The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, October 31, 1979-Page 5 EL TON JOHN. The Captain ain't so fantstic anymore .The Lion T Jewel By Wole Soyinka U-M Dept. of Theatre & promo SHOWCASE PRODUCTION By DENNIS HARVEY "Is there a place for Elton John in the 1980's? Certainly - but unfortunately that place may be in the bargain bin. Elton is so purely a product of the seventies that he already seems a little dated. He rose from the flood of singer- songwriters at the beginning of the decade, rode the crest of the glitter rock wave at its peak, and is now floundering about in the muddle of wan disco imitation at its close. At the commercial height of his for- mer partnership with lyricist Bernie Taupin during the Yellow Brick Road- Captain Fantastic days, Elton shrewdly packaged his undeniable gift for streamlined melodies with a sense of camp showmanship that made. him, on stage, the Ann-Margret of rock. Lacking David Bowie's bizarre deca- dence and Alice Cooper's cash-register gore, Elton's brand of glitter rock was the purest show-biz, all Las Vegas glit1 ter and flash. BUT THE performer's four LP's sin- ce Captain Fantastic have been in- creasingly weak pop entries that have weakly edged toward disco in a futile attempt to keep up with the times. Elton now seems pretty soppy when compared to the chilly come-on of the latest teen scream, the Knack; even Billy Joel, in many ways John's suc- cessor to the piano-pop glitter throne, seems a far more cynical and rock- oriented artist. Elton's Tuesday night set at Hill Auditorium offered two hours and forty minutes .of reassurance for the faithful , and there seemed to be thousands of them in the audience - who were con- tent to hear every juke-box favorite from "Your Song" to "Mama Can't Buy You Love" very competently rehashed by a still skilled, if somewhat aloof, per- former. All expectations were met. Elton was in excellent voice, the choice of material was a generally effective mix of hits and more obscure album cuts from throughout the last ten years, and his keyboard work was as per- suasive as ever. The old burlesque clownery of five years ago is apparen- tly gone for good; Elton entered without fanfare in a fairly tacky but relatively dull Day-Glo green suit, played entirely solo on each of the two stage pianos for the first hour and a half, and then in a feeling of premature, plasticized nostalgia. Indeed, the stark musical approach worked well for the most part, focusing all attention on the performer's frequently dazzling keyboard breaks and the durability of his older material. Songs from such earlier LPs as Tum- bleweek Connection still had some feeling to them, and inevitables like "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road," though admittedly pretty tired, would have won audience support even if they had been sung in pig Latin._Nothing could smirking background antics made it seem as though his greatest ambition in life was to star in the sequel to The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Reduced to the sound of a single piano. and tambourine, such barroom dumb classics as "Benny and the Jets" seemed pretty wan, and Elton's overex- tended audience-participation pleas only underlined the vacuum. Though the final encores brightened up a bit with a cheering medley of classic R & B tunes and an O.K. mix of "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting" and "Pin- which, wisely, was performed), is har- dly a step in the right direction. Until he finds some new gimmick or formula, Elton John may just continue to fade away from the charts. At present, he's too dated a figure to make teenybopper hearts tremble anymore, and still too recent and familiar to qualify as nostalgia. Tuesday's performance was professional, modest, sincere and, finally, just another sign that there is probably nothing but rehashing to look forward to in Elton's future career. TONIGHT AT 8:00 TROEBLOOD THEATRE Tickets available at the PTP ticket office-Mich, League OR at ~ ~, ~ Trueblood Box Office prior to performance. (764-0450) The Ann Arbor Film Coopelate Presents at Aud. A $1.50 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31 THUNDERCRACK (Curt McDowell, 975) 7 & 9--AUD. A The return engagement of an x-rated feature by two favorites of the 16mm Festival-Curt McDowell and George Kuchar, who wrote the script. "Erotica at its most hilarious . . an outrageous parody of the old dark house plot . sex is great fun in this film, which is absolutely, definitely not for prudes." '-Kevin Thomas, L.A. TIMES. "Genuinely touching, frightening, and sexy,: . . a dark and stormy night, an assorted group of strangers (four men, three women, and a gorilla) stranded in a remote Victorian mansion, and a crazed hostess with her husband pickled in a jar."-John R. Taylor, SIGHT & SOUND. Tomorrow: Oliver's HENRY V at Aud. A Joe Dante's -1976 HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD Paying loving homage to B-movies, this satiric compilation of cliches focuses on the misadventures of four would-be actresses: naive, big-busted Candy, casting couch gymnast Jill, roller derby queen Bobbi, and the queen of the B's Mary. With Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen. Short: MAKE ME, PSYCHIC-Sally Cruickshank's latest Quasi cartoon starring Quasi, Anita and Rollo. A Halloween Treat. Thurs: Guest Lecturer Linwood Dunn Daily Photo by LOREN PORTNOW' Captured in various poses is British rock star Elton John as he appeared Monday night in Hill Auditorium. The two-and-a-half-hour concert was rather lackluster, as Elton showed he may not be quite in tune with the times. remained equally restrained when joined for the second half by veteran percussionist Ray Cooper. NO LEAPS, no flashy effects, no schmaltz (aside from a rather corny fading-sun effect on "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me") and, amazingly, no glasses. Not even a single pair of wire- rims. If the singer has abandoned his for- mer campy theatrics for a more sober approach, fine. A return to the' old gaudiness in full force might be fun, but it, would probably finally have resulted save such vintage hokum as "Candle in the Wind," and "Rocket Man" collap- sed-as Elton went on (and on and on) singing ". . . andI think it's gonna be a long, long time ..." an all-too-appro- priate comment on the endless length of his live version. But in general the first half of the concert held up well enough. WITH THE arrival of Ray Cooper, the pace slackened and things began to fade a little. Cooper's flashy but largely superfluous percussion work was more of a distraction than a help. His ball Wizard," the show had lost its momentum. To this slightly less-than~dedicated fan, it was just pretty dull. ELTON JOHN remains a fine keyboardist, and his best material still has some strength, but Tuesday's con- cert revealed that he's in a relatively uninteresting state of transition, with his peak days of both songwriting and showmanship behind him and no new ideas in sight. The banal disco sounds of his new LP, Victim of Love (none of CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 IASK. THEM WH'YI Union blasts city action in cereal trust case BATTLE CREEK (UPI)-Five union leaders filed suit yesterday to prevent the city of Battle Creek and Calhoun County from intervening in the Federal. Trade Commission (FTC) effort to break up the major cereal companies. Earlier this month, the city and coun- ty filed suit in U.S. District Court in .Grand Rapids demanding that the FTC be forced to complete an environmental impact statement before it goes ahead with its shared monopoly suit against Kellogg's, General Mills, and General Foods. THE TWO governmental bodies claimed the proposed corporate breakup would eliminate 2,650 jobs nationwide, the bulk of them in the Bat- tle Creek area. But the AFL-CIO central labor coun- cil, which filed suit in Calhoun County Circuit Court, claims the city-county suit against the FTC is an action to protect special interests rather than a service that would be provided to any citizen. "Kellogg and the other cereal makers should be able to take care of them- selves," AFL-CIO attorney Edward Welch, Jr. said. "We seriously question whether the city and county would take the same action if somebody else were accused of breaking federal law." "We don't want to see people unem- ployed," Welch added, "but we question whether there's real evidence there will be unemployment. That's what the cereal makers have said but no one's looked into it." 'We seriotsly giestiont whethertlie City arl d cotunty WoUld take the sae aetion if some body else Mere ac-tused o f breaking federal lau.' -Edarl Welch, Jr. A FL-CIO att orney Welch's clients on the AFL-CIO board include the president of the Inter- national Printing Specialties Union at Kellogg Co. Nuclear commission urges basic changes (Continued from Page ) "OUR OWN assessment and our decisions on what to do cannot be made immediately, and we'll have to be very' careful and very methodical in our recommendations to the public," he said. The panel was sharply split on whether to propose a broad moratorium on the construction of new nuclear plants. A majority of the 12 members had wanted such a moratorium, but they differed on details and none was recommended. Industry officials generally ex- pressed satisfaction with the report, but anti-nuclear groups criticized the panel for not urging a moratorium on new plants. A STATEMENT issued by General Public Utilities Corp., the parent firm of Metropolitan Edison Co., which operated Three Mile Island, said the report's conclusions "lend support to our belief that the Three Mile Island accident involved the entire industrial technological and regulatory structure of nuclear power." -Floyd Lewis, chairman of a utility in- dustry committee formed to study the accident, interpreted the report as a signal that "nuclear power should go ahead." But consumer advocate Ralph Nader, who formed the anti-nuclear Critical Mass organization, said the com- mission's report "shows an industry and a technology that is running out of control." He said the commission's recommendations "have no teeth" and offer only "piecemeal reforms." Nader said the panel should have recommen- ded a moratorium on further construc- tion and licensing of nuclear plants. Dan Ford, a spokesman for the Union of Concerned Scientists, said the report "seems pretty good to us," but ex- pressed disappointment that "it does not squarely address what to do with the more than 70 plants already operating around the country." Ask a Peace Corps volunteer why he teaches business marketing techniques to vegetable farmers in Costa Rica. Ask a VISTA volunteer why she organizes the rural poor in Arkansas to set-up food co-ops. They'll probably say they want to help people, want to use their skills, be involved in social change, maybe travel, learn a new language or experience another culture. Ask them: PLACEMENT CENTER STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG. OCT. 30 - NOV. -1 I'- PERPS h1TA "Gimme a D * Gimme an A* Gimme an 1,... L ...Y~ Give the MICHIGAN DAILY that old college try. CALL 764-0558 to order your subscription ENERGY We can't afford to waste it. The University of Michigan Alumni Association in cooperation with The School of Music present aMaiziiBlues In Joint Concert With The Visconsin &inger NOV. 2, 1979 8:00 p.m. POWER CENTER