The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, July 9, 1980-Page 7 me==Arts==s Gang of Four's modern dance Entertainment! Gang of Four Warner Bros. BSK 3446 By MARK DIGHTON - It's hard to think of many fitting ad- jectives for The Gang of Four's Enter- tainment! Most of, them haven't been invented yet. Maybe after the war. With warmania growing, though, Enter- tainment! is an increasingly relevant album. It may be reflective of the downfall of another culture-the British-but it is no less descriptive of America's current hysteria. The Great British Decline may be different from ours in that they are trying to bow out as gracefully as possible from this madness while we continue to confront and provoke it, eventually increasing the retributions we are bound and deserving to receive from history, but the message is no less pertinent. The Gang of Four know all this. They are smarter than all of America combined. GANG OF FU ~ It's there in their words and music. The game's up. It's time for someone to pay for all the injustices-of individuals against other individuals, of business against people, of nations against each other. And The Gang is here to predict the judgment. SOME OF THE injustices they describe are intentional, such as the televised slaughter of "5.45." Other in- justices are committed by default. as in the viewer who serenely sips his tea while the blood from the slaughter flows out of his television. Unlike this mildly disquieted viewer, Gang of Four are intent on us realizing our part in the horror of this slaughter and the horror that we have been able to remove our- selves from it in the past. "Dig at the root of the problem (fly the flag on foreign soil) It breaks your new dreams daily (H-bomb Long Kesh) Fathers contradictions (Censor six counties news) And breaks your new dreams daily (Each day more deaths) The most important question that the Gang ask is, "Why are you really doing this?" Is it really in your interest or has someone else convinced you that it's for your own benefit? "Five men lie, dieflat on their backs. Were they born to lie in state, Defend the ever stagnant great?'..'. Guerilla war struggle is the new entertainment." Now count the number of times you've been told "What's good for Big Business is good for America" and tell me that Gang of Four doesn't have a point. They don't pick easy targets, though. It would be simple to attack one system in favor of another, but The Gang point out the inherent danger of systems themselves. They hint that they may agree with communism as a theory but make it clear that they dispise it as a reality. One by one, they let you know that all of the things that you thought were options, really aren't. Not democracy, not communism, not anar- chy. You're on your own. ABSOLUTELY NOTHING escapes their wrath, either. "The problem of leisure What to do for pleasure Coercion of the senses We are not so gullible". The Gang of Four are smart enough to realize that nothing is "Good" or "Bad," but everything is tainted with both. They are perhaps the only group to take seriously the philosophers' argument that we are solely guided by selfishness. "We all have good intentions, But all with strings attached. " By the end of Entertainment! they even have you convinced that love ("Love") is after all just another clever advertising campaign to get you to buy EVERY,,,,, HT QMIOp 5O'OFFCOVER _ GREAT REDUCED PRICES ON All BEVERAGES e5ct E51 into the system. Ideal love a new pur- chase. The only kind of love songs The Gang of Four sing are love songs for a disposable society-disposable prophylactics, disposably guilt, disposable partners. The Gang of Four can't help but suc- ceed in that by the end of the album you are fulfilled with an unspeakable rage, the only kind of anger that mat- ters-absolutely pointless fury. For on- ce and all they call the bluff on society's contention that you shouldn't attack something unless you have a better suggestion to replace it. Gang of Four reply that undirected anger and destruction can have their own value. THIS ALL-CONSUMING mistrust could be dismissed by all of our established intellectual- defense mechanisms if The Gang of Four didn't level their attacks just below that; they communicate musically on an almost primal level. (If you don't think that that is a compliment then you've missed the whole point of Entertain- ment!). They realize that our minds are more susceptible to their message when our feet are busy, so they sub- merge their content in the primal surge of the Beat. Their very mastery of disco and military beats shows conclusively that they know how to use the enemy's most effective tactics to get their own message across. The fact that each of the members of Gang of Four is a consummate musician is unavoidable. Few albums of this decade have been as mercilessly daneable as this one. The rhythm sec- tion could beat Parliament/Funkadelic at their own funk. The guitarist has ab- solutely no sense of decency. The long feedback intro to "Anthrax" would bring both Ted Nugent and Jimi Hen- drix to their knees cringing for mercy. Their technical perfection would be almost useless, though, without that illusive Sense of music outside normal conventions that they put to use so ef- fectively. Few other artists have that sense. Pink Floyd had it in the early days. Eno has (or had) it. Wire have it. So too now do Gang of Four. In many ways, their "Anthrax" is comparable to Wire's "A Touching Display" in its musically visionary embodiment of ab- solute terror and anarchy. Gang of Four have perhaps even gone one step further than Wire in making their ver- sion of the apocalypse infinitely more danceable. By now it should be clear that this album was not made for everyone ... but then again, neither were feelings, honesty, or humanity. Ask the Gang of Four. They know. "Always thought life should be so easy. Seems that Ihave misunder- stood." r Ulrich's: The Source. For school, for business, for fun-Ulrich's has it all. Books, art and engineering supplies, prints and frames, calculators, office supplies, lamps, clocks, Michigan souvenirs, and more. Come in and browse. You'll find just what you've been looking for. MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University at the corner of East U. and South U. 662-3201 "Gimme a D Gimme an A Gimme an 1 . . L .. .Y* Give the MICHIGAN DAILY that old college try.~ CALL 764.0558 to order your subscription