Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 27, 1970 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 27, 1970 I music A Think of Iceland ... and warmth little here...a little there READ -JAMES WECHSLER- in By JOE PEHRSON The presentation of "Black Angels" by George Crumb could not completely compensate the overall drab effect of the first concert in the Contemporary Music Festival series. The first piece on the pro- gram, "Animus" by Jacob Druk- man, is a work for trombone and electronic t a p e. Occasionally, Drukman would find a blend of e l e c t r o n i c and instrumental sounds-moments worth hoard- ing in a work which essentially consists only of separate and tinrelated gestures. "Fantasy in Two Movements" by Ross Lee Finney is a beau- tifully crafted piece, even though the form of presentation (solo violin in pretentious maestioso) reminded one more of Mann- heim than the current century. The first "Statement" of this work begins on a rather plead- ing note, and Finney is able to state this emotion in phrase- expanding and contrasting indi- vidual segments of what is es- sentially similar material. In short, a very good piece, but with interest more on per- fection of form than on the in- terest of spontaneity. "Magic Music for Woodwind Quintet," by Gregory Kosteck is not really worth mentioning, al- though in some sort of perverse continuity, the performance of this work/ by the University Woodwind Quintet was as bad as the composition itself. "Divertimento" for t h r e e string basses by Peter Phillips was presentedat the Contem- porary Directions concert two weeks ago. It hasn't changed much. In summation, the first part of this concert was a bore and not even good academia. This was unfortunate, since the pres- entation of "Black Angels" by George Crumb, a really fantastic piece, had something to com- pensate. "Black Angels" was commis- sioned by the University of M i c h i g a n and dedicated by Crumb to the Stanley Quartet, whose performance of the work was heard Friday night. Crumb takes us on a voyage. Amplified instruments serve to carry the listener on a path of "Departure," "Absence" and for- tunate "Return." The piece began with a force- ful vibrato-glissando, with only areas of pitch specified. This first section, entitled "Night of the Electric Insects," served as an original focus of energy and attention. The audience knew, at this point, t h a t something was present - a fact which was not altogethei obvious in some of the other works presented on the program. Immediate attention, spon- taneity: from there to the "Sounds of Bones and Flutes,' "Lost Bells," "Devil Music" - in which the solo violin does an astonishingly }ugly "phantas- ia" (in "vox diaboli"). and a concluding "Dance Macabre." I needn't add that Crumb's music is at least as interesting as his titles, which do well to capture attention. His particular emphasis is on the syntax of sound, rather than on an at- tempt to reconcile the particu- lars of some instrumental com- bination to a formalistic pat- tern (so indicative of the rest of the program). Crumb is not reluctant to use novel means of sound produc- tion. The performers will be ob- served tapping and scratching their instruments according to score, and occasionally Crumb invents some really astonishing types of sound: -"Return," the third section of the piece, has a first part en- titled "God-Music" in which the performers are required to bow partially filled pieces of crystal. The effect is amazing, somewhat similar to the sound of an On- des Martenot, but without the depth in pitch. -"Absence," the center sec- tion of this sound voyage, in- cludes an amazing "Threnody II" which is as interesting vis- ually (the score is a surprising visual tangle) as it is acousti- cally. The piece ends with a "Thre- nody III," another "Night of the Electric Insects": Crumb's ex- perience is brought to a close. This music has interest: it is a creative experience both for the audience and the perform- ers. A good example of this at- titude involves the actions of the audience soon after the pre- sentation. Members of the au- dience were seen exploring the various sound-producing devic- es on stage. In spirit, this was part of the work itself. Crumb's interest in sound (and what is music if it doesn't include this) was shared by members of the audience to the point of phys- ical participation. Crumb has designed a music which is so sponta neously interesting it causes the creative involve- ment of the audience after the performance has concluded. By DEBORAH MOORE There are probably very few people in Ann Arbor, Michigan. who have thought seriously about Iceland during the past three months. Which is not to say that one should decry the narrow horizons of the citizens of Ann Arbor nor the unob- trusiveness of the island nation. Today, from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m., this lapse of awareness is being rectified by Jacobson's depart- ment store, which is sponsoring an Icelandic Fair to acquaint the residents of mid-America with the culture, geography, crafts, fashions, home-furnish- ings, food and industry of Ice- land. While viewing the exhibits, it might be interesting to bear in mind how these aspects of a nation's culture, life-styles, or institutions came into being as adaptations to Iceland's rather unique location and climate. Isolated in the inhospitable North Atlantic just beneath the Arctic Circle, live 200,000 people on an island the size of Ken- tucky. Caught between the winds of the Arctic and the cur- rents of the Gulf Stream, the temperatures range from an average of 30* F in the coldest month of winter to an average of 52* F in the heat of the sum- mer. It is understandable, there- fore, that wool is central to the Icelandic economy as well as the peoples' lives. Sheep outnumber the human inhabitants of the country 5 to 1. And the people aren't the on- ly ones who have adapted to Iceland's consistently cold cli- mate. The sheep come equipped with long, silky fur, which makes the world's greatest, be- fore-a-cozy-fire rug. But one can't lie on a rug all day, so for the hearty souls who venture outside, the Icelanders have fashioned their wooly benefac- tors into parkas, ponchos, skirts, socks, vests, mittens and Scan- dinavian-style sweaters. Their most unique item is the sheep- skin coat which-literally engulfs the wearer in a mountain of fur. 'eI U Am IS, QUITE SIMPLY, ?T THE BEST AMERICAN FILM YEAR-inv1ce t Canby, I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR! . Y. TIMES A MIKE NICHOLS FILM ALAN ARKIN JOSEPAH ELER MARTINBALSAM.RICHARD BENJAMIN.ARTHUR CARFUNKIL;JACK WID, BUCK HENRY BOBNEWHAR, AXONYPERKINS PAULA PRENTISS MARTIN SEEN ON, O SO A WEtES ASUREELE SCREENPLAYBYBUCK HENRY PROD4BY JON CAtLEYIMARTIN RANSOHOEF RECTE BYMIKENICHOLS Mt(I St* K At; Scll ii iC&I1 * Am'5nw AV ARA iP1t u #i'e 1AR a m n I UaIm h DIAL 5-6290 SHOWS AT 1, 3,5, 7, 9:10 lti October 28-November 1 quirk auditorium for reservations: 487-1220 during box office hours (week- days 12:45-4:30 pm.) AN EMU PLAYERS SERIES PRODUCTION THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE ol records Rolback the rug-and dance! TONITE Christopher Detoach v I By AL SHACKELFORD Nestled on Main Street in downtown Ann Arbor, just a few blocks south of the foreboding Washtenaw County Jail, is a delightful little store known as Al Nalli Music. To Michigan music fanatics, the name Al Nalli is synonomous with. the name Brownsville Sta- tion, and if you didn't know al- ready, Brownsville Station is one of the most exciting young bands, both visually and music- ally, in rockdom today. The Station plays a glorious, timeless kind of rock which has been alternately described as either "pizza" or "party" music. Meaning when you put the Sta- tion's first album No BS on your stereo, you'd better roll back the rugs too, cause you'll wanna dance. Pick up the album and check out the songs: "Be-Bop Confi- dential," "Rockin' Robin," "Do the Bosco," "My Boy-Flat Top." Sound like dated rock 'n roll? Maybe the Station is just a local version of Sha-Na-Na? But it ain't so, because while Sha-Na- Na is pure parody and a musical failure, the Station plays great music, and No BS comes blast- ing off a stereo like a souped-up Ford. "Be-Bop Confidential," the band's follow-up single to "Rock and Roll Holiday," start the al- bum off at a rocking, bopping pace. Just don't listen to the words, which are a mish-mash of every old rock song ever re- corded: "Be-bop-a-Lula, she's my baby.. ." etc. But the music itself is great: Tony Driggins on bass and Cubby Koda on lead move at double-time, T. J. Cro- nely rocks on the drums, Mi- chael Lutz shouts out the hoarse Presleyesque vocal, and non- Station member Pat McCaffrey throws in some Little Richard- style piano to make the song cook. The rest of side one is good but inferior to "Be-Bop" until the needle passes onto the final track, a little number called "Do the Bosco." This is the dance- song-to-end-all-dance-songs, a parody which succeeds because it really rocks and stands on its own musically. The words say it all: "Rockin with my baby on a Saturday night/Dancin till the morning comes/Movin and a-groovin till the broad day- light/Just a laughin and a- having fun." Flip the album over and you get some more fine rock and roll; "My Boy-Flat Top" and "Rumble" are especially worthy of mention. "Flat Top" features, to quote the album credits, "the high-energy accordion" of Al Nalli, Sr., who also finds time to run that little store down- town that I mentioned before. Al's son Al Junior is also con- nected to the Station, as their manager. Anyway, "Flat Top" is about a typical guy who has all the necessary equipment for getting it on today's world: "big broad shoulders and a top that's flat" in addition to "Dreamy eyes and those crazy lips." All things con- sidered, he is "a real hep cat." Lutz on vocal even throws in the old Rudy Vallee megaphone bit to add a little authenticity to the tune. Listen to "Rumble" and see if you don't imagine greasy le- gions of Jets and Sharks danc- ing around in the alley, flash- ing their shivs. I kept expecting to hear police sirens and some- body screaming "Cheese it, fel- las-it's the cops!" Every song on the album, with the exception of "Flat Top," is spiced with Cubby's fine guitar solos. He doesn't play with his teeth or make airplane noises, and he never served an appren- ticeship with either the Yard- birds or John Mayall, but his solos have a happy, rocking sound that is unique. Only on "I'm a Roadrunner" does he re- sort to any gimmickry, and from Cubby it sounds fresh. The Station's rhythm section is tight, with Cronely on drums especially rocking hard. The percussion work on "Cadillac Express," a song dedicated to necking in your car ("We're gonna move out on the high- way/Highway 69)," is especial- ly fine. McCaffrey on the key- boards adds a fuller sound to the Station, as demonstrated on "Do the Bosco" and other songs. Bill Madison one of the mainstrean the Boston city folk scene '0 of Ij As great as No BS is, it can- not hold a strobe candle to ex- periencing the Station live. Driggins flops around like a black Peter Townshend, Cronely twirls his sticks in a blur. Lutz belts out his sandpaper vocals, and Cubby stamps each Station song with the indelible mark of his liquid guitar. The Station live are reminiscent of the Who,. but their music is more fun and less pretentious. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- agec by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mat Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. Pd. Pol. Adv. )e- - -~ - 'O- ~ - tI~SR Now Appearing Monday through Saturday -Hi55 0J.fl. SKiller Bnid 0O1 Enjoy FINE FOOD at REASONABLE PRICES While Listening to a Great Rock Band .6wk Open Mon. thru Fri. 3i 319 S. 4th Ave. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. 761-3548 Sat. & Sun. S p.m.-2 a.m. Mon. thru Thurs., no minimum charge ->(<--t><--.<.<--t}<--it<-- .<--.'<-- '<-- <.<--?U<"<-:y OPENS TONIGHT! "Fantastically Funny!I" *1 DAVID V. HEEBINK for WASHTENAW C. C: TRUSTEES ..rte Wednesday & Thursday, October 28th & 29th Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre PRESENTS Act I of SNACKS by STEVEN COFFMAN AND DUTCHMAN by LE ROI JONES ARENA THEATRE, Frieze Building promptly at 4:10 P.M. ADMISSION FREE ann arbor film cooperative presents beftedavis In whatever happened to tonight ! tuesday, oct. 27th auditorium a, angell hall 75c 7 and 9:30 4i 11 . mmmmmmmr i, I . 9. . ... 1 Corner State & Liberty Sts. DIAL 662-6264 --OPEN 12:45 Shows at 1,3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. SOLDIER s BLUE TECHNICOLOP5 PANAVISION* AN AVCO EMBASSY RELEASE.. Use Daily Classifieds I A For the student body: Genuine Authentic Navy PEA COATS COMING, FRIDAY, NOV. 6 THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Men's Glee Club WILLIS PATTERSON, Conductor and THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Men's Glee Club Fiat 85O3pider When you drive the Fiat 850 Spider the anin is the fun You feel tha I I || III a