-i -w -.- -lw- A CASUAL SURVEY Rock and V By CHARLOTTE WOLTER "IT ALL BEGAN when four mop-haired lads came from Liverpool, England. .." is the inevitable beginning of the fan magazine analysis of the recent boom in pop music. But it didn't begin with the Beatles, nor with Bill Haley and His Comets when they r e c o r d e d "Rock Around the Clock" (the first recognized rock and roll song), nor with the rhythm and blues of John Lee Hooker or Chuck Berry. The flashy, exciting music of the Beatles and the other groups, British and American, who follow is the fruit of an American musical tradition that icans heavily on the grim cultural heritalo, of the Negro in this country. The current styles that have evolvd c from this tradition can be roughly d:vid- ed into three categories; Rock and Roll (incorporating its earlier form, rhythm and blues) which is by far the lai st: Folk-Rock; and the Blues. American popular music had gone into a decline aft-r the payola scandals ef the late fifties. Superficiality and childish- neas "Baby Talk". "Shorty Shorts") pre- vailed and little was being offered from the solid tradition of rhythm and blues. The sudden popularity of the British {roups, then, was no accident. Most had worked together for several years'uy- ing and absorbin, the important fi'; res of American rhythm and blues and rack and roll. They added :some up-wm, o rhythms, mixtures of specific styles ,'d modern harmonies, plus an exhuberant sta'e manner: all of which combined to make this new, driving rock sound (Beat- ties' "1 Want to Hold Your Hand) par- ticularly appealing to eager British and American youth. N AMERICA, at approximately the same time, the Motown Sound-The Su'remes, The Four Tops, Mary Wells- originated in Detroit. a big band jazz sound with a rock and roll beat. A few American groups such as the Beau Brummels "Just A Little") successfully ad-pted the same style as the Enlish performers. Chuck 'Berry and o t h e r "Souther, Rock" artists regained popu- larity. The Byrds recorded "Tambourine Man" by Bob Dylan. and Dylan, himself, chano'ed his style radically, employing amplified instruments and a full band acco'm>animent. And, the increased interest in pop music was not limited to their perfor- mance by the most successful groups. In- spired partly by the apparent ease of suc- cess. but even more by the excitement of the music, innumerable local groups, of which Ann Arbor has many, formed. practiced. perhaps managed to get jobs, and dreamed of the future. Ori4ins The origin of this music is largely in the reli ious, work and love songs of the Negro in America. The Negro was. a o1l . . . Blues . . From Where? To Where? stranger in a strange land, a slave and, eventually, an outcast from society. His music combines his African heritage with English and French musical forms, but the most important element was the grim daily experience of the Negro as slave, as slum dweller, or as sharecropper. A multitude of styes developed from the Negro cultural base. First, there were the "field hollers", rhythmic work songs that incorporate the puffing and the sweat of field labor. At the same time, litany-like hymns, English words chant- ed much in the African manner, were sung as the Negro was "Christianized." Later, instruments were acquired or made (the banjo is an example, develop- ed in place of the expensive and more complicated guitar), giving the music more rhythmic and tonal variety. The gospel song was refined and sophisticated. Finally, the blues, as a distinct form ap- peared, telling in terms of ironic humor and existential d'spair and bitterness, the story of the "emancipated" Negro in ur- ban slums and on sharecropper farms. From this basis emerged Dixieland jazz, swing, rhythm and blues, Southern rock, rock and roll, and more. Roc and Roll AFTER THE New York-London coro- nation of The Beatles, rock and roll took a new turn. Along came groups like the Rolling Stones ("Satisfaction," "The Last Time") who concentrated on South- ern Rock a la Chuck Berry in addition to some of their own, impressionistic com- positions, and the Animals, ("House of the Rising Sun," "It's My Life") who bor- rowed from rhythm and blues- and old jazz styles. In each case, however, there is an ob- vious effort to do more than just change the Negro forms to make them accessible to white audiences (as had been the case when jazz was popularized). While they are expected to be fully in command of the traditional style, the new groups were making personal. statements, based on their own experience and relevant to the social milieu of the day. Local rock and roll groups are general- ly notorious for their short careers and poor quality. Ann Arbor, however, seems to have been made for the encourage- ment of rock groups and the local mar- ket is flourishing. All types can be found, ranging from the well-meaning efforts of a few clean-cut fraternity brothers to. some surprisingly slick work by high school students, to the shaggy, somewhat calculated decadence of others. They go by such cavalier names as ,The Moving Violations, Iguana and the Iguanas, The Drivin' Wheels, the Vanguards, The Bea- vers and The Hide aways. .Folk-Rock THE FRATERNITY or quad dance is their mainstay, and to the lucky ones go the chances to appear out of town at the big teen clubs, or, the ultimate, to cut a record or be on local television. They constantly change. personnel and names looking for the magic combination that brings SUCCESS. Meanwhile, they faithfully reproduce the current Top Ten every Saturday night. Despite some amateurism, the work done by many of the groups is quite good, and the competition between them is be- coming keen. Perhaps the best known of the campus groups are the Marksmen and the Bushmen. Although they stick fairly closely to recent popular tunes, they perform them with their own ar- rangements a n d occasionally include vintage or unusual (rock and roll) songs. One high school group, The Rationals, has been successful enough to make a re- cording (called "Feelin' Lost") and ap- pear often on a Detroit television station. THE BRIGHTEST SPOT- on the Ann Arbor rock and roll scene is Deon Jackson whose recent recording, "Love Makes the World Go Around," which he composed, sold nearly a million copies. He also has his own rock group, The Ar- borsouls who, in contrast with other local groups, have attempted to develop an original style using their own composi- tions. The strongest criticism that can be made of most of these groups is that they lack originality, not musical talent. Yet, if one has nothing better to offer, one plays what the audience demands. Also -there is little room in an already glutted market for their work, and, while the rock and roll boom has by no means burned itself out, other trends may soon equal its popularity. folk-sock SOME CALL IT the wave of the future; others say it is a sell-out to the images and trappings of success; others think it the psychoanalytic music of "the conscious generation;" a few merely say it is "camp" and are satisfied like chil- dren. Ever since Bob'Dylan "went electric" and people learned more than the first verse of "We Shall Overcome," a phe- nomenon called folk-rock (Simon and Garfunkel's "Sound of Silence," and The Byrds' "Turn; Turn, Turn," for example) has been the subject of a lively debate between folk "traditionalists" and the supporters of the new style. Many influences have combined to make this new, relatively -undefined style. One is the popularity and-almost-the legitimacy of rock and roll. In addition, social protest, particularly about civil rights, or war, is the theme of many of the songs, and is a rallying point for to- day's activit young. Another factor was the need for variety and originality-or IR MUSIC I CALL YOU IN THE, NAME OF THE GODDESS Oil upon the limbs Perhaps a rancid smell As here within the oil mill Beside the little church On the tacky pores Of unrevolving stone. Oil upon the hair Wound with plaited string And other scents perhaps Cheap and costly scents And statuettes with fingers Baring tiny breasts. Oil upon the sun The stunning of the leaves On stopping of the stranger The falling of the coins To thud of heavy silence There between the knees; I call you in the name of the goddess . . Oil upon the shoulders And on the twisting flanks Dark ankles in the grass. This wound upon the sun As vesper bells were rung As I spoke in churchyard With a crippled man. C. P. Cavafy a gimmick, depending on one's general attitude-in popular music. THE COMBINATION of these produced folk-rock, a form of music that has produced probably the best and also the worst of current popular records. The best has come from Bob Dylan. Despite charges of opportunism and com- mercialism leveled at him by former de- votees, his present tyle is, intellectually and musically, more sophisticated and more honest than his former traditional and protest songs. His new musical style is an adaption of the old blues band styles, similar to, but not copied from, rock and roll. And secondly, if one ac- cepts the premise that expression should be based on experience, Dylan does not belong in the field of protest or field- hand songs. Although he admits his debt to Woody Guthrie, who lived and docu- mented the barren misery of the thirties, Dylan knowing that he lacks this back- ground, has dropped the woeful protest of the worker and picked up a highly personal, often obscure imagery concern- ed more with metaphysical problems than the physical. Charges that Dylan has sold out seem even less valid when one realizes that his present stylings are 'much less im- mediately appealing and emotionally ac- ceptable than his earlierprotest songs. Now he goes far beyond the current,- "popular" concern about social injustices and deals more with the basic issue of the individual's -elationship-or lack thereof-with the reality around him. UNFORTUNATELY, in the newly-cut field of folk-rock, there is more. chaff than grain. Only a few artists beside Dylan have managed to preserve both their integrity and their popularity-the British Donovan, the Lovin' Spoonful (CDo You Believe in Magic?") and the Kinks ("A Well-Respected Man"). Other folk-rock performers, like Sonny and Cher or Andy Warhol's Velvet Un- derground, exploit this country's sudden taste for the bizzare, the grotesque, or the "camp." In a symposium of letters from noted music critics recently published in "The (Concluded on Page Eight) CHARLOTTE WOLTER is a junior majoring in English and Associate Editorial Director of the Daily. She listened to classical music until 1963, when she discovered the Beatles AWAITING THE BARBARIANS Nikos Gatsc ELEGY In flame of 0 your eye surely once s Surely to eye-flame spring swamped ancient shore Now as you hallowed sleep On frozen fields where the clematis Wound to embalm enmarbled wings Young children of endurance I would you might appear one night Stars' blood the leaf of myrtle For surely once on your chaste foreb white snow White snow of lambs of lilies But ah you swept through life like s Like summer flame like flaying kerc Though you had once been unto her amaranthine wave Her caustic stone Her youngest swallow in estranging Flameless to coolest dawn starless to Warm heart sprung now to the unk To snarled teeth of other shore To frozen children of wild cherry a DEATH AND THE K1 I see you mute unmoving Mounted on stallion of Akrites lance Timelessly riding through the aeons And would about you furl Dark forms that would ensure endi Until one day you also are consumec Until you are quick fire in Fate agai And would about you furl The bitter orange of snow encrusted And would before your glimpse unf In which red Scorpio would sing of In which the Heaven's River would In which the frozen North Star we And would about you pastures furl Waters which nourished German li And would this armor which you w With basil sprig with bountied splas With trophies of Plapoutas pure sw But I who one spring dawn saw yo. Rend skies of my own land And in the plain of Nauplion Saw the Morean cypress hush Before the wanting embrace of the Where aeons grappled with crosses o Now would about you furl A chifd's embittered eyes Cold eyelids closed In mud and in the blood of Holland Black land once more Shall flourish into green Iron hand of Goetz shall topple turi Hoard heap to sheaves of barley and And dead loves deep in darkest fore: There where stunned virgin leaf wa: On breasts where softly trembled t< Hushed star shall dazzle like spring But you shall be unmoving mute Mounted on stallion of Akrites lanc Timelessly riding through the aeons A restless hunter from the generatio With these dark forms that would Until one day you also are consumes Until you are quick fire in Fate aga Until once more in river caves resou The sounding hammers of enduranc No not for rings and swords For pruning hooks for ploughs. What do we wait for assembled in the square? The barbarians are to arrive today., Why is the Senate left inactive? Why are the senators still idle? Because the barbarians will arrive today. What laws can the senators now pass? When the barbarians come, they will reject them. Why did the Emperor arise so soon To sit atop the largest city gate Upon the throne sedately crowned? The barbarians will arrive today. The Emperor waits, with scroll in hand To greet their chief, with flattering Titles and with praises. Why have the consuls and the highest magistrates Come dressed today in purple, in embroidered robes? Why have they come with amethyst encrusted bracelets, With brilliant emerald rings, with gold and silver Decorated canes? The barbarians will arrive today. Such treasurers dazzle their rude eyes. Why do the orators not come as always To deliver speeches 'and to speak-their thoughts?- Because the barbarians will arrive today And easily they tire of eulogistic speeches. Why all 'the sudden tumult and confusion? (How pensive all the faces have become!), Why do the masses leave the squares and streets And homeward turn dumbfounded? Because night has come and with it no barbarians. And a few men returning from the borders. Tell us that no barbarians exist. And now, what will become of us with no barbarians? Those people were a solution of a sort. THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 1966