Arts Wednesday, July 28, 1982 The Michigan Daily Page 7 Records. Marshall Crenshaw - 'Mar- shall Crenshaw' (Warner Bros.) The rock music scene is in sad shape these days. Our most talented rock groups, especially the Clash, refuse to play rock, and instead diddle about with jazz, funk, and reggae. Experimen- tation is fine, but their apparent disdain of rock music annoys me. That is why Marshall Crenshaw is so refreshing. He is a man who obviously delights in rock 'n' roll and is not at all ashamed of it. A Detroit-area native, Crenshaw moved to L.A. to launch his career, and eventually, wound up playing John Len- non in a touring "Beatlemania" com- pany. But after two years of mimicking Lennon, Crenshaw decided that it was time to try out his own talents. The result is his self-titled first album, a collection of twelve classic songs that hark back to the golden era of rock 'n' roll. Though one can hear traces of many early artists in his a music, the Everly Brothers seem to be Crenshaw's biggest influence, both in his songwriting and in the general '50s sound of his record. The essence of Crenshaw's magic is his simplicity. He relies on only the most basic components of rock - guitar, drums, and vocals - yet that is all he needs. His music can stand on the strength of his songwriting, the Beatlesque harmonies, and'especially his guitar work. Crenshaw plays with a sort of under- stated and simple rockabilly twang, concentrating on getting exactly the sound he wants instead of trying to im- press his listeners with guitar-hero histronics. The beautifully melodic rhythm of songs like "There She Goes Again" and "The Usual Thing" places Crenshaw in the best tradition of early rock guitarists like Les Paul. But perhaps what I like most about Marshall Crenshaw is not his music, but the point he makes with it. As he demonstrated, rock music is not a worn out and futle genre. Though Crenshaw sounds like an up- dated version of the Everly Brothers or Buddy Holly, his enthusiasm makes the music sound fresh. Crenshaw proves that there still is room for talent to ex- press itself in rock 'n' roll. I think that is an important and very enjoyable point. -J. L. Komie Patsy Cline and Jim Reeves-'Remembering' (MCA) Patsy Cline and Jim Reeves, for those unfamiliar, sang pop country songs in the cultural wasteland of, oh, about 20 years ago, just around the debut of another pop country star, Loretta Lynn. Most people might not have too much to "remember" of these two, but in their day they were pretty big, and some of the hits (like the duet "I Fall to Pieces") still hit the radio air waves occasionally. Get your ALONG HIGHWAY 15, Mexico (AP) - This Pacific coastal route is rich in scenic variety and the lore of drug smugglers and highway bandits. But life, like Mexico's Pemex gasoline, is Murder has been part of its legend since 16th century Spanish conquistador Nino de Guzman plun- dered the Patzcuaro region, through which the road now passes, and burned alive the Tarascan chief who refused to tell where his tribe's gold was buried. Today, what happened to three American travelers - two died violen- tly and one vanished - is worrying Mexicans who want to keep tourist dollars rolling in. The U.S. Embassy is considering asking the State Department to renew the advisory issued against travel on Highway 15 in 1976, when at least 13 Americans and other foreigners were slain along its 1,432-mile stretch from Nogales on the Arizona border to Mexico City. Boosters of Mexican tourism, seeking to defend the country's second largest exchange-earner behind oil, insist the latest incidents are isolated and that armed assaults on travelers are far less frequent now. "A tourist boycott was justified in '76 but not now," said Jose H. Rico, the cross the mayor of Mazatlan, a Pacific resort on each day the highway that drew 1.4 million From t visitors last year, more than a third of Hermosi them from the United States. Culiacan, Although Federal Highway Police in- Tropic of sist their patrols are adequate, and Tepi( Mazatlan's hotel owners, mindful that Guadalaj 1976 and 1977 were their worst seasons Madres t of the decade, have started a letter- City. writing campaign to get the patrols in- Most o creased. blacktop Many Americans who take to the sun, full of pot Urf, game hunting and fishing of often lacki Mexico's Pacific coast arrive on and occas wheels, taking advantage of low hard day gasoline prices - the equivalent of 46 night driv U.S. cents a gallon for regular, U.S. of- The hig ficials say an average of 82 vehicles ways. "F kicks on '15' UNITED STATES -x Danger On Nogales Highway 15 " Hermosillo\ MEXICO kCuiacan J, \~San Ignacio " Mazatlan San Bias 15Guadalajara Pacific Ocean Mexico city Of the two, I'd say Cline (who is, in- cidentally, long dead) was the more talented-and thedmore discriminating in her choice of songs (including "Walking After Mignight" and the amusing "Back in Baby's Arms"). The Reeves selections (especially "The Blizzard" and "Distant Drums") often border on the ridiculous; so silly, obvious, and demeaning that I'm sur- rised even the poor lost AM souls of yesteryear didn't revolt. I would recommend this reissue only to country music historians lasking the cash or inclination to purchase the Pat- sy Cline originals. Featured are songs written by the likes of Hank Cochran, Carl Perkins and Don Hecht. Also, this tuff makes almost ideal elevator and waiting room music; but don't pipe it in, just sit back and inhale lightly. -Ben Ticho -42INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave of i ber ty 761-9700 WE WED--12:30, 2:40, 4:50 THUR-7:00 9:10 (R) STARTS TODAY! A local girl, a young aviator and their desperate, raw lustl OFFICER 'ENT'LEM Richard Gere (American Gigolo) Deb Wge Debra Winger Arizona border into Mexico on Highway 15. he naked desert hills around llo, Ciudad Obregon and the road winds across the Cancer just north of Mazatlan c. From there is turns east to ara and across the Sierra o Morelia, Toluca, and Mexico f Highway 15 is a two-lane road - undivided, unlighted, tholes, crammed with trucks, ing shoulders or a center line isionally blocked by cattle. A 's drive may be40 miles; ing is not advised. hway takes tourist traffic both aycua" - consumer goods smuggled through customs - moves mostly southbound. Heroin and marijuana flow the other way, as do the "alambristas," or fence cutters, who slip through the chain link barrier at Nogales to work illegally in the United States. Hector Arguelles, commander of the Federal Highway Police detachment in Mazatlan, said robberies on his 156- mile stretch of highway 15 rose to a peak average of six per week in 1980 before doubling of patrols on the entire road brought them down. Four patrol cars now cruise the stret- ch at all hours and robberies are down to an average of one a month, he said, "most of them drivers who make the mistake of sleeping on the roadside." WED-12:40,3:00,5:20 7:40,9:55 THUR-7:40,9:55 (R)