Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 25, 1971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 25, 1971 Playing in Hill Coliseum- West, Pappalardi, Mountain Daily-Robert Wargo McDowell and Tate: Blues played in juxtaposition By FARGO Suddenly it strikes you. What are these two grown men doing playing rock and roll? Lumpy Leslie West and radi- ant Felix Pappalardi dominate the four-member Mountain with West playing last of the new hot rockers guitar, his eyes flicking around like a frog, the mouth twisting to eke out the squeals from the axe neck - now his trademark on the ballroom scene. Except Hill is no ballroom- is weirder than its Gamelon/ Muddy Waters/Rubenstein vibes, filled and half of that by teeny- boppers and a few low-life Mid- west groupies. The crowd loves' it. "Theme From An Imaginary W e s t e r n." "Nantucket Sleigh Ride." "Roll Over Beethoven." Mountain as always heaving a muddy roar. My ears. Is West into it as much as last time? Sure he's into it. Looking like Jackie Gleason, the same pain and triumph in an unexpected face, here I am after spending years of my life practicing riffs, "I'm playing in a rock an' roll band." ("Animal Trainer and Toad") ; what's this guy doing showing off his fingers and fin- ger exercises and even music to a Coliseum of human animals? Pappalardi singing sweeter, West louder. My ears versus their wall of sound, rows of Sunn speakers. Pappalardi the most damned electric bass player head, nodding, going wild and in control. They intersperse subtle tunes but still amplified to oceans of volume. West, who is from Forrest Hills not Flushing, wants to hurl those chords right at you, show what a badass dude he can be turning that amp up to peak. And they can play. At moments I enjoyed it. I felt my- self getting older, reminiscing the lyricism of Jefferson Air- plane and Quicksilver songs. I kept reminding m y s e 1 f that Mountain is better than Grand Funk and Black Sabbath. GREGORY PECK in MOBY DICK Academy Awards winner by JOHN HUSTON "... it's about this whale." TUES.-Sept. 28 auwd. a-angell hall-75c 17& 9:30 p.m. ann arbor film cooperative Preceding the star act of last night's show was Mylon and the Holy Smokes, a group which has been touring with Mountain for several months now. Pappalardi, who first gained fame for being the producer of Cream's albums, is producing Mylon's second al- bum and it should be a corker. I regret to say. What do three black women singing hymnally against two guitarists, a bass, drummer, piano, and a giant heightened green suited with a cross on the back lead singer leaping stomp- ing gyrating out sound. A cheap imitation of Joe Cocker. Mylon playing imaginary solos with his hands and Mick Jaggering his face. He and the guitarist who made Alvin Lee-type straining faces while playing a one-four- five progression just outright infuriated me. And I was even angrier to have to admit that they played damned good tunes damned well. Some rock, some country, a touch of Gospel. My- DIAL 8-6416 SHOCKED REVIEWERS HAD THIS TO SAY! lon came out after his first song and tells the audience how well you know. Then his standard rap a song or two later of how he was down in Georgia a year ago with a tie and jacket on singing gospel and unhappy and how Pappalardi came and gave the group money for a place to prac- tice. A brief rap on how the freaks are taking over. Right on. The group does "Peace Begins With- in," and it is beautiful, the whole thing a show, good music, and in part a joke. Mylon is pretend- ing to be grooving so heavy with the Fender guitar player, the one who has the part of showing no emotion, but something's wrong with the amp and Mylon's tambourine momentarily loses its inner piece and makes him slam it against the cable with anger. I left halfway through Moun- tain. They are after all my ears for the rest of my life. I was actually stoned from being deaf. Mountain sure sounded better a year ago when I was eating meat. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. - ICE - a future-fantasy of revo- lutionary struggle within the U.S.' made by revolu- nary filmmakers. sex and violence .a. and vision TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY Sept. 28 & 29 ARM/Michigan Film Society Saturday and Sunday Ivan the Terrible PART I1 1941-1946, Sergei Eisenstein Eisenstein is the universally ac- claimed master of composition & editing. Ivan is his final and perhaps, his most powerful work. Part II Contains Eisenstein's only color sequence. Music by Pro- kofiev. ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7:00 and 9:05 75c N II -4 By BERT STRATTON Twelve years ago folklorist Alan Lomax "discovered" Fred McDowell-one of the last of the living first-generation bluesmen. That was in 1959, Fred Mc- Dowell playing acoustic guitar in Como, Miss. - farming and working at Stuckey's to make a .living. Last night Fred was at the Alley-five years of playing folk festivals behind him-a rhythm guitarist and bongo player to his and his melodic solos, it's not Fred McDowell at his best. It seems to be the fashion to put tae old men-in front of bands, like John Lee Hooker last week, and now Fred. And the strange part is that the bluesmen want it that way. McDowell plays with sidemen because he's so friendly he wants to get as many men on stage as he can. On the other hand there's Terry Tate who plays by him- self - acoustic guitar and har- the ironies-where would Tate be without men like McDowell having led the way? Fred McDowell will be dead in a few years, Son House will be dead, all the Mississippi blues- men will be buried, the oppor- tunity to hear the blues inno- vators will be gone-Terry Tate and other young whites will be what's left-not to say that the young men can't play, they can -Tate can-but it's not the real thing, it's not the history. I I * COUPON)} Mr. Mini's Submarine FREE SOFT DRINK with U each Mr. Mini's purchase * Offer good thru 10-1-71 at S. University location only u I - -- --7.- - iii m m-- mmmmm-mmmi Join The Daily WHAT IS THE -an all-campus orchestra! --sponsored by MUSKET and G&S! -performing 3 hit shows! DON'T MISS THE MASS MEETING SEPT. 26, 8 P.M.-ASSEMBLY ROOM-UNION UNIVERSITY THEATRE ORCHESTRA and 'I FRIDAY and SATURDAY SOME LIKE IT HOT with MARILYN MONROE TONY CURTIS JACK LEMMON Andy Warhol Calls This His Inspiration for Trash -Daily-Sara Krulwich left and a bassman and har- monica player to his right. In his hands, Fred had his electric Gibson; he's been electric for three years-.now. McDowell says he plays elec- trio because it's a lot less work s trying to play over crowd noise when you can turn up a knob. He also has to play over the hum of his sidemen. Playing his bottle-neck style guitar, a piece of glass on his third chording finger -he gets melody from both hands, and rhythm frem his continual pick- ing on the bass strings. He doesn't need any help-he doesn't sound as good when he gets it. The other guitars just add more to the already heavy bassline, the harmcnica cbscures his lyrics DIAL 5-6240 ANNA CALDER-MARSHALL TIMOTHY DALTON MCatw aHrahtlM monica. He's played with bands, he's played electric music and he's come home to the wood- guitar box and harmonica reeds. Tate played the opening act at the Alley-he and his music com- bined and were fine. When the plug's pulled out. old Fred McDowell will be out in the cold and Terry Tate will keep on jamming. It's ridiculous, H At corner of H State & Liberty *D DIAL 662-6264 Smokey's friends don't play with matches. 0 . . 5- - 7&9 75c Aud. A "The best book on college life to appear in modern times.." Jack Kirkland, playwright t*t F.. , '- - t Wa hrs boo stoe rctr b This delightfully Wacky book depicts college ilfe at the University of Michigan during prohibition days. Bathtub gin sold for 50# a gallons . . co-ed flappers were sweet, flat-chested playthings ... and there was Garbage Gertie! HI FROSH! gives you the low-down on the high-step- ping 53 piece Michigan Marching Band ... hilarious goings-on in the anatomy lab . .. wild parties at a fraternity house ... and a lot of other crazy episodes. After you've read HI FROSH! pass it on to your father, a brother, or perhaps an Uncle Ben. They'll enjoy it too. -' ci i.s. E _ A 11(111 N f dIt : t 1 a OPEN 12:45 PM. Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P. GOD HELP BOBBYAND HELEN = - .., -- -- _ .. 4A 1 .r ,'1 i P! (G , iJ rr i .' 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