Page Tw(. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesdoy, January 25, 1972 PageTwcTHE ICHGAN AIL Tusddy Jauary25,197 Hotro By HARRY HAMMITT Commander Cody returned to Hill Auditorium Sunday night as part of his first national tour to promote Cody's first album. As most people know, Command- er Cody and his Lost Planet Air- men started their career in Ann Arbor, but didn't start making it big until they had moved out to Berkeley. Since Cody is an ori- ginal Ann Arbor product, he is one of the most popular bands in the area. Their popularity is well deserved. Sunday night's show was Cody at his very best. The band has a lot of ties of their own in Ann Arbor, so they all like the chance to get back. Their rapport with the Ann Arbor audience is noth- Ing short of phenomenal. From the minute the band took the stage, until long after they had finished their second encore, the band had complete control of the audience. As soon as the band had the stage, they immediately went into a short warm-up instru- mental which was soon followed by "Lost in the Ozone.' They continued with quite a few of the numbers from their first al- bum, "20 Flight Rock," "What's the Matter Now?", "Seeds and Stems," "Family Bible," and "Beat Me Daddy Eight to the Bar." These songs, while all be- ing good, were performed specif- ically to alert the audience to the material from the album. About half-way through their set, Cody stepped up to the mike and introduced a few new num- bers which featured back-up vocals by guitarist Bill Kirchen and bassist Buffalo Bruce on the one hand, and guitarist John Tichy and singer Billy C. on the other. They did two. such num- d Lincoln: A hometown smash bers, one being the Coasters' "The Shadow Knows," featuring the golden sax of Andy Stein. Soon after, Cody introduced the next song by recalling the year 1955 and explaining that he used to wear, a ducktail and, pegged pants and was a real pain in the ass to his father, prompting him to say on more than one occasion, "Son, you're gonna drive me to drinkin', if you don't stop drivin' that Hot Rod Lincoln." This number, also from their first album, has been a staple of Cody's for quite some time, and the audience went wild. As the set drew to a close, the band played a number of rock 'n' roll numbers that should sound about the same, but in the hands of Cody, they never sounded the slightest repetitious. They ended their set with "Jail- house Rock" which brought the audience to their feet. As usual, the crowd's appetite was far from satiated, so Cody came out for more. More rock 'n' roll and they left a second time. But the audience was so responsive that they had to come back a third time. This time they did Gene Vincent's "Bebopa Lula" and that was enough to satisfy the audience. The concert featured Cody at his very best. The entire act was flawless with outstanding inter- play between the musicians. Cody on piano and Bill Kirchen on guitar really outdid. them- selves with excellent playing throughout. Stein was his nor- mal outstanding self on both fiddle and sax. Credit also has to go to steel guitarist Bobby Black who has the difficult job of replacing the West Virginia Creeper. One member who may ihere's thru Classffed TUESDAY, January 25 U.M. International Center 12:00 non LUNCH"DISCUSSION Subject: "Roadblocks to Development in. Haiti" Speaker: CHRISTOPHER FRENCH, graduate student and C.O. who did alternate service for 2 years in Haiti administering a ruraFschodl run by a Baptist mission. Cost 50c FOR RESERVATIONS Sponsored by CALL 662-5529 Etumenical Compus Center I Program Information 8-6416 TONIGHT AT 7 and 9 P:M. "AN ABSOLUTELY STUNNING FILM! A TOPNOTCH THRILLER!" N -JUDITH CAIN .& NEW YORK MAGAZINE I Noon Luncheon - 35 Wed., Jan. 26 "THE TRAGEDY OF BANGLA DESH" MUZAND HUQ and ROD HUBER Representatives from Committee on Bangl a Desh Refugee Relief Fund GUILD HOUSE-802 Menroe I I -Daily-Robert Wargo Chase the Inna~nrv RBliaae wv. Commander Cody be overlooked in praising the group is drummer Lance Dicker- son. Well, he shouldn't be over- looked. Dickerson is a very in- telligent and competent drum- mer. He is the backbone of the group and without him the group is just rnot complete. Billy C. was particularly up for the show and turned in a good per- formance, smashing his guitar and knocking over mike-stands along the way. Buddies in the Saddle, and the Boogie Brothers were the sup- porting acts and they played competently enough, but were nothing as compared to Cody. The harmonica-player in the Boogie Brothers should be rec- ognized for his excellent blues harmonica. The concert was one of the most satisfying concerts for a long time. When the Ann Arbor audience and Cody get things together, a -fantastic show can be expected. Sunday night was no exception; Cody was at his best, and that is awful good. JOIN US for the Grad Coffee Hour Wed., Jan 26 4-6 PM.. 4th Floor Rarkheni ajy IliI i I Hot chocolate and cake for all. o 6 cinema i Unman' By RICHARD GLATZER Unman, Wittering, and Zigo is ostensibly a movie thriller, ul- timately a disappointing one, yet I think those tiny words on the bottom of the ads, "Based on the play by Giles Cooper," should not be overlooked when parcelling out the blame. Stage thrillers, so confined spatially, are usually caged dynamos, long periods of waiting for those fi- nal climaxes that are intended to explain and redeem the en- tire play but that seldom do. And though Unman, Wittering, and Zigo's camerawork is per- fectly competent, its scenery beautiful, and its acting cine- matic, the film, so slow in build- ing toward its single climax, so totally lacking in plot action, is a thriller for the stage. It begins promisingly enough with Pelham, a professor at the Chantry school for boys, mys- teriously falling to his death at the foot of steep cliffs near the school. John Ebony (David Hemmings) arrives to replace Pelham, only to be informed by one of the students on his first day of class that his predecessor was murdered by the boys after having attempted to punish their disobedience with deten- tions. Ebony, however, once con- vinced this is true, sets about to find the ringleader - someone controlling the boys via terror tactics. Tuesday and Wednesday CHARLIE CHAPLI N SHORT COMEDIES Made Between 1912 and 1921 During the Greatest Era of Silent Comedy. See Chaplin's Immortal Tramp Character Dance through Life. TWO FULL SHOWS AT 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 75cI A bad stage killer And here's where the film be- comes static, for while we're waiting for something to hap- pen, for the boys finally to get down to business, and for Ebony to discover whatever there is to be learned, U, W, and Z (the title is three names of Ebony's students) tries to satisfy us with Ebony's social and marital prob- lems and a number of false alarms. All of which exasperat- ingly whets our appetites for the excitement we hope will even- tually come. That action does come, it is exciting, and it lasts for perhaps. seven minutes. Then, impossible though it may seem, it's time to. discover who planned Pelham's death and await the final cred- its. This denouement is totally implausible and unwelcome (who wants the action to end when it's just begun?), and merely obscures the issues when what we've been waiting for is enlightenment. The end? Not yet. Just before the final credits roll on the screen, Hemmings thoughtfully wonders aloud, "What made them do it?" If that's an admis- sion of not having answered the one question the movie raises, at least they're being honest with us. But if, as is more like- ly, it's trying to tell us that what we've just seen is actually A comment on the English school system that has produced these young murderers, Hemming's query has only coinpounded U, W, & Z's failure. Adding one line does not change a thriller to Plato's Republic; it only makes the film that much more disappointing. It U CLIP AND SAVE / t It [ [ 1 t / X te 980 1 SMUSIC FOR EVERYONEf t U t , INTGRODUNGCINGUL Ia Is t / t [/ * U 9-11 Classical 9-11, orning Show ta ^ '!I," 4~ I ENDS TONIGHT! Shows 7 " 9 The Murder that shocked the The Trial that still shak "ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST !" -BELLA ABZUG-SHIRLEY CHISHOLM -TOM O'HORGAN-JOHN SIMON The SACCO &.VANZETTI Murder Case "TRIUMPHANT! IT WILL FASCINATE YOU!" rs -Judith Crist, NEW YORK MAGAZINE Nation. Les the World. SL-L BdroadWay OO'IF'TH Po UM FIfTH AVENUE AT LUBERTY Ill-I DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR LJLJ INFORMATION 761-9700 STARTS WEDNESDAY! "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST !" -Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post-Pete Hamill, N.Y. Post -Bob Salmaggi, WINS Radio -Francis Taylor, L.I. Press RCYES ECIAL INTERFILM JURY ATLANTA PHOENIX GOLDEN DOVE FILM GRAND WORLD COUNCIL FILM "BEST OF "PEACE PRIZE" FESTIVAL PRIZE OF CHURCHES FESTIVAL FESTIVAL" AWARD PIEAWARDS FETVL ONE OF THE GREAT FILMS OF OUR TIME! A TRUE GIANT UNFORGETTABLE THE ACTING IS EXTRAORDINARY -ABC-TV -CATHOLIC FILM NEWSLETTER -NY. 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