Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, May 24, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY music Sun Ra: The surfacing of uture p ripp By W. REXFORD BENOIT I can only hint at the talent of Sun Ra. Neglected for years (I first heard one of his records in 1961 in a tiny Upper Peninsula ham- let), Sun Ra belatedly is sur- facing today in the forefront of revolutionary musical culture. His Astro-Infinity Arkestra is in Ann Arbor for two more days, tonight at Canterbury House and tomorrow night at the Ar- mory with the MC5, prior to their appearance at the First Annual Detroit Rock 'n' Roll Revival next weekend. Sun Ra's multability finds the f theme of optimism. Space is the place where you can be free, and anything is possible, there. I'm trying tok remember where I first heard one of the things said last night by an Arkestra member. "We came from no- where, here; why can't we go from here, somewhere?" Got it? Place is space, and so there are 4 no limits on what you can do in place/space. Surely you see why the mes- sage is memorable. It's some- thing to renew energy. Of course there are no limits on you. Charlie Parker had the same message. His finest group in- rr. cluded Buddy Rich on drums, because especially in contrast to Rich's plodding beat was the native freedom of Parker's play- ing apparent. In fact the elements of Sun Ra's music: melding of poten tialities, clarity, harmony, tech- nique, are closely similar to Parker's. Both invented new { ~musical forms. in hostile men- :.: vironments, and both spoke of the present in the language of the 'future possible. x. h?..Last night, Sun Ra played Daily- Peter Dreyfuss tunes by and for Fletcher Hen- ossible derson and Duke Ellington, making it clear that while these venerated bandsmen tootled for the musical tastes of millions, they lacked the strength to give insight. How many times have we heard that music is more than itself? Music Is a' form that al- ludes to infinities. The most pleasing feature of the Arkestra is their musician- ship. Here's what happens: the organ and piano set the tune, a pretty lady sings (like the lady Charlie Mingus had with him four eyars ago, except with more gumption), Arkestra picks up reeds, maybe there is a brass solo or some brass ensemble work, Do -you know something special about music, art, movies, theatre, rock, jazz? The Daily is currently recruit- ing summer reviewers. Benefits include free tickets. Come in any afternoon and ask for the boss. the lady steps back and every- one plays. Sometimes the pattern is re- versed or interspersed. Occa- " sionallyF there is no pattern ex- cept the language we rarely hear anyhewer but in universal art (free) forms. A final word. Somehow Sun Ra has not been given a proper Laudience for his work. Eight years ago it was easy to hear him, then forget him.I But the Arkestra has remained together ragainst odds, and is gathering force each day. The area that has produced the 5, the Stooges, and other fine groups now brings another visionary talent to our attention. Let it be our gain. Council questions bank building plan (Continued from Page 1) proposed the motion granting the be the same size for any given variance, countered that owners height regardless of increased set- of property adjacent to the area backs." were aware of the variance and The bank also indicated its raised no objections. "need and desire" to concentrate Fire Chief Arthur Stauch, the all main office activity in down- board member who seconded Con- town Ann Arbor, But the appeal lin's motion, said it was approved cited a "two-pronged problem of because the proposed structure availability of land per se and the would not conflict with surround- land cost factor" as a hardship in ing buildings. achieving this. "Basically that building wouldn't '1 4, ip ciem Illu.strated Man:' i -. By JAY CASSIDY Eliot Rosewater once said that science fiction writers are the, most visionary writers in the world. He said that after crashing a convention of science fiction writers and getting ,dead drunk. The Illustrated Man is a science fiction story yet it is certainly not the most visionary of movies.{ The famous Ray Bradbury wrote the book that the film was based upon; the famous Jack Smight (I'd Rather Be Rich, Harper, and No Way to Treat a Lady) directed the film, and the famous' James E., Reynolds did a groovy job of painting Rod Steiger with tattoos. Francois Truffaut made Fahrenheit 451 another book by Ray Bradbury. The film is visually graceful but verbally clumsy, par- tially because it was the first English language film of Truffaut, but, as Eliot Rosewater admits, science fiction writers can't write for sour apples. Thus, it is my suspicion that science fiction readers make allowances for- bad writing because the subject matter is, so visionary. But, it is just possible that science fiction writing such as Ray Bradbury is poorly transferred to the screen. Bradbury is 4 good writer with some good visionary ideas, but the two films that have been made from his books have really been poor. This is !not the fault of Bradbury but the fault of Truffaut and Jack Smight. The Illustrated Man was visiually very dull and the structure of the parts was very rough. Yet, the ideas are interesting and it is disappointing to see them handled so poorly.. The beginning of the film is a warning or maybe' an apology. It tells the audience that there are three "times" portrayed in the film. This insulted me, I didn't wait to be told, I wanted to find out for myself. The story is about Rod Steig'er who gets his body covered with skin illustrations which tell stories and predict the future. Robert Drivas is hitchhiking across the country to go work in a Sears Roebuck in California. He meets Rod Steiger and sees the future. The stories on Rod Steiger's skin are what Robert Drivas sees or dreams, yet these stories are meaningless. It is not that they have no plot (one is about how future kids have lions eat their. parents; another is about lost spacemen wandering through rubber trees in the rain.) The stories are too complete; the audience under- stands them to well for them to be unnatural or bizarre or even' the slightest bit interesting. The "recurring theme" is that all the stories have Rod Steiger and Claire Bloom in them. The third time portrayed is that of Rod Steiger telling Robert Drivas how Claire Bloom put all the tattoos on him. The stories are all mixed together with motley blending and silly transitions. As the film ends and Rdbert Drivas realizes his future, there is nothing left. It does not make us wonder about the really ter- rific changes that are going on, it doesn't suggest the effects of what machines do to us, what wars do to us, and what big and simple ideas do to us. If the film is analyzed as not a science fiction film then it is even worse. The macabre ending is just an end and nobody really cares about Robert Drivas. The sexy voice at the beginning and the end said that When examining the future, questions arise with no absolute answers. This doesn't work since, at the end of the movie, we have no questions. However, the bank owns 19,688 square feet of land on .the site and has proposed building on 'only 6,741 square feet. When the board granted the appeal April 11, 'three ex-officio members were absent, Wheeler, City Planning Director Ray Mar- tin, and Etter. All three had pre- viously expressed concern over granting the variance to the bank., Board members F. H. Colvin, the architect for the new bank building, and Joseph Edwards did not vote or participate in discus- sions. The only dissenting voter in the board's action was Clarence Roy. At that time, he pointed out that the air rights of future adjacent buildings would be pre-empted by the structure. However, Henry Conlin, who Guard clears Carolina (Continued from Page i) also said the National Guai'd will remain "as long as necessary." At New York City College ten- tative agreement was reached that could end a month-long revolt by black and Puerto Rican students. The New. York 'City College agreement, subject to approval by the faculty senate and the Board of Higher Education, could even- tually make the student body more than half black and Puerto Rican. It is now less than a quarter non- white. The black and Puerto Rican stu- dents, who forced two-week shut- down of the schooleon April 23rd, also won other majorgoals-in- cluding establishment of a separ- ate school of urban and third- world studies. Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan. Jr., denied yesterday petition for bail for 40 Dartmouth students and sympathizers sen-1 tenced to 30 day Jail terms for contempt of court in the seizure of the 'college administration building May 6. The Justice made no comment In denying' the. petition which was brought to him after: the Ist Cir- cult Court of Appeals in Boston refused to' allow bail pending a hearing. A gun scare on the St. Joseph's Colegt campus sent most of the school's 21 black students to the president's office Thursday with a plea for protection. The student, members of the Black Student Union on campus, said they had been harassed and threatened by white students. They said a white student walked' through a dormitory lounge with a rifle Wednesday night, Banet reported. be out, of place," Stauch said. "It wouldn't be a big sore thumb sticking up." "The bank has a well established function," he added. "It would be a good building, well-kept and maintained." Councilman Robert Faber (D- Second ward), who was first to challenge the board's action, says, "It is very clear the Ann Arbor Bank had no cause to request the variance let alone be granted it." The bank would be under "no major difficulty" if it did not re- ceive the variance, Faber main- tains. Besides, he adds, "this is not just a small change. It's tre- mendous." Faber claims the bank sought the variance to lessen construc- tion costs. "I'm angry i at the bank," he says, "and I am angry at the board for buckling under." Councilman Leroy Cappaert, (D- Fifth ward), the new chairman of the zoning appeals :board, says "I don't know why the board granted the variance. I find it difficult to understand how th~e practical 'dif- ficulty or unnecessary hardship could be shown in this case,"~ Cappaer adds that the appeal is really "a flaunting of the law- ful zoning ordinance." "I believe in law and order' in zoning matters as much as in any other matter," he maintained. Both Cappaert and Faber say changes in the board will be the structure and personnel of the group., "Obviously this doesn't work," Cappaert says. '0I -records-- Harmonies of Winter Consort By R. A. PERRY Contributing Editor One of the problems that any young, talented group of mu- sicians has to face is the in- credible heap of vinyl garbage that recording companies dump onto the market. The "top hit" charts seldom indicate quality- rather they provide an index to those records most heavily pro- moted or to those which come from established winners. A sin- gle with the Beatles the Anni- versary Waltz would make the charts, but a new group with a good sound, especially if that sound has a depth beyond in- stant recognition, struggles sim- ply to be heard. The Winter Consort is such a group; they have cut a beau- tiful record that, because it de- fies easy categorization, will probably never reach the wide audience of jazz, folk, and clas- sical music enthusiasts that it deserves. The jazz buff may look at the album, 'see that they do some things to Dowland,-Villa- Lobos, and Weiss, and think of previous unsuccessful attempts to make the classics swing: the dessicated "Play Bach" of Jac- ques Loussier or the banal in- anities of the Swingle Singers. The classical music lover may turn up his nose and too easily anticipate simple-minded ar- rangements. They're wrong, for though the Winter Consort cut across gen- eric lines, they arrive at more than an eclectic pastiche. They effect a complex but translucent instrumentation that is always fresh a n d interesting; even when they sing in an unimbar- rassed lyricism, the melodic lines float above a ground of in- tricate ' instrumental support. They seek and achieve a balance between the written and t h e improvised. The 16th-century composer Michael Praetorius defined a consort as follows: "When some persons (with different instru- ments, such as harpsichord, lyre, double harp, lutes, bandorn, penocon, zithers, -viola da gam- ba, a flute, or sometimes a rack- et, do quietly, delicately, a n d pleasantly make music together in a company and gathering, Paul Winter opens with a guitar Allemande by Weiss and then. moves softly into a long ballad based oft a Hungarian PeasantSong, which begins with the alt sax break- ing over a droning bass and tampura. .Various drums and bells glitter over 'the insistent drone and then drums solo; the tampura, sax, and penetrating English horn return inua haunt- ing manner. It gets quite "deep." Antonio Carlos Jobim's "CantaA Canta Mais" follows with a Des- mon-isc solo by Paul Winter. "The Little Train of Caipira" from Villa-Lobos Bachians Bra- sileiras No. 2 begins in an al- most trite Teti Heath manner, but there is a nice play between percussion and cello as the "train" gets under way. The last band on side one is a free im- provisation :on a Japanese Koto scale, and it is a fine line here between very free modern jazz. and the post-Webern world of classical music. Side two opens with a Joni Mitchell ballad and is followed by a quiet, melodic sax solo that becomes enriched by the im- provising cello and bass. "Her- resy" features the guitar of Karl Herreshoff; it's very soft, but again, very involved. Only "For- lorn Hope" on this sidb sounds a little too tico-tico to me, but "Trotto," which ends the side, is a wonderfully shifting-in in- strumentation and rhythm- adaptation of a 13th century Italian dance. Each band and the small in- terplays that occur cannot, of course, be fully annotated. What impressed me so much about the record and the Winter Consort is that, even in the most simple cuts I never heard that,.queasy Musak, cocktail lounge sound that typifies so much unaggres- sive jazz. There was always, even at the most relaxed mo- ments, a sense of complexity and involvement, a true concern with group sound.;Furthermore, and an important aspect of such music, the Winter Consort do not pal with repeated listening; there's a lot happening to ap- preciate. Sx Jearborn students resign (Continued from Page 2) Scott said the "minimum" es- timates of those who would attend the concert is 2000, and claimed that with "no toilets, no running water" and the lack of nearby parking, these facilities were in- adequate. There are 800 students enrolled at Dearborn. The resigning student govern- ment members, however, noted that the half-mile-long meadow on the mansion grounds had been used for the Fairlane Musical Festival-a series of concerts- during the University's sesquicen- tennial celebration two years ago. Scott countered that, with the lack of a- band shell or built-in seating, the mansion had, at that time, proved inadequate. Dick Reynolds, Dearborn cam-ai pus director of community rela- tions said, "I definitely feel this is not a case of censorship.'We've had numerous speakers here, some of whom could be considered con- troversial." and do accord together'in sweet harmony." This description fits, the Winter Consort well, at least to the musical ends if not to the instruments used. Using no electronic equipment, the Winter Consort rely on mod- ern jazz instruments such as alto sax, but they replace the piano with a classical guitar. Yet "the richness of instrumen- tation comes from the inclusion of the English horn, a Persian Tar, a Baroque lute, the Ama- dinda or Ugandan xylophone, the Indian tampura, the Renais-.. sance rackett (an ancestor of the bassoon), an enormous num- ber of drums (Brazilian, African,' Bulgarian), and other more dis- creet percussion instruments. That all the ingredients do not merely produce a concoc- tion of garish effects for its own sake can be attributed to the in- telligence and artistry of the 'performers of the Consort. Lead- er Paul Winter, who plays the alto sax with as sweet a lyricism as Paul Desmond, has traveled with his own sextet around the Festival)., Cellist Richard Bock sat first chair under Stokowski's American Symphony. Paul McCandless, English horn, played with the Pittsburgh Symphony, and Virgil Scott, alto flute, for Skitch Ienderson. The lutes and guitars are handled by Gene Bertoncini, who worked as widely as the Benny Goodman Sextet and the Met Opera, and by Karl Herreshoff. If that all sounds a -little too egg-headed a roster, you will appreciate knowing that percus- sionist Steven Bukar played with John Lee Hooker, Brenda Lee, and Jim and Jean, while bass John Beal was a member of the Lee Konitz Quartet. Then, as an added garnish to the musical Mulligatawny, the Winter Con- sort album features the virtuoso of the Israeli jar-drum, Ruth Ben- Zvi, who won a gold medal at the Moscow Internationl Folk Festival. So what do they do? Side one of the A&M release (SP 4170) p /' DIAL 8-6416 Shows Today and Sunday at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. What is the Magus Game? The game is love. The game is lust. The vicious game is life itself... Or is it death? 27h CENTiURY,FOX PRESENTS A KOHN-KINBERG MNaosw PRODUCTION cowk.e ii aulE NEXT: LOPERT FILM FESTIVAL 4i / i world. (In fact, the Winter Con- sort was the only jazz group in- vited to last year's Israel Music I i I Ever see a DEEP South western with Spanish cowboys and Inca In dians? 'RHOTS! (next week) FRIDA" What Ev and his fifteen piece ToB ASTRO INFINITY ARKESTRA dir. ROBE Y and SATURDAY per Happened laby Jane :RTALDRICH (1962) SNEAK PREVUE TONIGHT at 9 P.M. DIAL 5-6290 READ AND USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Regular show before and after prevue mo, EUIUSE-sCIESEBLOOM in RAY BRADBURY'S masterpiece of the supernatural! Aqi lieft m\srm I/ ItilK iY~\ 1 iL '/ I r