Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, February 18, 1970 Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY music= Music forum: A reconciliation Mi-.1les By BERT STRATTON Miles Davis is hard, easy, sub- tle, explosive, intellectual, down- to-earth . . . basically complex. As the cliche goes, Miles Da- vis plays Miles Davis m u s i c. There's no better way to put it. Of course there is an abundance of musical jargon available that captures some aspects of Miles' music - modal technique, po- lytonality, etc. B u t that will never do. There's also the ethereal ap- proach. Like wow, Miles is groovy, I don't know why, man, I just dig him. Definitely legiti- mate, but it will never do eith- er. It neglects Miles' intellectu- ality, his ability to synthesize the elusive, cerebral gut hybrid. Enough explaining. Listen to, Miles' records, particularly his newer ones, read the insightful interview in Rolling Stone, and go see him. But don't get angry at me if you go and don't like him. You- 'ye got only yourself to blame, you didn't study up enough on him. I once made that mistake - of not preparing for Miles. Last summer, a U-M friend and I went to the Davis Quintet con- cert in Central Park. ; I don't know exactly what I expected; but it was something along the lines of his old "Kind of Blue" material. You know, something with a good beat I could dance to. Things started out fine, the emcee- introduced Miles as the "Prince of the Dark," and sure as shootin' there was Mr. Stud Himself, shades on, ruffled shirt, tight bell-bottoms w i t h silver dollar inlays down t h e sides, and. silver trumpet. The music wasn't quite as ob- vious however. T h e tipoff to Miles' new direction was the in- troduction ..of his band. Only Wayne Shorter, the tenor sax- ophonist, was a carry over from the good old days of the early sixties. On drums was Jack De- Johnette, on bass, Dave Hol- land, and Chick Corea on elec- tric piano. It was a youth coup, all of the old stand-bys in the band had split. R o n Carter, Miles, ex-bassist, had left a while back, Herbie Hancock, Miles' ex-pianist, and Tony Williams, be yond the each he seemed to be doing all the work, alternating between so- prano and tenor saxes. To con- fuse me more, they didn't play any songs anybody had heard before. They jammed f o r an hour straight. When t h e y finished, about ten or fifteen guys in the first row gave them a standing ova- tion, the other thousand or so people applauded politely. I guess I wasn't the o n 1y one they'd lost. I hadn't prepared enough for Miles. Back to the studies. I picked up on his latest records, Miles in the Sky, Les Filles de Kilimanjaro, a n d In a Silent Way, and continued to read the many sterling reviews of Miles' concerts. (Miles hasn't received less than a spectacular review in the last two years.) - The first thing I noticed about the records was that they were completely different than the fifties and early sixties stuff I had been listening to before. He played sparser on the new rec- ords, using fewer notes, he didn't deal with chords as much, he was into running scales. He was mixing rock beats and old bop rhythms with avant-garde free form. All things considered, though, Miles' new records and Miles' live performances are still two different worlds. On record, he is overly conscious of mood and color, like In a Silent Way, in which he achieves a sonorous lulling mood, effectively exploit- ing the melodic texture of the electric piano, as well as the hypnotic rock beat, particular- ly in the theme song "In a Si- lent Way." The "live" Miles is much freer and violent. The album that comes closest to approxi- mating a live Davis Quintet per- formance is Miles in the Sky. In it, Miles' old drummer, Tony Williams, and his ex-bassist, Ron Carter, supply the dynamic rumbling background w h i c h play behind Miles' occasional violent explosions, which he adeptly sneaks in between his more subtle passages. Miles is as difficult as any classical musician. My. New By BOB SHEFF The pieces in Monday night's? Composers Forum tried to re- concile traditional dramatic form with the more modern pro- cedures of real-time improvisa- tion and open musical "space". Most of the basic sound ele- ments and gestures used in all of the evenings works were in- troduced in Kurt Carpenter's Heart of Darkness. Borrowing the title from Joseph Conrad, Carpenter constructed a color and articulation piece for small ensemble, which progressed in strict dramatic form with its inherent contrasts and irrever- sible climax. Heart of Darkness began with immobile quiet sounds punc- tuated by soft blips. Very at- tenuated flute harmonics (whist- ling sounds), unusual b r a s s harmonics, hitting the mouth- piece and playing inside t h e piano and other expanded uses of the instruments were used in an inventive manner, although the sounds themselves were not unusual for new music. The piece gradually introduc- ed more rapid articulations and built to a tremendous crescendo. A stinger finished the p i e c e when the cases for the percus- sion instruments were banged to the floor. A clock controlled the dura- tions of the various sections; no conductor was employed. Thomas Clark's String Trio was dominated more by musical intent than a desire to imagine new machinations. Clark lim- ited himself to a small ensemble and gestures that suggested ver- bal conversation. By a subtle feeling for harmony and spac- ing, Clark's piece was the best developed composition of the evening, and completely justified the use of the slow-fast dra- matic form. Two songs comprising Whirld- 'ness by Richard Manderville, based on poetry by Eve Eden; were beautifully sung by Kath- eryn Chism. As the title sug- gests, the sounds were events su- spended in clear space, and were directly evoked by the mean- ing of the poetry. The instru- ments listed as "accompani- ment" by Manderville actually went beyond that at times to distribute and reiterate sounds across the stage. Sometimes this transference took the form of obvious onomatopoeia, for exam- ple when the text referred to "wind" and a solo flute follow- ed. But the mystery of the piece remained a personal statement. It was hard to guess exactly what the title of David Foley's Entrance Not For Everyone re- ferred to, since there were no program notes or direct sugges- tions in the music. This piece for wind ensemble was of a fore- boding nature throughout and contained a great deal of mater- ial; perhaps too much for its short duration. The most 'avant' work of the concert was Robert Boury's Hearsay, for two dancers a n d amplified prepared piano celest, piano played inside, and piano played in the normal manner. The dancers, Alsace Leitz and Jennifer Cole, choreographed their movements independent of the score. The dancers would in- fluence the players to "turn on or off" as they passed through sectors of tape laid on the stage floor. The score sets up a plus- minus situation, akin to Karl-, h e i n z Stockhausen's Spiral. Three sound parameters are in- dicated;' register (top-score), amplitude (middle), and number of attacks (duration-lowest). A plus sign indicates an. increase of the parameter it is in, a minus is a decrease and an equal sign means to keep the para- meter unchanged. Additional arrows indicate to repeat and reduce/or expand what you have just improvised. The players are, therefore, called upon to make extensive use of improvi- sation and memory abilities. Any piece of well known music can be used to provide the ac- tual tonal material to be chang- ed. In the case of this perform- ance, it was the "alcott" move- ment of Charles Ives' Concord Sonata. A clock delimited the time of the performance, as in Heart of Darkness. Again the sense of dramatic form dominated; even in this "open graph" treatment, the plus signs gradually accumulat- ed and then softened into rows of minuses. The lights were completely off at the beginning and end of the piece and were at their brightest during theI middle. ". . . and everybody knows that the presence of musicians, inocent, however diverting it may have been in, say, the 12th century, when everything outside the gates was eating each other, no longer, in itself, transports us ... it is usually both unreal in a way that we don't need unreality and precious. Perhaps when things settle down, if they ever do, the situation won't be so demanding, but right now we are a long way from being in a position to expect people to list- en, even if they could. We have to find ways to cause things to go wrong in their minds." -Source Magazine (Jan., 1968) Feb. 17, 18-Tues., W.d. American Culture Film THE MALTESE FALCON dir. JOHN HUSTON (1941) Humphrey Bogart mixes work and romance in a unsentimental detective story. Mary Astor, Peter 7 Lorre, 7 & 9:05 662-8871 ARCH. 75c Election of LSA Student Assembly Members TUESDAY, FEB. 24 AUD B 1:30 P.M. Submit Petitions (25 LSA signatures) to 1018 Angell Hall by Friday, Feb. 20 NOW PLAYING NATIONAL SINERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRES FO.MAPLL6E 375 No. MAPLE RD."769.13OO TIMES MON-FRI 7:10-9:05 the ex-drummer, had just tak- en off to make it on their own. When th e music started it was violent DeJohnette was flaying the drums ferociously- everything was rumbling - ev- erything but Miles - cool Miles wasn't even playing, in fact he was walking off the stage. I could catch a glimpse of him standing in the wings of the stage, not doing much of any- thing, but after five minutes or so, he started to make his way back on stage and up to the microphone. The mike was at a height equal to his waist, that was the way he did it, bending his knees and back all the way down so he could get the trum- pet bell down near the mike. He blew a few notes and walk- ed off again. That freaked me out - but after a few more en- trances and exits I got used to it. I was beginning to wonder why the band wasn't called the Wayne Shorter Quintet, since DUSTIN HOFFMAN M IA FARROW~l .t l rtu .z',d~ S .' rt='~~ 'i OHN AND MRY 2ctYi 01 Ackles: A powerful presence By GARY BALDWIN Energy is a term often applied to over-amplified rock bands, but if David Ackles did anything at all Sunday night at Canter- bury House, he generated a sub- tle but powerful energy to the audience. And the audience was delighted, bringing him back for two encores. Ackles is a pianist/composer/ singer dealing in dramatic song. His voice is often as raw .as Jellyroll Morton and as force- ful as an opera singer. His roots range from Brecht and Weill -to subtle country melodies. Sim- ply that description would seem to indicate how unusual h i s medium is.. :Though some find Ackles' songs depressing, that did not seem at all true Sunday night. Much of David's music is about strug- gle, but the glow of his eyes and his powerful presence seem to indicate that he has won. Songs like "Candy Man," a true story about a one armed" war veteran who distributed por- nography to children, o f t e n seem too overblown and drama- tic. In his new material Ackles has overcome this. "Subway to the Country," the title song from his second Elektra album, is about bringing children up in the city "where there's so much dirt they think that snow is grey." Even if that seems to be a downer, Ackles has made it somehow refreshing, reflect- ing all the jobs of childhood and a hope there may someday be a subway to the country. Probably the most exciting part of Ackles' performance was a new untitled song that he sang in public for the first time Fri- day night. With the light sound of a country hymn, Ackles sang of Sunday night singing in an old white church where "Dad played the bass, Mom played the Art lecture set today The public is invited to a gal- lery lecture on the exhibition "Contemporary Paintings from the Collection of Joseph H. Haz- en" today at 4 p.m. in the West Gallery of the Museum of Art. The speaker will be Prof. Joel Isaacson. There is no admis- sion fee. The lecture is sponsored by the Friends of the Museum of Art, an association of individ- -. ti 's~isaa i~aof ! drums, and I played the piano/ And Jesus sang the songs." When he repeated the song in the second set, the audience sang along., Ackles dealt with everything .from police brutality in L o s Angeles, to heroine addiction in "Main Line Saloon," and socie- ty as a whole in "Inmates of the Institution." "The Road to Cairo," one of his older songs, is very personal but strongly drew the empathy of the audience. "Such a Wo- man," perhaps Ackles' only real tear jerker, is equally as person- al, and so musically effective that it visably moved much of the audience. Sitting atop the Chicago yel- low pages, Ackles carried on a friendly conversation with the audience. Still somewhat ner- vous, his communication with the people laid the greatest con- trast between Sunday night, and his performance here a year ago. Instead of making the lis- tener uncomfortable by n o t talking to him, Ackles now uses his short raps as effective tran- sitions into his songs. Even though his new s o n g s are much less "syrupy" than his older ones, some might main- tain Ackles is too sentimental. I would say, instead, that his work is very intelligent. "Amer- ican Gothic" is a song about a man who "drinks till he drowns in his dreams" and his wife who thrives on a wish for new shoes. This is a simple, accurate analysis of much of middle America. At 32, Ackles has seen that America, and most of the rest of the world. A former play- wright with an MA from the University of Southrn Califor- nia, he often uses internal dia- logue - talking with the other characters in his songs. The piano accompaniment, a welcome change from guitar, contributed largely to the uni- queness of the performance. Ackles' piano is effective, though not flawless, as an occasional wrong note may sneak into a chord. For the most part, he seems to play in a honky tonk, classical style, pounding on the keys, but using especially inter- esting chord combinations. His voice was usually strong, though sometimes sensitive and gentle. "Out on the Road," the last song of the evening, w a s the vocal highlight. The song began in a sad conversational tone, building to a driving cli- max; Ackles' voice bursting at its seams in a carefully control- led shout, "And if you do not understand/ How we got to . . lend a helping hand,/ Then all I can do is pray/ Please let me stay out on the road." Ackles' voice was powerful, his music intriguing, his poetry moving. Combined with his strong, friendly presence, it is no wonder the crowd was so reluctant to leave. 1. The Merry Widow I I Operetta by Franz Lehar Conductor: JOSEF BLATT Stage Direction : RALPH HERBERT FEBRUARY 27 and 20 MARCH 2 and 3 Mendelssohn Theatre 8 P.M. Admission $3.00 Ticket Information 764-6118 MAIL ORDERS: SCHOOL OF MUSIC OPERA, MENDELSSOHN THEATRE, THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48104. BOX OFFICE HOURS: FEB. 23-26, 12:30- 5 P.M.; FEB. 27-28, MAR. 2, 3, 12:30-8 P.M. (CLOSED SUN- DAY, MARCH 1) School of Music and Department of Art 9 University of Michigan I