-Tuesday, October 31, 1978-The Michigan Daily Low key Morrison mired in mediocrity Bigger and Better Than Iver NOVWMBER 3,4,5 Friday, 3-10 pm- Saturday, 10 - 9pmn Sunday, Noon- 5pm By DAN WEISS Before Van Morrison began his Sun- day night concert at Detroit's Masonic Temple, a local promo man stepped up to the mike to hype some local concerts. "If you want to see something really different," he subtly predicted, "catch Generation X at the Punch and Judy Theater." Jeanne Dixon would have been proud of him. Morrison's show was not anything different; it was an exercise in conser- vative planning and prosaic execution. The only surprise was in the or- dinariness of his performance. And just like recreational sex, it felt good at the time, but there were no memories to hold onto afterwards.- THE EVENING began ominously. with a thoroughly mediocre perfor- mance by Dave Edmond's Rockpile, doing their version of high-spirited rock. The sound numbing, the riffs were familiar and the songs were undoub- tedly stolen from Chuck Berry and Jimmy Page's wastebaskets. Rockpile was a classic case of the proverbial round peg in the square hole. Having a rock. 'n' roll boogie-til-you-puke band warming up for Van Morrison was akin to having Devo preluding the Guerner String Quartet. rpenter Rd " 971-4310 * Ann Arbor HALLOWEEN at the St aeDoor Restaura nt ESDAY, O0TOER 31 * Happy hour begins at 6:00 p.m. Lasts all night-25C OFF ALL DRINKS *Prizes for best costumes StAoe r ResHitAUri ACROSS FROM HILL AUDITORIUM For Van Morrison, moderation was a by-word. Controlling the band with sub- tle han motions, he allowed keyboar- dist Peter Barnes and lead guitarist Bob Tench just enough room for solos, without letting them explore anything new (not that it might have yielded anything noteworthy: the keyboard solos were Keith Emerson rip-offs, and Tench seems intent on reviving the ghost of Jimi Hendrix). OPENING WITH "Moondance," Morrison controlled the audience mood with the pacing of his songs. He alter- nated new songs with old hits; the show felt like he was pumping his brakes on a long, icy skid. And when the juices really began to flow, Morrison drained them off by turning over the stage to his backup singer and her version of Morrison's "Crazy Love," which made Helen Reddy's version seem definitive. But perhaps the saddest part of Morrison's need to keep things cool was the constraints he put on himself. Van Morrison is one artist who has never shied away from taking chances. As he once wrote, "In order to win, you must be prepared to lose sometime." Despite his risk-taking past, prominent on such masterpieces as Astral Weeks and Vedon Fleece - both conspicuously missing from the concert - almost every time Morrison seemed primed to push things something inside seemed to hold him back. TOWARD THE end of "Into the Mystic," when he sangd"I want to rock your gypsy soul." he was searching his soul, reaching deep in his throat almost ready to gral the final, unreachable note, when he hesitated and slipped back, leaving the organ to try and fill the void. Our gypsy souls were unrocked. It was Morrison's versions of his classics that let us down the most. "I Wanna Make Love To You" was turgid, and lumbered like a dinosaur on its last leg. "Wild Night" didn't race through the approaching life-saving night, but stayed home and waited for bedtime. "Caravan" was saved for the encore and was shackled by Morrisons'. restraints. Instead of turning the band or himself loose, all plugged along as if following a script, down to Morrison's two requisite leg kicks as he stutters "burn it up" at the end. His impromptu kicks at the end of The Last Waltz's "Caravan" was one of its true joys. Sunday night, there was nothing more P r I Why go to the corner drug S store when you can core to n our professiornal beauty salon I and purchase professional products such as, I " KMS Nucleoprotein I * Jhirmack 0 Redken I I " Vidal Sassoon " TCB ! I This month, RECEIVE 10 % OFF on our already UNBELIEVABLY ILOW PRICES. (offer good only with this coupon) Just steps from Campus 1 311 E. LibertyI 994-5057 L - than planned spontaneity. I was sur- prised he didn't tell the crowd when to clap. SURPRISINGLY, the high points of the show were the songs from his new album Wavelength. Granted, the soun- ds don't explore any new ground, but Morrison's artistry stems from his ability as a singer to not only make the ordinary sound interesting, but impor- tant. He uses his voice as an instrument and creates sounds that tremble and convulse with life, that shake your spirit to its roots, and delve into the darkest reaches of his mind. If you've ever heard "Listen to the Lion," you know what I mean. For example, "Kingdom Hall's" ee-do-do-do's" at the end were infused with Morrison's spirited, uplifting dancing. Morrison's repetition of the words "my lover" in his current hit "Wavelength" shud- dered with the struggle for redemption. Wavelength's "Natalia" was the high point of the show, perhaps because the song is about control. "Natalia" captures the internal torment and slow death of a jilted lover trying to sublimate his aching desires. It works so well because the song requires control, like a car steadily creeping towards a cliff with cut brakes and locked doors. He sings with a smoldering intensity, and "Natalia" vibrates with Morrison's internal struggle for survival by steering clear of that death-shrouded cliff. MORRISON'S singing on "Natalia" demonstrates the depth of his artistry. As Bob Seeger once said "I think every last one of us has a connection with Van Morrison. I got from him a sense of commitment." People like Seeger, Graham Parker, and Bruce Springsteen had the foundation of their music built by Van Morrison. His com- mitment to soul and spirit, through his electrified poem/songs was the vital link between black rhythm and blues and white rock and roll. We expect so much from Morrison only because he has raised those expectations and their stakes time after time. When he sings safe songs with bland arrangements devoid of risk, we have to be disappoin- ted. Sander con veys strength For me, the great deception began with Morrison's saxophone that remained onstage and unfingered throughout the night. I knew it was there, and what he could do with it (or perhaps, more importantly, what he would try to do with it) if only he would let go, even for just an instant. Leaving it onstage only raised, our hopes, and ultimately left our expectations of his performance not quite shattered, but simply deflated. The sax sat there, its gilded untouched keys a symbol of - o perhaps a testament to - Va Morrison's tormented attempt to con trol his genius, which eventually, a least Sunday night, controlled only him PIRANESI DRAWINGS NEW YORK (AP)-More than 13 drawings by Giovanni Battista Piranes will be on exhibit at the Pierpoi Morgan Library through Nov. 26. : % The library says the sha commemorates "the 200th anniversar of the death, of the great Venetia draughtsman, etcher, archaeologist theorist, architect and decorator." By CAROL WIERZBICKI If someone were to show you photographs of pre- and post-war Germany, what would you expect? Scarred battlefields? Steely-eyed' generals? Shattered churches and town halls? August Sander, whose exhibit of photographs opened at the University Art Museum last Friday, gives us photographs off... people. Sander died in 1964, but left a rich legacy of those who made Germany - from important artisans and military figures, down to the smallest child. The first photo in the display is that of an architect and his wife. The composition is what first strikes the eye; the woman's head is shown in profile, turning away from her husband. There is something in the man's face, fully exposed but looking off into the distance, that suggests a former anguish covered over by. the years. This unusual pose clearly conveys a sense of detachment between the two, that perhaps stemmed from the need for individual strength of character vital to the survival on the Germany of the 1930s. THE COLD starkness of such photographs, however, is relieved occasionally by witty cynicism, as in the wry portrait of a Cologne painter, be- speckled and smiling slightly. From the introspective and brooding, to the highly expressive, Sander shows a wonderful command of mood; though intelligent use of shadow and positioning, he is able to make the photograph convey the desired emotion or personality. Several paradoxes appear in Sander's example, contrived quite period picture clerk much shoulder work. So appear f, while unorthodox of time, of a holding the way a rifle. S me poses, for stiff and others are. for that as in the stately head an umbrella, one would till others are very turbulent; they seem to capture the person in a moment of passion or fear. Both of these emotions appear in the photo of a seated young man. Hand over his heart, leaning slightly forward, he gave me the impression of a soldier w "Expert and Parent. in #qmericanCulture"g WILLIAM KESSEN Professor of Psychology Yale University Today at 4:00 PM Schorling Auditorium, School of Education going off to war, torn between fear fo his life and love for his country. THE PACEMENT of children (in the few photos devoted to them) is very contrived, and the poses are somewha stiff, as they stand motionless with toy or dog. Balance, rather than liveliness, seems to have been Sander's aim here. But the next photo, "Circus Artists," is marvelous. The character of each subject - a burlesque dancer, a black usher ,with a remarkably creased face - comes forth, and there is no need to analyze their distinct personalities. The circus members, 'gathered before the simple backdrop of a trailer end, create a tension and variety, so that this is not only a photograph of circus people, but a cross-section of humanity. Another composite photo is Sander's "Musicians." The women in cloche hats, smiling shyly, the men wearing a wide range of facialexpressions - this portrait looks more like a famil wedding than a gathering of prominen musicians. It is this wonderfu ambiguity, this exposure of celebrities as people, that makes Sander's work so fascinating. SANDER'S personal, psychologica approach becomes even mor pronounced as one moves on to a serie of works describing people's positions in society. Three revolutionaries sit casually on some porch steps, hair tousled. A sailor poses on a bridge, smiling exuberabtly. A master baker looks up from his mixing-bowl, the very image of a puffed-up hautier. A secretary sits behind her stodgyrdesk and typewriter, a hint of mischief o her face.And a WWI military officer, with riding crop and haughty stance, is a chilling reminder of the ruthless side of humanity. This faithful study o costume, personality, and vocation i one of the best commentarier o working-class life I've ever witnessed. August Sander served in the military during WWI. He photographed important cultural and military contributors to Weimar Germany. Ye Sander retained his sensitivity to the individuality of these people. Rather than fitting them into his (or someone else's) conception of what they should be, he allows them the freedom to b themselves. Student Honored At the annual meeting of-th American Public Health Association it Los Angeles, California, it wa, announced that Carolyn Zinn;, a graduate student in the University Human Nutrition Program, Departient of Community Health Programs of the School of Public Health, has been awarded the 1978 Helen R. Stacey award. This is given -for graduate education at the masters degree level it public health nutrition. ,'/ 1 - Founded by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi 'EE INTRODUCTION to the Transcendental Meditation s a Program WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1 8:00 P.M. Main Lounge, Jordan Hall 8:30 P.M. Concourse Lounge, Markley Dormitory U (GUITAR MASTER or every Wednesday-Noon & 8:00 P.M.-Michigan Union For Information Call 6688256 Room 4111 (C) 1976 World Plan Executive Council-U.S. All rights reserved. Transcendental Meditation is a series of WPEC-U.S. a nonprofit education organization TKE at the SECOND CHANCE Ann Arbor in a special performance __ U U ~ ~