ARTS Page 10 Saturday, July 9, 1983 The Michigan Daily The Femmes are really hommes 4 0 By Joe Hoppe S AVE SUNDAY night for the Violent Femmes, folk punkies from Milwaukee, who are appearing at Joe's Star Lounge. The femmes are actually hommes; 19-year-old Gordon Gano who writes the songs, sings them, and plays guitar, Brian Ritchie, 23, who plays a big am- plified acoustic mariachi bass guitar, and Victor DeLorenzo, 29, who plays a drum set consisting of a snare, cymbal, and tranceaphone - a washtub inver- ted over a floor tom. And while they aren't true femmes, the band isn't truly violent, either; except for an occasional snarl or scream. The name comes from the "femme" that was synonymous with "wussy" in junior high, and "violent" is added asa dadaist paradox - or in other words, it sounds neat. The "new folk" pigeonhole for the Femmes is there mainly because of the instruments they play and the volume they play them at; there isn't a whole lot of folk attitude present. Besides those connotations of folk, the Femmes have also got some jazzy lines in both percussion and bass, a sometimes blues sensibility, and then a tremendously hook-laden out and out pop personality. They can also, of course, rock. The late Pretender James Honeyman Scott is the official discoverer of the two-year-old band in Femmes-lore. The group was playing on the streets as a "guerilla tactic" in front of the Oriental Theatre in Milwaukee where the Pretenders were going to play and Honeyman-Scott happened by, liked INDIVIDUALTHEATRES $2.00 SHOWS BEFORE 6 p.m. NIGHT ALL SEATS $2.25 "TWT iNT 1P_1AT 1 "10n m The Violent Femmes bring their folk/punk music, that is neither played by women nor violent, to Joe's Sunday night. them, rounded up the rest of the Pretenders, and Chrissie Hynde offered them a chance to be that night's warm- up band. More infamy than fame followed; the Femmes' accoustic ensemble was for- ced off the stage after 3 songs - but it does make a great story of beginnings. The Violent Femmes first ablum, self-titled and recorded over a year ago, came out on Slash last April, and received much critical acclaim. Now various major labels are talking to the Femmes after shows. Comparisons have been made, as they have been about the Dream Syn- dicate, between the Femmes and the Velvet Underground, and more ac- curately, between the Femmes and Jonathon Richman. Singer/guitarist Gano has gotten tired of that, and recently in one interview answered a question about those influences with "Lou Reed was my babysitter" and that his songs he wrote as a child were "influenced by Jonathon Richman doing all those children's songs." But the Femmes actually are reminiscent of the Richman sound at times, in the musical style of the Modern Lovers and especially the tonal qualities of Gano's voice. The Violent Femmes have a lot more to say than Jonathon Richman's puritannical Modern world conscience would ever let him, though. While Richman learns to be happy in his lonelines, the Femmes get snarly and end up buying a gun. Where Richman only wants a girl to care about, the Femmes ask "why can't I get just one screw?" Somehow they still have some kind of freshness and innocence; perhaps because of a musical line without any pretentions. The "femme" in the name might be a little ap- propriate here, if one wants to compare their simple music with some macho- rock posturings. Our ladies of violent disposition will be singing songs of frustration and love gone wrong from their album, a long- awaited psuedo-reggae song that goes to show how silly white boys from the midwest playing Jah's music can really be, happy melodies of how many pills one needs to take to get through it all, a tragic tale of a farmerwho loves his daughter so much that he throws her in- to a bottomless pit, and a message for everyone to kiss off (and many more...). So dance to the beat of the tran- ceaphone, from the streets of Milwaukee to your town. I I DAIL Y- (PG) 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 He's hot on the frck.. a. ancdoff Palmer puts on mediocre show By Leizer Goldsmith R OBERT PALMER PLAYED the Second Chance Thursday night under difficult circumstances, and per- formed admirably. The veteran rocker arrived with a six-piece band, which played enthusiastically through a generous 23-song set, as well as a two- song encore. By the show's conclusion, Palmer had won over most of the audience which, understandably, had booed the announcement earlier in the evening that Nona Hendryx would not be appearing. Although he has, like most pop stars, periodically attempted to "re-invent" himself, Robert Palmer has never forgotten his interest in assorted inter- national rhythms, particularly those of the Carribean. Long before The Police even existed, Palmer was toying with "Blue-eyed Reggae," on both his Pressure Drop and Some People Can Do What They Like albums. It was no surprise, therefore, that Palmer's show Thursday night was particularly satisfying for fans of good and varied percussion. Palmer's band worked well, and they were cordial and jovial throughout. The singer himself, however, was quite stiff, only rarely cracking smiles throughout the entire evening. Palmer never said a word to the audience until he was introducing the band, and his movements on stage seemed very un- comfortable for a performer of his ex- perience. Nevertheless, he was in fine voice, and the sounds which emanated from the stage were strong and pleasing, only occasionally dragging down the energetic feeling which essen- tially pervaded the show. Robert Palmer's latest record is, like everyone else's, very synthesized, and this updated sound was reflected in the stage show as well. But although the music was synthesized, and the songs were pop, the results rarely sounded like the "synth-pop" songs which are now so all-pervading on Top-40 radio. To Robert Palmer's credit, he seems able to mesh the synthesizer easily with sounds other than funk, and to combine in his concert the newer sounding music with more traditional AOR rock, thus making both styles more viable. Palmer worked rapidly through old favorites like "Sneakin' Sally Through The Alley," "Double Fun," "Give Me See NO NONA, Page 11 I I BURT REYNOLDS is DAILY- (PG) 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30