Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 1, 1969 PageTwoTHE ICHGAN AIL Wedesdy, Otobr 1,196 records -- From fathers to sons and sons and sons In the local bars . . S By BERT STRATTON, If a young man wants to learn how to play the blues, he must learn its language and he must listen to the poets that speak it best--the old masters, What Muddy Waters did was exactly that and his teacher was Son House, the pioneer of the Mississippi blues guitar. That process is the foundation of the blues tradition --a traditon which years later would make Muddy the teacher and Paul Butterfield the student. Muddy would be seated in the first row, every night, when Son House was playing the local bar. He was the prototype blues freak, his every action adding to the rich legacy of that peculiar vocation. The legacy that today accounts for Muddy's hotel room being filled up every night with you musicians wherever he goes, Muddy learned his lessons well from Son-the taut whining sound of the bottleneck sliding across the strings, the golden value of the straight-forward lyric, in effect, all the qualities that make Son so revered. And then along came a talented, guitarist named Robert Johnson, whose energy and youth added new dimension to Son's style-a dimension that Muddy was to further' enlarge. What the young Robert did was to up-tempo Son's "old-fashioned" pace and to develop the boogie base, which is the pulsating, back- ground runway from which today's good rock guitarists take off. And Robert died young, poisoned by a jealous girlfriend, before he was thirty, an abrupt ending not uncommon to great artists. But Muddy Waters took Johnson's message and spread it, from out of the close-knit Mississippi culture to Chicago, the black music capital, and finally to all America. Muddy and his half-brother Otis Spann played around Chicago at parties, fish fries--anywhere they could get some bread, Muddy on the slide guitar and Otis on the piano. Their "down-home" music was popular, but not anything too different than what everyone else was playing. But Muddy wasn't satisfied, and after World War II he formed the first of the now common, amplified Chicago blues DAILY OFFICIAL B LLETIN WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1 Day Calendar Department of Speech and Television Center: Benjamin H. Berentson Me- morial Lecture: Mr. Ward L. Quaal, President of WGN Continental Broad- casting Company, Chicago: West Con- ference Room, Rackham Building, 4:00 p.m. Statistics Seminar: Professor Leslie Kish, "Balanced Repeated Replica- tions"; 435 Mason Hall, 4:00 p.m. Department of Speech (Student Lab Theater) The Sandbox by Edward Al- bee: Arena Theater, Frieze Building, 4:10 p.m. String Department Student Recital: School of Music Recital Hall, 5:00 p.m. Botany Seminar: Dr. Richard A. Dil- ley, Charles F. Kettering Research Lab, Yellow Springs Ohio, "Ultrastructure of Sub-Chloroplast Photosystems I and II Fractions"; 1139 Natural Science, 4:15 p.m. Cinema Guild: Destiny, 7:00 p.m. and Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler, 9:05 p.m., both directed by Fritz Lang: Archi- tecture Auditorium. English Dept. Undegraduate Steering Committee 435 Mason Hall, 7:30 p.m. I (open to all taking English classes.) South and South East Asian Studies Lecture: Richard L. Park, Professor of Political Science, "Gandhi, His Life and Philosophy": Rackbam Amphitheater, 7:30 pin. Computer Lecture: Brice Carnahan, Professor of Chemical Engineering and Blostatistics, "The FORTRAN IV Pro-, gramming Language - II": Natural Science Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Department of English Poetry Read- ing: Gwendolyn Brooks. Poet Laureate of the State of Illinois: Multi-pur- pose Room, Undergraduate Library, 8:00 p.m. An Evening of Lieder: Ralph Herbert, 'baritone and Paul Boylan, piano: Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:00 p.n - (Continued on Page 3) ENDING WEDNESDAY NAt 10 AL 0EF+A CO tP0RATION _ O X E A S 1 E R r H E A T R SFR 375 No. MAPLE PD.-769-1300 MON.-FRI.---7:20-9:30 SAT.-SUN.-1 :00-3:05 5:10-7:20-9:30 BUFFY1 SAINTE MARIE October 4! / COLORs6 DeLuxe United Artists PERSONS UNDER 18 NOT ADMITTED m TODAY IS LADIES DAY! 75c until 6 P.M. For All Ladies TONIGHT 7:00 DESTINY 9:05 DR. MABUSE, THE GAMBLER Both by FRIT1Z LANG "Brinq your money tonight" 662-8871 Architecture Auditorium QflL~i Program Information 662-6264 SHOWS AT 1:10-3:45 6:15-8:45 FEATURE 20 min. later "VANESSA REDGRAVE IS SIMPLY GREAT IN 'TIlE LOVES OF ISADORA'!"-LIFE Magaine -ANESSA REDGRAVE "THE IDVES OF ISADORA" Produced In association with Universal Pictures Ltd. 9 TECHNiC0.6OLmj bands--composed of a lead and drum. His band was the detector that best sensed the odors of the urban ghietto, and the peCo- ple dug it. He cut lots of records and became a big name in black communities. However, it's on- ly fair to mention that he didn't do it all by himself, he had an impressive succession of har- monica players - Little Walter Jacobs, Jimmy Cotton, and George Smith. (Now he has an- other good one, Paul Osher, a white man.) Muddy's blues had the black community in a rhythmic vice, but white America had never even heard his name. What the blues needed, like rock an(; jazz before it, was a white nman to bring the energy from the vortex of black music to the sheltered core of white Amer- ica. Muddy's star pupil, Paul Butterfield, was the logical choice to be that cultural emis- sary. (Butterfield had been drinking out of the well of the South Side-filled with 'Thun- derbird-ever since he turne'd eighteen.) Butterfield ,was good, and le was white-a first in blues h:- tory and a winning combination inl any record producer's book. Thus, hie, and not Muddy, brought the blues America's mainstream. Everyone remem- bers his first album. Sim-.i: titled "The Paul Butterfield Blues Band" and on the co 'er are Butterfield, Bloomfield, Ris- hop, Arnold, and Lay, all giving tough "greaser" stares in front of a dilapidated storefront back- drop. (Enough to knock out any clean-cut suburban kid in 1965.) So everybody bought the album, everybody heard the first few high-intensity bars of ".3orn in Chicago," and the boominlg "folk revival" was sent on its way back to narmalcy and enier the "blues revival." Muddy and Paul's rvlusic his taken root. On the i.a azme. stand, in the record store, in the underground press, every- where, it's "the blues." Columbia Records offers a $400,000 c:n- tract to its latest blues sensa- tion, Johnny Winter, who is ironically an albino, and on the cover of Newsweek, Janis Jop- lin's wretched face is equated with the "rebirth of the blues." Yet on the other hand, soe white people, like those that at- tended the Ann Arbor Blues Festival, have gotten to the "roots" --- to the Muddy Wat- ers' and Son House's. The blues -caught in the dichotomy of young America's fickleness and its sincerity. bass guitar, a harmonica, and a lddy IJ7te rs ... . to the chambers o a record studio d..iv< p.. So here we stand, at right now, the whole spectrum of blues exposed. (From the high energy wavelengths of the blues originators to the lifeless waves of the cheap imitators that are reflected off their chrome for- tresses of shiny guitars and seven foot amps.) The competition is tough it's cutthroat, but there's one old blues family that nobody can scratch, and that's Muddy Waters and Paul Butterfield. The evidence for that statement is Marshall Chess' latest iecord- ing venture, Fathers anl Sons (Chess LPS 127), ene of the finest blues LP's of the decade. It's a twin record set, contain- ing jams that Muddy and Paul cut earlier this year (the first time they've gotten together on record) with the help of some outstanding sidemen-guys like Otis Spann, Mike Bloomfield, "Duck" Dunn, Sam Lay, Buddy Miles, Jeff Carp, Phil Upchurch, and Paul Asbell. At the Blues Festival, the then unreleased records were quite a big topic of conversation backstage. At that time, Muddy said he thought it was the be t session he had had since woik- ing with Little Walter and Jim- my Rodgers (a lead guitarist in his first band). As he put it, "We was close to the old sound." Sam Lay, with typical humility, was telling everyone how badly he had cut Buddy Miles on the drums. It's true though, Lay is probably the best shuffle dr'n'- mer around. Jeff Carp, who is Lay's harp player, didn't say much about the recording at the festival, maybe because be's only on one cut. The name for the LP, Fath- ers and Sons, was Bloomfield's idea (I guess he's been reading Ivan Turgenev) and not one of Marshall Chess' brilliant pro- mos. Undoubtedly Chess was n- strumental in choosing the cover design--a surreal scene which even includes a group of in- tegrated cherubs floating along the borders of the cover. Out of sight. But completely irrele- vant to the contents of the rec- ords. Forget about the cover a,.d get into the jams and dig how good Muddy is-he's the boss, and he makes all flfteen cuts what they are. To the pleasure of Muddy's fans, the group dres a lot of Muddy',s iuore obs -ire tunes, on the first album. like "All Aboard," "Blow Wind Blow", "Standin' 'Round Cry- ing," and "Sugar Sweet", and they add some of his better known songs. The second album, which ' as recorded "live" at the vast Chi- cago Auditorium T h e a t r e, (which accounts for the thun- derstorm applause, sounding like something off a sound ef- fects record) Muddy and the gang get down with some vld standbys - - "Long Distance Call," "Baby Please Don't Go". Willie Dixon's classic "The Same Thing", and of course "Got My Mojo Working". There are probably some peo- ple that think Butterfield ha, forgotten how to play the bili es (his new group replete with horns and sax is playing some- thing else). But they're -.ron. Just check him out on "Moo "Sugar Sweet", "Waikin Thiu the Park", or "The Same Thing". That's some heap,'y stuff. the antithesis of the I've we got from Junior Wells and Ji'nnyv Cotton at the Blues Festival. The difference etwen these men is that ButeA. even ii. the 'live' 'ecoine, siugs , ith his harp. whe s Well;end Cotton toy with their harps while struggling to get into po- sition for their next dance steps. What Butterfield. as well as Bloomfield and Spann do is to fill in the holes that MNudl- dy leaves open and to respod to Muddy's calls when he sls for it. On "Blow Wind Blow". < there's some incredible tum ate'- field-Bloomfield duels in an swver to Muddy's lead and ani articulate solo b! Spann (wi'o once again proves that he's number one among 'giving bltcs pianists.) On "I'm Ready", But- terfield, Bloomfield, and Spann are there again, augmenting Muddy's rich voice with excel- lent backup and superb breaks. Also, its a fact that the other sidemen do outstanding wi*,'k throughout the albums as well. "Duck" Dunn, the Memphis bass ,player, does a commend- able job when considering that the blues is not his forte. Sam Lay does his best work on "Walkin Thru the Park" and so does Paul Asbell, the :hythin guitarist. Jeff Carp adds a fine chromatic harp accompanimr'i t on "All Aboard." I've heard "Got My Moio Working" pienty time, but this recording of the song is the finest one yet. There's a coupe of reasons it is so good. One is that Otis Spann is feeling mighty fine, and he gets more right notes out of ?is piano than he ever has before. The second reason is that Paul But- terfield is no ego-maniac, he knows Muddy is leading, aid he pushed Muddy hard, but he doesn't smother him. Everything, and I mean e;erg"- thing comes together in "Mean Disposition", it's the best bluies jam to be waxed in a hell of a long t i m e -- Butterfield's moaning harp crying out to Muddy who answers him with all the vibrancy and depth cap- able of being elicited from the hmnan voice, Muddy's incredible "speech" on the slide guitar, and Spann's rhythmic piano fusing all the parts together. It's so good, it's the blues. i TONIGHT AT 8:00!0 l{ 1 BACH CLUB presents RANDOLPH SMITH Bach Club president and founder speaking on "HOW BEAUTIFUL, INTERESTING AND EXCITING THE 1ST MOVEMENT OF BACH'S CANTATA 35 IS" Thursday, Oct. 2, 8 p.m. 1236 Washtenaw (at S. Forest near S. Universitv) Refreshments and Fun afterwards Eve rybodv Welcome! (No musical knowledge needed) For further information Call: 663-2827. 665-6806, 761-7356 SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 12 Directed by John Houseman us "PLAY"by Samuel Beckett bfl DI S )W2chct do ChJldro ctt f r-- I with Patrick Hines Christopher Walken -1 L- .J Pau flutterfield 1 -4 ENGLISH STUDENTS Organizational Meeting FOR English Department Steering Committee All English moiors and students urged to attend WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1st- 7:30 P.M.--435 MASON I IN lLL AUDITORI.IM SECOND ANNUAL DANCE SERIES NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA ......Fri., Oct. 17 PROGRAM: Solitaire; Four Temperaments; and The Nutcracker, Act. II. 20% OFF* On Regular Dry Cleaning STIIIKERS WELCOME (Non-Strikers, too) 'FOR STUDENTS ONLY... Must show U of M ID card to receive discount THE FRATERNITY BUYER'S ASSOCIATION presents r 0" 0 lTONIGHT-1:OO to 9:30 P.M. Rooms A and B-Michigan Union Open To All Cooks, Stewards, and House Directors in Small Unit Houses JOSE LIMON DANCE COMPANY NIKOLAIS DANCE COMPANY DANZAS VENEZUELA RAYOL WINNIPEG BALLET 8:30, Sat., Nov. 1 8:30, Wed., Jan. 21 8:30, Tues., Feb. 17 2:30, Sun., Mar. 15 J =For these modern Dance Companies, Lecture-demonstrations are scheduled for Fri., Oct. 31, and Tues., Jan. 20 respectively. Tickets: $1.00. Season ticket subscribers to the Dance Series will receive complimentary admission. SEASON TICKETS: $17.50-$15 00--$12.50-$10.00-$7.50 SINGLE PERFORMANCES: $6.00-$5.50-$5.00-$4.00-$3.00-$2.00 ;z " .. 1 '4 " .. . , .. . . . . . . ..4 MISHA DICHTEB Brilliant young Amercian Pianist Winner at T chaikovsky Competition in Moscow in I 6 Monday, Oct. 6, 8:30 P.M. IN IILL AUDITORIUM PROGRAM: I i }. {