Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 34, 1972 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 30, 1972 U A spectacular MODAL JAZZ Wallowing in electronics By MARCIA ABRAMSON Indians begins before you en- ter the theatre, and stays with you long after you leave. There is carnival music play- ing as you open the doors of the Power Center, and there are shooting galleries and carnival posters inside. And there are Indians, grim, quiet, sitting on the floor. They stare, and you do not know what to do - whether to look away, or laugh. They are actors-they are an intrusion. But they are not just actors, and Indians is more than a play. It is a document about Indians and white men, even though it takes the form of a spectacle, comic and tragic, brilliant and furious. The best thing about Arthur Kopit's play and the University Players production is that po- lemics never take over. There is always comedy - the play nev- er drags into rhetoric - but the comedy does more than break the pace. The comedy in- tensifies the tragedy as laugh- ter is undercut with the bitter consciousness of the humiliation and destruction of the Indian people. The Players take hold of ev- ery opportunity offered by Ko- pit to stage a brilliant produc- tion, changing colors, shifting moods and perspectives with in- novative sets and properties. One moment cowboys prance in a chorus line as Annie Oakley bumps and grinds; the next there is a harsh confrontation between Indian and white man, a play-within-a-play, or a de- scent into the very private hell of Buffalo Bill. It is Buffalo Bill's show in every way. He is a comic Amer- ican dreamer, entranced by the myth of the west; he wants to make it big, although his feats are mostly mythical. He is also a man of changing times, who is closer to his public relations man than to Wild Bill hickok or anyone else - except per- haps Sitting Bull. O.K. Carson's Buffalo Bill is a magnificent character, caught between his compassion for the Indians and his love for Buffalo Bill. Finally, he recognizes the shoddiness of his own life: he does not want to die with his makeup on, and he stops believing in his All- American show. Buffalo Bill, the best white man, is guilty of many crimes of humiliation and intolerance; he has sold out a thousand times. It is Buffalo Bill who bought an Indian chief out of jail so he could speak his sur- render "twice a day and three times on Sunday," and Buf- falo Bill who featured a chained savage Injun' in his show. The President, First Lady (a pair of shocking Victorians) and Sen- ators are even worse. The scenes shift rapidly, re- Indians' vealing >harsh realities (occa- sionally overdon,, as in the strobe-lighted massacre) and exposing the white man's way in bitter-comic vignettes of stu- pidity, bigotry and humiliation. As a contemporary writer, Ko- pit has produced an exceptional work, drawing on all the tradi- tions open to him, from musical comedy to existential drama to the very traditional soliloquy. He can handle it, and so can the Players. Besides Carson, Andre Hunt and Brent Ramsey are excellent as Sitting Bull and John Grass -they are stoic, trapped, wise and very human, not just mar- tyrs or symbols. And Wild Bill Hickok, played by James Haz- lett, steals every scene he is in. Indians will grab you and not let you go for a while - see it. You can read documents, learn the history - Indians will drive it into you INDIAN SYRUP American Indians taught early colonists how to make maple sy- rup, and today it still is produced only in the United States and Canada, URANIUM LIGHT A pound of processed and en-I riched uranium can produce enough electricity tolight a 100- watt bulb for 2,600 years. RESERVED SEATS-$3.00 Tickets available daily at Michigan Union I1 A.M.-2 P.M . 0. U of M Folklore Society presents POWER BLUES SON HOUSE, MANCE LIPSCOMB, ROBERT PETE WILLIAMS at the POWER CENTER April 15-8:00 P.M. eastern michigan university april 9 Bowen fldhouse 8:30 p.m. (an MEC production) N E IL ,ls DIAM OND "yr:.y{+:::;,, to Sold at TICKETS Ann Atbor Music Mart $3 50 McKenny Union $450 National Bank of Ypsilanti (Cross Street) $5 5Q By ALLEN LOWE The arts of the counter-cul- ture have too often been mark- ed: the triumph of form over substance, with few artists rea- lizing that the framework can only succeed if that which it holds has any value. Unfor- tunately, this tendency to sub- stitute form for substance has seeped into jazz.. What I have in mind is the new electronic idiom (new for jazz, that is) in which many jazz musicians have chosen to perform. Miles Davis appears to have popularized it, and many others have followed in his wake. The form is basically'sim- ple -- a modal style of jazz playing with the use of elec- tronic instruments, as well as the "employing of electronic sounds. The form is very ap- pealing, not only for its sim- plicity, but because it is easily accessible to audiences beyond those primarily interested in jazz. There is no objection here to appealing to a larger audience. It is the sacrifice of the art that raises objections. As I said, it is a modal style of playing that leaves the soloist almost complete freedom in which to move his solo. Unfortunately, many musi- cians cannot stand up to this -owl challenge, and have chosen in- stead to wallow in the blanket of electronics. I have in mind the Contemporary Jazz Quintet, who appeared here recently with Alice Coltrane. Their per- formance was a massive wall of* sounds backing two, horn solo- ists who chose only to beid notes and run scales. The em- phasis was always on effect - a cracked note on the flugel-. horn can be a lovely sound, but only as punctuation, not as a musical sentence; a glissando on tenor sax can be used pur- posefully to create a feeling of movement, but something has to be moving besides an empty series of notes. This willingness to sacrifice content has beenunourished by the ignorance of cultural leech- es eager to grab onto any new movement in the arts that stirs their heads. One such critic praised Miles Davis for being the first in jazz to assume the modal style of playing with the album Bitches Brew. The first? John Coltrane and Eric Dolphy must be tossing and turning in their graves with the knowledge that they took steps toward throwing out the chords ten or more years ago. Ornette Cole- man, the mister practitioner of ;modal jazz, has been recording in the modal style since 1959, and years before that he was Thursday and Friday Rene Clair's Le Million Dir. Rene Clair, 1930 Those of you who saw The Italian Straw Hat will eagerly await more of Clair's brilliant comedy. Armand Bernard and Phillippe Pares search for a lost lottery ticket. SHORT: HAPPY ANNIVERSARY ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM kicked out of one jazz band af- ter another because he heard his music differently than those around him; Davis himself was speaking about using scales in- stead of chords in 1960. With his Kind of Blue, recorded in 1962, he was off and running in the direction of modality. Da- vis did not invent modality in jazz, he popularized it. Though one can argue that this accom- plishment is as important as in- vention, there is no question that the roots of jazz modality are not in-the 70's. When the artist is overcome by the form of his creation, the art isdoomed. I don't have such a dire prediction for jazz. Too many false prophets have spok- en premature eulogies and I see no sign that jazz is even ailing, much less dying. My point is that such sacrifices of sub- stance that have been made in the name of form cannot help but hurt jazz, which certainly needs all the friends it can get, but no new enemies. ALL SEATS 75c FR 9 Its scrumdidilyumptious! Cdr OTE0Wc(X0p' APRAIOMilPEW "Out Disneys Disney" Tony Mastroianna, Cleveland Press "A classic in the tradition of Wizard of Ox' and will be played annually thirty years from now." -L.A. Herald Examiner MATINEES ONLY-1:00-3:30 I - , if Friday, March 31-Pi Kappa Alpha presents: [I The Second Annual PKA Out-of-State at the PIKE HOUSE, 1923 Geddes MUSIC from .7-10 P.M: PHASE III ALL DRINKS 10c Except Black Coffee 8c HOT CHOCOLATE LEMONADE ORANGE JUICE COCA-COLA ORANGE SPRITE STATE AND PACKARD STORE ONLY DUNKIN' DONUTS To your home from ours Fresh every four hours. "The difference is freshness" OPEN MONDAY-THURSDAY 7:30-9 P.M. FRI., SAT., SUN. 7:30-3 P.M. This offer expires April 17th EmmEMMI 1I 41 OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1 P.M.-4:30-8 P.M. MATINEES $1.50 Mon.-Thurs. eve. $2.00 Fri. & Sot. eve. $2.50 603 E. Liberty .DIAL 665-6290 r The Place to INTERESTING Meet People! U Bach Club' Michael Vlatkoski-piano Goldberg-Variations REFRESHMENTS 8000 .m. March 30, 1972, Thurs. South Quad, West Lounge No Musical Knowledge Needed. Absolutely Everyone Invited. For further info: 763-6256 WE HAVE 16 PEOPLE TO HELP YOU WITH YOUR APARTMENT NEEDS. ONE OF US WILL WORK HARD TO HELP YOU FIND AN APARTMENT, THE REST OF US WILL TRY OUR BEST TO KEEP YOU HAPPY WITH IT. WE THINK IT'S THE SERVICE YOU GET AFTER YOU SIGN THE LEASE THAT COUNTS. VISIT US SOON. 7 and 9 p.m. 75c : ;:::