Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1985)
Reserve your 3bdrm 2 ba Duplex NOW! prices starting at ‘ $350 summer $480 fall mi. from campus ^Covered parking *w/d connections *24Hr Emergency Maintenance Visit our office for a personal tour. Hours: 9am - 6pm Monday through Friday 10am - 5pm Saturday 1 - 5pm Sunday 401 Anderson College Station 693-6505 3IVEYOUR PARENTS SOMETHING NICE FOR GRADUATION. We’ll be open May 23rd. So if you’re graduating this August, make plans now for your parents, family and friends to stay at the new College Station Hilton and Conference Center, only minutes from the University. It’s plenty of hotel, including 300 rooms, two excellent restaurants, a club, pool, jacuzzi suites, and free transportation to and from the airport. So make your family doubly proud. Call now and reserve their rooms at the Hilton. COLLEGE STATION HILTON and Conference Center 801 University Drive East, College Station, Texas 77840 409/693-7500 CALL 693-7500 NOW TO MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR AUGUST GRADUAHON. Page 2B/The Battalion/Friday, May 3, 1985 — ^ Hlli§ fsHH t ? . „ ; ISs Aggie sees life in CW band as a high-paying business By DAVID STEEL Reporter At 9:02 p.m. on a humid Satur day, an impatient redneck yells at the band to get started. Four drums tick clicks later the opening double lead of “Forget About Me” fills the smokey dance hall. The restless roper is happy now and his eyes scan the stage, observ ing what, at First glance, appears to be a typical, uniform group of six musicians. But as his eyes glance toward the right, a tall guitar-toting figure wearing shorts, nigh-tops and a Lon don Fog overcoat catches his eye by dancing and hopping around in his left stage cage. This performer is Robert Lytton. Lytton, a junior business analysis major, has been a semi-professional musician since his freshman year in college and has learned that the eco nomics of playing music are some times more important than one’s own artistic prefetences. “In order to play in a band, which takes a lot of time, and pay for your own education you sometimes have to compromise your musical tastes,” Lytton says. “In my case, I play country music. C&W is definitely the highest-paying music scene around here and that speaks for itself.” Lytton is a guitarist for the Texas Unlimited Band, ti three-year-old lo cal group that plays rock and soul music but specializes in country. “TUB is merely a commercial or ganization,” Lytton says. “It’s a prod uct, a business and I think everyone in the band looks at it like that. “That attitude is most obviously reflected in the music we play. I mean, we choose a song not because it is artistically significant but be cause everybody will dance to it.” Lytton, who began playing the guitar four years ago, is noted for his sharp wit, mischievous grin and his musical talents. He ventured into the local music scene while attending Bryan High School, where he and some friends formed a rock band, Warehouse. “Warehouse was the first real band I played in,” he says. “I re member we were so excited when we got our first gig playing at S.F.A. (Bryan’s junior high school).” After high school graduation, Lyt ton says he formed a heavy metal band called Prizner. “If we would make, say, $200 we would consider it a very profitable night. Now with TUB we can cleat- over $1000 a night pretty regularly.” After playing with the Texas Un limited Band for almost 19 months, he admits he gets a little bored at times. “Sure, it gets old playing the same .old tunes every weekend, but I try to keep myself entertained by dressing wildly from time to time and acting wild regularly,” Lytton says. When asked if his antics on stage ever get him in trouble, he replied: “Sure, there are a fewcounlR tins who get upset if you don'tlt or act, like George Strait. Butil 1 play what they want to heard* keep paying to get in awH what’s important to me.” y ijii- Chicken *n rolls 705 N. Texas Ave. 512 Villa Maria Rd. 1905 Texas Ave. Me a r oik