THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February S, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, February 5, 1971 records Back-up vocalists stars of blah record By FARGO BERMAN Occasionally a backup vocal group called the Blackberries comes on sounding as yummy as an egg cream on a summer (or winter) day. Those few moments are the only reprieve on the tiresome new Fever Tree album For Sale (Ampex 10113). Side one is a bunch of short cuts performed proficiently and with all the ingenuity and excitement of Muzak, if that dentist office drivel included second rate rock. Side two is more worthless, a thirteen minute repetitious ren- dering of "Hey Joe." Peter Green of Fleetwood Mac fame makes a serious attempt at music on The End of the Game (Reprise 6436) with several hits and misses. The bulk of Green's electric guitar work on this non- vocal release involves slurring together single notes with the aid of a wah-wah pedal. The first track, "Bottoms Up," is formula "live at the Poobah Ballroom" rock jam, but most of' the album is free form jazz, including piano and organ, God- frey Maclean providing fine jazz percussion, and Alex Dmochow- ski doing some good electric bass. Green is a subtle musician and generally tries to make eachj sound and nuance count toward the entire piece at hand. Game requires close, patient listening and is not quite rewarding enough to deserve such atten- slightly new because some of those old Fleetwood Mac echoy British blues sounds linger on herein. Phew. The misses occur on Miles Davis' Bitches Brew (Co- lumbia GP 26) but who cares. So you float down to sixth heav- en for a few moments. Yes, there's even those classic non- informative liner notes saying how you can not say anything about the music except wow' and the notes are right. A stun- ning double album with Davis on cosmic t ru mp et, Wayne Shorter on sax, Harvey Brooks on Fender bass, Chick Corea on electric piano and more and more and so many of those "is" moments.Check out the cover in the record store. The music inside is much the same. The Evil Eye (1961) Stephane Audran in the center of a love triangle and destroyed by the work of a camera's evil eye-the look that kills. Also a beer festival. Subjective unfolding of guilt. A film cen- tral in the contest of the total work of this great director. r Presents THE ALVIN -AlLEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATRE Direct from six sold-out weeks in Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev, Zaporozhe, Donetsk and Boroshilobgrad Friday, February 12, 8:30 IN HILL AUDITORIUM Lecture-Demonstration Thursday, February 11. Tickets: $1.00 PROGRAM: TOCCATA (Music: Lao Shiffrin; and Dizzy Gillespie); THE JOURNEY (Music: Charles Ives) ; ARCHIPELAGO (Music: Boucourechliev; BLUES SUITE (Music: Traditional); and REVELATIONS (Music: Tradi- tional) . TICKETS: $6.00-$5.50-$5.00-$4.00-$3.00-$2.00 at UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY, BURTON TOWER, ANN ARBOR Office Hours: Mon. thru Fri., 9 to 4:30; Sat., 9 to 12 (Telephone 665-3717) (Also at Auditorium box office 11x hours before performance time) 4 -Daily-Jin Judkis Play becomes' Ann 4rbor dance troupe Perhaps you could attend this evening. Get there by eight and at least make up for past mis- takes_ Andi jst in case ou are DON'T MISS! TONIGHT-SUN.! 2:30 & 8:00! By LAURIE HARRIS I set out for Canterbury House last night. A freezing rain had clogged the streets and, daintily I picked my way through the still solid flows of ice and chunky water. I missed. A cold rush set up my ankle and into my calf. Canterbury was only half a block ahead. I entered their alleyway. After all, I was a reviewer and they had told me Martin in Heaven, by Peter Griffith, was to be put on at eight and nine p.m. It was nine o'clock when I opened the door. A mysterious wavering of bod- ies steeped in shadow greeted my dampened eyes. I had been ex- pecting something strange, but not this strange. As a matter of fact, at nine o'clock I had been expecting a bunch of people wait- ing for a play to begins not al- ready engrossed in the action. But, alas, I had been misin- formed. This was the U of M Dance Troupe scheduled for 9:15 and starting much earlier. Mar- tin in Heaven must have fallen. What I can tell you is this: the dance troupe is exceptional- much better than anything I had been expecting in Ann Arbor. In a series of five or six short com- positions the group built up and relaxed tension according to their planned desire., "Duet', a short piece with mu- sic and choreography by John Cwiakala, was an intriguing ar- rangement between body and; sound. Cwiakala would bend at the waist then slowly turn his torso as though it were a screw entering the woodwork. In a mas- tery of control the two portions of his body became separate and yet worked together for a final syn- thesis. raded before her-ghosts of a hair-curler, sleepy eyed evening delaying her quest into morning. I first glance into the mirror ... it can't really be me! And then testing out the audience unseen glassy surface like a child's 'first encounter with a mirror. How far can you stretch before you dis- appear? And the joy of discover- ing it was still her, even though she couldn't see it in the elusive glass. T w o 'Internal Combustion' pieces and 'Studies in Silence' filled out the program that I was fortunate enough to see. They were studies in motion versus in- ertia, humor and gaiety versus frustration. The group's ability was engros- sing and the audience, small as it was, because of the weather, I presume, pushed and strained and tugged their muscles along with the performers. <1 - - SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT! 4 tion.Among the field of jazz- low on things to do over the next guitar jazz Green has too many few weekends, the Ann Arbor competitors far in advance of in himself. But even if he doesn't Drama Festival is continuing i learn a few jazz chords in the Canterbury House, whether Can- future, Green looks promising in terbury House knows it or not. his slightly new direction. I say s n University of Michigan Film Society (ARM) presents LOLITA7 with Peter Sellers, James Mason, Sue Lyon 8 & 10:30 p.m.-Friday-Saturday-Sunday 331 Thompson St. 761-9751 contribution $1 --.-., -.- - 7&9 662-8871 75c ARCH. AUD. ALICES presents the MARK of ZORRO BASIL RATHBONE TYRONE POWER friday 8, 10, 12 p.m. alice lloyd hall-763-7095 50c-2 99c with this ad Buck Rogers is at Alice's every Wed. It's free, so come .~- -~4~ 4 WHAT ARE CHABROL FILMS LIKE ? "In my next one," Chabrol says, "I'll kill everyone, but it's no big deal. They're living at the beginning and dead at the end. In between there's a story about a man who breaks the Ten Com- mandments one by one. CATH- ERINE DENEUVE will star, and of course ORSON WELLES will play God." -Interview with Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times, Jan. 24 CHABROL: Cinema Guild Thurs.-Sun. Diane Elliot's 'Funeral Break- fast Blues' was a humorous con- ception of it's title. Figures pa- I The University of Michigan Bands presents a "POPS" CONCERT featuring I' PETERNERO AND HIS TRIO with The University of Michigan Symphony Band Sunday. Feb. 14 34:30 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM TICKETS: $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 General Sales Feb. 8-13 at Hill Box Office, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. MAIL ORDERS: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN BANDS 1024 Administration Bldg. The University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Mail orders will be accepted from 2/1-2/5 ALL SEATS RESERVED '.. .. . .~. ~ . .'.... .. ............. .... I r Subscribe to The Michigan Daily I t I } r NOTICE: CINEMA GUILD announces petitioning for mem- bership on its board. All interested and qualified persons are welcomed. Under-classmen especially encouraged. SIGN-UP for interview appointments in Architceure Audi- torium lobby. A sign-up sheet will be posted on the central # column there. } ___. 7' i ,. * ~ ~. ..,, .a;; .;.:.;:.: ; ::: :~' ~ m I