PAGE 10 The News Argus May 1990 Entertainment s. SECCA Opens New Show ’’Sticks”, on display at the Southeastern Center for Con temporary Art (SECCA) from April 7 through June 17, docu ments the traditions of walk ing stick production in Ken tucky. Curated by Larry Hack- ley and Albert Sperath of the Kentucky providing a defini tive documentation of their canes from the past to pres ent. This exhibit is sponsored by the Humana Foundation with support in part by a grant from the Kentucky Arts Coun cil with funds from the Na tional Endowment for the Arts. The walking stick is probably one of the oldest utilitarian objects in man’s history. It has served as an aid to walking, a weapon, a status symbol, a commemora tive item, an advertising gim mick, a means to express an idea and, for the whittler, a way to pass the time. Included in the show are Ben Miller’s elaborate snake/ fish canes from dogwood tree trunks with roots still attached and Denzil Goodpaster’s trib ute to Dolly Parton. Elvis is commemorated by Elisha Baker and Donny Tolson’s coral snake is deadly. The fifty-six page exhibi tion catalog includes thirty- two color reproductions as well as, an essay and descrip tions of the 135 pieces in the show. It examines the social aspects of “Sticks” and the p>eople who use them, as well as the role they play as an out let of expressicMi for the people who created them. We have drawn from private and pub lic collections for the pieces of the show. SECCA is located at 750 Marguerite Drive (off Reynolda Road). Houri »re Tuesday-Sat- urday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, 2-5 p.m. For further information, please contact Dennis Szakacs, Director of Communications. Urban Dance Squad: A Review It’s a sound that touches the pulse of the street. URBAN DANCE SQUAD is at the hard core of the new dance under ground. Five rebels with a noise, delivering a sonic attack that’s adventurous, uncompro mising and sharp as a knife. Formed in 1987, the Am sterdam-based crew almost im mediately started to create a buzz all over Holland. With wild and powerful stage shows, URBAN DANCE SQUAD earned a name as a band to watch; challenging, hard to de fine, or as one critic put it: “...like a musical guerilla, with machine-gun rhythms, whiplash raps, crushing guitar riffs, scratches, cuts and other tonal booby-traps”. The blast of noise was so loud that the Dutch radio couldn’t fail to notice. The group made it’s debut on VPRO-radio with a 15 minute live special, that captured the raw power and creative energy of five musicians. Unlike most rap crews, URBAN DANCE SQUAD doesn’t use electronic rhythms, samples or pre-re- corded scratches. The SQUAD, Magic Stick, DNA, Rude Boy, Silly Sil and Tres Manos, formed instead a flesh-and- blood rhythm section, that sets a strong and dynamic backdrop for guitar, turntables and the raps of Rude Boy Remington. Their ground breaking new style is the sound of cultures colliding. A sizzling fusion . music, from Beefheart and Hendrix to state-of-the-art hip hop, mental, noise and heavy funk await the most avid of music affecionados. The de but album of URBAN DANCE SQUAD is entitled MENTAL FLOSS FOR THE GLOBE . Time Out of Mind: A Review A truly creative artist isn’t content resting on past accom plishments nor can he endure remaining still. His greatest satisfaction is derived from for ward movement; traveling and exploring new avenues and diverse paths. Such is the case with Grover Washington,Jr., who takes another major step forward with his third album for Co lumbia Records, Time Out of Mind. The music heard in Time Out of Mind defies designa tion to just one category. Instead, it offers the listener an opportunity to travel on a variety of musical excur sions, from the funky party sounds of Ronnie Foster’s “Jamaica” to a melodic, soul ful groove in “Gramercy Park,” and the intimate, ro mantic styling of “Sacred Kind of Love,” which ex udes a warm glow as it See Washington on page 15 Congratulations Class of 1990 Knollwood Bake Shop 452 Knollwood St. 724-0024