Arts Michigan Daily Thursday, July 23, 1981 Page 7 Listening to the Look By FRED SCHILL Daily Arts Writer "We don't go around saying, 'We want this to be commercial' or 'We think this is what people will like,' " rasps lead singer Dave Edwards of The Look. "We do it to please ourselves and, hopefully, it'll please somebody else." Now that's an interesting statement, since commercialism is exactly what this Detroit band's detractors have ac- cused it of. Positive and negative reviews alike agree that The Look is midwestern rock in the vein of the Michael Stanley Band and REO Speed- wagon-even though their debut album We're Gonna Rock was produced in Birmingham, Alabama by Southern rock impresario Johnny Sandlin. APPARENTLY, no one has yet reached the conclusion that The Look sounds simply like The Look. The band, for better or worse, has been classified "midwestern." Which does not seem to bother the energetic, effervescent Edwards. "I think it's good to be compared to those kinds of bands, and I think it shows that we have a variety. This band is capable of playing so many styles that it is amazing to myself. Versatility is the name of this band," Edwards insists. Indeed, he was intrigued by the fact that a Detroit Free Press review of the band's debut album (on the indepen- dent Plastic label), found the band too versatile. "He said we were direc- tionless. And yet Jim McFarlane of the (Detroit) News said he would like to see more versatility." Bemused, Edwards shakes his head, then demands, "What do you do?" WE'RE GONNA ROCK has gotten favorable reviews from most everyone else, including such media luminaries as People and Billboard, who included it among their pick hits. Indeed, the ex- posure (and praise) it is getting belies that fact that it is on a small label with no national distribution, a situation Edwards hopes to remedy soon. "Major label distribution," Edwards muses dreamily. "If you want to get to a lot of people at once, that's the way to go, but you can definitely do alright on an independent label. They're playing our record in California, Connecticut, Looking from left to right, The Look are Rick Cochran (bass), Dave Edwards (vocals), Randy Volin (guitar), John Sarkisian (drums), and Sam Warren (guitar). Rhode Island, Key West, in Bir- mingham." The band hasn't even played in half of those places, but the ever-buoyant and ambitious Edwards wants to remedy that. "We're trying to spread out. We've played in New York, Chicago, Fort Wayne" and most of the Midwest, he says, in addition to some forays into Canada. THEY HAVE already opened for major acts like Cheap Trick and the J. Geils Band in arena-sized venues. But the band feels ready for the big time, for the days when it can headline at concert halls. Edwards says the larger stages of such venues will mean adding more musical variety to the Look's sound. Edwards plays the piano, but the band has been playing on stages too small to accommodate the instrument. When that changes, he wants to incorporate piano and horns into their show. "If you keep going, the possibilities of learning never end, really," theorizes guitarist Randy Volin. "You get to the end of the road of one thing, kinda, maybe, and you go on to something else." EDWARDS ADDS, "by doing that, by being versatile, hopefully we'll develop our own niche. I'd like to develop our own. Maybe we have already-I can't tell because I'm too close to it." That was the only tentative note in the entire conversation. Praise 'em or pan 'em, this is a confident and en- thusiastic band, and those traits come across on stage as clearly as in conver- sation. "Keith Richard once said, I would become a junkie if I didn't play.' That's from his perspective. From mine . . . well, I live for (claps his han- ds) clapping," he says. "And, for- tunately, (knocks on wood) we've not had many problems with audiences." CONFIDENCE. The band says it has five albums worth of songs written right now ("If I had the money to live while I was doing it, I could write two or three songs a day," Edwards says) and finds itself getting better every day. Nothing shakes their self- assurance, not even labeling them as merely one more band "from America's heartland." And even reminding Edwards of the constant comparisons of his voice to Rod Stewart's didn't faze his hyperkinetic enthusiasm or charismatic puppy-dog friendliness. I left feeling guilty about hating their album so much, not to mention having said so in print. Not to worry. What would Edwards do if everyone had hated the LP? Simple. "I'd make another one." Neville Brothers The Neville Brothers-'Fiyo on the Bayou' (A&M)-In a time when bands like Talking Beads and Duran Duran are striving to rediscover their roots by laying African rhythms onto rock and roll instrumentation like floral wallpaper on ugly wood paneling, the Neville Brothers have no trouble finding their roots. * l In fact, they quite literally never left them-New - Orleans-where they're producing some of the funkiest soulful rock and roll heard in a long while. Their tunes include plenty of funky bass and Stax horns to let you know that they haven't been out of touch these past years, but the enthusiasm with which they attack ,rock and roll makes it seem like they just discovered the medium. In short, this is an almost unrealistically fresh crossbreeding. TO BE CERTAIN, there are some faults with the album. Their version of Jimmy Cliff's "Sitting in Limbo" is completely nondescript and their cover of Carl Mann's rockabilly killer "Mona Lisa" is so stringed-up and strung-out that it really does sound Like Johnny Mathis doing the vocals (with his mile-wide vibrato and all). But when it works (which is most of the time), this records sounds like the record that the Ohio Players could have made if they weren't so modern, the Busboys could have made if they weren't so self-conscious, or Little Feat could have made if they weren't so white. Do you need it spelled out any more clearly? ... The Neville Brothers' Fiyo on the Bayou is HOT. . , --Mark Dighton