a Records Sharon Bennett and Blane Shaw star in Cimarosa's The Secret Marriage, an opera sung in English, Saturday and Sunday nights. Secret Marriage is opera for all of us By JeffFrooman This coming Saturday and Sunday nights, Power Center will host The Secret Marriage, Domenico Cimarosa's comic opera masterpiece. Because the opera is such a light- hearted comedy, and because it will be performed in English, the produc- tion should appeal to all. The Secret Marriage was written in a very melodic and listenable style - a style that is also characteristic of Cimarosa's contemporaries, Rossini and Mozart. In fact, at its debut in Vienna in 1792, Emperor Leopold II of Austria was so enthusiastic about the opera that he insisted that the cast repeat the entire opera as an encore. The opera is being performed by students in the School of Music. The music director and conductor for the production is Zuohuang Chen, a doc- toral candidate in orchestral conduc- ting here at the University. Chen graduated from the Central Conser- vatory in Peking, and in 1979 became the first Chinese musician to be sent abroad for advanced studies in or- chestral conducting. Faculty at the School of Music predict that Chen will become a major influence in Chinese music in the years to come. Performances of The Secret Marriage are at 8 p.m. on both Satur- day and Sunday nights, July 21 and 22. Tickets are available from the Ann Arbor Summer Festival box office in the Power Center (763-0950) from noon to 7 p.m. daily, and until cur- tain time on performance nights. Tickets cost $12, $10, $8 and $5. Roger Waters - 'The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking' (CBS Records) Although some critics would probably like to rename the (forper?) Pink Floyd bassist/visionary's first solo ef- fort The Cons and Cons of Roger Waters, there really is some redeeming value to this concept album. But let Floyd and non-Floyd fanatics alike beware: the cons significantly outnum- ber the pros. The pros: 1) The album cover. I spent an extra hour flagging down a copy of The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking with the original (uncensored) cover. Ap- parently the record executives at CBS were less than enthralled with the rear view of a nude female on the cover, and strategically plastered an ugly piece of black tape on the shapely lass. And you thought the cover dispute in This is Spinal Tap was facetious silliness! One can almost hear Tap's lead guitarist Nigel Tufnel mutter, "What's wrong with a sexy album cover?" Apparently Waters failed to find enough of Tufnel's "fine line between clever and stupid" to suit the record execs. 2) The lyrics. In a sort of Kerouacian odyssey, Waters describes the on-the- road dream adventures of Man. It's that old story of Man meets Hitch iker, Waitress, Truck Drivers and Bell's Angels. The story serves as the script for the so-called "spectacular mixed media production" of the album on this sum- mer's limited tour of North America (Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens on July 28-29 is the best bet for local Pink Floyd afficianados). If you can stomach a healthy dose of the famous Waters' misanthropy, you'll find his poetry in- sightful and intriguing. Otherwise, lines like "You flex your rod! Fish takes the hook/ Sweet vodka and tobacco in her breath! Another number in your black book" might come across as the weary cynicism of a burnt-out rocker. The cons: Most of the rest of it, unfor- tunately. Though the lyrics are up to Waterian standards, musically Hitch Hiking is weak. Only Eric Clapton's backbone blues guitar breathes oc- casional life into this desert of un- melodic droning, especially on Sexual Revolution and the title track. Theproblem, it seems, is Waters inability to crawl out from behind the considerable shadow of 1979's The Wall. Like last year's disappointing The Final Cut, Hitch Hiking so freely borrows its style from The Wall. that we are left to wonder if. Waters is making the same album over and over again, adding new words each time. Waters and fellow Floyd songwriter David Gilmour avoided this pitfall a decade ago by following up the colossal Dark Side of The Moon with the profoundly original Wish You Were Here. Considering the floundering direction of Water's music, and the solid success of Gilmour's own About Face solo release, Waters would do well to reconcile with this guitarist and start afresh. The Wall was great Roger, but it's time to tear it down and try something else. - Paul Helgren Fury stands as a classic. Any English major can tell you that it is one of America's greatest novels. This English major slipped on the head- phones to see if Rough Cut's Sound and Fury is also a classic. Carolyn Striho plays the main character in Rough Cut; her lead vocals and keyboards dominate the album, and she wrote or co-wrote all of the LP's songs, except a cover of the Stones' "Play with Fire." There are several different in- strumentalists listed, but the liner notes don't specify who plays on what songs. The key contributions seem to be: Keith Michael (guitar), Thomas Cicola (guitar), and Craig Hernandez (bass), who all share songwriting credits on various songs with Striho. Striho's voice is reminiscent of Chrissie Hynde's, though a little higher and without Hynde's more notable mannerisms. Although she sings loudly and clearly, she doesn't inject enough passion or feel. "Play with Fire" suffers because of the singer's brashness, which doesn't come close to Jagger's menace. Add to this the dominant synthesizers and low guitar mix, the listener finds the sound tedious and the fury tame. Bright spots are the excellent bass and guitar on "Looking for Action" and "Scene of the Trance." The latter is an instrumental that is spoiled by keyboard fills that seem pretentious and lessen the track's dance appeal. This song reveals Rough Cut's tenden- cy to try to be artsy when they can cut terrific dance grooves. The last four songs on the LP aren't exciting, despite liner notes proclaiming "brave hard noise." "Search for Something Else" and "Visions" don't thrill, despite the second song's nice guitar work. "Where Did She Go?" contains the lyric What can she say/Tomorrow is yesterday which might lead you to read Faulkner without this album in the background. "James' Theme" is an in- strumental that ends the album with a decided whimper. You're more likely to fall asleep listening to this than doing English homework, and that says it all. - Steve Kaminski Peter Gabriel - 'Walk Through The Fire' (Atco) This single (culled from the other- wise worthless Against All Odds soun- dtrack is something of a disappoin- tment for those of us who had high hopes. Gabriel, one of the few genuinely powerful lyricist and innovative com- posers in the mainstream, can usually be expected to surprise and excite with each new release. But this short piece is more of a throw back than a new direc- tion. All of Gabriel's signatory touches. quasi-mysticism; slightly sinister little hooks; and African influenced rhythm are here: but without any brillance. The track sounds like an old outtake from an earlier album, and that's what it is. On one of my bootlegs from the sessions for Gabriel's third album, the song (sans lyrics) is listed as Seascape. In this surfaced remix, it's essentially the same song, more polished, but no more challenging. While not a bad song, it's easy to un- derstand its exclusion from any album to date. Don't expect any airplay, and invest in it only if you are an adherent (I am). - Byron L. Bull .ANN A UOR .N INDIVIDUAL THEATRES DAILY MATINEES $1.75 TUESDAY ALL DAY PIERRE GERARD RICARD DEARDEU Afimby FRANOSVEBER Ego N RS LES @OMPERES TUES. 1:00, 7:10, 9:10, 11 P.M. WED., THUR. 1:00, 7:10, 9:10 "A CONSISTENTLY HILARIOUS MOVIE" -Newhouse Newspapers MOVIE? WHAT MOVIE? TOP~%'; SECRE'! * TOES. 100, 7.20, 9.20, 11 P.M. _G_ WED., THUR. 1:00,7:20,9:20 pc 3Classitieds get results! Rough Cut - 'Sound and Fury' (Detroit International Cassettes) Any English major can tell you that William Faulkner's The Sound and