifying border crossing and ends with the family rich as kings in Mexico does not have much of the ring of truth about it - excepting the family's eventual arrival back where it began., But most of those that cross - or recross - the great river never have it as good as Kata does, on ei- ther shore. Would that Kata's pro genitor had given freer rein to the haunting fears through which, at times, her novel gets to the heart of the insecurities and deprivations which all too often mark the lives of this country's Latin American im- migrants. -Mike Fischer SAY IT INTHE.... DAILY CLASSIFIEDS DON'T GET CAUGHT IN THIS SITUATION SEND A VALENTINE IN THE SPECIAL FEBRUARY 14 EDITION OF THE CLASSIFIED PAGE. Michigan Daily Sports 747-3336 .;LASIFIED As 764 -0557 HELP WANTED WORK STUDY POSITIONS AVAILABLh- Flexible hours, free admission to UAC events, $4.50/hr. Just take money before shows. Call 763-1107 or stop by the UAC of- fices at 2105 Michigan Union. 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Univ.: Anthro 16 Bio 100 Bio 224, Bio 325, Class Arch 222, Comm 103, Econ 201, Econ 202, Econ 396, Econ 401, Geol 100, Geol 101, Geol 1, Geol 107, Geol 110 Geol 112, Geol 13, Geol 115, Ceol 125, Ilist 110, Hst 160, Hist 161, Hist 333, Hist 366, Hist Art 272, Physics 125, Physics 126, Physics 140, Physics 240, Physiol 101, Poli Sci 140, Poli Sci 353, Poli Sci 396 Psych 170, Psych 171 Psych 331, Soc 467, §oc 468. Call 663-6819 for info. 76-GUIDE IS HIRING! Paid peer counselors for 90-91 Applications available 3100 Mich Union For More info. 764-8433 UM is EOE. BI-SEXUAL MALE UNDERGRAD, inex- perienced, normal, straight-acting, average to good looking; interests include music, skiing, biking, sports. Would like to talk to other students m similar situation. Need to be dis- creet. P.O. Box 4533, Ann Arbor, MI 48104. BUSINESS SERVICES LIVE BAND for your party or wedding. Reasonable $. Info. call Tracy 677-1569. WILD CARICATURES/Amazing rates ** By Chuck Dodson 769-0194. 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NEW YORK GIANTS FANS! Watch the game at Cubs AC. 1950S. Industrial Hwy. VISIT OUR NEW and expanded Art & En- gineering Department. Michigan Book & Supply, comer of State and N. University. ROOMMATES 3 MORE RENTERS needed to fill our house on South Division. Parkin, huge weight room and laundry incl. 769-830. AVAIL. NOW 2 ROOMS IN HOUSE w/ female professor, cam pus1 mile, laundry, pkg. $270 + share util. Priv, nice 994-5181. NAME ADDRESS PHONE Make checks payable to: The Michigan Daily I Mail in or bring in person with payment to: The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard I ~Actual size of adI