Tuesday, February 18, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY- Fags Five Tuesday, February 18, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five this week Hancock at midcareer has own special sound Festival explores 8m m spectrum J ,___ By CHRIS KOCHMANSKI This Saturday night the University Activities Center (UAC) will present jazz innovator Herbie Hancock and the Lyman Woodard Organization in concert at Hill Auditorium. Hancock, arriving on the heels of his first gold album Headhunters and the much-acclaimed sound-track for Death Wish, brings with him a five-man band for a concert of improvisational jazz. Born on the south side of Chicago in 1940, Hancock took up classical piano as a youth, and at 11 years of age performed with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. At that time, modern jazz was in its primitive stages (be-bop), and its superstars were the likes of Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonious Monk. In :high school, Hancock was introduced to jazz and soon became hooked. He shut himself in closets with Oscar Peterson and George Shearing records, reproducing solos note for note. From this practice Hancock developed an amazing analytical ability to dissect musical structures. After having been awarded an honorary doctorate in music at Iowa's Grinnell College, Hancock performed with all the big jazz names who used local back-up musicians while on tour. Donald Byrd (of Black Byrd fame) was especially impressed with the young man's piano work and took him under his wing. Herbie Hancock's first solo album for Blue Note Records, Takin' Off, featured the jazz classic "Watermelon Man", which expressed vividly in words and music the black experience. Hancock left Byrd's band soon afterward to join the Miles Davis Quintet. For years (1963-1968), he worked with Davis, mastering improvisation on solo bits and becoming an expert back-up to Davis' trumpet. As a solo artist again, Hancock recorded Maiden Voyage, an important and successful jazz album, which resulted in of- fers to perform for all the major jazz combos. His versatility was evidenced in his composing of jingles for Chevrolet and Eastern Air Lines, and in his score for the Michelangela Anto- nioni film Blow-up. Mwandishi ("composer") marked Hancock's first effort as leader of the Herbie Hancock Sextet. By this time, the pianist had become involved in every step of his music's recording - writing, arranging, and production. Accolades streamed in, and soon Hancock was named the world's top pianist on both Play- boy's and Downbeats' jazz and pop polls. In 1973, Hancock moved his innovative self to Los Angeles and added to his achievements by recording Headhunters (fea- turing the hit single "Chameleon"), and the Death Wish sound- track which certainly warrants Oscar consideration. A recent tour took Hancock and his band from Tokyo to Carnegie Hall. Hancock's entourage at Hill Auditorium this weekend will consist of Hancock himself, Bennie Maupin (bass clarinet), Paul Jackson (various instruments), Mike Clark (drums), and Bill Summers (woodwinds). Once again, UAC stresses the need of complying with Hill's prohibition on smoking and beverages. Should the concertgoers not cooperate, the Hancock concert may well prove to be the Auditorium's last. By JAMES VALK and the People With the tuxedos returned and was technically the red carpet rolled up, t h e lent, although Fifth Annual Ann Arbor 8mm voice was not su Film Festival came to a close tent. Sunday night. The actual pre- Fortunately, sentation of the publically ex- overlooked by th hibited films commenced Sa- was apparent th turday night, but Sunday t h e suited to 16mn winners were shown, and it and could not be was officiallythe last day of the sonable competit festival. arena. The final program of the fes- The shoddy en tival consisted of over 40 f:lmns trum, technically from a field of over 110 sub- sent. The Fight mitted. Although the attend- the better films ance was mediocre at beat, the marred by poor audiences were generally re- weakly compose sponsive to the entries. Some the difficulty du films received prolonged ap- imposition techn plause, while others parted with in the film. Slip deserved hisses. was an animated Aside from the technical prah- bed sheets laid lems that are to be incurred creases intact. It with 8mm and the various mod- a hard problem es of sound that accomwIny it, it looked tacky. the festival was handled fairly ILogistics asid fluently, although a short film consider the ac entitled Prime Rib had to be the films, which started over due to sound prob- primary factor lems, a move that proved fa the winners. It tile in the end. pick a single fil The films, as a whole, were field of entry impressive, if one considers tne called the "be taboo status of 8 mm. It noth- this in mind, th ing else, the festival esta)lished and third prize that there is much that can be ally see them, a accomplished through the film than just a sing gauge, and that depending on First Place:I how much time, eff:t and three minute fil money is spent, the result can ler that is rema be generally comparao1e to concept, but de some of the better 16mti. work. fective in execu The quality of the films wvere pits a tower of. markedly determined by the re- portions agains sources available to tha individ- and man-madel ual filmmaker. Tamara Negara sulting in geom of the Jungle close to exrei- the nacrater's uited to tne con- this film was" he judges, as it at it was etter m competition, considered rea-I tion in she 8mm ,nd of the :pec- y, was ams- pre- Game, one oft presented, was r lighting a n d d shots, part of re to the super- nique employed Me Some Skin d film done with I on the floor, I may have been to avoid, bu: e, I :an ncw tual con'ont ofj h shouid be the in deteiwining is diaticult tol m from s ich a that could be: st film." Withj he first, second s, as I person- re open to more gle film: Thici: Tower Film, a: Im by Mike Hal- rkably crude in evastariiJlv ef- tion. The f i 1 m staggei Iipro- t both natural landcape:, . r e - netric and phil- Chamber season c an impressivei osophical intimidation of these dividual shots of a dreger att minute entities that exist with- the audience. Using his cam-f in its jurisdiction. era objectively yet pe-sonally, L The tower is presented as a from being merely ano her exi mysterious, looming giant that the filmmaker saved the film peers over hills and fills in val- perimental blunder. leys: it is an omnipresent force Second Place: Thise Cate & that watches over the world be- Ting Rink. This clever film byn low it, and symbolizes virtually David Fair rates as the moatt anything you perceive it to be. original approach to co-neal in It is an almost frightenng film, the festival. Lingering with ani- and one which plays on a h d mated titles that gave credits den fear of an uncovrcTh'b4-eI where credit wasn't de, thet dominance. i film proceeded to dwll on a First Place: La Ficelle. This gentleman aborbing his lun:h 4%/-minute film by Rose Dabbs with great flair, and ul imatelv proved how much can be :n joined him with his we in thet complished with so little to work most unique sequence in 3nim. with. Using just a few pie-es of Third Place: Leaf: By Nig-f yarn and a crude background, gle. This ambitious 40 minute this animinated film added effort by Joachim Blunck de- more life to its "ch-racters" serves recognition despite itst than sore of the liu action flaws. Working from a story by films. The yarn took o roove- J. R. R. Tolkien, Blunck a t- ments with incredible sn:oo'h tempted to recreate a series ness, with Ms. Dabbs ili:strat- drama with a fantasy overtone, ing her talent as bot, a fix refusing to compromise the to- maker and an innovator. tality of the work. Second Place: Amnazing Excellent cinematography and Grace: A trite little film that scenic backgrounds made the was nevertheless well conce v-quasi-epicwatchable, but th e ed and delicately pe ;ented. casting of 20-year olds as 70- Dealing with the subjet of year olds was a hinderance in motherhood and childbirth, the allowing the audience to take film carefully blends a kinrsrat the film seriously. ic effect with actual fuootige of Honorable Mention' The Two- a live childbirth. T3re was Minute Film: The prologue in- remarkable feeling for thp oar- formed us that this is a two ents involvel. 'Ihe filmn pias minute film that is divided into to one's inner emotions, whichh to ne' iner motons x i 1three equal parts. We then see may be an argument ag-iit it, the hands of a clock tediously but still ranks as sinc re~ nd tick off forty seconds. T h e effective effort by Nia ''x'n. hands stop. Another forty se- Second Place: Peerless rer- conds elapses. Unfortunately, ger. A quicK film by Carl conds. elapses..Unfortunately, Christiansen that threw w h a t , seemed like thousands (f in-h " S-TherelS.a difference!!, ! o m es to * PREPARE FOR: Over35years S MCAT of experience MI A ~~and success BTSml cI 'inish ~DAT Sm~~:e LSAT mious home American composer Al rii Et GRE ler, a student of Hinde.muth s Courses"that are at Yale University and late' a ATGSB costntlyuee faculty member at Smi'h Ca("ii u lege, I1I$A$ Tae clte o * esreviews of class Etler's concerto features 12 A lessons and for use * instrumentalists, with emphasis : A of supplementary " on the clarinet, but 't mst be : FLEX mteil confessed that the performances F Make-ups for of Professor Charles wea and ;.ECFMG twotstudentassociate, Terrv A 'M0 Smith and William Moersc'han "0NATMED DS " a great variety of per.ussio i i- THOUSANDS HAVE struments (including vira- e RAISED THEIR SCORES phones, xylophones, marimba, wta and castanets) was most out- " 313 354-0085 standing. * 21711 W. Ten Mile Rd. : This concert represe ited t h e0 Southfield, Mi. 48015 end of a most su::eisful se * ez. "Lj cond season in the Faculty Chamber Concert Seinas. lit is hoped that the series will be " "EDUCATIONAL CENTER" continued by the School of M isic E ATIONCETR y, TES PREPARAION next year, and that th enthus- *L SPECIASTSSINCE938 iastic audience support will :on- tinue as well. u s m f f L is E 0 n t 7 s t c f t f t z t c EASTERN MICHIG OFFICE OF S AN UNIVERSITY'S TUDENT LIFE PRESENTS nY KRIS KRISTOFFERSON and RITA COOLIDGE IN CONCERT FEBRUARY 21 8 P.M. BOWEN FIELDHOUSE $3 50-$4.50-$5.50 Tickets available at: EMU McKennv Union, Mr. Music (Briarwood), Huckleberrv's (Ypsilanti), and J.L. Hudson's. the rhythm and spirit of t h e amoeba birthday party. film is completely lost when the Festival judges included Bar- ast forty seconds of the film bara Morris, lecturer at the is excerpts from Leave it to Residential College, W i 1 1 i a in Beaver. ' Thompson of Cinema Guild, Honorable Mention: The Two- Jane Praeger of Cinema II, and of Fishing: Just because it was David Blomquist, Arts and En- not a Mort Neff treatment of tertainment Editor of T h e the subject, I am thankful. Daily. Honorable Mention: Lambing Official winners were: Time: Barnyard olympics with First Place ($100)-301 idirected sheep, perhaps the most unin- by Jerry Scott): Nimbus (J. P. tentionally hilarious film of the deck- decae. est ineof te flm: Second Place ($75) - Unleashed decade. Best line of the film: -Tom Cappels): Tower Film (Mike "Sheep love the presence of peo- Haller); Pereless Dredger (Carl ple, and these people really love Christensen) ; La Ficelle . (Rose their sheep." Dabbs). Third Place ($40)-Stepping Out Dishonorable Mention: Crown- on the Boardwalk (Sara Bolder): fire. A collage of images that Leaf: By Niggle (Joachim Blunck); appeals (I guess) only to a cer- Dog Catcher Marvin (Andy Mosier; Marathon (Ambrose .Salin i).- tain band of experimental film- Honorable Mention-The Fight makers, of which I am not one. Game (David Renwick); The First The entire mess looked like a Days (Richard Geisler). cross between scratched film, Animation Award ($40 and Ox animation stand-The Musician (L. close-ups of Jupiter, and an Frenkel). By SARA POLARCE Sunday afternoon the Faculty Chamber Concert Series com-I pleted the final concert of its second season. As usual, the musical works were profession- Ensemble l tight comp la s show1 ?lling work By MARK DeBOFSKY 1 stage are off when the room is This past weekend, the Couz- lighted, and on when the room is ens' Ensemble Theatre staged dark. its second production: White The story centers upon pauper Lies and Black Comedy, two sculptor, Brinsley and his fian-I plays by Peter Shaffer. Al- cee Carol, who are waiting in though the works are relatively his apartment for Georg Bam- obscure, they were nonetheless berger, a millionaire art collec- excellent in quality, and the tor who might want to purchase overall result was unquestion- some of Brinsley's work. Carol's ably first rate. father, a Colonel Melkett is also White Lies, starring Elisa exoected. Weisman, Scott Hauser and In order to make everything Lauren Ketai, centers itself look perfect, the sculptor's ratty, somewhere between Macbeth furniture is exchanged for the and Cyrano de Bergerac. The elegant furniture of neighbor story focuses on the tragic and Harold Gorringe who is con- age-old result of people pretend- veniently out of town. Beginning ing to be something they are with the blown fuse everything not. - conceivable goes wrong: Frank, a member of a singing Bamberger is late, Colonel group, wants to scare his lead Melkett ends up hating Brinsley, singer away from the girl he Gorringe returns home early to loves. To do so, he is able to find his apartment vacant of bribe a fortune teller, Sophie, furniture, and an old lover of into acting out a little "practical Brinsley happens in, and throws joke." a small jealous fit. The story, naturally, is ex- Paul Quesada, Kathy Straub posed, and the joke proves and Bary Busch played the lead cruelly, to fall through. This roles, and Marie Eckert, Mark crashing emergence of the truth Mikulski and Deborah Pittel forces the characters to con- rounded out the cast. front themselves, and to stop the ! It is only too bad that more pretences. White Lies went over people on campus couldn't have extremely well, but was only a appreciated these plays. The warmup for the extremely suc- audience appeared to be mostly cessful Black Comedy. of family and friends of the Black Comedy opens with an players, but indeed, the plays interesting effect. Since most of could have been equally success- the play is in the dark due to ful with even the toughest of a blown fuse, the lights on, audiences. ally executed before a thrilled and responsive audience in Rackham Auditorium. The concert began '%ith a small ensemble piece )y .J-}h- ann Christian Bash, a : extet ,which featured violin, cello, oboe, harpsichord and t w o French horns. The sex'et is charming chamber music, which combined'the mellowreF-s of Marilyn Mason's harp.3ichord with the excellent string tone of Professor Gustave Rosseels on violin and student asaoeiate! Debra Fayroian on cello. The second piece of the con- cert was Paul Hindemuth's haunting "Die junge Migd" or "The Young Maidservant." Here modern composer Hinde-: muth has translated into song cycle the expressionistic poems of George Trakl which concern - the life of a young girl who is trapped in the physical and moral filth of industrialized Europe. The girl is prone to hallucina- tions and hysteria and Hnde- - th' dd ri itrhpan dh d .bs ur cycle was "esoteric" and may not "win the plaudits of the lis- tening audience." Bossart added that this was the first perform- ance of the work in Ana Arbor. Bossart may have been in some part correct in his predic- tions of audience respr.,ise to the Hindemuth piece, bot th e cello solo by Johann Sebastian Bach which followed, mere than, compensated for this lacking. Professor Oliver Edel per- formed this extremely virtuosic and demanding piece as befited his final public appearance as a member of the facuhv of the School of Music. Edel was ap' plauded warmly for his very accomplished performance. The final piece of the concern was a clarinet concerto by the A R yT mun s oU p ECnes anr UUC r; meters lend an appropriately melancholy note to her cries. Professor Eugene Bossart, who worked with the six stu- dent associates as they prepared to perform the piece with mez- zo-soprano Rosemary Russell, said that Hindemuth's s o n g UAC CONCERT CO-OP presents HERBIE HANCOCK and the LYMAN WOODARD ORGANIZATION FI -m -.-.,.in---------mm mmnmm--maw -- - ---mm mm 50c Off Medium 14" Pizza ONE ITEM OR MORE u Reaularly $2.50 with cheese and sauce I 75c Off Large 16" Pizza I* ONE ITEM OR MORE - Reaularlv $2.95 with cheese and sauce Includes Mo7zerella Cheese and Sauce EACH ADDITIONAL ITEM 40c I SERVED DAILY 3-9 P.M. OLYMPIC RESTAURANT 221 N. MAINt t~~i wwrew w w wws Iww w~~ir~ww s w~ TEARS AND SHUTTERS A concert of dance, film and music featuring the work of Milton Cohen, Gay Delanqne and Diane Eilbert. FRI., FEB. 21 AND SAT., FEB. 22 AT 8 P.M. SCHORLING AUDITORIUM SCHOOL OF EDUCATION BLDG. Tickets: $2 available noon-4p.m. in 24 Barbour Gym and at the door CALL 764-6273 Sponsored by UM Dance Department Feb. 22 8 p.m. Hill Aud. I I I a7 '6' I Tickets on sale in the Union lobby, $6, $5.50, $5, $4.50 Call 763-4553 for more info. UAC and WRCN present: SOCKHOP '75 featuring Frankie & the Fireballs and Kiss Me Kate & the Ko-eds DISC JOCKEY AMERICAN BANDSTAND DANCE CONTEST FRI., FEB. 21 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM -FREE ADMISSION- "Ya gotta come greased!!" FUTURE WORLDS presents: GEORGE KISH "Views of a finite world: man's use of his resources" 8 P.M. RACKHAM AUD. NEXT MON., Feb. 24 MEDIATRICS presents: 'TI E D #" F'5 I'"lelD NATIONAL DANCE COMPANY OF MEXICO