The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 18, 1979-Page 5' THE PUPPY DOG: Nice Kenny oggis keeps a cute fire By DENNIS HARVEY As a recording artist, Kenny Loggins falls comfortably in middle ground on the harmless male-pop scale; above Stephen Bishop, for example, but well below James Taylor. His recent music has been purely commercial yet sincere and unpreten- tious, and, while his lyrics may be fairly sentimental and banal, at least he doesn't seem to know it. Though he has the sort of puppy.-dog good looks and simple appeal prone to make 15-year- old girls dream things they'd rather not tell their parents about, Loggins is just enough of a musician to avoid limiting his audience to the juvenile swoon set. He's a competent but undistinctive vocalist, capable of producing effective rock scowls, low-key "sensitive" mur- muring and immaculate falsettoes on cue. CELEBRATE ME HOME, Loggins' First solo LP after the break-up of his highly commercial partnership with Jim Messina, promisingly provided the singer with a nicely subdued setting for his agreeably innocent, simple com- positions. But the follow-up disc, Night Watch, produced by Bob James, reached out for too many pop/rock snoods in an attempt to push its star over the top of the charts. Given a help- fal shove by the single "Whenever I Call You 'Friend,' " a duet with hot FeetWood Mac'er Stevie Nicks, the LP more than achieved its financial goal, but Loggins' modest charms woundu somewhat buried under a ton of creamy, slick but superficial produc- tion effects. Loggins' latest, Keep the Fire, is, alas, more in the vein of Night Watch than Celebrate Me Home. The production is sharper and catchier this time around, but in its glossy way it tries almost too hard to please; the commercial intent is spelled out in boldface in every cut. There's a track of coy pseudo-funk (complete with Michael Jackson squeaking in the baikground), the inevitable disco at- tempt, some fairly hard-hitting rockers, and one or two ballads - an expansive spread, but weightless enough to leave you hungry. Night Watch and Keep the Fire are all purpose music; you can dance to them, wash the dishes to them, or just sit back and enjoy the smooth sounds. They're undemanding albums that neither bore nor require the full atten- tion. On his records, Kenny Loggins' peculiar charms have yet to be fully captured. 'BUT IN CONCERT . . . ah, that's a dilffeent matter entirely, as Loggins' Tuesday set at Hill Auditorium proved. He entered looking like the last of the flower children, and that feeling of naive good will carried through the en- tire evening. His opener was "I Believe in Love," an uptempo number originally sung by Streisand in A Star is Born. When Loggins sang, "I believe in love/do you?," all resistance crum- bled; the audience screamed its assent as if Peter Pan had just asked them to believe in fairies. Getting by with sheer clownish charm rather than any sort of genuine magnetism, Loggins managed to turn all his relative faults into a part of his appeal - a knack for telling bad jokes (disarmingly shrugged off with "Well, I blew that."), a tendency to move rather clumsily on stage, etc. Sheepish and almost apologetic, his 'very lack of style created just the right aura of campfire enthusiasm that the songs required. The audience, invited to sing and clap along with the perfor- mer, quickly abandoned all claims to A ttention I Pull off your headphones and drop those coke spoons! All Deadheads (they're just wild about Jerry) should send their qualifications to the Daily Arts Page (420 'Maynard, 48109) for the "Biggest Deadhead in the area" contest. Prizes and fame to the winner. Nothing j for losers. Deadline: October 22. Donald; the song found its way onto Night Watch; and later as one of Mac- Donald's dazzling exercises in letter- perfect pop it gave the Doobie Brothers' Minute by Minute album an enormous- selling single. MacDonald's collaboration with Loggins on Keep the Fire is "This is It," another example of his astonishingly sure hand with a Top 40 melody. Loggins' version on the album (with MacDonald on background vocals) is a good version of a potentially terrific tune; his live version is even better. But Mike MacDonald is fast becoming the reigning wizard of pop, and one hopes that "This is It" will be definitively covered on the next Doobies project. ONLY ONCE was Loggins' stage band allowed to step into the limelight. Unfortunately, the occasion merely proved that no such break was necessary. "Angry Eyes" was over- extended to the point of inanity to allow each band member their big moment, and the following "Lady Luck" also suffered from an inappropriate amount of jamming. The concert rolled algng cheerfully whenever confined to Loggins' slight charms and relatively brief tunes. The evening reached its low point during one assured but very, very long drum solo, during which at least one audience member could be heard grumbling, "Is this mandatory, or what?" The set regained its-strength with a tight "Easy Rider," and the final en- core, "Celebrate Me Home," perfectly capped all the good feelings of the per- formance. Loggins may indeed be overdosing on the qualities of sweetness and light, but he certainly made the ad- diction attractive. It should be noted - just barely, if possible - that Kenny Loggins was not the sole act on the bill. Sniff n' the Tears, a seven-member British band, plowed through forty minutes of generally acceptable, totally unin- teresting jazz-rock occasionally spiked, but never saved, by a reggae beat. The group did not have any of the features that oqe dreads from opening acts: no juvenile macho men in sequined tights, no Freddie Mercury imitators, and no borrowed guitar- juggling acrobatics. Unfortunately, their approach was not so much sub- dueo as indifferent, and their music was just the same old fusion Muzak pilfered from a thousand uninteresting sources. Perhaps if they had done. something interesting, like wearing identical Dolly Parton hairdos or singing without moving their mouths, the set might have been saved from utter routineness. As it was, Sniff merely passed the time, and not particularly well. E'nough said. CONT6CT LENSES soft and hard* contact lenses $210.00 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, follow-up visits, starter kits, and 6 month checkup. includes a sCconflIpair of ha'd /enss Dr. Paul C. Uslan, Optometrist 545 Church Street 769-1222 by appointment JOSEPH STRICK'S 1978 PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG MAN James Joyce's incisive, sensitive portrait of a young man rebelling against parochial Ireland, with its memories of the martyred patriot Parness and the stifling atmosphere of a puritanical religion. What seemed esoteric in the book comes throu h with impact to the unseasoned lover of Joyce. An exquisite adaptation that surely goes hand-in-hand with analyses of Joyce. An Ann Arbor Prenfiere. In color with T. P. McKENNA & SIR JOHN GIEIUD. Fri.: Huston's FAT CITY Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM Kenny Loggins and his guitar CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1 .50 restraint, . . Call it regression if you -like, but, God help us, the guy was really sweet. Terrifying words like "touching" and even the dreaded "cute" rise to one's mind when thinking about Loggins, and in concert he justifies them. YOU CAN practically hear the cash registers ringing, in the background when Barry Mpnilow sings about Love (no, not just love, but Love), but when Loggins pours on the syrup, there's lit- tle doubt that he's genuinely engaged by such things. It's not a fashionable at- titude, to be sure, but it's powerfully persuasive. Fortunately, Loggins is a con- siderably better songwriter than any current graduate of the Manilow school of slop. He's also, thankfully, more in- clined toward rock: Surprisingly, the concert managed to salvage entirely the lush studio sound of Loggins' recent LPs while pumping life into material that seemed over-produced on the discs. Even without Stevie Nicks, "Whenever I Call You Friend" sounded remarkably like the original, while even songs, as dismal as "Junkanoo Holiday" (a Latino hunk of nonsense that is Keep the Fire's disco entry) seemed to have an exhilarating edge entirely lacking in their recorded ver- sions. "Love Has Come of Age," a pounding but gimmicky rocker that opens the new LP, came across with genuine for- ce, thanks largely to the immaculate support of the five-member stage band. LOGGINS' VOICE unexpectedly swooped from breathy tenors to star- tlingly high falsettos with even more panache than on any of his recorded ef- forts. The inevitable medley of ballads from the Loggins-Messina era, in- cluding such standards as "The House at Pooh Corner" and "Danny's Song," was performed as a solo acoustic inter- val. The sap flowed freely, but Loggins' guileless delivery and the foolproof melodies made this admittedly familiar section the concert's peak. The new ballad "Now and Then'" was equally winning, even with the astonishingly sentimental addition of (swallow hard, now) a classic Italian-restaurant ac- cordian wailing in the background. Loggins' best recent material has of- ten been co-written with other, stronger performers. "What a Fool Believes" was co-written with Michael Mac- The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative Presents at Aud A $1.50 Thursday, October 18 THE LEFT-HANDED GUN (Arthur Penn, 1957) 7& 8:45-AUD A Penn's first feature is a psychological western about Billy the Kid. PAUL NEW- MAN plays Billy, an inarticulate manic-depressive who is befriended by a gentle cattleman. When the cattleman is killed, Billy sets out to find and kill the four murderers. As the 'story of a "folk hero" gunman which examines the contrast between legend and reality, this film prefigures Penn's later Bonnie and Clyde. Based on a teleplay by Gore Vidal. With LITA MILAN, JOHN DEHNER. (John Ford, 1970) WAGON MASTER 10:30 only-AUD A One of the finest "A" Westerns Hollywood ever produced concerns itself with trek of a Mormon wagon train to Utah. Rugged terrain, a travelling medicine show, outlaws, a posse, and Navajo Indians are consumed by Ford's highly individual style to transfer a genre into a personal masterpiece. "It is lovely. leisurely, full of romanticized reincarnation of the pioneer spirit, all-beautiful images and stirring ballads." WILLIAM EVERSON. Tomorrow: NEW WAVE CINEMA, a collection of punk rock Shorts and NATIONAL LAMPOON DISCO BEAVER FROM OUTER SPACE at MLB 3.. Also showing tomorrow: Bernardo Bertolucci's 1900 at MLB 4 ADMISSION $2.00 A NORMAN JEWISON Film AL PACINO "...AND JUSTICE FOR ALL' JACK WARDEN - JOHN FORSYTHE and LEE STRASBERG Music by DAVE GRUSIN Lyrics by ALAN & MARILYN BERGMAN Written by VALERIE CURTIN & BARRY LEVINSON Executive ProducerJOE WIZAN Produced by NORMAN JEWISON & PATRICK PALMER Directed by NORMAN JEWISON RRESTRICTED 40 UNDER ii REQUIRES ACCOMPANYING c'( un PARENT OR ADULT GUARDIAN A Columbia Pictures Release Read The Ballantine Paperback c 1979 COLUMBIAPICTURESINDUSTRIESINC. PictureS STARTING FRIDAY OCT. 19th It's five miles wide...it's coming at 30,000 m.p.h.... and there's no place on Earth to hide! e-- . 1t 5th Avenue at Liberty St. 761-9700 Formerly Fifth Forum Theater ._. k- - Honk if you lave~ Brian. ADVANCE TICKETS GO ON SALE TOMORROW AT 1:00 PM FOR FRI-SAT-SUN MON, EVE. SHOWS SAT. SUN. WED. 12:10 2:30 4:45 7:15 9:50 I MON. TUES. THURS. . .