Page Two, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 30, 1970 41 PaeTo H .HIA ALYFia, coe 3,17 records- From f By ANN L. MATTES Arlo Guthrie's talent has often been discredited because of a resemblance to the singing style of Bob Dylan. Too often these critics fail to remember who played a decisive role in Dylan's development: Woody Guthrie. The art of Woody has permeated the work of both singers, and as far as that influence is felt, the similarities appear. In Washington County (Re- prise, 6411) Arlo pays tribute to both his father and his con- temporary. "Lay Down Little Doggies," the .last cut on the Side One, was written by h i s father, and Arlo sings it with- out much .alteration, including the "Okie" accent. The song contains the colorful imagery of the Dust Bowl songs that made the elder Guthrie so popular, a witty tribute to a herd of cat- tle. that the singer is bringing to a packing-house. The trip is two months in the travelling, up the Texas flatlands from Mex- ico 40 Dodge City. He addresses the animals as he would com- panions: Here now we come to the end of our trail. Your hair, your hide and car- cass to the stockyards I'll sell. 'r see you in tin cans when you get shipped around. So lay yourselves down, little doggies, lay down. When Guthrie died in 1967, a second edition of an auto- biography written in 1943 came out. In reviewing his life, a critie in the "New Republic" had this to say about the man: "Quite unlike most of our errent folk singers, Guthrie was from the land, was the possessor of his own un- borrowed language, knew po- verty like his own skin and protested against nothing- about which he hadn't inti- mate knowledge. Bob Dylan and Joan Baly may be super- ior artists and Dylan at least is much more complex- but as members, of an affluent ad "wised-up" generation they can't have experienced what Guthrie ;did. He was moved by the kind of patrio- tism native to the American populist radicals - "This Land is Your Land" - a love of country anchored in a not yet undermined belief in the American possibilities of bro- 'therhood and justice." The inclusion of the New Dy- lan tune, "Percy's Song," brings the influences a full circle. Back ,0 967 Dylan-went to New York to visit Woody Guthrie, hos-1 pitalized by Huntington's Chor- ea. Referring to these visits, Dylan once said, "Man, I could whip anybody! I was at the high point of my life from see- ingWoody. He ain't a folk sing- er - he's a genius genius gen-{ National General Theatres FOX VILLB5E 375 No. MAPLE RD. 76943OO ___DOUBLE FEATURE COOL HAND LUKE Saturday 7:25 Sunday 3:00-7:25 HOTEL Mon. Fri. 9:15 Saturday 5:15-9:40 Sunday 1:00-5:15-9:40 GP ther to son: A permeating soul "All I know is we gotta git together, and stick together. This country won't ever git much better as long as it's dog eat dog, every man for his own self, an' to hell with the rest of the world. We gotta get together, damn it all, an' make somebody give us a job somewhere doin' something." One of the Arlo's songs that reflects both Dylan and Woody is "Gabriel Mother's Hiway," which is a beautiful spiritual that contains a delicate balance between two accoustic guitars and two basses. The song in- vokes the people to join together in order to "make a heaven out of the earth." Even better and as catchy as Aretha Franklin is "Valley to Pray," written by Doc Coutson, John Pilla and Arolo. Trumpets, autoharp drums and bass all contribute to the swinging rhy- thin. The "Introduction" is a brief instrumental work follow- ed by a few lyrics that sounds remarkably like the accompani- ment of the Beatles' "Let It Be" with its electric hymn music. This opening leads directly into "Fence Post Blues," a nonrelig- ious song which has a great Arlo piano accompaniment. This song praises the simple country life Stockbridge, Mass., his songs are less like poetry and more like a narration. This particular trait of "talking" to his audience may also derive from his father's style. Both father and son pos- sess an exuberance and opti- mismaabout life, an enthusiasm that is contagious. As a matter of fact, the elder Guthrie was one of the first advocators of "getting together" for a com- mon political cause. Addressing a group of jobless men, he urg- ed: of a wheat farmer and beckons others to stay on the land. (I must have been here before, but I wonder where the hell I've been.") Washington County, strange- ly enough since it's the title song, is another instrumental filled with banjo strumming that lasts all of one minute and 59 seconds. Side Two contains three other songs that haven't been men- tioned. "I Could Be Singing" is a love song that insists that the new world is taking over the Spiros, the Chicago police and the Kent State guards, but it isn't entirely convincing. "If You Would Just Drop By" is the only sad song on the album, a lament self-evident from the title. But even in this song, when "up is down," Arlo still doesn't give up hope. The last song ends with another lively tune,say- ing "this is the time of earth when Itwant to be around, sleep- ing in the sun with everyone." Few current folk albums con- tain the uplifting spirit that Arlo Guthrie's melodies present. Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen, Randy Newman, Bob Dylan all effuse an air of tragedy. For those brief moments when it isn't raining in Ann Arbor, this album reflects sunshine. C; thisw i October 28-November 1 quirk auditorium for reservations: 487-1220 during box office hours (week- doys 12:45-4:30 pm m s40ANE ILAERS SEIES PRODUETION THE P'RIME OF OWEN McBRIDE IRISH pub songs and ballads 1.50 EXPRESS 'OURSELF ius." During this time Dylan be- gan to sing at the Village cof- fee houses that were to estab- lish his own career as a folk singer. The contribution of "Percy's Song" to Arlo's album is an act of appreciation. The song it- self is similar to the conversa- tional blues songs that all three helped to popularize (e.g. "Alice's Restaurant" and "Mort- gage Nightmare"). The lyrics contain a feeble protest of a 99-year sentence that a friend received who was the driver in an accident that killed f o u r people. The melodic refrain - "Turn, turn again . . . turn, turn to the wind and the rain." - creates a melancholic m o o d CORRECTION The Contemporary Music Festival, which has been hold- ing its three concert series this week, is not part of the Con- temporary Directions series held throughout the year. The Daily regrets its error in assuming the two were asso- ciated. Soph Show '70 Caon-Can open in only 6 days get tickets for opening night today in the FISHBOWL that leaves the listener uncom- fortable, if not agitated. And, it goes witnout saying, that Arlo owes an additional debt to the talent of Dylan. Washington County bears a special resemblance to the John Wesley Harding album in its re- ligious feeling. But unlike t h e songs "Frankie Lee and J u d a s Priest" and "I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine" on the D y 1 a n album, Arlo's religious songs are not touched with the cynic- ism and grotesque incidents that pervade Dylan's. Also, Guthrie is not as much concerned with his personal life as he is with his audience. Perhaps partially as a result of the community he lived in at 1491 Kill STREET 1 I S1 4 I 1# __ _ __ .... National General Theatres FOX VILLBGE 375 No.MAPLE RD.-"769-1300 SAT., OCT. 31 1 :00 P.M. QN '_Y Edgar Allan Poe-Arama House of Usher PLUS Pit and the Pendulum TICKETS 75c AT DOOR FREE SHRUNKEN HEAD- DISCOUNT TICKETS AT THESE MERCHANTS 1. NICHOLSON MOTORCYCLE 2. CAMPUS BIKE & TOY 3. FLAMING PIT RESTAURANT 4. BURGER CHEF FREE BAG OF POPCORN >- I I .: II r. : . ti i 9 This SUNDAY, NOV. 1 DEBBIE FREEDMAN and JACK QUINE in a concert of CLASSIC and MODERN FOLK music TWO SHOWS: 7:30 and 9:00 p.m. AT SHALOM HOUSE 1429 HILL ST. I I HALLOWEEN FESTIVAL WED., OCT. 28: The Cat People dir. JACQUES TOUTNER (1942) Girl believes she turns into a cat as a result of a curse. THURS., FRI., OCT. 29-30: The Day the Earth Stood StillI dir. ROBERT WISE (1951) Michael Rennie tries to save Earthmen from themselves. SAT., SUN., OCT. 31-NOV. 1: The Mask of Fu Manchu This Sax Rohmer favorite replaces the unfortunately unavailable Psycho, COMEDIES FESTIVAL STARTING MONDAY 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-887 7AUDITORIUM Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY SAAB } LNAFTVF UlE { E t ONLY FRONT WHEEL DRIVE MASS MEETING CINEMA III DESI ARNAZ and HIS BAND "it kind a chokes me up"- -FRED MERTZ "Counterrevolutionary" -FIDEL "After seeing this 1 wish never let him go." -LUCY -ALSO- ROMAN POLANSK I'S CulI De Sac "A Halloween horror"- -L. TAFFER FRI. & SAT.-7 & 9:30 75c AUD. A-ANGELL HALL *4 #i *i SPORTS CAR IN U.S.A. V4, Four on the Floor, OVERSEAS IMPORTED CARS 936 N. Main St. I 4 M COLOR by Deluxe MAX VON SYDOW * LIY [lJni1 United Artists I ULMANN 0 BIB ANDERSSON Exporing the basic human failing dR3M DIAL 8-6416 It's out now! 1970-71 STUDENT DIRECTORY CONTAINS LISTING OF: (1) Students, their majors and home address (2) Student organizations University of Michigan School of Music presents 1970 Festival of Contemporary Music THIRD CONCERT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 8:00 P.M. Hill Auditorium 4 m Guest composer: Alberto Ginastera Ives: Psalm 54 Ginastera: Two Chorales from the opera Bomarzo I NEAR BARMR AND LOWIS AND WALTER SON THESE GREAT SONGS;. : Hello DollyI Jus Lee" ve imTa 3I. 11 i (bfartt Irl.., f1Ht Mo ^?X88 i Si a ':: : f = -