THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, February 21, 1970 1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday. February 21 1970 "I, M-- VV I ..a / I music in himself -poetry and prose Bly to present readings, play 4.t By BERT STRATTON The Miles Davis Quintet is the tightest group In existence. Last night they brought their explosive message to the State of Michigan for the first time. The Hill Aud. did a commendable job of keeping pace with Miles, although a few Neanderthals did walk out during his set. Miles may personally be one of the world's biggest bastards (at least to white people like myself). But when the music starts, that's all forgotten - his group is just so incredible; they're energy packets, being unwrapped before your very eyes. Miles group doesn't shuck. He told me that they play for keeps every night - their hour and ten minutes jam last night is good enough proof of that. David led the way on the trip, one with very few signposts. Only rarely did they pick a common line from Miles' repertoire -such as the rock rhythm from "In A Silent Way". It was straight improvisation for the most part, Miles calling the color of the scales, as Chick Corea's electric piano added the fine shadings. h The electric piano is just presently being explored for its cap- abilities. Corea was the mad inventor, developing the "new im- proved" sounds. Sometimes he sounded like a machine gun, at other times like Tinker Bell. In all, he was superb, the latest discovery of the Davis talent agency, the same firm that brought us John Coltrane, Hank Mobley, and Tony Williams. Indirectly, Tony Williams (Miles' ex-drummer) was represented last night. The lead guitarist playing with Miles was John Mc- Laughlin, who is a regular with Tony Williams' Lifetime. Mc- Laughlin and Davis seem to be hitting it off well, McLaughlin is on Miles' last record. Most of the time last night, McLaughlin was fortifying Corea's rhythm, but he did manage to get one really good lick in, covering the whole range on his guitar. Jack DeJohnette's drumming knocked out just about every- body ,especially those who came to the concert thinking Ginger Baker is the world's best. DeJohnette is young; he can't capture as many moods as Tony Williams, but he sure can swing (with style). Wayne Shorter, on soprano and tenor sax, was at his best, almost singing the lyrics to Miles' melody. What Miles laid down was a barrage of sounds - blue, green, and red ones. That's how they sounded to me. Back in the fifties, the critics used to say that his trumpet sounded like "the voice of the last man on earth." And Miles did, at times-when he went into his unaccompanied, vibratoless solos. That's blue. The notes he .!t out of the trumpet's middle register are green, blowing in the breeze, the high screeches are blood red - the kind that make your eyes squint. The group walked off to a standing ovation. God, what a load off everyones' minds. When they left, Hill began to surface from the depths, minds were relaxing again. Ron Carter's New York Jazz Sextet came on - the classical lines of the grand piano and the bass, the dark suits of the musi- cians, and the weird trumpeter looking like Henry (of the comic strip) were almost too much to handle. But when they broke into Thelonius Monk's "Straight No Chasin" or when Carter choked Ravi Shankar-like incantations from his bass they were great.' The replay can be seen tomorrow night when the funkiest sax- -Daily-Thomas R. Copt ophonist in America, Cannonball Adderley, comes to Hill. cinema John and.;Mary': communication game Following Writer - in Resi- dence, Robert Bly's opening last night, there are m a n y other events and poetry readings to take place in the near future. This coming Tuesday (Feb. 24) Bly will read his transla- tions of t h e Latin American poet, Pablo Neruda, and take part in a discussion following the reading. This will take place at 8 p.m. in Canterbury House. "The N e w Brain Research: the 3 Brains and Their Rela- tionship to Poetry" will be the topic of a lecture at 4 p.m. in the Undergraduate Library Mul- tipurpose room on Thursday the 26th. The neat day, also in the li- brary at 4, Bly will take part in a symposium with Donald Hall called "The New Poetry, or Why the Spanish Poets Are Better Than We Are." Saturday evening at 8:30 p.m. in the Residential College, a play by Bly will be presented, called Why Do You Love Arms So Much? What Draws You to the Grave? His second poetry reading will take place in the Natural Sci- ence Aud. at 8 p.m., March 1. And to wind up the entire pro- gram Bly will give a final lec- ture on "The Return of the Old Gods" at 4 p.m. in the library, March 2. In addition to these scheduled events, Bly will make t h r e e dorm appearances. Student ap- pointments can be m a d edby signing up at the book sale desk and at the individual events. These will be at 10-11:30 a.m. on Feb. 23, 24, 26, 28, and March 2 at 1715 South University. An informal class will be held on these same dates at 5 p.m. in Canterbury House. (Except for Mar. 2 when the class will meet at 8 p.m.) All events and activities are open to the public and are free of charge. Bly's books of poetry include Silence in the Snowy Fields, The Light Around the Body (which won the National Book Award for 1967) and The Morn- ing Glory. The City Lights Pocketd Poet Series is about to bring out a long poem of his, "The Teeth Mother Naked at ,Last." k -Daily-Dave Schindell i II NATINAL ENEAL CRPORTIO NOW PLAYING FOX EASTERN THEATRESo FOX VILL 6E 375 No. MAPLE PD.-"769.1300 TIMES Mon.-Fri. 7:10 & 9:05 DUSTIN HOFFMAN' MIA FARROW JOHNND )MARY I Friday & Saturday LORING JAN ES Is BACK SAT.-SUN 1:30-3:20-5:15 7:10-9:05 R rH -_______ ili By NEAL GABLER Someone with a ;sense of humor -must have booked John and Mary out at the Fox Vil- lage Theater right after Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice. The titles, say something about our so- ciety. The discarding of sur- names and the reliance primari- ly on Bob, Carol, Ted, Alice, John and Mary, underscores the interchangeability of our lives. Perhaps I am being overly ana- lytical, but names once served as elements in identity; now they serve as convenient labels in conversation. Notice I said conversation and not communication. There's a big difference. Just about every- one has become an expert at conversation. But beneath the punctilious rhetoric lies the verbal sparring; each jab knock- ing loose a particle of knowl- edge, until, voila!, you have broken through the words and are able to communicate. This dueling is just another of the innumerable games peo- ple play. It would be a hell of AdvertisinL To the Editor: While not a scholastic parti- cipant in the University's multi- faceted nature, I am a partici- pant in the various cultural. aspects which art open to all who wish to support them by the payment of admission. I am directing this not towards The Daily, but the Inter Co-opera- tive Council for primarily mis- representing thru advertising the recent Tim Buckley 'recital'. The fact that Buckly himself was disapointing (and given the magnitude of the audience and the endeavor itself, it's not real- ly too surprising) is not the issue here as the council had no con- trol over the concert content. Rather that the incredibly un- original and dull group which preceded Buckley was not an- nounced previously to the public. This group proceeded to com- pletely exhaust any receptivity which might have been better spent concentrating on what a lot easier if everyone just said what he thought. But the prob- ing is not totally without rea- son. I know from my own ex- perience the hesitancy one has in adding an artificial input to a relationship. You don't want to say to a girl, "May I kiss you?" Instead, a fellow waits until the understanding between him and the love-object is such that the question has become unnecessary. And then you kiss her and, letting nature take its course; you do whatever else your passions dictate. Other films have taken brief looks at the pre-bed ritual, but John and Mary is one of the first that focuses solely on the process. John meets Mary in a New York bar, and they find themselves the next morning in John's bed. They don't know anything about each other ex- cept both saw Weekend at the New York Film Festival. But they want to feel that what they did is somehow of, more con- sequence than ,intercourse be- tween alley-cats, so they set honesty.?? out on the road to a meaning- ful relationship. The bout be- gins, only this time after they have bedded down rather than before; they test each other, feel each other out and, via the flashback, they dig into the arsenal of past experience. Lo and behold, in typical Hollywood fashion, they find that they like each other. Sweet mystery of life, I've found you! After reading so many un- favorable reviews I was expect- ing the worst and was happily surprised at how intelligently the subject is handled. While the movie may not rank among the greats, it is never boring or embarrassing, and I thank di- rector Peter Yates of Bullitt fame for little favors. However, there is one slight problem - although the word battles are intentionally low key, they seem too much so, as if somebody went beserk with a can of starch. This may be due to the fact that scenarist John Mortimer had originally written it for a London setting (also the back- drop of Mervyn Jones' novel), and the film has a subdued British tone, not the raunchy American flavor I have come to know and love; all it needs to be thoroughly Anglicized is David Warner and Rita Tush- ingham. That certainly shouldn't crimp your ability to empathize with it, though. For one thing, I am convinced that onyone who doesn't look like Paul Newman identifies with Dustin Hoffman. He proves once again, by the way, that he is as talented as he is well-managed. And Mia Farrow isn't any slouch either. I advise you; overlook the mo- ments of phony gloss and enjoy it with someone you want to love. It may save you a lot of small talk. SAVE $300 by making your own decisions.. . and dinner For Fall living, investigate the possibilities at OXFORD HOUSES Open House Sun., Feb. 22 2-5 P.M. (at the Max Kade House, across from the "Arb") Sunday-8;:30 JON SUN DELL farewell performance Daily Classifieds Bring Results NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON STUDENTS AND-THE TENANTS RIGHTS MOVEMENT FRIDAY, FEB. 20-SATURDAY, FEB .21 MICHIGAN UNION WORKSHOP LEADERS WILL !NCLUDE HARLEM RENT STRIKE LEADER, JESSE GRAY-NATIONAL TENANTS ORGANIZA- TION DIRECTOR, TONY HENRY-ST. LOUIS RENT STRIKE LEADER PLUS ED HARRIS AND OTHERS. -1 ' . ___ .r _,, 11 I *1 @ NOW d1' Undergrads and Grads Tired of Studying? Take a Break at AN ALL-CAMPUS MIXER Sunday, Feb. 22 at 8 P.M. I TONIGHT! GO AND SEE DIAL 8-6416 di "F~ut is a shhrd. ohust t, rote Buckley was attempting to ruuntoTa un ur £he the prove. Therefore, the point of MOTION PICTURE t ou nhat this is that in future names secretIt which are sponsored by the MORALITY! wherey you1429 HILL ST. council, they should shave the out)"o courtesy to the people, who sup- primte orliy 25c ADMISSION port the name by buying tickets, Commonwealth United presents Play. to notify them that the name in a Guvnor Proun ---- .- - --- - _ - - - - - - - - - - - - question will be coupled with . .. . j ""~., AR another performer. Those pay- ing the admission price will be nNl aware, that they may also be supporting a worth-nothing en- CEW tertainer and perhaps judge UNDER r''s POST more intelligently whether or NOTADMITED! not the price to see the reputable ....Feb. 21,22d Sunday performer is worth supporting PAMAMAR.TORYROUPE .n m -. a. 22-Saturday,Sunday the secondary entertainer in k JOSISTFMO - . .,ROCHE1EFOWENS - aTOMO OHGAH-,. CMORWEA THUNITED -"co question. COMING: BUSBY BERKLEY FESTIVAL -Michele SincockFETVLR LSOTHG lVI dir. JEAN RENOIR (1939) Tomorrow, Sunday, Feb. 22 Auditorium A -Angell Hall 1 and 4 P.M. (note time changes) The Mid-West WORLD PREMIERE of TROPIC of CANCER" :$o I I The hip off-Broadway hit that knocks the box and other American fetishes Groove Tube is underground television. It's what TV could be without censors and sponsors. See a TV sex olympics ... a kiddies show for adults only ... and an anti-VD commercial to end all public health messages. Come prepared to laugh a lot ... and blush a little :.. but come ". .. a wicked and hilarious lampoon of TV pro- grams"-Look "Now TV executives are faced with the ultimate weapon. Groove Tube demolishes television. "-Play- boy Presented by KENNETH N. NEMEROYSKI THURSDAY and SUNDAY: 7:30 and 9:15 SATURDAY: 8:00, 9:45 and 11:30 Prices: Thurs. & Sun.: $1.75; Sat. $2.50 The Best of the Underground-Him Artists Brakhage, Anticipation of the Night I I