Page 6-Saturday, November 11, 1978-The Michigan Daily The Mercury descends at Cobo , By TIMOTHY YAGLE Detroit rock fans had quite a choice to make Thursday night because two of pock's top acts, one a rocker and one known for its cosmic brand of progressive music entertained the city. q The Moody Blues, not having set foot ip the Motor City for seven years, visited Olympia, while England's royal rockers Queen invaded a nearly sold ,out Cobo Arena. THIS ESTABLISHED four-man band, not thought of as being in the miainstream of modern rock and roll, is :ying to change its image and become mnore like "one of the guys" - more raunchy. An example of this was when :the band sponsored a nude bicycle race in Wimbledon Stadium to promote their new LP Jazz. The album will be in the Mtores in a few days. :Comparing Thursday night's concert to their concert' almost a year ago, the tiwo were almost identical. There are a few major differences. Queen's current tour emphasizes new material. A majority of the songs they played Thur- sday night were from A Day at the Races and forward, with the balance of the program coming from their most recent LP, News of the World. Last year, they played more older tunes. The only oldies out of the 17-song two-hour set they played this time were "Keep Yourself Alive," which' broke the ice since it is a familiar rocker, "Brighton Aock" and "Now I'm Here." Missing, among others, was the burning "Stone fold Crazy." : The other major difference was that tihe band does not seem to have the vitality it once did. Freddie Mercury, 4lad in a shiny, black, tight suit, looked bie a novice ballet dancer the way he tioved around on stage. He has ap- arently lost a little charisma;.not a lot, but enough to notice something is dif- ferent. He just didn't have that magic we're accustorhed to. LEAD GUITARIST Brian May hasn't changedmuch, although he did seem a bit more hesitant about sliding around during Thursday's performance. He can, however, still play a mean guitar. Bassist John Deacon, sporting a new Charlie Watts-type haircut, was his usual docile self. Queen didn't have the elaborate crown overhead this time, either. Their lighting system was rather standard in comparison to other rock bands. About half way through the set, everyone was stunned when a second, much smaller stage, with a smaller drum set and two stools on it, was lowered to the bigger stage. Mercury couldn't have in- troduced it better. He said en- thusiastically (straight from Monty Python), "and now for something com- pletely different." Queen played their acoustic set of two tunes and the crowd took it in stride. I wondered what they i were going to do next? It was as if Queen had one stage ingeniously designed for their acoustic set and reserved the bigger stage for letting it go with their familiar rockers. ..,peen plays acoustic material passably, settling down the crowd so that they will be primed when the band starts rocking. FOLLOWING THIS short set, Mer- cury tossed his mike into the crowd and said provocatively, "You say something." There was, as expected, a mad scramble. "It's Late" began in the typical grand style Queen is known for with May playing guitar on an elevated platform stage left and Mercury singing on a platform stage right while the mini- stage was being raised. "Brighton Rock" and the single from Jazz "Fat Bottomed Girls" ensued. Most of the group's songs were per- formed with crisp precision with the only noticeable flaw in the rough tran- sition from live to taped music in the middle of Queen's biggest hit "Bohemian Rhapsody." But when the hard guitar part came at the end, May flew on stage in a flowing mid-length robe accompanied by exploding flash pods. Not surprisingly, the crowd loved this. An exuberant "Tie Your Mother Down" followed "Rhapsody," and it was here that Mercury's voice decided to quit. He really struggled during their two encores of the punk-like "Sheer Heart Attack" from News of the World and their famous one-two punch from the same album "We Will Rock You - We Are the Champions," which in- cluded plenty of clapping and stomping. It would be unfair to say that Queen really are no longer the champions, but they just didn't have it Thursday night. Their magic of a year ago just wasn't there. Even though their show was for the most part satisfying, they didn't get CHIRSIJP;fR HE WESTERN has always occupied a very special, loving niche. in American literature and film. That's partly because the frontier's huge and exotic presence so long filled American's need for open space, for freedom to move and explore; partly because its lore and heritage wertsq,: indigenously ours, yet appealing enough to capture and hold the imagination.. and longings of the entire world. The Western seemed to satisfy needs which cut across any political spectrum. Both liberals and conservatives could appropriate as their own the frontier ideals of truth, individualism and close-to-the-earth wisdom. Yet for all its mesmerizing geo-political lure, the Western always hovered in a strictly limited corner artistically. I once read an article which argued persuasively that only seven basic plots exist in Western literature, and that any departure from that basic lexicon merely constituted 'a!- variation thereof. That the genre has managed to endure and flourish 'all these years despite such thematic strictures seems a testimony to a pervasive life force which extends far beyond aesthetic boundaries. YET I'M BEGINNING to wonder if the cosmic allure of the Western hasn't finally run its course, at least in cinema. Cowboys all but disappeared from television some time ago, and have been visiting movie houses with, ever-decreasing frequency as well; even grandmaster Sam Peckinpah hasn't made a Western in nearly five years. The problem is that new frontiers on earth long ago ceased to exist, and those remaining in outer space seem increasingly inaccessible both chronologically and economically. It may be that in this augmentedly inward-directed age, the Western has nothing left to tell us, its dream now turned alien, anachronistic and dull. It's this kind of feeling which permeates and ultimately mummifies Comes a Horseman, a film made all the sadder when one considers all the diverse talent that tried and failed to breathe life into it. THE SHEER SKILL of Horseman's participants is enough to temporarily obscure its lurking maladroitness. It's nice to watch Jane Fonda, James Caan and Jason Robards do their slick, professional turns on- screen; one can settle comfortably into director Alan Pakula's expert craftsmanship and bask in Gordon Willis' graceful frontier camerawork; such expertise is enough to lull you along for maybe half an hour until the squirming realization dawns that Comes a Horseman has nothing - absQlutely nothing - to say. There isn't a single theme, a single scene, perhaps even a single line in this film that hasn't been recycled and regurgitated through interminable earlier variations. It doesn't come across pretentiously, but with a kind of resigned, android exhaustion. Very swiftly one can detect a dispirited aura settling over cast and crew, as if their hearts were simply no longer into this. stillborn project at all. -" +..--- 4 AA.... V......L.i....... RECORDS East Coast street life. In the case of "Rosalinda's Eyes", an ersatz Puerto Rican ballad, it gets a bit em-- barrassing. Joel rolls his R's, and it sounds forced; we know he doesn't talk like that. "You had to be a BEEG SHOT, DEENT YA," he interjects during "Big Shot", in an Italian accent borrowed from a Ragu spaghetti sauce ad. Same thing. "Big Shot" sounds like a hangover feels, with its pounding, plodding melody reminiscent of'Ravel's Bolero. Over this stressful music, Joel disgustedly berates someone (him- self?) for getting high and acting like a 52nd Street fool. Sneers Joel, Billy Joel You had the Don Perignon in your hand Co/unih FC 35699 and the spoon up your nose But when you wake up in the morning With your head on fire By ANNE SHARP And your eyes too bloody to see Although midterms and a pelting Go on and cry in your coffee rainstorm kept Billy Joel's fans from But don't come bitchin'to me packing Crisler Arena when he played "Stiletto" is a noir song, a paranoiac there in October, they are nevertheless fantasy in which the narrator imagines snapping up copies of his latest release, his sadistic lover mutilating him with a 52nd Street. Billy Joel deserves suc- knife. Despite its unhealthy subject, cess. Over the years, he's turned out "Stiletto" features a smooth, moody nany fine bits of music. Last year, with saxophone hook by Joel's ace woodwind The Stranger, a perfect little gem of an player Richard Cannata. Joel, of cour- album, Joel had five hit songs; his se, wrote all the songs for 52nd Street, reputation was made in the popular and performs pianos and vocals on the eye. Now, although -52nd Street is album, which does not explain why, on, perhaps a weak follow-up to The the frontand back cover and inside Stranger, it is not really disappointing, sleeve, Joel is photographed holding+ Joel has yet to become lousy. atrumped (Freddie Hubbard is the only "Rock and roll!" Joel shouts during trumpeter in the credits, for "Zan- "Scenes from an Italian Restaurant" zibar"). Is the trumpet another Billy on The Stranger. He's mistaken there. Joel trademark, like the boxing gloves Joel doesn't really rock. It's a sort of on The Stranger? Does Joel play trum- quality MOR, a sophisticated version of pet, or, indeed, box? For that matter, what Alice Cooper is doing now, a was he ever the tough New York street mellow, jazzy, cosmopolitan sound by a urchin of his songs? If it's all a pose, it mature man that wuld fit as comfor- certainly suits him very well. tably into the format of the Tonight What cheapens 52nd Street are Show as that of Saturday Night Live. moments that sound like hackwork, the BUT JOEL HAS a rock and roll men- product of an artist trying to follow up a tality that separates him from MOR. stab at success on a deadline. Witness these lyrics from 52nd Street; "Honesty" is an uninteresting, "sin- Little Geo is a friend of mine cere" song. "Until the Night," with its We get some money and we buy a cheap dusky, night-life sound, has lovely nin, music, but its lyrics, a confusing Sit on the corner and have a holiday melange of cliches, are reminiscent of ,Hide the bottle when the cop goes by some of Jim Steinman's words on Bat Talk about women and lie, lie, lie Out of Hell, the Meat Loaf album. They These words are more Patti Smith sounded shoddy, coming from the man than Barry Manilow. Joel, although he who wrote "Only The Good Die waxes eloquent on 52nd Street about the Young." But then, don't listen to me. I elegant agony of fame and grown-up absolutely hated "Two Out of Three love, shows a familiar affection for Ain't Bad." ALAN BATES In Harold Minter's 1973 BUTLEY An outrageous brilliant comedy. One harroeing day in the life of Ben Butley, a lecturer in English at a university in Lon- don. A brilliant screenplay by Simon Grey and a memorable performance by Alan Bates as Butley. With JESSICA TANDY. Sunday:- Jack Nicholson In THE LAST DETAIL TONITE AT ANGELL HALL AUD."A'' CINEMA .. 7& 5 $1.s50 Howling with rage, Jane Fonda witnesses the destruction of her land from a windmill perch shared by her partner and lover, James Caan, in "Comes a Horseman." Screenwriter Dennis Lynton Clark yanks Horseman's story out of the traditional 1800's locale and updates it to 1945, yet geographically and thematically things remain as untouched as the needles on the Lonesome Pine. The good guys are Ella Conners (Fonda), a small-time Montana rancher, and Frank Athearn (Caan) a GI just back from the war. The two fo them join together in a less than mutually friendly alliance against meglomaniacal catle baron Jacob Ewing (Robards), whose consuming dream of reigning over an unbroken domain of land is obstructed only by the small plots owned by our protagonists. NATURALLY, 'ELLA and Frank are determined to hold onto their homesteads and steers at all costs, with Ewing just as hell-bent to run them, off by all means necessary, including murder. On such hoary sagebrush' chestnuts doth Horseman's plot progress, its imaginative malnutrition fairly' oozing from its feeble narrative. And. though Pakula's lines are clearly drawn between heroes and villains, both the saintly and satanic prove so uniformly drab that it becomes difficult for one to work up any genuine rah- rah spirit for the good guys - an absolute prerequisite for any successful- Western. For a while, Horseman tries to work up a modernizing subplot. It seems" the evil Ewing is in as mortal an apocalyptic bind as Frank and Ella - a' powerful local banker threatens to foreclose on his entire domain unless the cattle baron agrees to let the banking interests use his (and Ella's) land foirI oil drilling. Corruption of the soil beckons, and suddenly the Peckinpahesque motif of traditional good and evil mutually smothered by amoral corporate-' monoliths seems about to carry the day. Yet just as suddenly, Pakula and Clark drop the theme of industrial invincibility. Ewing rebels, efficiently dispatches the slimy banker in' a' phony plane accident, then moves to re-establish his territorial imperative Does this mean he's now turned hero, defender of the traditional and good?' No way, says the film, shifting gears again to allow Ewing a final murderous assault on Frank and Ella, whose own relationship has inevitably evolved from enmity to love-in. OUR HAPPY COUPLE demolish their antagonist in an all-too-brief, clumsily staged fire and gunfight, and thus emerge triumphant simply, through the fact that none of their enemies are left, traditional or mode.rn. If there's any intended moral in this drab and confusing happy end - other than the unintended one of survival of the fittest - it was lost in Horseman's doomed and confused quest for its own reason for existence. The prevailing ennui slowly diminishes the film's participants technically as well as inspirationally. Pakula, reknowned as a master of tension and unseen menace, fails utterly to work up any form of suspense.1 There's more drama in a small sequence of Frank and Ella dickering with a cattlebuyer over the price of their herd than there is in all of Horseman's "boffo" scenes put together. Cinematographer Willis supplies surprisingly little aid, as his work devolves from picturesque to merely tiresome. Jane Fonda makes a passable frontier type, though her character is underdeveloped. James Caan is less believable as a cowpoke, and as Horseman progresses, he looks like he's struggling against persistent constipation. Jason Robards takes the acting honors as Ewing, but even he displays a kind of mechanical weariness over a part he has done so often he could almost play it on reflex action alone. "Knee-jerk" would be an apt definition to apply to this whole melancholy production. You can almost feel its captive rep company silently, plaintively crying out: "We've seen this before, we've done this before - who the hell cares anymore?" Who, sadly, indeed? Perhaps all one can do is remember - remember The Westerner, Red River, The Searchers. On another level, remember Roy and Gene and Hopalong and The Lone Ranger. Remember and cherish the sacred, scintillating past - and bury the vapid present as swiftly as possible. A slow death for this once-proud genre would be too much to bear. R.C. Players presents ENDGAME nn iA nC hk r ekv-af 14 Art-% L0f