Arts Update
The Michigan Daily- Friday, June 3, 1988 - Page 9
Friday
-Living Colour brings its Vivid
technihues to St. Andrews in De-
troit with The Chesterfield Kings
opening up. Living Colour's first
two demos were produced by Mick
Jagger.
-What the hell does Rosebud sym-
bolize anyway? Find out tonight
when Citizen Kane is shown in
MLB 3 at 7:30 and 9:45.
-Ann Arbor favorites Map of the
World play the Blind Pig ... the
other Ann Arbor faves Tracy Lee
and the Leonards hit Rick's.
Saturday
-Just when you thought Ann Arbor
was about to take a terminal dive
towards the neon '90s, the U's
Folklore Society presents a Square
and Contra Dance with a live band
in the Union's Anderson Room at 8
p.m.
-Enemy of Mine, a challenging,
theatrical look at insanity, is per-
formed by Italy's Gruppo Teatrale
at 8 p.m. at the Kerrytown Concert
House.
-Movie fans should check out David
Mamet's highly acclaimed house of
Games at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. in
MLB 3 ... Matewan, a film about
1920's union struggles shot in
West Virginia, runs at the Michi-
gan at 9:15 p.m.
-Detroit's The Suspects blast out
the Blind Pig.
*Tonight is your last chance to
catch Intersect Dance Theatre's new
avant-garde w o r k
Kamikaze/Transcending at 8:30
p.m. at the Performance Network.
-Claude Berri's 1987 works, Jean de
Florette and its sequel Manon of
the Spring appear at the Michigan
beginning at 5:15 p.m. Both
movies are in French with subti-
tles.
North American tour.
-The New Adventures ride the tide
into Rick's with their surf-influ-
enced instrumentals ... The Differ-
ence is across town at the Blind
Pig.
-The Beat, a new club above the
Heidelberg at 215 N. Main, hosts a
dnwi anr~im iw~ h -d th
yraucous goo-eme muscner ,
M"nday Holy Cows.
to
-Michigan's own, Elmore Leonard,
will autograph copies of his latest
thriller, Freaky Deaky, at the E.
Liberty Community Newscenter
from 6 to 7:30 p.m.
-Shades of Shakespeare? The Na-
tional Grand Kabuki of Japan will
perform A Messenger of Love in
Yamato, a drama about two young
lovers with a suicide pact, tonight
at 8 p.m. at the Power Center.
Tickets are $22-25, but it's worth it
considering Ann Arbor is one of
only three American stops on their
--~~ n.ursaay11
-Still in that Kabuki mode? There's
a series of free lectures centering on
the history of Kabuki theatre from
2 to 5 p.m. in room 1 of the MLB.
-The Pendleton Room of the
Michigan Union hosts harpsi-
chordist Ann Kozik in an evening
of Baroque ensemble music. The
Bach starts at 8 p.m.
-Oldie but goodie Ragnar Kvaran
humors up the Blind Pig.
-The Flats, a tense tale of conflict
in a working class Belfast ghetto,
begins its three weekend run at
Performance Network at 8 p.m.
Tickets are $6 for students.
-Influential Blues guitarist Albert
King courts the Blind Pig at 9:30
p.m. with help from opening act
the Conquerroots ... The Eels
slither into The Beat with their all-
original funky psychedelic mix.
Records
Band of Susans
Hope Against Hope
Further Records
The Band of Susans have only
} released an independent 12 inch and
this LP, yet they have already been
labeled "the third greatest guitar
band in the world" by England's
New Music Express.
The question then is 'Do the
guitars cut the mustard?' The an-
swer is yes. If you know what the
picture on the cover is, you will
enjoy the record.
The Susans attempt to stay
within a pop/rock chain structure
instead of going for a more youth-
ful sonic direction. Herein lies the
Barry
Continued from Page 8
furious riptide propulsion of Joey
Santiago's guitar with much greater
clarity, thanks to Big Black's pen-
cil-necked prince of noise, Steve
Albini. His production adds a crisp,
switchblade-snap to Santiago's gui-
tar and delivers a snarling, drop-kick
in the ass to drummer David Lover-
ing, who obediently picks up the
rhythmic momentum. While Mrs.
John Murphy's buzzing bass-line
flicks in-and-out of the mix like a
reptilian tongue, Black Francis ex-
hibits his vast vocal depth - one
minute he's murmuring cathartic
mantras and the next he's spewing
rhapsodic Blue Moon falsettos.
Overall, Surfer Rosa rocks-out
with a heavier discordant wallop
than its vinyl predecessor.
And for all you fans who are
"trying to get the feeling again,"
why don't you go firebomb the
Copacabana, huh?!!
THE PIXIES hit Rick's next
Thursday, June 9, at 10:00 p.m.
Cover is $5.
problem. While their songs rely on
a structured rhythm underneath
wigged-out guitars, some of the
songs suddenly fade instead of end-
ing. Their lyrics can best be de-
scribed as excruciating - lines like
"war criminals see winnable wars /
freedom fighters raped the nuns,"
from "Throne of Blood," are already
a difficult mouthful before a tune-
less singer gets hold of 'em. Their
political views are better demon-
strated on the instrumental "Elliot
Abrams In Hell." If the Band of
Susans put out the two instrumen- Yuji Oniki
tals on this album as a single, they American Circumstance (45)
would have the hottest 45 since The Eek! Records
Jesus and Mary Chain's "Vegetable This single was released some-
Man" backed "Upside Down." Their time last year, but the review copy
lyrics might work in a more exper- got here last week, and it's good
imental setting, a la Sonic Youth's enough to talk about anyway. Yuji
"Justice Is Might," but trying to fit Oniki is an Ann Arborite who
"the message is sent in code / and fronted Dreaming in Color for a
you're not even close" onto a regu- stretch. This effort finds him
lar beat doesn't work, no matter sounding gentle and pretty, with
how incredible the guitar sound sparse arrangements featuring
might be. acoustic guitar. The songs sound
-Brian Jarvinen like out-takes from the last Big Star
record, which isn't a bad thing to
sound like. The performajoce is
generally good, but Yuji's vocals
are at times a little thin. My fa-
vorite of the 45's three cuts is the
too-short "Six and Nine," which
clocks in at a sparse 49 seconds,
and deserves another 38 or so.
-John Logie
UM News in
he DiDy
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