Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 17, 1972 lI' Mountain 's new record bombs; a surprise fro-m King Biscuit DIAL 665-6290 SHOWS AT: .1 :15-3 :45-6 :15-8 :50 FEATURE AT: :30-4:00-6:30-9:00 theatre UPlayers present two excellent 'absurd' plays By HERB BOWIE As I see it, Mountain has two things going against them and one factor in their favor. The first trouble they have is a lack of talent. Now I'll admit that talent isn't always a good thing -Ginger Baker's Air Force had plenty of talent, and they still make crummy records. On the other hand, ? and the Mysterions made "96 Tears" with no talent. at all. Nevertheless, talent does give a group a certain versa- tility-if you have it, you can al- ways pretend that you don't, but if you don't have it there's no way to fake it. Mountain's big asset is the nerve to turn up Pappalardi's bass to unprecedented levels. This gives them a rhythm sec- tion that, even if they didn't have drums, could stop an ele- phant in his tracks at a distance of twenty yards. All of these qualities are re- flected in Mountain's latest re- lease, Flowers of Evil (Windfall 5501). A few cuts cook, or rather simmer, like they're supposed to, and their lack of talent can be forgiven. On the other hand,r when they start to jam on the live side of the album, their ineptitude is painfully obvious. What really hurts, though, is their inability to deviate from their heavy style. "Crossroader," with lyrics like "I'm a Cross- roader/ Speeding from town to town," obviously demands some nimble playing to convince us that this crossroader really can speed. What the cut sounds like, though, is a fully-loaded Mack truck lumbering down an inter- state highway. "One Last Cold Kiss" suffers from similar problems. With fairy tale lyrics about an ardent swan whose mate dies and who thus spends the rest of his life in mourning, one might hope for a gentle, folksy back-up. Not a chance. Mountain performing this song is about as appropriate as Leslie West dancing a ballet. Tigers Will Survive (Vertige VEL 1010) is a decent, well-bal- anced effort by Ian Mathews. The selection of songs is excel- lent, including several originals, one by Eric Anderson, one by Richard Farina, and one by Spector - Barry - Greenwich. Mat- hews' singing is pleasant, no pretentiousness, j u s t flat - out good singing. The back-up is mostly in a C&W style close to that of recent Grateful Dead releases with the exception of a lovely a capella rendition of "Do Doo Ron Ron (When He Walked Me Home"), and it's just plain tasty: the guitars crackle with excitement, the bass is lively, and there's a lonely Sax solo on "Right Before My Eyes" that's just perfect. Ad Nauseum or Death At Fun City or Future Shock (Mercury SAM 1 616) is an album of poetry by Paul Roche, whom the cover boldly proclaims as "A poet. A man. A mind." The trouble with the album.is that, though Roche is certainly a man, a'"mind, and a competent versifier, he's not such a hot poet. By GLORIA JANE SMITH One student couple admitted to walking out- on last night's performance by the University Players. They weren't in the mood to think - they wanted to be entertained. Really, it was a poor excuse, not at all valid. Theatre of the Absurd provikes the mind, granted, but last night's pro- duction of Eugene Ionesco's Victims of Duty and Jean Ge- net's The Maids was not some- thing to walk out on. Actually, I'm surprised that they were able:to make the move. Both plays, reflective of the respective searches for person- al identity that lurked in the minds of their creators, were superbly produced last night. Choubert, played by Errol Segal, is led to search for the man, No. 58614 in detective files, who at one time lived in Choubert's apartment. A detec- tive - played by Samuel White - who vascilates from pleas- antness to visciousness, orders him through a voyage into his past-a journey which inevit- ably leads to self-destruction. "Everyone has his special duty yto perform," we are told by his wife Madeline, played by Adele Ahronheim. . Segal's performance was ex- cellent, from his initial loqua- cious, monotone conversation with his wife to his inevitable backward travels into the chasms of his mind. Both plays, reflective of the respective searches Air personal identity that lurked in the minds of their creators, were superbly produced last might. " y f'i?;re s;::fri }pr :ir":"?:.,.......... ,r."':} ""{:;;.:}:.r:i ,r. ~ ? ~t:*441rr"r"...++r..."1{.".."'e.:::}..:..::.:vr.4:.,.n:...:.:7i.. . . ."S S:...... to completely involve us in the complex activity on stage. Especiallyy notable is Susan Kramer, who plays, the maid Claire. She is enthusiasm; she is emotion; she is grief. Espe- cially well-sustained is a long monologue toward the end of the play. I understand that she is a new to the Players, and I hope that she will be seen again in future productions. The other two women - Uni- versity Players regular Chris- tine Lahti who played Madame and Janice Young who played the maid Solange - were also excellent in their roles. The stage was expertly set in both plays. In The Maids, we live in an elaborate, if not gau- dy array of scarlet, violet and gold in the boudoir of the Ma- dame. And in Victims of Duty, we live in a world of "blue boxes that suffice for tables and the mountainous stepping stones into the inner mind of Chou- bert. The sets are handled well -changing before our eyes and yet untouched until changed. Behind every good production is a good director, and in this case, Donald Boros succeeded beyond the call of duty. As the production ended, ra- ther nonchalantly, the audience gave their applause and began to gather their belongings to leave the theatre. Thoughts that settled in their minds, were I'm sure, paradoxi- cal-disturbed by the essence of the plays, yet satisfied in the . performance they had just ex- perienced. Driscoll Eighth Paddy Driscoll's 90 yard return of a kickoff against Iowa is the eighth longest in Northwestern football history. A good poem should stand on its own, irreducible into its com- ponents of themes, images, rhy- thms, etc., without the loss of the poem's main impact. Not only do these poems fall apart, Roche actually dismembers them right before your ears. Before the title cut, for example, in a spoken introduction Roche gives you the theme: man is gaining the world but losing his soul. He lays out the main images- seals driven mad by DDT beat- ing their cubs to death on the rocks: birds unable to hatch their eggs because a chemical has made the shells too brittle too sit upon; Admetus sacrific- ing his wife, Alcestis, to save his own life, and then finding "life empty. He even tells us why he uses a bit of doggerel at one point. All of which sounds fine. The trouble is that I find the introduction more moving than the poem. If Roche had developed one of the above images and let it go at that, he might. have a moving poem. As it is, though, he beats you over the head with a large number of scantily de- veloped images that certainly convey his theme, but don't really add up to a good poem. Roche's reading sounds equally artificial. He seems unwilling to violate the sanctity of his poems with any authentic feeling. Oh, he varies his pitch and speed al- right, but always in a mechan- ical manner. If he can't get it up for his poetry, how are we supposed to? Do you have a bad aftertaste in your mouth left by the flood of big-name records released in time for Xmas? Winter in Ann Free Ireland! conversation with Tom Mac intyre author, lecture.r -and in discussion- Bernard Cullen grad student activist TON IGHT 8:00 p.m. 75c cont. FREE COFFEE conspiracy cafe-theater 330 MAYNARD UM Film Soc. Arbor beginning to get you down? Then I suggest you run right out and get Gooduns' (Paramount PAS 6023) by King Biscuit Boy, If that doesn't work, you better try heart mas- sage. Don't let the name King Bis- cult Boy scare you off. This isn't some derelict bluesman gum- ming words about how he's got 'de blooze', although he is, ap- parently (frankly, I never heard of the guy before,) a middle- aged black bluesman. No, what King Biscuit Boy and his friends play is, for the most part, rockin' bar blues that aren't really blue at all. Take, for example, these lyrics from "You Done Tore Your Play- house Down Again: "Your eye- balls look like road maps/They look in two different ways/ You got your wig in one hand and your teeth in the other/ And you haven't looked this good in days." Now ain't that sad? No, what this record contains mostly is (I hesitate to use the term (but no other will do) high-energy, good-time music. Most of these cuts have the raw power usually found only in live performances. King Bis- cuit Boy is a strong, unaffected, blues shouter who's equally powerful on harmonica and slide guitar. His band, in its various permutations on differ- ent cuts, is tight - absolutely together at all times--yet loose enough to allow room for con- siderable improvisation within the contexts of the songs. De- serving /special note are Rick Bell of the Full Tilt Boogie Band and. Larry Atamanuik from Sea Train. Bell's piano, especially on the intriguing intro to "You Done Tore Your Playhouse Down Again" and his nifty accompaniment on "Bald Head Rhumba Boogie," is great. Atamanuik plays drums with a ferocious intensity. Lis- ten to him on "Bald Head Rhumba Boogie," for example: U of M Students, Faculty and Staff BAHAMAS Freepor 5 DAYS/4 NIGHTS MARCH 6 to 10 $129.00 or- 8 DAYS/7 NIGHTS MARCH 5 to 12 $159.00 ALL TRIPS INCLUDE: " Round trip non-stop jet transportation " Open bar and meal service en route " Accommodations for four (4) or seven (7) nights at the Freeport Inn FOR DETAILS CALL: Owen Perlman-663-2044 Larry Kaufman-764-7692 Steven Eder-763-2790 Carol Klau-663-8227 or Steven Zacks-Studentours 483-4850 I OPEN 1 p.m. SHOWS AT 1:15-3:10-5-7-9 P.M. Feature Starts 5 min. later I "IT'S A SIZZLER" -Detroit News "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST" -Time "The best American movie of the last six months." "Come on like gangbust- ers . . . I doubt if you'll see anything quite as devastating." -Michigan Daily DIRTY HARRY he's not plaging those drums, he's attacking them! As good as the hard-driving numbers are though the real masterpiece is "Lord Pity Us All," a slow gospel-flavored cut written by Dr. John. Here, King Biscuit Boy manages to sound like a member of the Band, al- though I'm sure the influence was the other way around. The song includes a beautiful piano duet by Rick Bell that leads into a sizzling guitar break, and an organ part reminiscent of the Band's Garth Hudson. In short, this is a fine, fine album suitable for dancing or whatever your favorite rhyth- mic activity happens to be typing, mixing cake batter, and knee-slapping are all recom- mended.) 5TH WEEK! At State and Liberty Program Information 662-6264 A MARK RYDELL FILM ( Panavision® TechnicolorG From Warner Bros.,A Kinney Company p II - I THURSDAY and FRIDAY ALL THE Ki.NG"'MEN Dir. ROBERT ROSSEN, 1949 The story of Huey Long- Based on R o b e r t Penn W a r r e n's expose of American political cor- ruption. Starring'Brod- erick Crawford, Mercedes MacCambridge, and John Ireland. PLUS A SHORT- I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7&9p.m. 75c I 1 6mmmwm i Each man in his play depicts )the torment of his life as a mis- fit. Each cries out desperately to be found and replaced in an environment of forgotten, elu- sive pleasures. Each man has a different vision, but both de- liver messages which carry the same hollow echo which indi- cates the distance separating them from the object of their quest - themselves. Victims of Duty, is a play with a lesson to be learned. It speaks out against society's need to pressure us into fulfilling du- ties, often meaningless and de- structive duties, that are the means to an end of conforming to society. The Maids opens with two maids acting out a ritualistic scene between a maid and her Madame. This is a ritual they feel com- pelled to enact - releasing their vengeance for a beautiful rich woman who flaunts her social status. But the final ritual, the final act which will completely release them - provide them with an identity - is that of murder. They must kill Madame so that for once, they may be ac- cepted by a society which has done little more than alienate them in the past. Three women compose the cast, and each fulfill their duty 11 Salmagundi 9 p.m.-Feb. 18 Couzens Cafe 25c IN THE ARTS' Thursday evening, February 17,8:00 p.m. Faculty Lounge, 1st floor, Michigan Union EVENING INCLUDES: performance by Woman's Street Theatre of Detroit STORIES OF OUR LIVES Student-produced films about women Woman's Art Show at Student Gallery 1st floor, Michigan Union February 17th, 6:30-8:30 p.m. ADMISSION FREE sponsored by Office of Religious Affairs * i l POLITICAL BOOZE BASH FREE BEER FREE PEANUTS FREE PIZZA AT Informal Rap With CONGRESSMAN MARY ESCH STATE SENATOR GIL BURSLEY STATE. REPRESENTATIVE RAY SMIT NEW PENGUINS AT THE CAMPUS' B@@KST@RE SELF AND OTHERS (Rev. Ed.) R. D. Laing. The author of The Divided Self probes the relations between the self and other people - with the aim of achieving a non-fragmented vision of human relations. $1.25 WILHELM REICH AND ORGONOMY. Ola Raknes. This authoritative introduction to Reich's science of life energy - or orgonomy - covers the liberation of sexual energy, -the nature of functional thinking, mind-body functional identity, the four-beat orgasm formula, and the implications of life energy for re- ligion, education, medicine,-and psychology. $1.45 THE NEW MAN. Maurice Nicoll. A unique inter- pretation of some parables and miracles of Christ. $2.00 STRANGE LIFE OF IVAN OSOKIN. P. D. Ouspensky. Time, infinity, and eternal recurrence are the themes of this novel about a young man who is allowed to relive twelve years of his life. $1.45 EATING YOUR WAY TO HEALTH. Ruth Kunz- Bircher, Dagmar Liechti-von Brasch, Ralph Bircher, and Alfred Kunz-Bircher. The celebrated Bircher- Benner approach to nutrition, with a complete cookbook. $1.95 REVOLUTIONS 1775-1830. Edited by Merryn Wil- i!_ 1i_-- - . - S ! _ ., ....a:.. - 1-L ... ,. UAC-DAYSTAR Presents with ICC and Vietnam Vets Against the War BILLY PRESTON, IRIS BELL .:. AND Delaney, Bonnie & Friends 8 P.M.-HILL AUD. THIS SAT. NIGHT, FEB. 19 $4.50-3.50-2.0O gen. adm. "Listening to Billy Preston, you really can believe once more in the saving powers of music." -Rolling Stone You've heard Billy Preston on the Banal. Desh Concert Album. with amas I