IU Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, May 8, 1984 Bill Nelson lights up city audiences By Larry Dean THERE WILL BEtwo marvy shows occurring in the vicinity of Ann Arbor tonight and Wednesday, two shows which, I'm told could singe even the bristliest of chest hairs off of Mr. T. Tonight, Bill Nelson will be swinging through Detroit, with an erstwhile ap- pearance at historic St. Andrews Hall, located in the heart of the Motor City. Nelson is best-known for his early guitar wizardry with Be Bop Deluxe, a semi-glitter, futuristic foursome who matured into the best art-rock combo this side of Moby Grape. However, when he though his reputation as an "axe victim" began to preceed Be Bop's band status, he called an im- mediate halt to the group to pursue a solo career. After.one album under the name Red Noise, Nelson released Quit Dreaming and Get on the Beam, The Love That Whirls (Diary of a Thinking Heart), and numerous other instrumental and import-only LPs which quickly cemen- ted his place as a synthesizer player of at least as good quality as his guitar- manship. With the domestic release of Vistamix, a compilation album of tracks from Nelson's overseas solo ef- forts, he has decided to tour. Whether or not it will be with a band, or just Bill by himself, remains to be seen, but if you want to see a modern music maestro at work, don't miss Bill Nelson, tonight, at St. Andrews Hall in Detroit. Starts 'round 9:30 p.m. Down home in Ann Arbor-town, the Violent Femmes are returning for their third show before gape-jawed Ar- borites, who hailed the last two Fem- mes performances at Joe's with bouquets of symbolic roses. Led by cherubic Gordon Gano, the Femmes' serio-folky attack and smart songwriting have carved neat niches in both critical hearts and the hearts of their fans. Rounding out the band are Victor DeLorenzo on drums, and Brian Ritchie on bass, with a fourth musician set to help beef up the live sound. Promoting their soon-to-be-released second album on independent Slash Records, Hallowed Ground, the Violent Femmes promise to bring a hot stage show to the unlikely locale of the Michigan Union Ballroom. Wed- nesday's the night, 8:00 p.m., and fur- ther info's 763-2071. Don't miss, if you value either the ideoligy of Mr. T, or dandy musical chops. 4 6 Bill Nelson is just one of the musical delights on tap for the Ann Arbor area this week. Also about town are the Violent Femmes, tomorrow night at the Michigan Union Ballroom. Blind Pig gains new look B Byon ullfrom the older front section. Whereas By Byron Bull the latter is a comfortably small alcove of wood and brass surrounded by a T HE OLD Blind Pig on 208 S. First forest of hanging plants, the Back will never be the same, though Room is a spacious art deco styled af- nere may be no less to mourn. This fair of cream colored walls and crome. Thursday night marks the grand A large carpeted stage sits in a corner, opening of the Back Room, an addition with a long wooden dance floor before to the bar that more than tripes the it. A black and white checkered tile amount of space and moves the Blind floor rims that, with cafe tables and Pig into the dance club arena. refurbished antique church pews for The Back Room is markedly different seating. The sound system is a 1200 watt triamp arrangement designed by Apex Systems, that is loud but clean as op- posed to the older make-shift set up in the basement. The owners, Betty and Roy Goffett, are making a careful but most definite move to broaden the Blind Pigs audien- ce. While they will still favor blues, they're opening the music format up to include more accessible styles like fusion jazz, rock and reggae. In ad- dition, there will be a video system in- stalled, and WCBN/WEMU disc jockey Tom Simonian will be playing records every Wednesday night. Special events will be staged, such as a live broadcast of a performance there by the fusion band Lunar Glee Club on May 14th over WCBN. By catering to a larger audience, the Blind Pig does run the risk of alienating some of its older clientele. But Dave Faber, who books acts for the bar through his Blind Pig Productions says the old crowd has nothing to fear. The quiet intimacy of the old front and glass patio will remain intact, while the ex- panded Back Room facilities will enable them to bring in larger more prestigious acts, and do them with the style and technical proficiency the basement could never accomodate. And the variety of the new format should be appeal enough, "Ann Arbor really doesn't have anything to com- pare it to," boasts Faber. The Blind Pig afficionados will have their say this Thursday, when George Bedard and the Kingpins officially inaugerate the stage. Interestingly, the Back Room seems to be at the front of a sudden resurgence in the local bar scene. Next month John Carver opens a high fashion glitter club called The Nectarine Ballroom at the E. Liberty location where the Second Chance once harbored the out of town leather and tatoo crowd. And in Sep- tember Ron Brooks plans to open his Bird of Paradise live-jazz club. Faber says there are no fears of competition at the Blind Pig, and that he in fact thinks a surge of new bars will only generate a more active crowd to ac- comodate them all. - Byron L. Bull