The Michigan Daily - WuesZ at. - ThursdayMarch 28, 1996- 7B Polonsky made it a year of 'musical firsts' By Heather Phares Daily Arts Writer "What do you think ofCeline Dion?" asks singer/songwriter Jonny Polonsky 0 the middle of a question-and-answer ssion that is supposed to focus on him and what makes him tick - but has drifted inexplicably to, er, French-Ca- nadian pop divas. But leave it to Polonsky to make even the most routine interview quirky. As irreverent and exuberant on the phone as he is on his debut album "Hi My Name Is Jonny," Polonsky has a fresh take on pop music, recording, touring and interviewing because he's pretty OW to them himself. Interviews, the bane of many a pop musician's existence, provide Polonsky with another outlet to amuse himself. He actually enjoys them - with a few exceptions. He explained: "Sometimes they get a bit monotonous, and some interviewers aren'tall thatgreat. Some- body basically asked me if I was a loser once. He didn't come out and say it like Aat, but he said that there's this com- onmisconception that Ijust sit around and record myself, that I'm just this lonely, bedroom-ridden rockerorwhat- ever." The media has made a lot out of the fact that Polonsky wrote, played, re- corded and produced the album entirely by himself in his brother's bedroom in Chicago. That, combined with the ro- mantic, wistful nature of songs, such as "Gone Away" and "Love Lovely Love," leadto notionsofPolonskyas acreative recluse, a myth that he's eagerto dispel. "A lot of the songs on the record are love songs, and a handful of them are kind of forlorn, so I'm seen as some kind of forlorn dude," Polonsky said with a sigh. "But that's just a handful of songs I've written out of maybe 30 or 40, at a specific time in my life. I'm a pretty happy guy." And if anything can smash the per- ception of Polonsky as a forlorn dude, it'shis lovefortouring--anotherfirst. Opening for one of his musical heroes, ex-Pixies frontman Frank Black, has been nothing short of a great time for him. "It's been really fun. The guys that I've got playing for me are old friends that I've known for quite awhile and played with under different circum- stances over the years, but this is the first time that we've played my music. It's a real band, a power trio," he said. And if Polonsky seems a little too enthusiastic to be true, consider what he was doing before he became a critic's darling and the freshest purveyor of pure pop: "I worked in an ex-nuclear power plant in Watertown (Mass.) xeroxing Army files. It was awful! It was all just babbling army nonsense," he recalled with a shudder. "Hi My Name is Jonny" reflects that bouyant feeling of freedom that Polonsky felt when he finally quit working at the plant to concentrate on his music. Songs like "Half Mind" and "Gone Away" have a bouncy, immediate quality to them that make them seem like discoveries on each listen. While Polonsky's own discov- ery wasn't so immediate, it's certainly dramatic. He gave some of his demo tapes to Tin Machine guitarist Reeves Gabrels, who gave them to none other than Frank Black. Impressed, Black helped Polonsky with a more polished demo. And, Polonsky explained, "Frank got me a manager. The tape that I made with Frank got me signed and got Rick Rubin's (the president of Black's tand Polonsky's record label, American) at- tention." He laughed, "It's always good to have the big man on your side, to have the president behind you." But with songs like Polonsky's, it's hard to imagine Rubin not backing him. "Hi My Name is Jonny" bursts with simple, affecting yet unaffected pop like "Love Lovely Love" and "I Don't Know What to Dream at Night." Ironi- cally, Polonsky occasionally has trouble coming up with these artless tunes: "Sometimes the words and everything just come out really easily, but some songs take a lot more cajoling. I guess my biggest problem is with lyrics. A lot of the songs I write deal with relation- ships, but now I want to try different things. Iljust gotta do what I gotta do, as long as it sounds true to myself," he said. Right now, remaining true to himself means setting up in Chicago to record his new material as soon as possible - right after he gets off this tour, as a matter of fact. "Hopefully by then I'll have all my equipment that I've or- dered in town, and all I'll have to do is rent an apartment and set up. Realisti- cally, by June I'll be able to start record- ing. I'll just have to take some time to learn how to use the gear. Hopefully 1'll get the record done this summer. That's my goal," he said with that enthusiasm that has carried him so far so quickly. Afterayearof musical firsts.Polonsky's new projects are bound to be second to none. inPl fairly glows with talent. Lonny Polonsky fairly glows with talent. Author Curtis to captivate Rackham audience tonight By Sarah Beldo For the Daily Christopher Paul Curtis holds the perceptions and opinions of the young in high esteem. "I believe that young people are often blessed with the best ears for detecting what rings true or *hat feels right in a particular piece of writing. To me the highest accolade comes when a young reader tells me,' I really liked your book.' The young seem to be able to say 'really' with a clarity, a faith and an honesty that we as adults have long forgotten. That is why I write," he said in an interview. Perhaps it is this conviction about the honesty of a child's perspective that moved Curtis to choose a young ,oy as the protagonist for his story of African American family who trav- elsto Alabama in the midst of the racial tension of 1963. "The Watsons Go to Birmingham - 1963" is Curtis' first novel, aimed at young adults ages 10 and up. He will be reading selections from this work at Rackham Amphithe- atre today at 5p.m. as part of the Bor- ders/Hopwood reading series. "The Watsons Go to Birmingham - 1963" is a wryly funny tale of an idio- syncratic family composed of 10-year- old Kenny, his hard-working father, practical mother, humorous sister and hisl3-year-old brother, an "official ju- venile delinquent" who is so vain he freezes his lips to the car mirror while kissing his own reflection. The first half of the book is con- cerned with describing the Watsons' life in the frigid temperatures of Flint, Mich., as Kenny navigates through the wilderness of childhood bullies, myste- rious new kids at school and fleets of toy dinosaurs. When the adolescent Byron Arries his attention-grabbing antics to6 far, the Watson family decides to make a trek to Alabama - and, consequently, to the sordid, segregated south of the early '60s - to let him spend th sum- mer with Grandma Sands. It is heire that Curtis subtly blends the story of the offbeat Watsons with the true story of the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham in September 1963, an event that killed four young girls. Writing through the eyes of the observant Kenny, Curtis' voice remains consistently in a state of innocent won- der, and he never loses his believabil- ity, even when describing a child's re- action to a horrific event. In reading this novel, you can't help but wonder how much of these humor- ous situations were drawn from Curtis' own childhood in Flint. He has said that I believe that young people are often blessed with the best ears for detecting what rings true." -Christopher Paul Curtis Author he felt a burning desire to write ever since he realized that he couldn't talk his way out of many of his problems. He abandoned this interest for a time to pursue a more solid, reliable job after graduating from high school, when he took a job hanging doors on cars at Flint's historic Fisher Body Plant No.l. He held this job for 13 years. And it required a push from his wife, who told Curtis he "better hurry up and start doing something constructive with his li fe or else start looking for a new place to live," to bring him back to his origi- nal love of the written word. While attending the Flint campus of the University, Curtis tested his writing skills and was pleased with the results, winning the Avery Hopwood Prize for major essays and the Jules Hopwood Prize for an early draft of"1"he Watsons (o to Birmingham- 1963." The result of these efforts is an en- gaging, charming book, both "construc- ie" enough to please Curtis' wife and imaginatively humorous enough to en- tertain a lively audience at Rackham tonight. Save bia on a Mac