Tuesday, November 27, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Tuesday, November 27, 1 97~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five r Shawi By GLORIA JANE SMITH While The New York Times aptly pegged Shawn Phillips an "obviously brilliant performer" last year, there were still cynics who believed that he would not succeed. His lyrics were too complex, too heavily grounded with social and political convic- tions. Not exactly the decadent stuff that stuper-stars are made of. "Oh yes," Shawn said with a knowing smile as we talked in hillps Expundin sing room at Detroit's his fifth album in the States ferent f icets of the human psy- oxygen. Jacq ditorium. "It's reducing (Faces, A&M SP4363), it is just che. It's just human emotional that we hve ices for success." this blend of orgasmic musical experience." than 18 ear le don't want to have to exploration and intellectual state- He doesn't compare himself the ocean or he continued in his light ment that has ironically expand- with other musicians and al- to death. It's rawl "We'veS gottoast- ed his cult of followers. ., ,-1 his dres Ford Au my chan "Peop] think," h Texan di ques Coiste exactly a l s to stopI we will s very, very . O VCt t ers and washing machines and everything's easy. Life is becom- ing very luxurious. I'm not here just to boogie. We can boogie just as hard as anybody, but the point is that I want to move people's minds, not just their feet." Following the recent release of A self-taught musician who be- gan playing guitar at the age of seven, Shawn describes his music as "electronic orchestration," but adds that it really can't be pi- geonholed that easily. "You can't categorize the human psyche and my music covers lots of dif- though he admires Procol Har- em, Yes, and the Mahavishnu Or- chestra (also in the electronic orchestration genre), he does not consider himself influenced by their work. "When I go back to Italy to write, I don't listen to anybody. If I put anything on, it's classical." His lyrics are articulate and well designed. The son of a writ- er, Shawn also devotes time to writing poetry, fairy tales and even ballets. His words carry a foreboding message. Phillips also voiced ot c e r n s, including nat ("Why can't people simp tifv with the fact that just one species?") and t lation explosion ("Peo afraid. They think tha they are in a city and other people that they're The truth is that the onl ity that exists is within y mind.") Phillips' recent music, lowed a bit. "I'm veryr love with this lady I li is clt au sa's (longhair) who plays sitar. "It's ittle less an instrument that really ex- p-:l'lting nresses the intensity of life suffocate force," he explained. real." A philosopher of sort, Shawn her con- does not align himself with any ionalism established religion. "I don't be- ply iden- lieve in anything but energy and we are life, If you want to call that god, he popu- then it can be that too. You can ple are also call that cabbage or mirror." t when He remembers his childhood, around which was spent "a little bit in secure. Texas" and mostly "all over" in y secur- places like the South Pacific, our own New York and Los Angeles, as being a "bit weird." has mel "My parents were divorced much in and things happened. Evidental- ve with. ly, I went through a few trau- mas that I know nothing about." This early exposure to various parts of the world had a definite impact on his writing. "When I was very little, I was constant- ly aware of all the different val- ues and cultures of everyplace. I was very impressed. Anything I do now, I try to relate it." "I have to deal with the world as it is, I think, because I have travelled so much. I can't deal with it on a small scale." On stage, Shawn Phillips is magnetic. He unbinds his hair ut when and lets it fall to his waist and and the atter en- his fingers flash up and down unch of his guitar in a gentle interplay a little of sound with his musicians. "It is very important to me lady in that the audience have the pa- n fishing t refuge tience to allow musicians to go (for spontaneously create on stage. , he was That is the important moment, ngland)' the magic." nown to apaloni" copyright Gloria Jane Smith 1973 ARTS i1.-- "We're about to come to the end of civilized life as we know it if we don't quit fucking around," explained the 30-year- old artist. "A lot of august ty- coons are going to have to stop worrying about the maximiza- tion of profit. If the human need doesn't come first, we just ain't gaing to make it." His fears are not unfounded. He cited the oceans as his first priority. "The oceans produce 86.7-86.8 per cent of the earth's You can love the world b you can love someone world it's a different ma tirely. I've written a b songs for her which are more mellow." Shawn lives with his Positano, a small Italian village. Since he sough there about six years a some inexplicable reason refused e n t r y to E Shawn has become kn Italian audiences as a "c Shawn Phillips Roy Wood turns out brilliant parodies on new one-man album NEW WORLD FILM CO-Op presents THE LOVES OF ISADORA WITH VanessaI 1 based on "MY LIFE" by Isadora Duncan Redgrave, Jason Robards, James Fox By TOM OLSON Do-it-yourself-ism has" been all the rage among rock stars for some time now. Look, ma, Peter Townshend can play 17 instru- ments all by himself! He don't need to ask nobody's help! Roy Wood's album Boulders (United Artists LA168F) is a fine parody of this whole crackpot mentality. Wood has not stopped at mere conceit- he has gone on to OUTRAGEOUS OBSES- SION. He makes every noise on the album! He plays all 76 trom- bones by himself, and then he sings the girlie chorus that backs them up. Wood's irony is at its peak in the first cut, "Songs of Praise." in the chorus he asks for some help from the folks in the audi- ence: "Gather round me broth- ers See how many we can raise/' Call on all your sisters' Sing about the songs of praise." The audience - 26 electronically al- tered by Roy Woods - roars out its response. The western world's first one- man hootenanny. Pointless, right? Why didn't he just hire some Campfire Girls instead of slaving for days over a hot tape recorder? Roy Wood seems to be making fun of somebody! But even great parodies are a bore after two listenings. For- tunately, Wood's music stands up as brilliant rock and roll in its own right. "Rock Down Low" shows how Wood's formula works. The mu- sic is pure, 'visceral rock, as raunchy as anyone coufld expect from a -law-abiding Enalishman. But the lyrics are not the usual "Stay with me baby, or I'll turn you into peat moss." Instead, Wood sings about the missionary life: bringing degen- erate rock music to the two-bit sinners of Indiana. How do you make a sheltered farmer's daugh- ter understand rock and roll? Roy Wood has the idea: "Keep a'rocking till your legs are achin' like a tractor wheel." Wood's spry sense of humor prevents him from ever lectur- ing at ils or pitying himself in public (for which we ought to be 9ratef-l). It -lso leaves him a bit detached from his music. Wood's self-mockery is agree- able enough that we forget sin- cerity can be pleasant once in a while. His lampoons of rock mu- sic do not become irritating in the way that Frank Zappa's do, because his humor is not Zappa's crude slapstick. "I would like to go down in history as a qreat dancer . . . but I suppose I shall be rembered ornly for the number of lovers I have had." --Isadora Duncan This filth is dominated by Vanessa Redgrave's colorful performance as Isadora Duncan, th high prietess of modern dance which won Vanessa an Oscar nomination and Best Actress Award at Cannes. dEMB 231 S. STATE ST. DIAL 662-6264 OPEN DAILY AT 12:45 UUAL I&WAR FILM-Ann Arbor Film Co-op presents Bergman's Cries and Whispers in Aud. A at 7 and 9; Cinema Guild features Eisenstein's Alexander Nevsky in Arch. Aud. at 7 and 9:05; New World Film Co-op screens Reisz's The Loves of Isa- dora in Aud. 3, MLB at 7:30 and 9:45;. Women's Studies Films presents The Black Women and Lavender in UGLI Multipurpose Rm. at 7:30. ART-The Union Gallery holds a reception tonight at 8 for its Holiday Show to include refreshments and music by the Residential College Woodwind Quintet. The show includes ceramics, paintings, prints, weaving, photog- raphy, and sculpture by local artists and University A&D students. The show continues through Dec. 22. MUSIC-The Ark presents folk-blues singer and guitarist David Bromberg tonight at 9; Ralph Vaughan William's Hodie, a musical anthology of the Christmas story, will be presented at 8 in St. Andrew's Church. University stu- dents will participate. LECTURE-H. Wiley Hitchcock of Brooklyn College speaks on "A Day in the Musical Life of Louis XIV" in School of Music Recital Hall at 4 p.m. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GILBERT & SULLIVAN SOCIETY Proudly Presents THE GRAND DUKE LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Nov. 28-Dec. 1 Fri. 8 p.m.-$3.50 Wed. 8 p.m.-$3.00 Sat. matinee 2 p.m.--$2.50 Thurs. 8 p.m.-$3.00 Sat. 8 p.m.-$3.50 BOX OFFICE-763-1085 ALL i YOU CAN ., A o TONIGHT ONLY Modern Languages AUD. 3-7:30 & 9:45 $1.25 - i fill I HURRY! ENDS WEDNESDAY Audiences are standing up . and applauding. IN COLOR "BEST AMERICAN MOVIET.d OF THE YEAR" TUES. and WED. --Rolling Stone ?t 1:30,4 p.m., 96:30 ad9P.m. STARTS THURSDAY 4 Ten Strings & Five Centuries he plays on a single instrument, but the effect is as though an entire ensemble might be on stage, says a Eur-tnean music critic. Since his debut in Madrid in 1947, NARCISO YEPES has become a great virtuoso, with his extraordinary ten-string instrument na rxe rcrr-110 11-- AC tO arar nbvon. His Ann Arbor 6ivERSD Y