Page 8 The Battalion Thursday, February 1,1995 THE GK&PEVW 201 Live Oak College Station, TX 77840 BehfndLa Quinta 696-3411 Patty Loveless, country’s latest rising star, to open show Living legend Strait returns to G. Rollie ARIHII 7-i Vj+m, > 1 kv-w* (NinTendor) • Free Memberships • Players & Camcorder Also Available Movies on Tuesday & Thursday including NEW RELEASES MAKE US YOUR ONE STOP ENTERTAINMENT CHOICE ★ Compact Discs ★ Cassettes ★ Cassingles Accessories By: Maxell • Memorex • TDK • Discwasher • Case Logic M-Th F&St Sun. 10-9 10-11 1-9 693-5789 Located on the corner of Texas & SW Parkway in the Winn Dixie Center, College Station MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED By JOHN RIGHTER and TODD STONE Of The Battalion Staff ■e The Presses will be hot on February 14! That’s when The Battalion is publishing its annual lovelines page. For just $6 you can: •proclaim your devotion to your honey • reveal your secret heartthrob •or simply say “I Love You” To place your loveline come by the English Annex. Deadline is February 9 TWO PIZZAS ON THE DOUBLE. Call Us! 260-9020 4407 Texas Ave. 693-2335 1504 Holieman 822-7373 Townshire Shopping Ctr. 2 PIZZAS 1 TOPPING only $1 Q95 Call Domino’s Pizza today and get TWO fresh baked 12” pizzas with one deli cious topping for only $10.95, plus tax! Additional toppings avail able for just a little extra. Offer expires Feb. 28,1990 Valid at participating stores only. Not valid with any other coupon or offer. Prices subject to applicable sales tax. Deliv ery area limited to ensure safe driving. Our drivers carry less than $20.00. ©1989 Domino's Pizza, Inc. George Strait needs no introduc tion to country music fans. Friday night, the two-time Coun try Music Association Male Vocalist of the Year will perform at G. Rollie White Coliseum as a presentation of MSG Town Hall Concerts. Opening for Strait and his Ace In The Hole Band is 1988’s Best New Country Artist, Patty Loveless. Strait, a Pearsall native known for his old-fashioned style of Texas honky-tonk and southern swing, bested the previous A&M ticket sales of R.E.M. and Restless Heart, selling out in a matter of days. He launched his 11-album career nine years ago after graduating from Southwest Texas State Univer- the house (filled mostly with adoring women). What pressure. Loveless, on the other hand, has had a more difficult climb to her present position as the latest country music diva. A Nashville performer since age 14, she got her first break replacing Loretta Lynn in The Wilburn Broth ers. Marriage and high school side tracked her until the mid-80s, when she reembarked on a singing career. After her third release for MCA records, Honky Tonk Angel, Love less is now at the top of Nashville’s industry on the strength of her num ber-one single “Timber, I’m Falling In Love.” sity. Since then Strait has garnered fame through his trademark croons of yesteryear country flavor, his clean-cut good looks and his authen tic country lifestyle. Strait is the real thing. A cowboy from birth, he owns a ranch, has a degree in agriculture studies, lists steer-roping as his favorite hobby and endorses Tony Lama Boots. The guy bleeds dust and hay. As an artist, Strait has found a for mula that works and has stuck to it. He lends little effort to the mechan ics of his albums, instead employing Nashville’s best young writers and most capable producers. . His song style is an indelible mix of tearful ballads and hokey swings that cry of traditional giants such as Bob Wills. As a performer, he has vaulted from being a regular on the Texas night club circuit to the single big gest draw in country music. He is the one artist who has been able to break down the wall of coun try gentility. Strait takes one step and he is gua Loveless has just begun a 75-date tour with Strait. She is also finishing her fourth album, which will be re leased in May. In a telephone interview Wednes day, Loveless spoke of her time with Strait and her rise in success. “Touring with George has been great,” she says. “He sells out every where, so I know I’ll get to perform in front of a lot of people. I’m very fortunate to get this exposure. “The only bad part is that I’m a loner, and now I don’t have time to be alone. I really enjoy the time I get to spend at home when we have breaKS.” One of the factors that prompted Loveless’ return to singing was the rediscovery of the traditional coun try style, popularized by performers such as Strait. guaranteed to bring down “The return to traditional country music is great,” she says. “It exposes younger people to the older, great songs, and returns a style that had been largely forgotten. “There is definitely a variety in country music with people like K.T. Oslin, Dwight Yoakam and Randy Travis.” Loveless plans to continue touring in support of Honky Tonk Angel until she finishes the shows with Country singer Patty Loveless Strait. She is then scheduled to em bark on a Solo tour to promote her next album. Still, the exposure with Strait is tremendous for an artist teetering on the brink of stardom like Lovel less. And for A&M, Friday night’s pal formance is an excellent opportunu l to catch country music’s hottestan| But then, you already know that House Levelers’antics likely to bring down house By JOHN RIGHTER Of The Battalion Staff ‘We’re opening? Well, then you can expect 02 undiluted madness for 45 minutes,” says bass player Pete Ficht upon finding out his group, House Levelers, will not headline this weekend. “When we play for three hours we tend to stretch out the drunken buffoonery, but 45 min utes calls for a lot of jumping around, spitting beer, falling over and just having fun,” he says. Saturday night’s double bill at the Texas Star Tavern features an interesting live pairing. Opening for Austin’s Vanguards, a veteran blues-rockabilly band, New Orleans’ House Lev elers are froth a slightly different spectrum. Unlike the seasoned Vanguards, a classic hard working band that has paid its dues and finally is- getting recognition, the House Levelers have stumbled to their current position. A three-piece band composed of Ficht, guitar ist Grayson Capps and drummer Sterling Roig, the band bases its sound on Capps’ amped acous tic guitar and Roig’s stripped-to-the-basics drum kit. The result is an original brand of thrash-folk. “We’re not instrument-based,” Ficht explains. “There is rarely a second when one of us is not singing. We have to play short, compact songs ’cause Grayson and I aren’t good enough musi cians to do a worthwhile solo. “It definitely makes our music different from most other groups and places the emphasis on our lyrics, where it should be.” Their lack of musical ability has not fazed the trio. In fact, the band has capitalized on it. Instead of the usual mastering of cover songs, Ficht and Capps began by writing their own songs. . “Grayson and I started writing our songs be cause we cidhldn’t play any covers,” Ficht says. “We didn’t know how to. We took the opposite route of doing songs since we weren’t good enough to learn other band’s stuff and instead focused on creating our own material.” Playing their musical ignorance to the hilt, the band first performed with a percussionist who played the pink flamingo. That’s right, the House Levelers hold the dis tinction of being the first band to feature a drum mer who whacked away at a set of Lone Star beer bottles and a tambourine with a pink flamingo. Somewhere, Neil Peart is experiencing heart fail- try to hide it, but instead play off it. I thinktlJ audience appreciates that.” Capps and Ficht claim that much “drunk buffoonery” and hearty laughter is in store foi those at the Tavern this weekend. 1 wonder i!| professional-minded Hugh Stearns (a Texas Surf Tavern owner, who prefers seasoned bandi knows what he has gotten himself into. Unfortunately, the following tale of how tk| name House Levelers came about (and how was originally Cliff Fauver House Levelers) won! ease Stearns’ stomach. “The fans loved this idea of a guy drumming on a stack of beer bottles with this stupid-looking pink flamingo,” Ficht says. “It was really crazy that some band would do this. They liked him (original flamingo player Jay Scully) more than Grayson and I.” Obviously, the band enjoys live performances. Capps believes that fact sets House Levelers apart from other bands. “Playing live is what the House Levelers are all about,” he says. “Our stripped-down sound comes off as simple, but powerful. It’s real music the audience can relate to. “Plus, I feel the audience relates to us as peo ple and performers. When we screw up we don’t T this emblem with ‘Cliff Fauver’s House Levelen Mobile, Alabama’ on it,” Ficht says. “Thisideaof a company that went around and leveled houstj destroyed things for a living, was fantastic ant absurd. “We thought, ‘This is great. We have to nan* our band after this guy Cliff.’ For a while we in vented this Cliff persona that served as our gum He was our spiritual leader and our sets featurd songs and stories about Cliff. He became symbol. “We finally dropped the Cliff Fauver part be cause our manager was afraid we might get sued when this guy found out we had hats and t-shirti with his company’s emblem on it.” As an entertainment critic, I shouldn’t heal lowed to endorse a disaster like the one I thinll will occur Saturday night. But somehow, I haveaj feeling it will be quite amusing. 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