Page 18-Tuesday, October 16, 1979-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, C Onward and upward with A rtworlds Monk: Coming on the Hui (Continued from Page 15) make homespun castanet cords every bit as good as expensive imported ones. Artworlds holds special appeal for the student; workshops are reasonably priced and two Artworlds terms fit neatly into one semester on the UM calendar, with a convenient break for midterms. For one or two hours a week it's nice to forget that one-is a pre-law, liberal arts, or medical student, and en- joy a modern dance class with live piano accompaniment. A monumental bulletin board will ,keep you posted on upcoming civic and University fine arts events, and the'gallery houses a new display of works by local artist each month. Gallery art, too, is at the mercy of the commercial world, and here again Ar- tworlds is a welcome retreat for Ann Arborites. "What hangs in the gallery is not there because someone hoped it would sell," Taylor says, "but because the artist likes it." Taylor never strays far from his cen-_ tral theme. "As an aerospace engineer I dealt primarily with things. People were expendable. In the real world it should be just the reverse. Here we move people at the expense of things." About Artworlds' philosophy of teaching, Taylor confesses, "We cheat a little. We don't give 'professional' lec- tures as much as we let people take the materials in their hands and actually work with them." Taylor himself isn't a master of any of the fine arts, though he's learned "a little bit about everything." He is still basically an engineer, now pulling the switches at a Montessori school for big kids instead of sitting* behind a light desk. Though his shift from corporate peon to Renaissance man meant a salary cut of almost.80 per cent, Taylor measures what he earns today in terms of personal satisfaction, and claims he's "feeling good." 4 The ultimate goal of Taylor and the others who are devoted to Artworlds is to develop it to the point-where it.will be. entirely self-propelled. This requires a tough-minded business sense. ''I've worked just about everywhere," Taylor says, spouting his resume,"with the Air Force, AUCO, Burroughs, Bendix, General Dynamics. You know," he says without regret, "I'm forgetting half the companies I've worked for." i i Restaurant W~atering hole featuring " Our Famouse Catchers Mit " Charbroiled Hamburgers * Specially Prepared Chef Salads * Giant TV Screen " Schlitz, Molson & Pabst on Tap " Selected Fine Wines N_ $1.00 off on a, Pitcher of beer miles wth vmuon ilDember t1979 from 2324 Dexter Rd. Ann Arbor, M campus P1.-665-8644 O *"_ THEATRE PRODUCTIQA!. a new group dedicated to new and innovative forms of theatre presents*** *cildrervs thieatre cform troupe, * imroviation Q uestion|s or deas* * 763-1107 By R. J. SMITH With hardly any doubt it is the greatest name anyone ever dreamed ,up. Thelonious Sphere Monk. And with even less doubt possible, he is one of the greatest American composers of our age. To be fanciful for a moment, let me put it this way: Monk is the Andy Kaufman of jazz. One of the funniest. things I have ever heard is the lub-dub- lub-dub-lub-dub-shhhh beginning to "Light Blues'" melody, the way the whole song gleefully wobbles like a wagon rolling down a hill on wheels -of different sizes. Monk's is entirely a humor of motion. He does not make musical "jokes;" Monk does not create anything trite, anything that quickly wears out, or anything funny for fun- niness's sake. Lurking somewhere in the smokiness beneath his most passionate ballad, resounding in the joyful little dances he sometimes performs onstage, is a humor of truly global proportions, a sensibility which does not so much poke fun at "things" as it does take poking fun as an integral part of one's life. Surreal and eminently, practical, Monk's humor bubbles up from his piano playing, his compositions, and the music of the sidemen he teaches. LET ME RAISE the ante on what Thelonious Monk is all about: Without a doubt (as Stanley Crouch has previously noted), Monk is the Picasso of jazz. Both those guys knew the value of laughter in modern life, and both of them knew that what's really funny is not anything that can be written down, nothing that can just be relegated to memory's back shelf after one "gets it." And that's it, really - no "joke" is really funny, because if it's really funny you could never simply "crack it." What's funny is, well ... everything. And Kauffman's stuff, like Monk's, is funny precisely because it is so ubiquitous and inexplicable. To Monk, a man unable to find steady gigs for almost twenty years, humor was a knife he wielded to ward off the things - the countless things - in his life that wanted to take complete con- trol. "Play your own way," says Monk. "Don't play what the public wants - you play what you want and let the public pick up on what you are doing - even if it does take them 15,20years." From the start, Monk was face to face with restrictions he refused to give in to. When his earliest gigs, traveling through the South and the Midwest playing piano with a Baptist choir proved to be overly restrictive, Monk Although Monk's style of-composing and play- ing are so utterly his that one rarely hears a convincing, performance of Monk music by other musicians, without his influence it is clear that the careers of people like Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Sonny Rol- lins, and John Coltrane would have taken different courses. tirely different route from the one he taught his pupils. There were all sorts of differences. Whereas bebop thrived on fast tempos, Monk wrote and played generally in the most laconic tempos imaginable. Ever the soloists' medium, bebop think he w altogether, and creat statement Will exten bars, to th song is in d of course it Monk's i packed in t result of tli his followi tioned the head. WHEN A happening' gleefully e happening googleplexe music, and threading s happening. As to wh right now, people (m Monk acknowledg dates and r early to mi made less playing odd companyin But a trul cur - Mon Arbor in th parently, th brought us Ellington a sidering a t it did hapi good that 1 very well co see SAVE $1 on the purchase 1 of either of these two popular folios. 3 EATLE 1AnI I" 1 1963-1966, VOL. I I 1 -I Vol.1 or 2 $6.95 T. Monk $5.95 *with this ad Offer ends Oct. 31, 1979 / KING'S I 115 East Liberty Street-663-33$1 I OPEN MONDAY & FRIDAY EVENINGS . LESSONS " RENTALS " SALES * EXPERT REPAIR HERB DAVIDo a GUITAR STUDIO a ( 209 S. State StreetQ Ann Arbor (Upstairs)z 665-8001 INSTRUMENTS) ACCESSORIESr .LESSONS INSTRUMENTS j.4 * K z 3E1 ULa w *WE !MAKE: " IRISH HARPS " GUITARS " BANJOS " FIDDLES took to playing late-night jam sessions in whatever dive he could find. When in the late forties, he had played a large part in educating, and when his license to perform live was taken away (from '51 to '56), he scratched out a living for himself by making a handful of recordings and living off whatever morley his wife earned. BUT THOUGH hidden, his music was never static. It's impossible to figure out where much of it came from (in- deed, it seems only to have sprung from the mind of Monk), but Monk music from the start had a few noticeable an- tecedents. Clearly there is the hand of Art Tatum in much of his soloing; that is, Tatumesque fireworks totally inver- ted to the point where the cathedrals Tatum built with scads of notes are built in the average Monk solo as much by the silences as by what gets played. And if Monk's wit and smoothness can be traced back, it is to the often-neglec- ted piano player Duke Ellington. After the gospel gigs, Monk homed in on the New York scene which was soon to give birth to bebop. Hanging out in 118th Street's Minton's Playhouse with the likes of Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Kenny Clarke, Monk was a prime force in drawing up the master outlines for the bebop revolution. The curious thing was, once bebop exploded onto the jazz world in the mid- forties, Monk played the role -of an ascetic teacher who followed an en- provided lots of open space for im- provising whatever entered the musician's head; Monk's music (like the music of another bebop expatriate, Charles Mingus) tended by its com- plexity and the demands of its com- poser to force the soloist to remain much closer to the melody, or else the soloist would be totally lost in it, and face-to-face with an angry composer. AND YET along with the pervasive humor, what makes Monk music Monk music is his sense of time. He has an almost Hindu notion of a restful, waitful circularity of events in his playing; it goes without saying that every note counts, because although he has so many ideas, they are never forced out in a hurry. Monk will fall back so far when playing a single note that you Sight and Sound Supplement - EDITORS Katie Herzfeld, Anne Sharp Contributors Terry La Ban, Maureen O'Malley, R.. Smith, Eric Zorn, Keith Richburg, Owen Gleiberman, Anna Nissen, Roger Pensman, Allison Donahue, Brad Benjamin, Neil Patten. ADVERTISING Sales Manager Arlene Saryan -Ei Sales Reoresentatives Kathy Culver, Bob Granadier, Sue Guszynski, Leslie Harris, Nancy Stempel, Bob Thompson, Dan Woods. VA LUABLE CUPO Linda Solomon, Special thanks go to Sun Photo, Big George's and Purchase Camera for contributing the gift certificates for the Photo Contest. $1.00 -FF ANY F Good thru October 31, 19 Cover photo by Maureen O'Malley L. j 4, *4,. .W, - - . .