special feature the summer daily by nadine coho das 4 FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1969, NIGHT EDITOR: DANIEL ZWERDLING Iris Bell Feeling glad 4 Adventure: all over -Daily-Larry Robbins T'S AMAZING, you know, what people can do with a piano, a bass and the dri~ms.' When they put them together in song, some people can make you sit still for hours or make you feel like dancing. Or they can make you happy or sometimes make you think. "Balderdash-" you mutter. "No one is that good, and besides, who are you to say?" I am a person with two ears who likes using them to capture the music of the Iris Bell Adventure, the long-playing trio at the Rubaiyat on Main St. The Adventure, which has been at the Rubaiyat 13 months, is Iris Bell, leader and piano player; Butch Miles, the drum- mer who sings falsetto, deep base, country western twang and virtually any other voice; and Derek Pierson, the sideburned, mustachioed bass player who also plays the guitar and develops the group's ever- changing special effects. To attempt a conventional review of the Adventure by analyzing their musical abil- ity is unnecessary-that they are very, very talented I shall grant them. BECAUSE THERE IS, I think, something more to the group than producing well-balanced, good music. They can, plain and simply, make you feel good inside just watching and listening to them. "We want to wake up people to what is in them," Iris explains. And I think the group succeeds because they really play "from a love to perform, not a need to." Iris, Miles and Pierson are doing what they enjoy-making a lot of good music for people they like and inviting their friends to join them. At an April benefit concert at Hill Aud., for example; Iris stopped the program to move the piano so she could see the audi- "Maybe the reason I can relate well to big groups is because I think I have failed in a lot of my personal relationships," ad- mits Iris. "I want to make it up on a bigger scale." IRIS DOES NOT talk about peace and love merely to fill space between songs.. She believes and lives what she says. At the Diag rally after the first night of arrests on South University, she walked up to the microphone, took it and spoke despite brief spurts of heckling. She talked about what she talks of every day and asked the people really to strive for peace by being peaceful, not by needlessly provoking violence. As she finished Iris asked all those sup- porting her to make the "V" peace symbol' and raised her own hands with the many who did. "I just had to say something," she ex- plains. "I had 'to find out if people still believed in peace,..." HOW TO END THIS now, I wonder. I could say, "And so. folks, for a really swell evening go down to the Rubaiyat and see the Iris Bell Adventure. They're great." But that won't do. Because maybe there is no ending. May- be things aren't finished with the group. Though they've been together five years they're still growing, they say. I think it might be like a song Iris has written, "Summer and Grass." She says she hasn't written the last verse yet be- cause she can't. She says she hasn't lived it all. And I don't think I can write the final paragraph here, either, because there is nothing yet than can sum up the Adven- ture, nothing that can or should put even a verbal lid on their music. I won't even try. ence and they could see her. And before resuming the music, she invited the crowd to make Hill their living room. Whether or not the transformation com- pletely occurred is unimportant. At least Iris let her audience know she wanted them to be more than spectators at a mu- sical show. She wanted them to be her friends. And so do Miles and Pierson. VERSATILE AND energetic, Miles is the youngest member of the trio at 25 and a drummer since he was nine. "It's very gratifying to know people like the way we do a song," Miles says, "rather than like it just because it's a popular tune." Watching him play, especially during his 10-minute drum solo in "Mirage" you can't help but be awed and exhilarated by the whirlwind he creates when his arms are set against a strobe light. They zoom up and down, across and back like a supersonic mix-master blend- ing every beat. Sometimes you catch a single motion. Other times, just a blur- shirt, stick, drum, hand-fused together. Miles also writes some of the group's songs and shares the major singing duties with Iris. He is the nearest thing to the group clown-he can create comic charac- ters with his chameleon voice but can also sing a mellow folk song like Leonard Co- hen's "Suzanne." BASS PLAYER PIERSON seems to bal- ance the exuberance of Iris and Miles with his quiet intensity. He's the technician of the groun-the behind the scenes man tar, however. He also does the special ef- fects during each !performance which en- tails adjusting sound levels (three or four times during some numbers), controlling the strobe and black lights, and singing background as well. SO WHEN YOU combine the talents of these three people you have something more than three good performers. You have a good time. Evidentally a very good time. The Ad- venture came to the Rubaiyat in June of 1968 for a one month engagement. And they're still there. "We tell the truth here," Iris says to all audiences. "Our old manager used to tell us 'You have to have some gimmick' . . . but we don't believe it. We're not an act." When the Adventure plays there are no games, no tricks, no blatant attempts to overpower the audience. Instead there is a genuine atmosphere of relaxed enjoyment whether at 3000-seat Hill or the more inti- mate Rubaiyat. It comes through simply in watching the three make music together. They smile, they laugh, tell jokes, ("We're h e r e even if everyone else is at the riots," Miss Bell quipped on the second night of the South University disturbances.) They speak to friends in the audience as they spot them-(at Hill, as well, fa- miliar faces were acknowledged throughout rows of people.) And they always'seem to relax, ignoring a dissonant chord, a missed beat or an ac- cidentally garbled lyric-all of which are rare. Her eyes are closed, her head tilts back and sometimes bows forward in a quiet second. Her hands and arms are either playing the Rubaiyat's Baldwin grand pi- ano or waving gently to the drum and bass accompaniment. And her shoulders sway, reminding you of each beat going by. The words flow in a crystal clear, strong voice that can be Janis Joplin in one song and Barbra Streisand in the next. It's the kind of voice that lets you re- lax. You're not afraid Iris will miss a high note because her sound is so solid you know she'll hit it. AND SHE THINKS. She has theories, ideas, ideals and a part of herself she likes to convey through conversation and through each song or set of songs the group does. In a sense Iris challenges each audience with her mind. She tells them at the start what the group is going to sing and talk about and offers them a choice: Become involved or leave. They all stay. And the audience is her audience. Every evening Iris speaks of peace-the internal peace in each person and the ex- ternal peace between people and between nations. And she talks about love-between per- former and audience, between all people and most assuredly between man and wo- man. Granted you may have heard this before and may want to rank her with other "mes- sage" performers. But I think Iris -is dif- ferent. She's not kidding. She is what she does-honest in both her. music and her They left, but half an hour later they came back, apologized and stayed until closing. Iris is equally blunt in delivering her views on life. Although she talks about love between men and women, she is quite explicit about what she does and.does not mean. "For those of you who can't. get above your belts we do this one," 'Iris says. And she begins "Why Don't We Do It in the Road?" She goes beyond the title, however; and adds her own verses to emphasize the point. One night she looked squarely into the crowd and asked, "Why don't you do it in the grass? Why don't you do it on your ass?" Those who believed her laughed. Those who understood didn't. "HEY JUDE" PROBABLY says it best, though, and when the trio does the song Iris talks at great length about what she feels. She reinterprets each section of "Jude" and explains- her interpretations directly to the audience. Where the original words say "let her into your heart," for example, Iris sings "let love into your heart." "If you can get so full of love for your- self, some just has to spill out to others and bring them into the universal circle of people," she tells the audience. "It has to widen that circle. "When the Beatles sing 'go get her' they mean 'go get love,' not merely some girl,'" she says. "And when they say 'get her un- der your skin' they mean 'get love under your skin'. It's not just bed love-it's for all