Page Two THE WICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, December 5, 1971 Page Two THE 'MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, December 5, 1971 Doe3 'human, By JIM IRWIN The first time I ever heard Doc and Merle Watson perform in person was two years ago in Canterbury House. It was one of those performances you never dreamed could exist-entirely unique and unforgettable. Lydia Mendelssohn Theater last night was not the old Can- terbury House with its hots cider and intimacy, but the perform- er was still the same Doc Wat- son - warm, traditional, down- to earth, and the audience ap- preciated every minute of it. Musically, Doc Watson is an incredible technician - anyone who has heard him will attest to. that. Between songs he and Merle will launch into flat-pick instrumentals that are so fast they seem to defy the capabili- ties of the human ear-it's im- possible to gain any sense of melody, yet every time they play a new instrumental the ideas are still rich and new. They never fail to re-energize even the most foggy mind. But Doc Watson is much more than music - he makes you ' homesick for places you've never been and a peaceful way of life you never knew. He tells stor- ies of the old Southern way of making molasses that was "clear and golden like honey." Or of the first banjo his father ever gave him when he was about seven-it was even unfretted. He sings of the old American folk heroes that have become but dim archetypes in our mem- T1a Ltson: Warm, Soul performers go to Ghana dow-n-to-ea th and present a soul lacking film v wn -. t' w-inr- i MLAIL. %-JF T V T&4f-EL-EL By PETER N. MUNSING The reasons people make films of rock festivals and the rea- sons people go to see them are often different. People generally go to see a film about a festival if they couldn't make it to the festival itself. Woodstock is a prime example of this. The peo- ple that make the films may either try for a straight show approach, such as Monterrey Pop, or try to give the surround- ing atmosphere or insight. Of course, if you're Warner Bros., you fabricate a show and then film it, ending up, with a preten- tious flick like Medicine Ball Caravan. Soul to Soul tries to be Wood- stock but ends up a'Monterrey Pop, and is at times boring, for the same reasons Monterrey Pop didn't come off. People will go to see Soul to Soul for Ike and Tina Turner, Wilson Pickett, and Santana, al- though the Voices of East Har- lem, Les McCann and Eddie Harris, Roberta Flack, and the Staples. Singers are also there. Director Dennis Sanders is try- ing for a little more, though he ends up with a lot less. In March of this year a group of black American performers were invited to Ghana for the celebration of the anniversary of its independence, and Sanders attempted to capture this on film. The film concerns itself not only with a show, but with a return to the roots for these performers-a search for iden- tity. Soul to Soul begins in the best George Pierrot style with an air- plane and the pilot speaking, "Let me tell you a little bit about Ghana," which he pro- ceeds to do. Then conversations among passengers like Ike Turn- er reading a poem about being black; Roberta Flack telling us, "I'm looking forward to all the pretty materials and things be- cause I like to sew,"-in short, the mixed reactions of Ameri- cans going back to their home- land, just like a synagog from Southfield going to Israel. All well and good, except that the title (used by the Ghanians as well) implies an exchange from which both will benefit. But most of what we see is the Americans performing to a smil- ing African audience. Sure, there's a special excitement and rapport generated between the performers and audience differ- ent from what you'd find in De- troit, Chicago, or Washington, but we really won't see the per- former's reactions. What we do see are the per- formers playing tourist-taking pictures, buying souvenirs, tra- velling to villages. Occasionally we get a sense of their feelings -realizing that they're not The dudes, they're not really on their own turf, black though they may be. But whenever anything like this plot is developed, the scene shifts back to more travelogue -natives singing as they work in the fields, cure people, dance, and generally live. A Ghanian performer joins Eddie Harris and Les McCann, but the scene suddenly switches to a Disney-type series on his dancing his way from his village to Accra; director Sanders mar- velling a la Ed Sullivan, "And this young man came all the way from his village to perform here tonight." The performances themselves are worth it, with the possible exceptions of Roberta Flack and the Staples Singers who were unexciting. I also got a little tir- ed of Carlos Santana's histrion- ics, though maybe Sanderasrwas trying to make a point, which escaped me. The Ike and Tina Turner Review was up to its high standard, but because it was standard, it wasn't as good as the Voices of East Harlem or Wilson Pickett. My disap- pointment with the film lies not so much with what it gives, but with what it fails to give. There were parts where it showed glimpses of potential police- men swaying in harmony with the music and the crowd they were controlling; one of the Ghanian hosts telling the group that they didn't worry about slaves as they were tribes de- feated in battle, and other shots, but these got lost in the pretty wrapping. It's like National Ge- ographic attempting to do a story on James Brown, and fail- ing miserably. 11217 S.University across from Campus'lheater DIAL- NOW! 8-6416 "Ingmar Bergman's 'The Touch' is the best film about love he has ever made." -Penelope Gilliatt, The New Yorker Elliott Gould M Ingrnar ^s Bergman's kJ..j""'The Touch" TA CoAor 79 r ,f jTODAY AT 1,3, 5,7,9 pm. lazy old codger and all the trou- bles he's having on his farm- the hens aren't laying, the fish stopped biting, the hole in the seat of his pants keeps getting bigger. But he doesn't care; he just takes it easy with a sort of comfortable satisfaction that the world will take care of him anyway. Doc Watson gave a workshop at the Ark yesterday afternoon where he gave a lot of tips on flat-picking - what he's best at - and talked about the nu- merous folk musicians and styles he draws his "notions of country pickin"' from - such as the Delmore brothers, Mississippi John Hurt and Merle Travis. "A friend of mine came over one day and said to me, 'Hey, yer the best guitar player in the land.' "'Well I got you fooled,' I said. "Then he looked at me and said. 'You got Earl Scruggs fooled?' "I said 'Yeah."' For those who are interested, ories-like Casey Jones and John Henry. George Gershwin's "Summertime" is indeed a more modern song-but his rendition of it still evokes that same rich nostalgia. One of my favorite songs which I distinctly remember from his performance two years ago was "The Black Jack Coun- ty Chain." "The moral of this song is don't be unfair or dis-. honest or you'll get your 'come- uppins'." (A traditional South- ern idiom meaning karma;) The song is about a guy who gets picked up by the Black Jack County Sheriff for vagrancy and spends a few years drag- ging around unbearable chains. The sheriff, with his "black snake whip is a tyrant. One day the prisoners creep up on him in his sleep and kill him. The melancholy tune and the per- cussive lyrics make it an un- forgettable song. One of Doc Watson's more unusual numbers was a narra- tion accompanied by the "gui- tar." The story was about some -Daily-Tom Gottlieb Merle and Doc don't play any of the standard makes of fine gui- tars - like Gibson or Martin.T Centicor B Theirs were made by J.W. Gal- r lagher of Wartrace, Tennessee -what a sound,it speaks for it- self. What are you going to do with all your paperbacks? Program Information 662-6264 OPEN 12:45 Centicore on South University pays higher "Always the Finest in Screen Entertainment" prices in cash or credit for all used quality Corner State & Liberty Streets and mass market paperbacks in good condi- Shown at 1 P.M. & 3 P.M. tion: 30 % of cover price in cash, 50 % of Only-Separate Admission-All Seats 75c cover price in credit. "WONDERFUL WORLD__ OF THE BROTHERS GRIMM" G Rated.. Centicore on South University will specialize in AT 5 P.M., 7 P.M. & 9P.M. ONLY-NOT CONTINUOUS used paperbacks-and a few other things-all WITH FAMILY MATINEES year round. Bring your paperbacks in now. And I.&T. T URNER, WILSON PICKETT when you buy, you save. & SANTANA N -_ ' tThe Centicore BookshopJ 336 Maynard 1229 S. University NO 5-2604 THE NEW YORK TOURING COMPANY Presenting Its Interpretation of JSUS CHRIST Saturday, December 11 CO-SPONSORED BY Hill Auditorium-8:30 P.M. ENACT AND THE Tickets $4.50, $5.50, $6.50 ANN ARBOR JAYCEES TICKET SALE BEGINS 10:00 A.M. MONDAY DECEMBER 6 AT HILL AUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE THE ALLEY CINEMA 330 MAYNARD TOMORROW ONLY -MONDAY, DEC. 6 THE SERVANT dir. JOSEPH LOSEY ; screenplay by HAROLD PINTER 1963 American Revolutionary Media presents Jean-Luc Godard and the Youth Culture -TONIGHT- Vladimir and Rosa ... & Abbie & Jerry "flashes of the Marx Brothers and Bertold Brecht . . . on the whole, the best recent Godard I've seen."-Kauffman, NEW REPUBLIC "the Chicago Trial parody is bitter, but the playing is exuberant and ener- getic, as childlike as the }(pre-Mao) fantasies."-N.Y. TIMES also: Haight six-minute 1968 Newsreel documentary-and- Godard in America 40-minute documentary of Godards- 1970 campus tour..Berkeley confrontation was historic. 7:30 & 9:30 Naturay Science Aud. $1.25 cont. I AIII Doc Watson Program Information 665-6290 LAST DAYS Today at 1-3-5-7-9 " . gut-tightening thriller and one "of the most exciting films you'll see this year!'Ken Barnard-Det. News CLINT EASTWOOD ...an invitation to terror... SHOWCASE PRODUCTIONS NO. 2! VASCO0 by George Schehade TRUEBLOOD Theatre, Dec. 9, 10, 11 at 8 P.M.! Box Office Open 2-5, M-W; 2-8, Th-S Tickets: Thurs., $1.00; Fri., Sat., $1.50 3 PERFORMANCES ONLY! 'ii> x:i:>? s: :-:-. .m-5 (All~ift sk~1tum nYaRin o I . starring DICK BOGARDE, SARAH MILES, JAMES FOX ("Performance") WENDY CRAIG and a, Ii i II . _ _III