The MichiganDaily-Tuesday, July 28,.1981,Rage 9 Music for computer games (Continued from Page 7) graphics timed to coincide with the polished electronic sounds that bounce from speaker to speaker. NEEDLESS TO SAY, the audience is stunned into a nearly stuporous con- dition by this overwhelming commer- cial for wholesale mechanization. Kraf- twerk seem a little taken aback by this; Ralf Hutter reminds us at one point that the large wooden area where- a. good portion of the audience is seated is sup- posed to be a dance floor. And danceable is their music. From the opening thuds of "Numbers," I knew this was going to be one of the most danceable concerts I'd ever wit- nessed. Live, Kraftwerk replace the cerebral, flat sound of their albums with earthquake-like bass and high-hat zaps that can nail your eardrums together. Their command of sound is such that during "The Robots" they produced this crazy little call-response interplay between a bass frequency that used your entire chest cavity as a resonator and a midrange tone that made your body hair vibrate like it was under the control of a static charge. In fact, the . bass riffs were often felt more than heard, producing a curious Sen- surround-like trembling in the lining of the stomach. BUT THEIR demeanor did nothing to encourage us to get physically, in- volved wth their music; their imper- turbable composure could have easily been mistaken for catatonia. Only through Hutter did we receive any permission to react to Kraftwerk's music in any fashion but cerebral. As the audience sat quietly-as you're supposed to do in the presence of Art-Hutter seemed anxious to convey in his funky swaying that it was also okay to relate to their music as Fun. And eventually, the crowd began to respond in kind. From the start, their reactions had been ecstatic. . . but cautiously reserved to the use of their hands in the polite space between num- bers. Then their hands began to respond freely (and more Thyth- mically) during the dance tunes. By the end of the show, a good portion of the feet in the audience were also respon- ding. BUT KRAFTWERK never really broke through their impersonally business-like airs until the first encore when they came out from behind their imposing synthesizer banks to actually play "Pocket Calculator" on hand-held consoles. By this time, even Florian Schneider-the other mastermind (besides Hutter) behind Kraftwerk and the most stolid of the four-was getting some obviously devious pleasure out of the cartoonish sprung spring sound that he was generating. They even interact- ed with the audience at this point, allowing some ofthem to contribute to the song. Nevertheless, it wasn't until the third and final encore that they really let randomness run rampant as they jam- med in a rabidly erratic fashion, oc- casionally tangling in each others dissonance, but always able to rely on the prerecorded rhythm tracks to keep them on course. Though by the end the argument seemed irrelevant, Kraftwerk felt compelled to remind us one final time that they consider themselves to be more technicians than musicians. As they left the stage one by one, their equipment continued to sputter furiously syn- copated dance rhythms. I REMAINED unconvinced, however. Kraftwerk's ability to wrench qualities like humor, funkiness, passion, and spontaneity out of reluc- tant little black boxes qualifies them as "musicians" as far as I'm concerned. The fact that their musical tools are devoid of expressive range per se - and so hardly "instruments" at all, but machines-capable of understanding only on and off, sound and silen- ce-makes their work as musiciAns doubly impressive. I still wonder, though, why they seem so reserved about it. No doubt it's a "concept" or something-constructing and then destroying the barriers of alienation, considering technology a toy that ultimately changes the meaning of fun, or some such nonsense. Not only do I find that idea relatively irrelevant to their music, I worry that they may go too far with it. Having already created androids in their own image in order to (yet again) make the point that they are incidental, expendable accessories to their own show, the obvious next step is for Kraftwerk to find some way to replace the audience. I can just see it now-a dance floor crammed with hydraulic legs leading up to metallic derrieres bumping and grinding in per- fect synchronization to an endless, computerized beat. It's hard to tell whether that would be Kraftwerk's ultimate triumph or their ultimate self- trivialization. DAILY CLASSIFIEDS (Continued from Page8) WANTED TO BUY SITUA TIONS WA NTED PAYING CASH for all gold, silver, and precious HOUSE SITTING AVAILABLE 8/10/81. Family stones. CaII761-3296. 78K0804 unable to sell out of state house. Will care for pets, BRUCE INGBER you are the lucky winner of two plants, etc. No charge. 665-8690. 7400730 free tickets to the State 1-2-3-4 Theatres. Come pick your tickets up atthe Daily today. dM5728 BUSINESS SERVICES WRrI'E ON . ..LIVE IN'LUXURY! 3 rooms available for summer " creative, technical copy sublet in beautiful home on Greenwood. House has " Rewriting fantastic sun deck, big modern kitchen, 2 baths, " Research washer, dryer, garage, fully furnished... 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A concert of FRENCH BMROQUE VOCAL 01D INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC featuring works by Jean-Philippe Rameau Jean-Baptiste Lully Frangois Couperin performed by students and faculty of a Performance Workshop in French Music, 1680-1730 sponsored by The Academy for the Study and Performance of Early Music in cooperation with the U-M School of Music The University of Michigan Museum of Art Friday, July 31, at 8 p.m. ADMISSION FREE