°, ss 9 For the nicest choice of fine chinas, crystals,f stainless steel and silver. you will enjoy shopping at the JOHN LEIDY ¢ GIFTS $ 601 -607 E. Liberty St. 668-6779 Ann Arbor . ~ - ::::i .X ":::.: ~ ::~ii:::: Ai ;i...?}:i:+:":".:::;3 i:y:"-3 -it":i HERBIE HANCOCK Profiles of a jazz musician Records: 4 Biggs, Ormady, HERBIE HANCOCK SEXTET Apr. 26-Monday Apr. 27-Tuesday Apr. 28-Wednesday TWO COMPLETE SHOWS EACH NIGHT 9:30 AND 1 1:30 Doors open at 9:00 By RON.ENGLISH Those of us who listen to jazz know why we do: beyond its value as a sophisticated aesthe- tic entertainment, this music is (as Heraclitus said the ancient religious rites were) a cure for the soul. What the musician needs to hear, he creates; what his soul can use, ours can use. And what distinguishes jazz cre- ation from other high art, mu- sical and non-musical, is its contingent immediacy. What a man like Herbie Hancock needs to create on any day is contin- gent to some extent (given his order of creativity and virtuos- ity) upon his fellow players and their expressive needs, and upon the audience and its needs and ability to participate (however passively) in the flow of psychic energies. (After Hancock and the sextet he leads appeared last year in Detroit, he and the other musicians expressed some sur- prise and delight at the energy level in which they found them- selves playing, which they at- tributed to the local ambience and the specific involvement of their audiences.) Jazz composition, f r o m the "Classic" p e r i o d onward, has been largely a matter of design- ing themes and formal frame- works for that expressive col- lective spontaneity. Hancock's achievement, as a pianist, com- poser and leader, has been with- in this broad movement. Like many other seminal figures of the last ten years, Hancock has developed toward increasingly sophisticated rhythmic and har- monic matrices for improvising, such as would yield a large va- riety of dramatic shapes and a richly expressive vocabulary of textures. This expansion and sophisti- cation can be heard beginning with Herbie's fourth album as a leader, Empyrean Isles, continu- ing through the inflential Maid- en Voyage and the more subtle lyricism of The Prisoner, Speak Like a Child, (all on Blue Note) and the record featuring his current sextet, Mwandishi (on Warner Bros.). His develop- ment as a pianist and member of one of jazz' most influential rhythm sections can also be heard on the 11 albums he made with the Miles Davis quintet of 1968-69. In Hancock's work there re- main, though, those "folk" ele- ments audible in the music of jazz figures as diverse as Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker, Hor- ace Silver and Ornette Coleman. Jazz has always maintained a close vitalizing relationship with its roots in the folk tradition, which extends to Mother Africa, as Dizzy Gillespie put it, and which expresses itself today in the cats singing on the corner, the church choir with rhythm section, and the high school drummers working out their hip routines. This latter, by the way, has a lot to do with Motown drumming and the whole boog- aloo phenomenon. That particu- lar rhythmic development is, as a matter of fact, the folk ele- ment most prominent in several of Hancock's compositions. Es- sentially, a duple metric flow w i t h shifting syncopated ac- cents, either on the 8th note (as in bossa nova) or 16 note stratum (as in boogaloo), it is a pervasive e 1 e m e n t in today's popular musics. The "vitalizing" relationship I spoke of works both ways: Hancock's "Watermelon M a n" (popularized by Mongo Santa- maria's Latin band) is by no means the property of the jazz audience only, and is played by musicians and demanded by au- diences who have little if any awareness of Herbie or the rest of his art. (This odd state of affairs is due in large part to incidental music for Bill Cosby's Fat Albert Rotunda, a TV spe- cial (both of which are avail- able on record, both commer- cially successful, leading to Her- bie's Grammy award nomina- tion for Fat Albert), as well as a flock of TV commercials for Eastern Airlines, Pacquins, and others. All of which brings up the sticky question of patronage. Herbie's position today is a poignant one, reflective of the stance of jazz music as a whole. Today, the record industry is in a state of flux, casting about desperately for the next craze. Filmmakers, advertisers a n d university m u s i c departments have also been eyeing jazzmen. Unfortunately, with the patron- age of the powerful often come strictures on the music, and on By DONALD SOSIN RCA has just released a re- cording of works by contempor- ary Czech composers (LSC- 3181), and for all the promise that this might suggest (none of the works having been avail- able here before), the disc is a disappointment. The major work is the Vocal Symphony (1963) of Vladimir Sommer. He is a meticulous craftsman, the liner notes in- form us, but this does not pre- vent his work from sounding terribly cliched in places. How- ever well constructed, the sounds are those of Honegger and Pro- kofiev, and sometimes even re- miniscent of Hoffnung c o n - certs, which were anything but original and serious. The work is in three movements, the text in each having to do with death, commented upon by Kafka, Dostoevsky, and Pavese. The first movement is a solo for mezzo-soprano and orchestra. Nancy Williams does a credit- able job, with the London Sym- phony directed by Igor Buket- off, who wrote the insipid jack- et notes. sHis musicianship is somewhat better, though, and the performance does not lack in emotional qualities. But it is all too often a wasted effort, as in the second movement, w h e r e Raskolnikov's dream from Crime and Punishment is recounted. A narrator (Peter Ustinov) is continually interrupted by punc- tuation by the chorus (The Am- brosian Singers) and the total effect is more absurd than an accurate reflection of the na- ture of the words. What came immediately to mind was the parody "Horrortorio" on t h e Hoffnung Astronautical Musi- cal Festival album, so similarly is the chorus treated. And the third movement frequently sounds like the slow movement of Prokofiev's Fifth Symphony, a fact which the notes mention. But this distracts more than contributes to the impact of the work, and one comes away with the feeling of having heard it all before. The Soviet government can still set forth doctrines about composition, and have works produced of great mass appeal but little intellectual susten- ance; one would have hoped that the Czech government, still lib- eral and progressive in 1965, would have done other than awarded the work the State Prize. Also represented on the disc are two younger Czechs, J a n Klusak and Lubos Fiser. T h e former's First Invention for a small instrumental, ensemble is serial, and although the 1961 work may have been among "the first Czech works to make con- tinuous use of Webern's c o m - positional technique," the piece sounds a grea deal more like Berg, for all the tonal refer- ences one finds, or Schoenberg, for its unifying rhythmic mo- tives. Fiser's 15 Prints After Dur- er's "Apocalypse" makes use of a six-note theme, from which all melodic and harmonic ele- ments are derived. One h e a r s constant use of the tritone, and in the background a woodblock beats out time while the play- ers improvise within limits set by the conductor. More interest- ing than the Klusak piece, it nevertheless sounds dated; cer- sound of these organs, including the oldest organ in Britain, lo- cated in Cheshire, and a Regal, actually a reed instrument (as opposed to pipe) with an alto- gether different tone quality than anything else heard on the album. * * * Eugene Ormandy conducts the Philadelphia Orchestra on a new Columbia issue entitled Ballet Fantastique. (M 30463) If in the Biggs one listened mainly for sound rather than musical con- tent, the same is true here. This is one of a series featuring the "Biggs covers a number of short works by Eng- lish composers including Stanley, Purcell, and Handel. One listens primarily for the distinc- tive sound of the old English organs, including the oldest organ in Britain located in Ches- hire." tion has created a wonderful, witty piece of music. The "Can- Can" and "Galop" are particu- larly charming. The perform- ance is not as good as the sound, however. There is a heaviness in many places which destroys the airiness that give the music val- ue. One has only to listen to the Israel Philharmonic's record- ing with Solti to hear w h a t might have been done with it, even though their sound is no match for Philadelphia's. On the other side we have two more ballet suites, those f r o m Giselle, by Adam, and Les Pa- tineurs, by Meyerbeer. Both works have extensive recording histories, and here are only vehi- cles for impressive tonal dis- plays. Musically they fare as the Respighi does, too ponder- ous and are not as interesting to listen to. * * * Also on Columbia are two new recordings of the New York Phi- harmonic under Bernstein. The first is Nielsen's Symphony No. 4, "Inextinguishable" (M 30293). Bernisten, as he has done with Ives and Mahler, has revived in- terest in this Danish composer, and gives a fine performance of this powerful, foreboding work. His version of Strauss' Also Sprach Zarathustra (M 30443) does not fare as well. One miss- es any sense of awe in the well- known, dramatic opening, and the playing is lacking in dy- namism as well as precision in too many places for it to be re- commended by this listener. Or- mandy's recording is still t h e most satisfying he has heard, for it has all these qualities, as well as his "faculous Philadel- phia sound." and the Czechs I it Adm. $3.75 No age limit LIGHT REFRESHMENTS Strata Concert Gallery 2554 MICHIGAN (1/2 mile west of Tiger Stadium near 17th) Order Your Daily Now- Phone 764-0558 ST 0 E WjE . 44 NOW at 207 E. Liberty the vagaries of the music "in- dustry" in this country, of which. more in a minute.) Herbie has remarked on several occasions that, beyond its intrinsic musi- cal interest and possibility, this rhythmic element has attracted him as a means to reach more people with his art. Hancock quite cle arly has reached the jazz people; the young voters in Downbeat's an- nual readers poll have named him their favorite pianist for the last three years. The richly expressive vocabulary H e r b i e has developed, capable of pro- jecting subtle images and emo- tional states, and the accessi- bility of the folk elements in his work h a v e evidently reached other artists,as well as the Cap- tains of Industry (yes) ; and so he has composed the score to Antonioni's Blow Up, and the the artist's creative time and energy. What is to my mind worse and ultimately corrupting is the ugly and unmistakeable effort on the part of enormous conglomerates such as Trans- america Corporation to mnopo- lize (and standardize?) black art and entertainment. (Trans- america now owns Blue Note and World Pacific records, for- merly two of the outstanding jazz independents, and such films as Cotton Comes to Har- lem.) What is ugly about it is that such firms (indeed, most of the music industry, operate on what Charles Moore of the Contemporary Jazz Quintet calls "the Top 40 mentality of plan- ned obsolescence." It works this. way: find a music of energy and freshness with some popular ap- peal, reduce it to a fixed set of (Continued on Page 19) tainly none of these compos- ers are trend-setters, as are their Polish contemporaries. E. Power Biggs has added yet another title to his list of over forty recordings. On previous albums he has presented exam- ples of historic organs of Swit- zerland, Spain, Italy and France. Latest in this series is Historic Organs of England (Columbia M 30445). What is most interest- ing is the contrast in character among these instruments a n d those on the other recordings. One can hear that each coun- try's instruments have a dis- tinct flavor, Spain's are darker and brassier in tone, while the Italian and Swiss are rich, with many stops and often unusual effects. The English instruments heard here are more modest, owing to the fact that they are not church organs as in the other discs, but smaller instru- ments located in baronial halls throughout the country. Biggs explains that, although t h e country once boasted fine or- gans dating back tothe 12th century, many of these were de- stroyed in the Great Fire of 1666, while others were the vic- tims of poor rebuilding in the last century. Thus Dunstable's Agincourt Hymn, for example, has a more intimate sound here than on a large church organ on the Swiss collection. Biggs covers a num- ber of short works by English composers from this early ef- fort to those of John Stanley in the mid 1700's, touching on men like Tallis, Purcell and Handel along, the way. The pieces are of secondary importance. One list- ens primarily for the distinctive TODAY'S GAMES for TODAY'S PEOPLE " Ecology " Dirty Water " 3M Bookshelf " Smog " Diplomacy Games " Cities Game " Ecology Kits " Tri-nim * Wiff N' Poof " Equations * Blacks & Whites " Krypto * Queries & Theories Group Therapy Learn about today's problems through games Graduation Gifts throgh gmesCHOOSE A SPECIAL GIFT Make your own decisions FOR THAT SPECIAL OCCASION about how to solve the situation Chess Sets wood-ceramic-Lucite-plastic- Facts and Fun magnetic-3D"-brnze & pewter-aluminum CHESS BOARDS--CHESS PRIMER 224 So. Main 663-0310 CHESS SCROLL N "Fabulous Philadelphia Sound," and for these recordings special care has been taken in arranging the orchestra for maximum stereo effect, and in the use of special recording equipment. The sound is indeed excellent, although the sound of harps next to the first violins can be un- settling, but the percussion is wisely distributed around t h e back to excellent advantage.. Side One is devoted to La Bou- tique Fantastique, an arrange- ment of Rossini tunes into a ballet suite by Respighi, w ho, through his brilliant orchestra- atimefo ty oj~ utJea 334 S. State Street ;... 663-5049 V +i .\a J N J. X C " R+1.5~ d yN tX.O . 'd D .. a 3 CRIME TRIAL For the Construction, Outfitting and Maintenance of A Federal Court of Justice No Swimming Aloud. Malarial Injections Tuesdays and Thursdays. No Cameras, Recording Instruments. No Spit Balls, Cat Calls. No Blood, No Fire. No Christmas, Pentecost. No Easter Above All. Viewing Rooms Straight Ahead. Silence. Concrete. Your Loved Ones Safe and Sound. Buzz Saws, Sharks, Narks, Wasps: Third Turn to Right. Cleaner Finger Nails. Use Bottom Cushion for Flotation. Air Sickness Bags. The Sayings of Pilate. The Next Voice You Hear. Y ": ' .. .:: ^} ":. g :..a. Daniel BERRIGAN/Robert MARX Crime Trial Portfolio i FORSYTHE GALLERY aO1 NICKELS ARCADE. ANN ARBOR. MICHIGAN i i I i I I i i i i i i i I I i 1 I 1 i r i i r I Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, April II 1971 Sunday,-April 11, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY