ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, October 16, 1991 Page 5 Heavies put the funk back in it by Scott Sterling Detroit, summer of 1991: there is a huge resurgence in the under- ground club scene. After-hours clubs such as the Warehouse and 1515 Broadway are consistently packed with club kids and ravers. Amidst the soundtrack of songs that propelled the manic, sweaty ,crowds this past summer, only one stands out as the Detroit club an- them: "Dream Come True," the de- but single by British acid-jazz funksters the Brand New Heavies, is the hippest song to be seen dancing to at three a.m. this year. The song's jazzy, horn-driven '70s groove (a word this band uses a lot) and infec- tious chorus, sung by the powerful and amazingly soulful vocalist N'Dea Davenport, never fails to fill the dance floor. Chicago, fall of 1991: Andrew Levy, the Brand New Heavies' bassist, is speaking to me from a downtown hotel room. The sweet sounds of the band's touring horn section can be heard in the back- ground, as Andrew and I settle in for a fun and enjoyable chat. The Brand New Heavies emerged from the Rare Groove scene in London back in the late 1980s. This contingency of British soul boys turned to American bands, such as Tower of Power, Miles Davis, and Earth, Wind, and Fire, for inspi- ration, while most of England was getting into computer-powered techno and house music. I ask Andrew about their then-new sound. Andrew Levy: Without sounding too boastful, we kind of instigated that whole thing. There weren't any other bands playing live dance music, which is basically what we were doing. There were a few DJs playing that kind of stuff, but only one or two in London. One of those DJs ended up being in our (first) band. We were called Diana Brown and The Brothers. (It was) us, Diana Brown and the DJ, doing the rare groove stuff. They eventually left and set up their own thing. The current line-up (Levy, guitarist Simon Bartholomew, drummer Jan Kincaid, saxophonist Jim Wellman and guitarist Lascelles Gordon) came together about a year ago. Scott Sterling: So you feel that you've had a huge influence on British music? AL: Anything from Europe that's Disciples are going to be massive. SS: So what kind of response has the BNH had on the road here in America this far? AL: The show's are sold-out, and we do three encores a night. The people know the words, and it's a really voice just cooks! AL: Yeah, it does, doesn't it? She was signed to our label, Delicious Vinyl, and we were looking for a vocalist. The president (of Delicious Vinyl) played her our tape, and she flew to London to record within two days. SS: When you're not dazzling audiences on stage, what do you do in your free time on the road? AL: (Laughs) We try to check as many clubs as we can, if only to relax. We listen to music a lot. A lot of rap, Latin stuff. Anything that's got grooves and is rhythmic. I listen to classical stuff, such as Schoenberg and Ligetti, avant garde classical composers. We also jam in our hotel rooms. Our percussionist, Miguel Valdez, has a very wide ar- ray of instruments, and we just jam and often record it. SS: Have you written any new songs this way? AL: We've come up with a lot of grooves. That's really where the BNH come from, theP way we write our stuff. If the groove is right, then it's a song. We're a groove-based act. SS: What are the band's plans after the U.S. tour? AL: We're working on two songs for movie soundtracks. One of the movies is called Juice (the di- rectoral debut of Spike Lee's famed cinematographer, Ernest Dickerson). The other track is for a movie called The Prince and The Pauper. That song might be on our next album. Then we're all going to have a two- week holiday somewhere in the world. Then we go to Japan for a ten-date tour, and then back to the U.S. for a longer and larger theater Graduates display their art; Justice is served at Pitcher Alumni Art Show krater vases. The sculptures them Slusser Gallery selves, however, depict overweigh 46 The School of Art is hosting the annual Alumni Art Show in the Slusser Gallery of the Art and Architecture building. The show features ten artists who have grad- uated (or will soon graduate) from the University School of Art and are currently pursuing careers as artists or designers. Michael G. Collins, who re- ceived his BFA in 1985 and will receive his MFA next year, has a group of small oil paintings in the show. Collins' still lifes, featur- ing shells, have a nice, soft focus to them, but his painting of the University Observatory, though it captures the light well, seems too literal. Oddly enough, it also appears to be rather unfocused. Tom Webb, who received his MFA in 1970, has several two- dimensional works in oil crayon and a group of sculptures on dis- play. Webb creates a series of sur- real images that work best when he doesn't become too concerned with portraying tangible objects and instead focuses on geometric shapes, as in his beautiful oil cra- yon drawing, "Four Leaders Dis- cuss Assassination." Among his sculptures, the most striking is "False Memory," with its exciting arrangement of wooden rods. The most captivating works in the show are the textiles by Laura K. Brody, who received her BFA in 1980. Brody depicts stylized bo- dies which seem to be falling. Weaving, sweeping lines move around and across the bodies, ac- centuating the feeling of turmoil in works with titles such as "Maelstrom," "Upheaval" and "House Tornado." John Goodyear's series of em- bossed lithographs on Arches pa- per is also interesting. Goodyear embosses the outlines of several images of art from the dawn of civilization (such as the Stele of Hammurabi) on Arches paper, in- scribing the words "Order" and "Chaos" across the work. Good- year's images are sharp and direct. The superficial view of history reflected in his work is remi- niscent of Pop Art. The most humorous work in the show belongs to Dalciene Merning. The outlines of Mer- ning's series of terracotta scul- ptures take the classic forms of traditional Greek amphora and n- ht women wearing bikinis and boxer shorts. The garish glazes suggest pink flamingo lawn decorations. The Alumni Art Show also features furniture and posters de- signed by Alumni artists and will be on display at the Slusser Gal- lery in the Art and Architecture Building until October 26. -Aaron Hamburger The Broken Pitcher Trueblood Theater October 10, 1991 The University Players' pro- duction of The Broken Pitcher opened last Thursday night, prov- ing to the audience that German plays can be funny. Kleist's com- edy emphasizes the ineffectiveness of the judicial system through the tensions between members of the community of Huysum. Jon Hammond activated the stage with his portrayal of Judge Adam. His whimsical method of indiscriminately dispensing justice - by throwing sand bags on hu- man-sized scales of justice, or by ringing a bell - was hysterical. Hammond was consistently true to his character, incorporating the heightened language of the play into his own natural speaking style with ease. He manipulated rhythm, rhyme, intonation and pa- cing to extract every ounce of hu- mor from the text. The University Players' production of Tartuffe last winter, and now The Broken Pitcher, have displayed Ham- mond's innate ability to play ec- centric characters with vitality. Hammond, however, was not the only actor to offer a fully de- veloped character. Mark Willett's performance as Walter, a visiting circuit judge inspecting Adam's courtroom procedures, was pol- ished as well. Willett exhibited the character's haughtiness and author- ity with poise and grace as he dealt with Adam and the peasants. His movements on stage were as de- liberate as his character, and he consistently presented himself with an air of dignity. Matt Letscher's interpretation of ClerkLight as a shaky, zealous nerd with glasses was a good cast- ing choice. With every sway of his head, however, the glasses fell off. Maybe this wasn't inten- See PITCHER, Page 8 Brand New Heavies look SO fashionable. You can tell that their Britishness has overwhelmed their sense of cool funkiness. funky has basically been instigated by us. We were doing it before there was any interest in live music. I think we were just ahead of our time, basically. SS: So which bands do you feel that the BNH have directly influenced? AL: Definitely Galliano (a Last Poets-influenced beatnik-jazz- funk combo), and the Young Disciples (a rawer, funkier BNH-sounding band) as well. Those are the only two that I would personally suggest as being A, good, and B, inspired by BNH. They're bands I listen to, and are friends as well. I think the Young moving feeling. I'm really moved to see people mouthing the words and things like that. SS: The BNH have a reputation as being absolutely fierce live. What do you think makes you so special in concert? AL: Well, we don't use explosives or pyrotechnics or stage-dive, but what we do is we lock into each other's vibe. The band's like a family, basically. We have the best time on stage, and people notice that. We create a party atmosphere. SS: How did you hook up with your vocalist, N'Dea Davenport. Her tour. SS: I have Come True" to tell was the you, "Dream Detroit dance anthem of the summer. It'll proba- bly be the show stopper here. AL: That's great to hear! We've revamped it, actually. We've mixed in a house section and a Latin section, and we've extended it. It's one of our oldest songs, so it's like an old favorite for the band. That's the song that got us our deal back in nineteen-eighty-seven. See HEAVY, Page 8 Burton Tower does more than tell time by Liz Patton As the clock strikes 10, Professor Margo Halsted jumps up. "If we hurry, we can see it striking," she urges. From her office on the ninth floor of Burton Tower, we scramble up to the carillon overhead, ducking under the huge bell together just in time to feel the overtones fade away. Five of the largest bells have a separate hammer operated by the clock, which chimes every day from 9:15 am. to 9 p.m. Centuries ago, people depended on clock towers to tell the time. "Here people just sort of look at their watches when it goes off," laughed Halsted. In a quaint old metal and glass case stamped "International Business Machines," the mechanical works all date from the 1930s,-but the well-oiled gears run smoothly and the clock is accu- rate. If it reads 10 past, yes, you'll be late to class. Back in her office, Halsted con- tinues to tell me about the carillon and her upcoming concert. Since she is officially part of the organ de- partment, Halsted's recital is part of the 31st Annual Conference on Organ Music. In addition to music of the 17th and 18th centuries, in- cluding excerpts from Rameau's Les Indes Galantes and Gluck's Ihpigenie en Aulide, two of Hal- sted's own compositions will be on the program. Other contemporary pieces include Robert Lannoy's Ballet of the Little Ducks and Flor Peeters' Serenade for Carillon. At 45 minutes, the concert shouldn't be too long for the shivering listeners in the courtyard below. With 55 bells, the carillon in Burton Memorial Tower is the third heaviest in the world, but like Goldilocks, Halsted says it's just right. In fact, she says, conditions here are ideal for a carilloneur. The performer can hear all the bells, and there are plenty of places to sit and listen down below. The carillon also has an unusually wide range of four-and-a-half octaves that gives it a rich sound. This gives the Univer- sity's carillon a larger potential repertoire than many others. If you recognize the tunes that reverberate overhead each day, that's no accident. "You try to play for your audience," says Halsted. "I try to do something familiar every day." She'll play love songs on Valentine's day, "The Victors" be- fore football games and carols at Christmastime, saving the latest modern compositions for special audiences like the Guild of Carilloneurs. In addition to Halsted, quite a variety of performers play the caril- lon, from a professor of aeronauti- cal engineering to a waste control officer in the Chemistry Depart- ment to a lecturer in the School of Public Health, as well as three graduate organ students and students from departments as far from music as economics and biol- ogy. The only thing that limits Halsted from taking on more stu- dents is the fact that there is only one practice keyboard. No one wants keyboard exercises inflicted on the entire university community! Just about anything can be and is arranged for the carillon. "Of course, music that's written espe- cially for carillon sounds the best," says Halsted. The instrument has. some peculiarities, such as the unique overtone series - intervals that sound together with each note. "All carillon bells have a minor third in (the overtone series), so they sound slightly out of tune," she says. "If you play major thirds down low, then they sort of fight each other, so certain minor keys and modal music sound better." Still, there is an increasing See BELLS, Page 8 II MORGAN STANLEY invites seniors of all majors to a presentation on Opportunities in Investment Banking Monday, October 21, 1991 Michigan Union Kuenzel Room 7:00 P.M. Representatives of Morgan Stanlev COOKIES Sweeten your sweetie with Order your college ring NOW. JOST ENS A M E R I C A S C O L L E G E R I N G"'