Page Ttiir THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 13, 1969 Puge ~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 1 3, 1 969 _- music' A resurrected, be (tern ever, Spider John By DANIEL ZWiERDLING Oyez oyez, Canterbury House resurrects Spider John Koerner this weekend replete with honky tonk piano, bass and guitar and electrified contrap- tions on the acoustic he used to strum alone while on a bare wooden stool. Spider John be- gan easing from his lone status into, working with piano ac- companist Wil1lie Murphy about two years ago - they played together in town last year. But his new group is still young enough after six months to be fresh and some- times a little struggling and not yet sure enough to bask in the stale glow of complacent musi- cal success - which makes it good and still full of potential, Spider John claims his ar- rangements differ little from last year -- but they sounded different to me and I loved them. The old Koerner -- not quite folk and not quite be- tween honky tonk and good booze singing - was simpler. less complicated, less concerned with rhythm shifts and harmon- ic breaks, more predictable. Now with a piano and bass and drums, Koerner can afford to live freer, to experiment. "I wanted to go to a band be- cause the music I wanted to make was fuller," says John. "Not in quantity of instru- rnnts, but in the types of music wve could do with it." Part of the sacrifice is,' the group has to play from arrangements - piano rifts and guitar breaks have to be scheduled. And so if the whole group isn't precisely together, the songs don't work. But when the group does more together, tight, it's more fun, more sophisticated, more throb- bing than the music Koerner made before. Spider John writes all his own songs - Willie Murphy does the arrangements - and some of them surpass any of the vo- dee-oh-do tunes the Beatles have played since the last dou- ble album. "The Tender and Lovely Ballad of Bill and An- nie" succeeded with some es- pecially good singing by Koer- ner and Murphy and with effrc- tive breaks in the music which signaled new shifts in the song's plot. This is a device the Beatles use - and some of the octave harmony, and rhythm chang- es sounded like Koerner has listened to them a lot. "Ballad" and other of Koer- ner's songs reflect the little bboy look of aimless loneliness that seems to envelop him on stage-as if Koerner is always saying "wellll sheeeet." "Don't let the bastards wear you down don't let them hassle and frazzle you cause, they're full of beans anyway," he sings. Boy and girl, meant for each- other, finally meet-and then don't like eachother. End. "Black Dog Blues" the only song in their repertoire which Koerner didn't write, features some fine full chord piano work by Willie Murphy. The acoustics at Canterbury House were not designed for electric bands; and since Koerner's band is so new they still haven't worked out a balance which works. It was difficult to understand Koer- ner's words - when he and Murphy sang, it sounded like they were singing through a buzz tone kazoo. And Murphy's piano work was often lost in acoustical muddle. Koerner, Murphy, and his bass Bruce Menier and drummer Bob Grenier will stay the weekend at Canterbury. It's worth the two dollars and your time for their singing and Canterbury's expanded assortment of tasty cookies. You can catch Koerner on his new album-or see him alone at the Triangle Bar in Minneapolis. But it would be better to hear the whole group at Canterbury now - because when they're to- gether and in the music. Koer'- ner and his group make ter'- rific music. FALL RENTALS 2 bedroom apartment 2-3-4 Mean McKinley Associates 663-6448 Order Your Subscription Today 764-0558 TONIGHT ANDY 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. The Best ' qI .1 761 -19 51 Finaeroickina1IL " Guitarist in the Countr. DAVE VAN RONK S1.25 RAGTIME PIANO AND GUITAR SATURDAY NITE LATE: AFTER HOURS 50c MASS (E EIl Il THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE ORC ST1RA an all-campus orchestra! sponsored by MUSKET and G&S! Dailty--Larry Robbins S TA L.,;6,I: i- performing 3 hit shows! MASS MEETING CMiiiiiiiii' I n XVest Quad CIaig t'1iaPoa ; . 1 la l they1 leaveC a 11 sain1 n (C Ano101her u C0 aa ce whlich11areC 011i 1>1( iigl~ call(10o1> tle wll ('OliX el I*lIl. 1121le s \\11 Il.itrn the0181On;(l aL 1120 1 mIUI ']saes J ~in (uk let' *1he pl1118V ai 'I of ho1 lulsing ofiii' c .7IS 1)..81118W11saving , 1".Read(1o(f1the Waling up is~n't nnih eh ie T he lights go 011 at 8818 win 1and11 a l ate ioutof the . ith11all Ihei, ltci IIIie cc>., >unlcllts hel they sh1ul1 1_4 le, , geti t ceasy ecwK 1(1nta HyThe (101 lar pecr day 1o1 a bed and two dresser drawers is genierally considered acceptable. but the daily $270 food allowvance is unpalatable. ()11c Cafeteria No. 3 resident computes the cost of temporary housing at $888 for the --or,' about $60 less than the normal triple. If we're being inconvenienced we should att least be saving mney." lhe complains. Th? ;360 salvinig doesn't satisfy him. So far. nine residents of the two cafeterias have been giv en rooms, and Begun was among 01" lucky nine. "'m glad to be getting a room, but in a way I'll miss the place because you meet so many guys, and they're right here. When we get rooms, we'11 be spread all over the campus., Sept. 15, 8 P.M., 3A mwUnion 1 _ SINGLE SEATS ON SALE I I / o (C 11f VI lI I'. '~ IL ~l1 N, i )I 5.-11l3\1 O'rder Your Daily Now Phone 764-0558 NOW!i Te cto l~ A 4 04 a 9 PM. picture to be seers IC; .PI Cud 0901 -- YOUNG LOV ER S WHEREVER YOU "NI ARE UN ION-LEAGUE PUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE NEEDS PEOPLE INTERESTEDI IN: *WRITING e DESIGNING * PUBLISHINGI o SELLING ADVERTISING *PHOTOGRAPHY SEE JAMES BECK at the Student Offices in the Michigan Union (2nd floor) or coll UNION: 662-4431 (Ask for Student Offices) JAMES BECK: 761-3542 (Home Phone) THOMPSON'S famous PIZZA SMALL MEDIUM LARGE Plain 1.50 . . . 2.10 . . . . 2.35 1 Item 1.75 .. ...2.35 2.80 2 Items 2.00 ..2.75 3.25 3 Items 2.25 . . .. .3.00 . . .. .3.75 Super 2.55 3.25 3.90 Additional Items .35 .45 .50 ALL PIZZA INCLUDES CHEESE AND TOMATO PIZZA ITEMS: Pepperoni, mushrooms, sausacge, horn, creen Depor,~ chopped olives, onion, hamburqer ABOVE PRICES INCLUDE SALES TAX CALL FOR FAST 761-001 FREE DELIVERY Delicious SOUTHERN i FRIEfl ".Th eeriest Alacbeth of the centur'.v"' --L. A. Times SHAKESPEARE'S . SEPT. 16-OCT. 28, 1969 t o- y '{ : . - WHARI) L* ks , I , () N Directed by Ellis Rabb ' 1 A~d WO~AN ACADOU,'Y A WAR DS j WINNER j SLWE'P 30-00'. 12 Directed by John Houseman THE AMERICAN PREMIERE of Ghe/der~ode 9s +" "A wihiff Ofsatic~ual sulphuir" by the author of the APA hit "Pantagleice" " Next: "HOTEL OZONE" IJ2T~dBirYIOUSB Look y-Look! SPIDER JOHN KOERNER andr WILLIE MURPHY plus "PL.AY" by Samuel Beckett n x,, r ,' - (IISTPE Wii~pi~ \AIKEN P\TRICK HINES NOEL COWARD'S I TAMMY GRIMES WWWW;vg I