Page 6-Saturday, September 16, 1978-The Michigan Daily Heavy-metal reigns at Cobo - , By TIMOTHY YAGLE It was the rock 'n' roll veteran and its offspring performing Thursday night as heavy rock masters Black Sabbath and Van Halen blasted a sold-out Cobo Arena 'with some incredibly loud but often mediocre heavy-metal rock. The California-based, four-man, powerhouse opened the show playing all the tunes from their highly successful debut LP Van Halen. It was: clear from the beginning that this wild, AUDITIONS Soloists * Chorus * Orchestra Johann Strauss' GYPSY BARON Sign up Wednesdqy, Sept. 20, 7:30 pm Conference Room, New Fire Station Corner Huron and Fifth THE COMIC OPERA GUILD For further info: 665-6074 party-down band was there to just make noise. Lead guitarist Edward Van Halen attacked his guitar, wailing out some screeching solos while lead vocalist David Lee Roth, looking very pretty, did his best to emulate Robert Plant, frequently arching back and screaming his larynx out. Needless to say, it didn't all sound very good. Van Halen is a great band live, if you like to let it all hang out - like they do. Vasco da Gama became the first European to sail around the Cape of Good Hope into the Indian Ocean 490 years ago-on Nov. 22, 1497-on a voyage commissioned by the Portugese monarch. After founding a trading post at Calcutta, India, he returned home two years later. They have a good time performing, and. expect their audience to do the same. They got rowdy, priming the anxious crowd for Black Sabbath. THIS FOUR-MAN British band on their 10th anniversary tour, called the last of the underground bands, began their three and four chord assault on the ears with the pounding "Symptom of the Universe" from their LP Sabotage. This set the musical tone for the evening. Their song selection could have been a bit better. They didn't play a few of the true Sabbath tunes most of us expected them to play ("Sabbath Bloody Sabbath" for one). However, they did do ear-splitting versions of "Electric Funeral," "War Pigs," "Iron Man," and "Paranoid", probably their best of the evening, along with "War Pigs." This punk-like band with a very select following lost everything when they played the incredibly lazy and slow "Black Sabbath". The band was missing notes and cues and really shouldn't have played the song at all. It's just not a good live number. Sabbath does not have an outstanding stage show. Lead guitarist Tom Ommi was in the center-state spotlight instead of lead vocalist Ozzy Ozbourne who was to Ommi's left. Sabbath's raw, gut-level sound revolves around Ommi's guitar and the heavy bass, which is what attracted their followers in the first place. OZBOURNE IS no Tyler or Jagger, either. He looks almost clumsy running, yelling and clapping around the stage and looked like a complete moron hunching next to Ommi trying to mimic him while he just stood there grinning and playing his black guitar. They ended their one-and-a-half hour set with "Dirty Women" and "Rock 'n Roll Doctor" from their last album, Technical Ecstacy. Then they played the title cut from their soon-to-be- released LP Never Say Die. Black Sabbath is going to be around longer than most people think, even though their songs receive little airplay. They've got a limited but strong cult that believes "never say die" is a perfect motto for their band, .