ARTS The Michigan Daily, Friday, September 27, 1991 Page 8 As PC as they wanna be by Kim Yaged G retchen Philips plus Kathy Korniloff plus Pam Barger plus Meg Hentges equals Two Nice Girls. There's no point in saying who plays what because they all do everything. Their music (folk, rock, country, alternative, blues...) is as diverse as the instruments they play, creating a sound too original to be confined to a label. One might want to say that Philips, founder and frequent spokesperson for the eclectic band, is the leader of the pack, but she is quick to bury that allegation. Speaking in terse interjections of "oh yeah" and "sure," she still manages to demand the utmost re- spect in just a few words. Two Nice Girls is definitely and consciously an all-women thing. "I life the feeling of going, 'It's all women making that music that I'm listening to.' Unfortunately, in this world, because there's not much (all-woman music), it matters," Philips explains. "Anyway, I want to be able to play at women's music festivals." The band does celebrate woman- hood and lesbianism, but don't be misled - they're not man-haters. On the contrary, Philips would like to see the "cultural constraints" on men abolished along with those on The fourmembem of Two Nice Girls have neverbeen banned, but they're still cool women. "We're man-lovers," she says. With the band's song "Man Love" being one case in point, Philips supports a complete conver- sion to open-mindedness. "Homophobia is such a horrible thing in this culture," she says. "It's allowing for the ridiculous things going on around AIDS, just a lack of governmental support, a lack of people caring about other people, because what they would have to be concerning themselves with is queers. Now, if they had a little queer in their past themselves, maybe they'd be a little more under- standing." So they're feminists who call themselves girls, and there are four of them. The "Girls" portion of the name comes from a band they esteem called Girls in the Nose, and the "Two" comes from a band that has fallen from Philips' grace, Five Happy Guys, who changed their name to Happiness Crew upon the addition of a sixth member. "[It] pissed me off because Five Happy Guys was a much better name than Happiness Crew," explains Philips. "I mean, you get a name, stick with the fucking name." (One might infer from these comments that the Two Nice Girls appellation is here for the duration.) Two Nice Girls is about "self- expression, self-respect and a push to have a lot of fun," Philips con- tinues. "There are a lot of things to celebrate. There's a lot of things to bitch about." Philips finds herself in a rather unique position in that she has de- veloped an uncompromising faith and trust in herself as a performer and a woman, something which all of us should probably strive for. Philips prescribes the following self-congratulatory remedy for ev- eryone: "I'd like to tell [everyone] to respect themselves... I feel like when you get in touch with your own humanity, then it opens up your view of everyone else and their hu- manity, but I think it has to start with self-respect. Philips and the Girls are as open- minded in their performances as they are in their politics. "You get more of a sense of us in a live per- formance then on record, because there's just a lot more personality being exuded live," she says. "I give the audience credit for their own feelings. I'm not gonna guide them through it.... I don't make up rules about performance at all. It's a fuckin' free-for-all as far as I'm con- cerned... I try to go for the fun al- ways." As a final note, Philips adds (through a grin, completely intend- ing the pun), "For a good time, come." See TWO NICE GIRLS at the Ark this Saturday and Sunday. To- morrow's shows are at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m., and Sunday's is at 7:30 p.m. only. Tickets are $12.50 at TicketMaster (p.e.s.c.). O Paul Hillier joins Academy of Early Music by Liz Patton Paul Hillier, conductor and bari- tone singer, comes to Ann Arbor this weekend for more than just a concert. Saturday, in what amounts to a master class for the Academy of Early Music, Hillier will work with the Ann Arbor Boychoir, Our Lady's Madrigal Singers and the Academy of Early Music Choir. The program includes madrigals, motets and sacred works of the English Renaissance. Sunday, Hil- lier will sing with the Academy choir in an evening of English and French Baroque music, including Purcell's Funeral Sentences and "Welcome to all Pleasures," one of the Odes to St. Cecilia. French music featured includes Campra's cantata entitled Les Femmes and Char- pentier's Christmas oratorio In Nativitatem Domini Nostri Jesu Christi Canticum. Hillier's interests have shifted from performing and voice instruc- tion to choral conducting. Never- theless, after several days of re- hearsing as a conductor with the other musical groups, his own vocal performance on Sunday provides a focal point for the weekend. "It's nice to feel that one isn't just com- ing to do that," he said. "It's a bit more than come in, rehearse, per- form, go away." More than instructing the vari- ous groups in rehearsal', Hillier will share his experience with them. "I don't believe in imposing an inter- pretation on a group of people," he said, "but rather finding out what the group and myself have to say to- gether. It's a little bit pointless to come there and say, 'No, that's com- pletely wrong, do it like this.' There has to be an artistic meeting of essary. Ultimately! One really never gets that far." Hillier has left the Hilliard en- semble, the group whose success brought him fame as its leader. "I'd been there nearly sixteen years - it was time for a change," he said. "I felt that we were beginning to re- peat ourselves, treading water a lit- tle bit. I couldn't do the kinds of new repertoire I wanted to do." Although he's here as an expert in early music, Hillier avoids being pinned down as a specialist in any one period. "I like to perform the music that I like to perform," he said bluntly. Indeed, Hillier's expe- rience ranges from Medieval and Re- naissance music to 19th-century songs, though his current interest is mainly in contemporary music. Hillier has had a number of Hillier minds. "But... ultimately, the conduc- tor's job is to make himself unnec- Checking out one of the works of artist Gerome Kamrowski are 0-r) Kamrowski himself, Maya Savarino and, yep, CNN's own Ray Tanter. Collection displays collage of creations by Diane Frieden There's an alligator guarding the door at the Alice Simsar Gallery. Created by the internationally known avant-garde artist Gerome Kamrowski, the beast is constructed of neon-painted wood, with sharp glass tiles as teeth and scales. The whimsical sculpture is just one part of; the mosaic menagerie, but all of the works exhibited in Gerome Kamrowski: Recent Mosaics and Sculpture suggest that an abstract, almost surreal zoo has taken residence. The other artistic taxidermy is just as humorous. An oversized hornet perches on a pedestal, its multi-winged body shimmering, the glass and tile reflecting the light like a real insect's own iridescence. What looks like a fuchsia cat sits on the gallery receptionist's desk, eyeing the word processor. Other colorful, fanciful and exaggerated creatures are displayed around the gallery. Kamrowski incorporates many elements of pure expressionism (seen in the candy colors) and surrealism (his principal influence) in his sculptures. What makes his work so intense, however, is its inner movement: each figure seems poised, ready for attack. The framed mosaics offer a more tranquil feeling. Jackson Pollack, one of Kamrowski's contemporaries, "freed" the line from it's property of continuity with his paint-spattered canvases. So too does Kamrowski set the line loose in some of his larger inlaid works. The wall-sized sextych combines some of the animal motifs seen in the sculpture, but the mood of attack is not as predominant. Some of the creatures blend into the background; where one stops and another begins largely depends on the clever placement of differently-shaded tiles. Some of the smaller works portray the animal theme with more recognizable forms, such as an ornate dove or a crab, but no greater detail is used. The size of the tiles remains the same, in fragments roughly no smaller than a half-inch and no larger than an inch. But even within this standardized self-constraint, Kamrowski has fun with the medium. The dove is pieced in gold tile, elevating it to peaceful status (all that's missing here is the olive branch), and the crab's body is mother-of-pearl, bringing to mind the sea from whence it came. The show is small, but it explodes with color and light, a perfect respite from from the drab-skied winter weather. GEROME KAMROWSKI: RECENT MOSAICS AND SCULPTURE is on display at the Alice Simsar Gallery, 301 N. Main St., through November 9. There will be an open reception for the artist today from 5 to 7 p.m. For more information call 665-4883. 0 ", See HILLIER, Page 10 RAVI SHANKAR Sunday, October 20 4pm Hill Auditorium I ~/7~ The University of Michigan SCHOOL OF MUSIC a benefit for the Indus Medical Foundation ~; %'> ~ 2 / ~ "'72A.2'727A~y~'~-/ -'.#,'/ // ~/6' 7/7 ~ " // ~ '7/' 2 I /7 '7 2 i,,,, ~' 2," ,2'' ~ /7 /7 '~~~A;'~ 7" 7/' /'/~ "'/7 Tue. Oct. 1 Fri. Oct. 4 University Symphony Orchestra Gustav Meier, conductor Mozart- Symphony no. 41 (Jupiter) Hoist: The Planets Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. Guest Artist Recital Ellen Rose, viola and Katherine Collier, piano Boccherini: Sonata in A de Falla: Suite Populaire Espagnole Clarke: Sonata Brouwer. Two Pieces Enesco: Concertpiece School of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m. 0 - .1 .. I f P f m p -I- - - n-1-- r