ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, April 7, 1992 Page 5 Poet Mark Webster is honored posthumously by Darcy Lockman M ark Webster was a poet, a graduate student in Creative Writing in the University's MFA program. He died unexpectedly of heart failure over a year ago at the age of 29. Webster's dream did not die with him, however. His work lives and breathes with the publication of a book of his poetry, Along the River Road. Miss America feels poppy-soft, like Dorothy without Toto or the Tin Man to hearten. So very, very tired. Webster was a modern poet. Influenced by the world of the late 20th century, and free from the confines of iambic and trochaic meters, his lines of free verse resonate with euphonic personal experience. Varying themes, from childhood to nature to music to death to life, flavor his poetry. Tuesday night condoms rimmed with pink lipstick hung from the tines of dead thistle. An empty bottle of Wild Irish Rose dug its collar in the gravel. According to Alice Fulton, one of Webster's creative writing instructors (and author of the book's introduction), Along the River Road is "a celebra- tion of growth and progress." She acknowledges that Webster might have revised some of these poems before publishing them, but feels that their un- polished quality only makes the works more effective. "There's a good roughness, at times, that is more immediate and moving than lines in which all oddity has been workshopped away," Fulton writes. It is that same "roughness" that gives Webster's poems their honest, simple tone, which sits well with his themes and diction. Webster didn't alienate the reader with esoteric symbolism and eight-syllable words. Her only lover breathes with caution, hands melded in the fabric of her skin. She exhales a shower of lost want ; the hour is final. Webster's first and final book of poetry is published by Paprika Press, a company founded specifically for the purpose of publishing Webster's work. This memorial volume was put together by his widow, friends, and colleagues. Along the River Road is dedicated to Webster's daughter, born three months after his death. The book includes not only poetry, but photography and journal excerpts as well. When the sun dies out, will our relic be seen, a zenith travelling to the final reaches of light? Mark Webster, his friends and associates will host a reading of selected works from Along the River Road. The event is co-sponsored by Paprika Press and the MFA program in Creative Writing. Says Mimi Mayer, founding publisher of Paprika Press, "The reading is a tribute: a celebration of Mark, his poetry, and the enduring spirit of creativity." The ghosts have much to celebrate in their lightened condition and perform with great joy the routines that a corporeal extant despises. MARK WEBSTER'S work will be read today at 4 p.m. in the East Con- ference Room. at Rackham, The public is invited, and admission is free. Those toads are a morose bunch, but you can't write good lyrics if you're not depressed, right? They are Glen Phillips, Todd Nichols, Randy Guss, and Dean Dinning. Their arty setting may by California, but it could just be the hell in their own minds. This Toad is leaping out of Cal Signed by a biggie, Toad the Wet Sprocket has still kept their charm by Nima Hodaei " 6 We're all trying to do our own thing," explains Toad the Wet Spro- cket bassist Dean Dinning, when asked about the group's comparison to other American counterparts such as R.E.M. and the Connells. "We're not sitting down to write a song and trying to make a certain style of music. It's just whatever happens to come out, sort of free-form. "We use a lot of acoustic and folk instruments and things like that. I think bands that try to develop their own voice and sound like them- selves, kind of sound alike." Toad the Wet Sprocket has gone a long way in distancing themselves from these comparisons. The quartet out of Santa Barbara, California (Dinning on bass, Randy Guss on drums, Todd Nichols, guitars, and Glen Phillips, vocalist/guitars) has been putting forth their own unique brand of electrified folk and rock tunes over the span of three albums now. Their latest recording, Fear, is definitely the most diverse of the batch, featuring a more brooding, gothic sound that has expanded the band's style. "Glen writes all the lyrics and what he has always said ... is that we write about a lot of dark things," says Dinning. "Being someone who writes lyrics, when you're in a happy mood, you want to get in the car and drive up to the mountains, and just hang out with your friends. Being depressed, I suppose, is contempla- tive. It's more conducive to lyric writing, so that tends to be what comes out." Toad's tale is truly a success story at a grass-roots level. Ori- ginally playing as a no-cover band in a small Santa Barbara club, Toad's members borrowed enough money from Phillips' father to record and locally sell 1989's Bread and Cir- cus. Around the same time, before signing ,with a major label, they recorded with their own money, what would later become 1990's Pale. A deal with Columbia Records soon followed, and has produced, as Dinning puts it, a very fair relation- ship. "Columbia was the only label we met with at the time, who when we said, 'We want you to release our first two albums that we recorded ourselves, nationally,' didn't put up record company came up for one af- ternoon, heard about six mixes, and said, 'Sounds great!," says Dinning, with a laugh. "I think that they know that the best thing they can do is to leave us alone. It's good to have them be that understanding and to be able to recognize that we're a good band." It strikes most listeners as odd Ride Going Blank Again Sire/Reprise Has Ride grown tired of the Br tish guitar wash categorization? TI band's latest offering, Going Blai Again, seems to indicate as muc The music on this album is actual more complex than on their previol releases, yet it sounds stripped of t dream-like guitar wails, the distan often forgettable vocals, and ti unmistakable "ocean" feel of the other works. Unlike Nowhere, its first fu length album, and Smile (a compil tion of the band's first two EPs), Going Blank Again makes an honest attempt to capture the perfect "pop" i- song - short, not overly simplified, he and most importantly, appealing and nk accessible. "Twisterella" is the clos- h. est this band has ever come to ly sounding like anything but the My us Bloody Valentines and Lushes out he there today. It's a cool change. U, The distortion pedal is mysteri- he ously absent from most of this n'. See RECORDS, Page 9 ANN A R OI Ur12 'Being depressed, I suppose, is contemplative. It's more conducive to lyric writing, so that tends to be what comes out.' -Dean Dinning bassist any fight at all," he says. Even more surprising for the band was the great amount of free- dom that Columbia gave them to record Fear. "Basically, we went and recorded a record for three months and the that Toad has not received more at- tention than it already has. Natioftal appearances on shows such as Laie Night with David Letterman can only help the group's nationwide ap- peal. But for music so accessible to See TOAD, Page 9 _________________________________________________________________-« 5TH AVE. AT LIBERTY 761-9700 ,- .. .. --1- STUDENTS: "If your hair isn't becoming to you you should be $3 .0 0 DAILY HOWSYEFRE PM i I STUDENT WITH 1.. $3.50 Roadside Prophets (R) White Men Can't Jump (R) 7:30 p.m. APRIL 8th & 9th