i R E C 0 R D S The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 12, 1978-Page 7 UAC Special Events presents THE AMEN-RA DANCE TROUPE African Dance Program THURSDAY, OCT. 12-8:00 PM Michigan League Ballroom ADMISSION FREE HALF PRICE on Beer & Cocktails EVERY MONDAY: Monday Night Football on Our Large 7 ft. Screen Don't Stop the Carnival The Greeting Sonny Rollins McCoy Tyner Milesione M-55005 Milesrone M-9085 A Song For You Ron Carter Mi/estone M-9068 Pieces of Eight Styx A&M 4724 By ALAN RUBENFELD Now that the Milestone Jazzstars have come and gone, Ann Arbor jazz-philes have had their appetites whetted for Sonny Rollins, McCoy Tyner, and Ron Carter. Fortunately, all three have recently released solo albums with their usual touring units, These albums provide an ideal picture of where each individual is at musically, and after Monday's show, this is obviously something Ann Arbor cares about very deeply. Sonny Rollins offers no surprises on Don't Stop the Carnival. It is a continuation of the light, jazz-pop format Rollins has utilized on his past several albums. While not extraordinary in its content or originality, it is an enjoyable disc and demonstrates a possibility of gaining Rollins a wider audience accessibility. The ensuing result is quite palatable, but one gets the feeling that Rollins is offering the listener an appetizer of the feast of talents he is easily capable of. "-DON'T STOP the Carnival," the title cut, contains the album's flashiest melody. Rollins infuses a bright, caypso sound to the song. His tenor saxophone explores the ranges of sound it can offer, from brilliant, bouncy riffs to harsher, gutteral grunts. Drummer Tony Williams offers some outstanding percussion technique, keeping pace with Rollins' breakneck improvisation. One possible flaw in Rollins' choice of instrumentation shows with guitarist Aurell Ray. While sounding quite fluid if not uninspiring with his soloing and rhythm on the album's funkier tunes like Rollins' "Camel" or guest artist Donald Byrd's "Non Cents," Ray sounds out of place on the slower and more mainstream songs such as "A Child's Prayer" and "Autumn Nocturne." Trumpeter Byrd helps to augment the group sound, playing either in a funkier vein of mellowly eloquent whatever the situation dictates. Byrd and Rollins' tandem playing highlight "Don't Stop the Carnival." The two work well together, supplying each other with a base to work their improvisations from. One could only wish the group performed a bit tighter and. that Rollins' choice of instrumentation will lean to a more acoustic persuasion in the future. A listen to some of Sonny Rollins' older acoustic work (reissue of his Green Dolphin Street classic is available just this month) shows another side of a man considered the greatest tenor saxophonist alive. It is hard to refute the claim that Ron Carter is the greatest acoustic bass player jazz has to offer. Indeed, no damage is inflicted on this reputation in Carter's new album, A Song for You. Ron Carter does not simply expand the capabilities of the bass - he redefines them. At times, his sound can be the richest of tones, or it can rage with a demonic fury. On A Song for You, Carter opts for a full, sonorous texture out of'his acoustic and piccolo bases. The album's theme seems to be on the sedate side. Carter features a quartet of cellos on each piece to provide both background harmonies and melodies. The bass/cello combination offers the listener a relatively sedate cocktail mood. "A Song for You," the title track, is a soulful, if not a little maudlin, melody. Jack DeJohnette's drumming is incredibly inspiring, providing a firm foundation for Carter to expose his musical ideas. DeJohnette's technique is equally eloquent on the ensuing cuts, "El Ojo de Dios" and "A Quiet Place". Always innovative and sensitive, DeJohnette becomes the driving force behind the unit. CARTER OFTEN gives the listener an opportunity to hear him playing two bases at one time, while his acoustic bass lies down the fluid rhythm, his piccolo bass soars above, taking the lead melody. The ensuing combination is quite harmonious. Carter picks up the tempo with the cooly-paced "Good Time," with the bassist playing simultaneous lead lines on the acoustic and piccolo basses, while the piano and cello supply the rhythm. A Song for You is a lightly accented albtm, filled with prime examples of Ron Carter's bass virtuosity. While the record does not really explore new combinations of orchestration of instrumental groupings, it is a pleasant mix of individual talent and tasteful accompaniment. The influence of McCoy Tyner permeates all of jazz. The drive and inspiration he places in his music is limitless. His music saturates the listener with an indelible part of the artist's spirit. Tyner has been making his musical expressions for more than two decades. His polytonal textures are vivid and clear. The Greeting reaches high limits of emotional expressiveness as well as one or two moments of mediocrity. The opening cut, "Hand in Hand," is about three minutes too long because of its repetitive nature, although the opening moments showcase Tyner's brilliant percussionist, Guiherme Franco. "Fly With the Wind," a number from the album of the same name, containst the spirit of the studio version less the string background. The song, like the newly released "Pictures," is orchestrated to contain dynamic levels of intensity. They are both exhilarating combinations of instrumentation organization. The title cut features some extended solo work by Tyner. Also, McCoy performs a solo piece written by the immortal John Coltrane, "Naima." McCoy Tyner's reverence for his great mentor exposes itself in the love one feels generated by this emotional ballad. This tender ode to Coltrane'I'former wife is onesof the highlights of this enjoyable collection of performances by one of the world's keyboard greats. The major drawback of the record, as in Sonny Rollins' live recording, lies in its fidelity of reproduction. Both performances sound a little muddled and the separation of instrumentation, while not always spectacular in live recordings, seems exceptionally ambiguous here. Nevertheless, McCoy Tyner's The Greeting, as well as Ron Carter's A Song for You and Sonny Rollins' Don't Stop the Carnival, are all pleasing musical packages that offer a glimpse of jazz virtuosity, circa 1978. By TIMOTHY YAGLE Styx will probably never make another album like Grand Illusion, but though their new effort, Pieces of Eight is not as noteworthy and probably won't go through the ceiling like its illustrious predecessor, the music is invigorating and satisfying. One of this band's great assets, aside from the machine-gun drumming of John Panozzo, has always been an ability to fit vocal textures to the tone and style of a song. Dennis DeYoung, Tommy Shaw, and James Young take turns writing and singing, building up an impressive if not overly experimen- tal range of brilliantly-executed musical flavors. If one can ignore their artificial guitar, which sounds like it was spewed out of a computer, there is much to like here. MOST OF THE songs retain Styx' fusion of hard rock idioms with a lighter, airier sound. "I'm O.K.," a typical self-esteem song, has the same joyous atmosphere of Grand Illusion's "Come Sail Away," and Shaw's song about desperate and paranoid life, "Renegade," offers some perky, skip- ping sounds. The album's real hit parade is on side two, beginning with a blockbuster and my personal favorite, "Blue Collar Man." A rolling, rambunctious tune with a strong guitar, "Blue Collar Man" features Shaw - whose voice has a perfect pleading quality to sing about the woes of society's lower echelons - complaining about constantly being on the unemployment line. DeYoung's devilish and bewitching voice is tailor-made for a song about everyone's ace-in-the-hole, the "Queen of Spades," which is thoroughly absor- bing by virtue of its lively accentuation. After seven years of relatively un- noticed work, Styx has finally garnered some well-deserved recognition. Their theatrics also make them superb live, and they have an inimitable stage presence. For Styx, music has finally, begun to pay off in pieces of eight. DOWNTOWN a-. 114 E. Washington I= Dir. David Wiley Director of the African Studies Center, Michigan State University presents: A lecture on Friday, Oct. 13-8 PM "Ethics and Foreign Policy: The U.S. and efrica" " the second in the 1978 DISTINGUISHED FACULTY SERIES SPONSORED B Y THE Ecumenical Campus Center 921 Church St. The lecture will be held in the Center's lounge. All interested persons are invited to attend. Media t rics presents: BLOW .UP (Michelangelo Antonioni, 1966) Antonioni makes a statement on the morals of the sixties generation and examines the theme of reality vs. unreality. David Hemmings as a "mod" fashion photographer may have witnessed a murder and Vanessa Redgrave may be involved: The only reality is the beauty of thesbright hard-edged London that has come to epitomize the look of the 1960's. Music by Herbie Hancock with the classic Jimmie Page-Jeff Beck guitar smashing sequence. Thursday, Oct.12 Nat. Sci. Aud. 7 & 9 LA BETE HUMAINE (Jean Renoir 1938) Jean Gabin, Simone Simon and Julien Corett in a menage-a-trois of love, anger and death. "A masterpiece of editing and perfect simplicity . . . The acting is of exceptional quality."-Georges Sadoul. 7 & 10:20. THE LOWER DEPTHS (Jean Renoir 1936) Based on a Maxim Gorky play and sgt in Renoir's dark Paris of corruption, gambling and midnight ramblings. The Lower Depths follows Jean Gabin as he attempts to retire his career as a thief. Fri. Oct. 13 8:40 only Nat. Sci. Aud. M .A .S.H. (Robert Altman, 1970) A thinly-masked anti-war satire set in Korea, but aimed at Vietnam. A "saucy, outrageous, irreverent film. Nothing is sacred, not medical surgery, chastity, womanhood, army discipline, marriage, war movies, or the great American institution of football."-Time. Sat. Oct. 14 Nat. Sci. Aud. 7 & 9 ADMISSION $1.50 I I i tt . a e le S ___i Are you fed up with RISING PRICES? Then here's Join the Arts Page -The Association for Critical Social Studies and theI County Coalition Against Apartheid present: Fri. Oct. 13, 1978 MLB- 2 SHOWS-7:30 and 9:30 Ann Arbor Premiere of a new Cuban film Washtenaw AUD. 4 Angola: Victory of Hope This film is a compelling account of the people of Angola-their history, their struggle, and their victory. Blends enchanting poems and songs with battle footage and scenes from daily life. ALSO SHOWING South Africa: The White Loager This color documentary traces the history of African nationalism and relates it to the development of apartheid and the explosive situation in South Africa today. BOTH FILMS: $2.00 SUBSCRIPTION RATES haven't gone up at hie Siroan uaijg 764-0558 rr- * " . The NEW BRUBECK 1 QUARTET, iI i