Wednesday, September 25, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY gage Five Wednesday, September 26, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~-'age Five~ Iuldaur: Spirited, sensuous singer By DIANE LEVICK Arts Editor Some have called her act "sleezy." Rolling Stone .heralded her new album as "a glorious breakthrough." And the Ark's audience sat with eyes glued on up-and-coming singer M a r i a Muldaur last weekend as she shook and swayed her way into their hearts. No newcomer to show business, the 31 year-old Muldaur says "A little sleeze is comfortable." In a tight gray skirt and halter top she belts out country, blues, and pop numbers - pratically all containing marvelously sugges- tive if not blatantly sexual ly- rics. Offering professional insight on the difficulties of her vocals, Mil- daur says, "There's nothing like having a few belts before you go on and having 'to belch all set and phrase around it."She must have mastered that art, for she delivers her material with 'a uni- que, pure voice that seems to glide from octave to octave. Backed up on tour by piano, bass and lead guitars, Muldaur likes to "really put it on." As she squeezes every bit of sen- suality out of the lyrics, h e r grinning husband accompanies her on the piano. His amused, knowing look brings to mind Ike Turner's coun- tenance as he watches T i n a bring the auditorium to a full .wcbn boil. A former member of the Even Dozen and Jim Kweskin Jug Bands, Muldaur now boasts a re- pertoire from Dolly Parton's "In My Tennessee Mountain Home' (This is a tune about nirvana") to "Won't You Be My Chauf- feur?": "I want you to ride me, baby . . . You ride so easy, I can't turn you down." Although she doesn't write her own material now, Muldaur as a teenager wrote "about 18 re-liv good rock and roll songs - goad for that time anyway." "I had a group in high school called the Cashmeres," she ex- plains. "We wore tight white sweaters, tight black skirts -- and we cut class and sang in the girls' bathroom." But shortly after she cultivated the rock and roll greaser image, she turned on to "pure country music." "At 18 I first heard Doc Wat- son and went wild for him, ' she says of the fine country picker. "I became a mad groupie for hi; 65 year-old father" (a musican too). Without formal musical train- ing, Muldaur did manage to pick up some fiddling, which she still uses in her act. Her teenage en- thusiasm for songwriting, how- ever, didn't 'last. "I must have had a fit of self- consciousness or something," she says. "It just doesn't come easy to me." Certainly not as easily as the sensual banging of her tambour- ine. Or her proud, spirited stamp- ing to "I'm a Woman," the song by which many - feminis's in particular - remember her from the Jim Kweskin days. Ironically but predictably writ- ten by men, "I'm a Woman" ly- rics boast of a Superhousewilo- type who can accomplish an in-. ordinate amount of cooki1g and cleaning and who can "jump in bed at 5, get up at 6 and start all over again." To the nearest male, Mildaur directs the last verse: "I can make a dress out of a feed bag and make a man out of YOU." "You know it's funny," Mul- daur reminisces. "But it was 10 years ago that I started sing- ing that song. I was 21 at the time and had just started living with Geoff. I really tried to ful- fill everything in that song "And then last winter I was in LA oin my own. This women's group said they wanted to do a poster with a quote fr)m t h e 'Woman' song. They said they felt it represented certain joy- ous, positive things about being a woman." Subsequently, Muldaur felt she saw the-song "in a new iigh*." Recalling the line in the tune about greasing a car, she ex- plains, "The song says I can do everything." So she views iit as a proclamation of self-reliance instead of a glorification of the enslaved housewife. "When I was in Cambridg2 " she continues, "a woman pointed out to me that in none of my songs.does the woman take the victim stance." Hell, her songs either p o s e straightforward invitations or put down the proverbial foot, as in "Don't You Feel M , Leg": Don't you feel my leg, don't you feel my leg 'Cause if you feel my leg, you'll want to feel my thigh, And if you feel my thigh, you'll want to go up high ... Sorry to leave yan hanging on her thigh. But if you want to know Muldaur any better Shoot the Piano Playr! I Woody Allen Festival 3 of his greatest hits TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN 7 p.m. PLAY IT AGAIN SAM 8:30 p.m. BANANAS 10:00 P.m. TRIPLE FEATURE!! EMU Major Events Committee PRESENTS: SHACONA- October 13 Bowen Field House TICKETS ON SALE WED., SEPT. 26 $4.00 advance, $5 at the door general admission TICKETS ON SALE at: Hudson's, AA Music Mart, Grinnells, Huckleberry Party Store, McKenny Union Daily Photo by TOM GOTTLIEB Maria Muldaur Art Assoc. films feature works of pioneering painters I By EILEEN LOEHER Do you know as much as you would like to know about art? Whether you are an art en- thusiast or have just a casual in- terest in impressionist and ear- ly modern painting, you should find "Pioneers of Modern Paint- ing" a. film series much worth your while. The series will cover the works te 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Andy Griffith ,50 Gilligan's Island 56 Taking Better Pictures 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 ABC News 91 Dream of Jeannie 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Guten Tag Wei Geht 6:45 56 German Film 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell theTruth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 Mission: Impossible 56 Vince Lombardi Scienes ant Art of Football 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Sale of the Century 7 Wait Till Your Father Gets Home 9 Bewitched 56 Consumer Game 8:00 2 Sonny and Cher 4 Adam-12 7 Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice 9 The Tribe that Hides from Man 8:30 4 Bob Hope 7 Movie "Hijack" 9 News 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 2 Cannon 9 Ian Tyson 50 Night Gallery 56 Together: A Chuck Manglone Concert of EdouArd Manet and P a u 1 Cezanne on Monday, October 1; Claude Monet and Georges Seu- rat on Monday, Oct. 8; and Hen- ri Rousseau and Edvard Munch on Monday, Oct. 15. The Monday showings will be repeated on each following Wed- nesday evening; Oct. 3, 10 and 17. A showing will be presented each evening at 7 and 9. All 9:30 4 Faraday and Company 56 Man Builds, Man Destroys -Ecology 10:00 Z Dan August 7 Owen Marshall 9 The Pipes-Music 50 Perry Mason 56 Homewood 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 one Step Beyond 11:30 2 Movie "So1 Madrid" (1968) 4 Johnny Carson 7 Alan King at the Indiana State Fair 9 News 50 Movie-Comedy "The Strawberry Blonde." (1941) 12:00 9 Movie "The Guy Who Came Back." (1951) 1:00 4 7 News 1:20 2 Movie-Western "A Pistol for Ringo." (Italian; 1966) 2:50 2 Mayberry R.F.D. 3:20 2 News showings will be in the Modern Languages Building. The series was written and nar- rated by Sir Kenneth Clark, the originator of the highly acclaim- ed series, "Civilization". "It seems to be one of the best of its kind," acknowledges Professor George Bayliss, one of the co-ordinators of the p-o- ject' in the department of art of the College of Architecture and Design. "I would certainly have faith in anything that Sir Ken- neth Clark would do," he says. Sponsors of the series besides the department of art of Archi- tecture and Design inclade the Ann Arbor Art Association, the Friends of the U-M Museum of 'Art and the University Extension Service. "We hope to have some siin- ilar future plans if this is "i suc- cess," says Jean Amick, a co. o- dinator of the Ann Arbor A r t Center. "We were happy about the amalgamation of the Uni- versity with the Arts Association. If we can do things togeth.-r, we can bring more top notch arts to Ann Arbor!" 7:00 9:00 12:001 11:001 6:00 6:30' 7 :30 11:001 3:00 The Morning Show Rock Progressive Folk/Rock/Progressive News/Sports/Comment Talkback Jazz/Blues Progressive Signoff L. _. _..._ _._ FILM-Cinema Guild presents Fellini's Variety Lights in Arch. Aud. at 7, 9:05 tonight. New World Film Co-op pre- sents Little Murders in MLB Aud. 3 at 7:30, 9:30 tonight. Truffaut's Two English Girls is showing at Aud. A Angell presented by Cinema II and AA Film Co-op. SCHOOL OF MUSIC-Flute Student Recital, SM Recital' Hall, today at 2. University Choir, Maynard Klein, conductor, in Hill at 8 tonight. ENDS TODAY BURT REYNOLDS IN "WHITE LIGHTNING" (PG) OPEN 12:45 Shows at 1,3, 5, 7,9 p.m STARTS THURSDAY She's 6 feet 2" of Dynamite! * NEW WORLD F1 # # * "Jules Feiffer, a satin cal sharp-shooter Wit # a deadly aim, glare * Balefully at the mean *ingless violence i American life, an( # opens fire on it i * LITTLE MURDERS." -New York Pos # * "Jules Feiffer has writ * ten a satire tha # scorches neatly every * thing it touches.I *blisters the hell out o * sex, marriage, religion # psychiatry, Ia w, an * last but far from leas * a troubled America j family struggling frt * survival in the work # wild with violence." * -Boston Glob LITI * * ALAN ARKIN in his * The film is a parody * creep callers, chokin * for the evil in the wo * TUES. & WED. * SEPT. 25t * THURS.: See Marily * SOMETIMES A GREA '*riyrakynkttkiiy ILM COOP -presents- ir- tb .s n- in nd at .Y- It of in, nd t, be JULES FEIFFEI'S ELLIOT GOULD DONALD SUTHERLAND (as the minister) ALAN A RKIN (as the detective) Lou JACOBI (as the judge) { "The DR. s>.STRANGELOVE of the 70's." -Nesday 'KF 4c K -'I T'K TT TyK T'K TK T'K TT Ty TK 'K 'K yK T'K TT 'KT TK Ty Ty 'KT 'K 'Ky y'K Ty 'K r. 'K 'K 5 '* TLE MURDERS liP 1)11 lIE IIIlii iiE Come Alone Tonight WEDNESDAY (singles night) OPEN 'TIL 2:00 A wooing experience in sound and light 341 S. MAIN ANN ARBOR LIVE ENTERTAINMENT SUNDAYS directorial debut has brought to the. screen the two act plav written by JulesI , of the Newquist Family and their willingness to "hang-in" a world of m g air and hidden assasins. LITTLE MURDERS uses comedy and satire as a c rld. l Feiffer. uggers atharsi: $1.25 & 26 Modern Languages Aud. 3 7:30 & 9:30 P.M. I 'WP '2' *.. Waw W BoS.MhA,..myC A W. C.I..,.pany NEXT: JESUS CHRIST, SUPERSTAR n Monroe in the Prince and the Showgirl, and Ken Kesey's AT NOTION. 1111.L.111. .11111111111t1.1111111111.i.111.i.111111111.i.i..i..L J. Jr Jr r**************#*********#*******###****####*7tr*X THE FELLINI FESTIVAL VARIETY LIGHTS Fellini's first film deals with the real- - ity of s h o w business. Though he shares directing credits with Alberto Lattuada, Fellini depicts a down-and- out vaudeville troupe with the humor, insight, and realism that characterizes other early works such as Nights of Cabiria and La Stroda. SHORT: TWO-A satire of Fellini and Antonioni THURS.: Fellini's The White Sheik CINEMA GUILD Tonight . ARCHITECTURE AUD. at 7 and 9:05 Adm. $1 UAC-DAYSTAR presents Stephen StillS With manassas pioneers modern of " s painting AN UNUSUAL SERIES OF NEW FILMS ON ART RESERVE YOUR SERIES SUBSCRIPTION NOW! Written and narrated by LORD KENNETH CLARK, originator of the "Civilization" series SCHEDULE Two Showings Each Evening: 7 and 9 p.m. Monday, October 1 Wednesday, October 3 Edouard Monet-Paul Cezanne Monday, October 8 Wednesday, October 10 Claude Monet-George Seurat Monday, October 15 Wednesday, October 17 Henri Rousseau-Edvard Munch ALL SHOWINGS IN THE MODERN LANGUAGES BUILDING, across from the Rackham Building and Washington Street, on the +t -- ...I l r r - l/ +, I Y1/f r ifs/ ^T h i-k ,nn Series Subscription quarantees a seat at each of the three programs. Two hours of film at each program. Series Subscriptions: Adults, $6; Students, $5; Only series tickets will be sold in advance Purchase Tickets by mail with the c o u p a n below or during selected hours at: the Museum of Art, 525 S. State Street (763- 1231) or The Ann Arbor Art Association, 2275 Platt Road (763- 0590). 1 l SERIES SUBSCRIPTIONS PIONEERS OF MODERN PAINTING E NAME___ ADDRESS ' CITY 7-ZIP_ t I i Enclosed is a check, payable to the University of Michigan in the I s # S amount of $ for: F- Monday, 7:00 p.m., Series Ticket(s) 1 Wednesday, 7 p.m., j j. t t F t f 1 A 0 ,: . I