Poge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 19, 1971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 19, 1971 Mu ddy: By BERT STRATTON Muddy Waters' band was on stage playing "W a t e r m e l o n Man" and "Peepin," jazz tunes;. .Muddy was waiting in the wings. --Friday night at Hill Auditor- ium, midnight, people in the aisles, people sneaking in con- tinuously all night, the place sold-out officially by noon that day-sold-out to the freshman who paid five bucks to take the new woman to the first big event of the year.hsold-out to the nuts concert-freaks who'll go to anything, and sold-out to everybody who likes good blues. And Muddy Waters came out, the outerspace name, the man, the same man who played with Son House in Mississippi, and he played to that big open Hill Auditorium building, and he played to everybody with an enormous, 'indescribable passion of blues, not sadness, not mel- ancholy but the whole mixture of what is this thing called being in love, being in trouble, being in life, the whole thing: he didn't dance around, he sang around,: he didn't jump around in hoolahoop frenzy like a 56 year-old clown. Muddy didn't do that, he played his music, he played it well, that thi All those people listening to monica Muddy at midnight, the man imore who started a good part of in the what's the blues t r a d it i o n, higher bringing the Southern country the sar blues sounds up North and low re winding them around the wires from t and poles of electric Chicago frmatY land, 1949's, with amplified gui- smallx tar. and new hard-driving city also be beats, to play the South Side faction bars and- create the dark blues, four ye the city blues. Muddy Waters gotten Up from Mississippi, he taugh It's ha the Rolling Stones how to play was at -maybe, but he taught Magic Andt Sam, he taught Otis Rush, he ing Mw taught all the South Side men down a thing or two. dng 1 down t Muddy Waters who now plays m a k i to white college people, not in blues, the dank rooms of late-night tance low-pay clubs with nobody lis- at one tening, but to a million college students who will sit back and analyze every move he makes, if he is cool, if he is jive, if he l is playing the blues-a crowd I not raised on the blues, that wants to learn what makes it go. With him was Paul Oscher, the young harmonica man to follow in the footsteps of Mud- dy's long line of harp blowers, audi Paul played Little Walter's a "Juke," he played everythinga Vanguard immemorial and Junior Wells. Featuring the same Buddy Guy who when he came to Chicago in the fifties was considered to be the heir to B.B. King's throne, the same man who let the white blues re- vival eat him and his guitar alive. He is the pimping pink cherub in the facial grimace Heaven for all jive performers -playing his guitar with his handkerchief, witha drumstick, behind his back; and who cares if he'd played it from a heli- copter hovering over center- stage-it would still have sound- ed sloppy and routine. A "show" he has worked out to the finest details, a show which is very professional but is pitifully be- low the capabilities of Buddy Guy-as he used to be, more than three years ago-now he shouldn't be mentioned in the same breath with B.B. King. To go along with Buddy Guy there was Junior Wells, the sawed-off James Brown of har- monica doom, who has taken up dance, put down his harmonica, and become a success, shining bright in bellbottom bliss. Jun- ior Wells used to play good harp, he used to be called the Hoodoo Man, he used to even play a little while without being interrupted by Buddy Guy. As a contrast, just think of the amazing blend of showmanship and musicianship that harmon- ica man James Cotton forges. John Lee Hooker was there too, a man who most of the time plays domineering cadence- like boogies w h i c h penetrate through auditoriums and clubs like they're on the express train to Africa. A hypnotic voice, a rhythmic pulsating guitar and the man, Detroit's own, John Lee Hooker. Friday night the Man John Lee Hooker was out back taking a stroll while some imposter-phantom looking just like Hooker but without the depth and beady-eye stare came out to do a little soft-shoe num- ber for the crowd. He hardly p 1 a y e d his guitar, he hardly sang one comprehensible lyric, and he didn't play anything close to a driving boogie; he was watering his lawn in a suburban mad-craving desire to trim the edges and cut the hedges and get the crowd standing no mat- ter how bad he really was. The whole auditorium of people standing because Hooker told them to get up, to see him dancing, which was like watch- ing your next-door neighbor at the yearly block party-unco- ordinated, uninteresting, a n d stupid. John Lee Hooker goofing on his pay check for the eve- ning, it was a terrible goof. The lead act, Terry Tate, put Hooker to shame-a young Ann Arbor harmonica and acoustic guitar player, who sang deep and concise blues the way John Lee can do it when he's good. Tate was involved with his mu- sic, his energy spiralled from himself and was caught up by the crowd. John Lee Hooker's energy was zip, it was all the crowd feeding him. Friday night, the killer blues -in memorium, Buddy Guy and Junior Wells, get well soon to John Lee Hooker, and long live Muddy Waters. LATE SHOW 1 p.m. MON. NITE WINNER OF 4 AWARDS! mocguco BEST SONG 2b CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID AUD. A-ORSON WELLES Join The Daily (f/Q- ;y- ,, 0 , ' 0 GRAD COFFEE HOUR IS{HERE WEDNESDAY "we had 200 people last week" 4-6 P.M. 4th FLOOR RACKHAM coffee, punch, pastry discussion BE THERE I F, in -Daily-Tom Gottlieb hose ten holes on a har- will give,.and he played by switching harmonicas middle of tunes to get, notes-all working to fit me key, and he played atic harp with that mel- sonating sound different he wailing sound of the blues harp, which Paul ent to everybody's satis- . A man who's played ears with Muddy and has so good in those years rd to remember when he beginner. there he was accompany- u d d y who was getting with his slide guitar, run- his metal slide up and the strings of the guitar, n g it true, playing the "Honeybee," "Long Dis- Call," and then to finish o'clock with "I Got My Boy's school-fantasy? INDSAY ANDERSON'S if.... Tues., Sept. 21- 7 & 9:30 p.m. itorium a-angell hall n arbor film cooperative Mojo Working," everybody on their feet dancing, Muddy sing- ing in that unique tensile vdice of his-he had come through the centuries of immemorial Af- rican tribes and windy days on street corners broke, all that, to play before a white audience who loved him, and he loved us. As for the rest of the con- cert, it was simply shuck. it was a low-class blues revival foister- ing of what nobody else will buy up onto young whites. The hype act of the decade-Buddy Guy For the student body: SGenuine Authentic Navy PEA COATS $25 Sizes 34 to 50 I 4 MICEG DIAL 5-6290 603 E. LIBERTY Shown Daily at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. TOM LAUGHLIN " DELORES TAYLOR Htr1NI4OLd R~A% ii Srrc ..~= == STUDENT WIVES GRADUATE--UNDERGRADUATE join MICHIGAN DAMES The National Association of University Dames Michigan Chapter-Ann Arbor GENERAL MEETING Tuesday, September 21, 1971-8 P.M. Huron High Dining Room For further info. col Jean Young-971 -8242 SUNDAY The Lone Ranger and the Lost City of Gold Hi, Ho Silver I CHECKMATE L w m i w I State Street at Liberty of - - M Program Information 662-6264 DOORS OPEN 12:45 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, & 9:05 JULES VERNE TAKESYOU OVERTE EDGE OF THE WORLD! I MONDAY NITE at 7 :00, 9:00, & 1 1 :00 p.m. WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS I INC.UDING BEST SONG r 1 M 0 Ij I I Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 20th CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS f IULXNKWMAN ROBERT REDFORD KATHAR(NE ROSS BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID AND. A, ANGELL HALL ORDER SEATS NOW! MENDELSSOHN BOX OFFICE, 10-1, 2-5 7&9 75c Aud. A PANAM1KWO4 OOLOR 1.OE LUXE "G orson welles film society .974 lnr.erxuyQo/. /4i an Mrf2744wanaI 1,4(1rea rv)xoram . &aaid/y ,reeaen?4 I WABX & The University of Detroit present IKE & TINA TURNER plus WAYNE COCHRAN and the C. C. Riders Fri., Sept. 24-8:30 p.m. U. of D. MEMORIAL BLDG. I Tickets $5.50-$4.50-$3.50 Exclusively on Liberty Records On sale at U. of D. MEMORIAL BLDG. BOX OFFICE and all J. L. HUDSON ticket outlets. __ [ "-U APPLAUSE FROM 12 CRITICS - IN COOPERATION WITH the ann arbor film cooperative PRESENTS ON MONDAY NIGHT ONLY the world premiere of PAMELA AND IAN starring Pamela Seamon and Ian Stulberg Directed by David Greene. Made in Ann Arbor during 1970 and 1971, Pamela and Ian includes scenes filmed in the Nickel's arcade, Rive Gauche, the Residential Col- lege Auditorium, 1111 Prospect and a chase through the streets of Ann Arbor. PAMELA AND IAN is based on an idea of the French New novelist, Alain Robbe-Grillet, who said, "the characters in a film are born in the beginning ( I I THE GALA INAUGURAL PlIOBCTIONI Qcy/ 9t LL ne POWER CENTER A ~r I e l /'rnn q Ax *1 "Wonderful fun! A dazzling work of the highest rank!" -Rex Reed, Holiday "Runs a breath- taking emotional spectrum!" Paul D. Zimmerman, Newsweek "Extraordinary!" -Parent's Magazine "A rare event in cinema!" -Hank Werbs, Variety "A glory:" WOURLD PRIEIIEIREI "A pure stone gas! A trip and a half!" -Michael Goodwin, Rolling Stone "Exuberant, charm, nostalgia and BARBARA --O RUTH FORD WESLEY ADDY CELESTE HOLM Anf MURIEL -IH MAX SHOWALTER RUSS THACKER humor!" FEDERICO FIBLLINI "A perpetual delight!" -Stefan Kaner, Time Magazine 9 E -Playboy "Another Federico Fellini masterpiece of imaginative cinema!" --Arthur Unger, Ingenue "A lovely movie!" --William Wolfe, Cue "If you go to the cinema only once a jfee THE GRASS HARP " I a' P2ielt y (llm etvC/f/C e~ail~a fade on de noelly TRUMAN CAPOTE 4 'reeled 4 ELLIS RABB