Orchestral I Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark-O.M.D.' (Virgin- Epic)-Oceta Manoeuvres in the Dark make every other band that plays synthesizers sound narrow-minded. They don't see why electronic music need be just "moody" or "silly" or "danceable" or "weird," when it seems quite easy to them to combine all of these qualities (and more) into one sound. For in the course of proving their point, the two men who comprise OMD-Paul Humphreys and Andy Mc- Cluskey (with occasional help from Malcolm Holmes on drums)-run through music as pastorally poetic as Eno, as industrially threatening as Throbbing Gristle, as humorously engaging as Kraftwerk or The Silicon Teens, as single-mindedly danceable as Visage, and as passionately compelling as Joy Division.Now, roll all those soun- ds into one, putthem behind a clear, clever, lyrical melody, and you've got one OMD song. NEEDLESS TO say, their musical vision is incredible. "Stanlow" seems to be a good example of that. This tune is introduced by coldly clunking mechanical sounds that soon prove to be perfect backing for a wistfully hear- tfelt BALLAD. No kidding! Few bands could conceive of a sentimental pop song as strangely touching as "Stanlow," and I'm sure only OMD could realize it as beautifully as this. Of course, the best example of their Never Rema in s Silent 76+4-0558 Manoeuvres The Michigan Daily-Friday, August 14, 1981-Page 11 Putting on 'Yellow Wallpaper' at EMU wryly danceable (and subtly humorous) music is their dance club hit "Enola Gay." You might well think "Enola Gay" was only the quintessentially symphonic electronic pop ballad that it at first appears to be. Then you realize that it's also a song about the bombing of Hiroshima (the pilot named the plane after his mother, Enola Gay) and all of a sudden the words take on a whole new level of meaning; it is no longer simply a song about an individual's lost love but also a tribute to humanity's lost in- nocence. "Enola Gay, Is mother proud offlittle boy today? Aha, this kiss you give It's never going to fade away. " And OMD are always thinking on several levels just like that. Just as they play electronic music that utilizes the full range of synthesizer sounds, they also write songs that reflect the en- tire range of human emotions. In both ways, they are clearly a cut above most of their peers (Gary Numan, Joy Division, Ultravox, etc.) as well as their descendants (Duran Duran, Spandau Ballet, et al.). OMD make writing simple pop songs with great dance beats and state-of-the- art electronics seem so easy that you can't imagine why it seems so difficult for everyone else. -Mark Dighton By GAIL NEGBAUR Daily Arts Writer The 19th century woman had even fewer choices than today's woman if being a housewife and mother was just not enough. Charlotte Perkins Gilman and her heroine in "The Yellow Wallpaper" literally went crazy due to this oppressive situation. Although Gilman was able to recover and write many books, her character was not as lucky. This story, though first published in 1892, has become a strong political statement few women of the 20th Century. The piece challenges women and American society itself to reevaluate the confining roles women are forced to fill. JUDY CASSEDAY has recently written a play based on "The Yellow Wallpaper" which she will also direct in performance as part of the Ypsilanti Yesteryear Heritage Festival. Casseday, who works with the mentally ill in Washtenaw County, originally saw the play as a com- ment on the treatment of the men- tally insane. Soon, however, she saw broader implications. "Looking at it existentially, she (the main charac- ter) chooses to go mad because this is the only option she has left." In the story, the young woman is confined by a supposed illness to a room in an old mansion. The walls are covered with a yellow wallpaper that slowly begins to drive her crazy. '... It is dull enough to con- fuse the eye in following, pronounced enough to constantly irritate and provoke study, and when you follow the lame uncer- tain curves for a little distance they suddenly commit suicide-plunge off at outrageous angles, destroy them- selves in unheard of contradic- tions. " She tries to avoid the implications the paper begins to take on for her and be the kind of wife that her husband wants her to be. But then she begins to see a woman caught behind the pattern. That woman, like herself, cannot escape. CASSEDAY USES three separate actors to portray the heroine's split personality. One is the obedient wife, one the "imaginative side demanding expression," and the third the "mysterious woman behind the wallpaper." The way the trio of actresses will share the stage and the costumes they will wear will make it clear that they are indeed all the same person. The play will be performed in the Laboratory Theater of the Quirk Theater Building on the EMU cam- pus in Ypsilanti. It will be performed at 8 p.m. on August 28, 29, and 30. A three dollar donation will be requested. Join News Staff sa V(Amateur and CommercialPhotofinishing) HOUR Ektachrome SLIDE Processing On the Hour 10 to 3 Weekdays at 3180 Packard Only Regular Prices! 4 Hour Service at 691 So. Maple and 1315 So. University In by 9 or 1 Llw A