To wnshend leads 'Ball' The Secret Policeman's Ball - The Music (Island)-The Secret Policeman's Ball was a 1979 London stage performance given by a group of musicians and comedians (in- cluding the show's director, John Cleese, and three other members of Monty Python) to benefit Amnesty International. A film of this stage production has been released as well as separate comedy and musical soundtrack albums. The par- ticipating musicians are Peter Townshend, Tom Robinson, Neil In- nes, and John Williams. The most interesting portion of the music album are the three Who songs Townshend performs solo, ac- companying himself with acoustic guitar. The much-abused "Pinball Wizard" gains a good deal from this simple treatment. Townshend once claimed that he wrote the song in or- der to con then-influential rock critic and pinball fanatic Nick Cohn into writing a favorable review of Tim- my. Considering the heavy spiritual significance the song has been laden with, it is indeed surprising that the pinball wizard "never tilts at all." The less grandoise treatment makes this pleasant but light-weight num- ber more palatable. On the Quadrophenia version of "Drowned" Roger Daltrey sounds consistantly on the verge of being inundated in a sea of guitars, piano, bass, and drums; "set me free" equals suicide as release. Townshend, on the other hand, is blissfully adrift, yearning to "drown in your love." Townshend is joined by classical guitarist John Williams on "Won't Get Fooled Again," and this weighty Who standard is transformed in being liberated from the snythesizers of Who's Next. Tom Robinson (now of Sector 27) also uses only an acoustinc guitar on "1967 (So Long Ago)" and "Glad to Be Gay." Here the acoustic sound is reminiscent of the folk singer/protest movement of the '60's. In the context of an Amnesty International benefit, the ironic "Glad to Be Gay"-"I don't believe that sort of thing happens here'-is a gentle poke at smugness when tor- ture allegations come from Irish H- blocks, and gays and other minority groups are still subject to political persecution in so-called free coun- tries like England and the U.S. There are two tracks from classical guitarist John Williams, each pleasant listening if nothing wildly exciting. The remaining song comes from Neil Innes, occassional Python sidekick. "Spontaneous" is a mildly amusing parody of a night- club entertainer, replete with swelling horns, oozing piano, and nauseating vocal inflections. If you're interested in hearing Pete Townshend's solo inter- pretations of well-known Who songs, this album is worth your time. You can also feel good knowing that profits from the album go to Am- nesty International, an organization which aids and defends prisoners of conscience. -Karen Green The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 6, 1981-Page 7 Kingbees - '60's redux The Kingbees-'The Big Rock' (RSO)-What do the Kingbees, Knack, and Romantics all have in common? Besides the fact that their music is repetitious, all three bands secretly wish that they could have been playing in those topsy-turvy Sixties. At least that is where their music is most of the time. The Kingbees ache to be Buddy Holly and the Crickets; in fact, they do quite well covering Holly's "Wishing." The vocals and guitar on this song remain true to the spirit of the master himself. It's in the way that they attack their own material, on this their second album, that they falter. TO PLAY the type of Be-bop rock that this group would like to conquer requires great amounts of enthusiasm for the music. But on The Big Rock it seems as though they're only going through the motions. It's not that they don't try to pull it off with feeling-one can tell how hard they're trying on the first listen. It's just that they don't succeed. Groups like Rockpile make this genre of music into good, fast fun; the Kingbees make it hard work, with a tenseness that drains all the necessary spontaneity out of it. Many times the lyrics don't help either. "You plug in your electric guitar/You're halfway there to being a star," and "I'm ready/And I hope you're ready too/to keep rocking/rock away all my blues," are lines one could come up with in the shower. Uninspired production and cliched guitar solos mark almost three quar- ters of the album. Their first album would have made an excellent EP. I'm afraid their second effort delivers no better than a single's worth of good material-that being the title track and "Stick It Out!" And those two songs could never have competed with any Holly single. -Ed Mandel, Jr. Pop Quiz: When does $400= 3.0 Answer: When you shop in Ulrich's art and engineering departments. We deduct 10% from the price of all art and engineering supplies at the cash register. That's important to remember when you're comparison shopping, MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University at the corner of East U. and South U. 662-3201