Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 7,'l 971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 7, 1971 Pipes and guitar soothe at the Ark By PATRICK SKY and LUKE BALDWIN After a successful tour of Eu- rope and a private audience with the queen, Patrick Sky fin- ally found a hole in his busy schedule to play the Ark here in Ann Arbor. In the most exciting set this reviewer has seen since Phil Ochs in his gold lame'e suit. Pa- trick managed to woo an other- wise uninteresting audience into an emotional state verging on hysteria. His repertoire is varied to say the least, singing songs ranging from traditional and pop to classics. There are songs a plenty to suit the most culinary of tastes. I especially enjoyed the taste- less songs about freaks, the Pope. and especially the one about the girl who died from an overdose of birth control pills. While Pat is most professional in his performance, I'm sorry to say that the audience was not up to par. Laughipg at jokes in all the wrong places, applaud- ing when they should have shut up, they were generally so' bad that after I finish this re- view, I am lodging a formal complaint with the Local Chap- ter of the International Audi- ences of the World. It seems that unions are really lax these days about whom they admit to their organizations. Alas, times must change. It's not everything, I fear, that changes for the best. May doom from the water gun of death drip upon any- one who would question the truth or the untarnished mod- esty that exudes from the drooling mouth of my compadre. Not only is he unusually tact- ful in his presentation of un- controversial material, but the taste he exhibits in his slightly more objectionable numbers is only surpassed by the scrump- tious tongue of an oversexed Blue Tick Hound. The audience bathed itself in masochistic delight as they squirmed on the floor, listening to such hits as "Separation Blues," "Many A Mile." and Jimmy Clay." Sky's piercing mastery of the guitar was overcome only by the disgusting presence of an audi- ence garbed in costumes that would have made the crowd at the Ali-Frazier fight seem nak- ed. Dressed in orange dungarees, black leather zoot suits, and B. V.D.'s (with a generous assort- ment of chrome plated chains, , they wheezed ecstacally having been treated to music unmatch-' ed sincesAprodite caught her left breast in an electric toaster. By ABBY MILLER Every time I get really turned on to a particular kind of mu- sic or a performer, I'm totally at a loss to relate my impressions to anyone. Take far example my dry review of Lou Killen, one of my very favorite performers. This time I don't intend to make the same mistake. I ask only that you treat yourself to an experience that you'll never again get in Ann Arbor by rep- resenting yourself at the Ark this evening. Liam O'Flynn, from Dublin, a master at the pipes, has been playing the uille- ann pipes for 14 years. No one in this country can play the pipes like him, and even in Ire- land this music has gone under- ground. The only way I can hope to describe the pipes is that there is magic in them. The weird and eery sounds that Liam pro- duces are a combination of his skill and soul, plus the mystical The ALLEY The Last Night For: MUDDY, WATERS Shows at 7:30..1O00 $2.25 PINBALL in the Basement All Chairs Removed Upstairs quality of the pipes themselves. Incorporated with his music is his soft, charming way of pre- senting each piece. He sets up each tune with stories and inci- dents of the song and its com- position. Gradually one begins to have a feeling for Carolan, the blind harpist, for the old fiddlers and pipers whose tunes he plays - for a kind of music and its mood and historical set- ting. Through Liam's images and the haunting strains of the pipes, one is transported into another world. Liam builds around him an enchantment and encitement for the ancient music flowing through his pipes. EXCLUSIVE © AREA SHOWING - AN ALL-TIME FIRST MI. - ~~ '_. BUILD Saturday and Sunday MURIEL DIR. ALAIN RESNAIS, 1963. with Delphine Sey- rig. Resnais takes you in- to the world of the mem- ory. Former love and for- mer horror invade the present in a Proustian rememberance of things past. Muriel is a film ex- quisitely constructed with Resnais' sophisticated ed- CINEMA II I is now petitioning for new board members To petition for the board, go to Room 240 Michigan Union and sign up there for an interview to be held November 9. Also fill out an interview sheet ond return it to Room 240 by Monday, November 8. 4 I New releases: Trying to find a pearl in a messy bed of oysters z j. * *****-N.Y. Times iting. In color, French, I By HERB BOWIE Listening to all the obscure releases the record compannies secrete every year is a little like diving for pearls: every so often you find something t h a t Justifies all the hard work you have put in. If you had hap- pened to be listening to thelat- est stack a few years ago, for example, you might have been shocked to hear a record so good that Three Dog Night lat e r covered one of the songs there- on. The group, then known as the Rockets, later became Crazy Morse, Neil Young's back-up band. Keeping this in mind, then,- let's take a look at t h e latest batch of unknowns. Mason Proffit sings about the tragic, bittersweet, qualities of life. The album, Last Night I Had The Strangest Dream (Am- pex A-10138), is full of pithy little epigrams like "Freedom's just a way of getting older, and living's just a way to let it be," that are easily memorized and are sure to help us all through our everyday struggle with life. At times they sound a little like Peter, Paul and Mary laced with melancholy harmonica and pe- dal steel, at times a little like early Simon and Garfunkel, but they always sound constipated. Coming after Mason Proffit, Wishbone Ash's new album, P11- gimage (Deca DL 75295), sounds positively refreshing, with hardly an intelligible word on the whole album. Coming af- ter anyone else, though, they'd sound a little dull. With drums, bass, and two guitars, t h e y sound like they should be a tight little rock 'n roll and blues band. Instead they're a loose 11 t t i e quasi-jazz group ' that never really manages to get it on. Alex Bevan is an entirely dif- ferent story. No Truth to Sell (Big Tree Records BTS 2006) is almost good enough to listen to again. The longest of t h e thirteen cuts is only four and a half minutes, and each track contains a nice song well sung and carefully arranged. The ly- rics are the central part of each song and, as the ones below in- dicate, are quite equal to the task: Everybody told me what I needed, and I believed them for a while. Now I tell them tell each other, while I sit here and I smile. I let them get to me, now I wait and bide my time. I sing soft songs, some say very well. I sing soft songs, I got no truth to sell. Tucked away inside my suitcase dragged round many miles, You'll find my love like my hi ThisNOKRD $1.50 FRI., SAT.,rSUN. Vanguard Recording Artist PATRICK SKY AND LIAN O'FLYNN T-shirts Ready to wear Like my smile. The album's fatal flaw is that every song tries to convey basi- cally the same mood of sad dis- illusionment. A whole album of unremitting melancholy is sim- ply not convincing. If this al- bum had just a couple of songs of unrestrained joy and enthus- iasm, the remaining laments would stand out in bold relief. As it is, they all melt together like grey clouds in an overcast sky. The best thing to be said about Hiroshima (Ampex A-10123) by Wishful Thinking is that it's eminently forgettable. Eiven at 45 rpm they can't keep up with Lawrence Welk. Nick Drake's new album, Nick Drake, is positively delightful. Nick's voice is a real great, sure to rank right up there w i t h those other distinctive voices in rock, belonging to Bob Dylan, Rod Stewart, Ian Whitcomb. and Mick Jagger; the best way I can describe it is tobsay that it sounds like Donovan's at its softest, folksiest best. At times it's so smooth and even th e n you can almost forget it's there! Andthebackup is ab- solutely charming. Nick's lyrics are some of the most sensitive and perceptive w be sung in a rock context since the memorable "Surfin' Bird" by the Trashmen. At one point in the album, for example, Nick wrenches these words from his soul: I could have been a whistle, I could have been a flute. A real live giver, I could have been a boot. I could have been a signpost, Could have been a clock. Did we not immediately real- ize that Nick is speaking meta- phorically here, we might be tempted to ask "Well why didn't you, Drake? What the f. s is your excuse?" but we are well aware that Nick is speaking on many levels here. If Nick's re- cord doesn't completely enchant you on the first listening, try playing it at 45 rpm: it sounds evenbetter! All kidding aside, Johnny Riv- er's new album, Home Grown (United Artists UAS-5532) is really nice; if you buy it you're crazy, but I would advise you to take a look at it the next time you're in a record store. T h e hype job is so ridiculous it's not even obnoxious. The cover is pseudo-burlap, with a picture of freaky Johnny in the middle be- decked with long hair and beard standing in the midst of nature next to a small child with curly blond locks. There isn't a single word on the cover that is me- chanically produced nor is there a single photo whose edges have been evenly cut. Corner of State and Liberty Sts. DIAL 662-6264 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:05 FRANK ZAPPA'S R with subtitles. ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7:00 and 9:05 75c Read DailIy Class if ieds L. S. & A. STUDENT GOV'T, ELECTIONS PETITIONING NOW OPEN for EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEMBERS-AT-LARGE EIGHT FULL-TERM SEATS File Petitions at Rm. 3-M, Mich. Union FILING CLOSES MONDAY, NOV. 8, 5 P.M. THIS Q RATED FILM IS HIGHLY RECOMMEND E BY THE MANAGEMENT * PIus 2nd feature * Cinema 482.3300 PAI NI ) 4th WEEK MIii DIAL 8-6416 Shows At 1-3-5-7-9 -- Looking for a Pusher TRIP with on CALEDONIA or KLM TO LONDON MUNICH AMSTERDAM We Care HOW You Get There CHRISTMAS DEPARTURE--CHECK CLASSIFIED UAC Travel, 2nd floor STUDENT UNION, 763-2147 Administrative Services by STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL, 769-5790 iHELLSTROM CHRONICLE 4 ARM/UM Film Society Maria Callas is MEDEA SUNDAY NOV. 7 I mommmommom" TICKET SALE STARTS MONDAY PTP Ticket Office-Mendelssohn Lobby Monday-Friday 10-1, 2-5 y Laurence Olivier in Strindberg's corrosive classic PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A lIHE FILM IN~ ASSOCIATION WITH 'I t ATIONAL TEATRE OF GREAT BRITAIN LAURENCE OLM ER THE DANCE OF DEATHR GERALDINE McEWAN AD ROBERT LANG PRODUCED BY JOHN BRABOURNE DIRECTED BY DAI GLES(~~ Tf.CHNIC()LU A PARAMOUNT PCTURE ALL ES AorM " DT1 G Gee== -tmne 4 SHOWS daily at 1:15, 3:45, 6:15, 8:45 "What is important is the secret and sometimes terrifying force Pasolini has communicated. MEDEA fascinates us like a film of horror. But here the hor- ror is charged with poetry. Maria Callas is infallible in the role ... She brings to the film a nobility and exceptional sensibility. A kind of magnetism is emitted from her very person." -LE MONDE, Paris 3:00 matinee SUNDAY 7:30, 9:30 p.m. Power Center for Performing Arts Tickets $2.00 Centicore S. U. and at door fA~a- 4 The U of M Folklore Society presents .. . DOC WATSON, IN CONCERT Dec. 4 8:30 P.M. Mendelssohn Theatre h I 1111 *~ U~ '.k .~' :."'"'~~Q~X};;,:~ . ..: ., I I