Wednesday, February 21, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Ann Arbor Civic Theatre PRESENTS T 'ieves Carnival 8 p.m. Wed. thru Sat. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Box Office Open Daily 10 a.m. WED. TUMBLE- WEEDS 1925, William Sittart di- rects & stars in his last film, a Western ..-. And Donald Sosin gives his last piano perform- ance for Cinema Guild! THUR. BUN UEL'S EXTERMINATING ANGEL ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM Hicks sings and swings in Detroit J By HARRY HAMMITT Dan Hicks made his first De- troit appearance on Saturday night to a rather odd mixture of musical tastes and feelings. As soon as you were in the Masonic auditorium it was obvious that Hicks was going to play first: onstage was a motley array, of speaker boxes and amps and mi- crophones; not an overwhelming mass, just the bare minimum. Aside from the obvious sparsity of equipment there werebthe normal Hicks touches: a back- drop of a palm tree beach with the sun setting over the ocean, a parrot hanging down from the rafters, and an array of potted plants placed strategically around the equipment. Hicks and his band took the stage a little while after the scheduled starting time; from that time on Hicks was master- ful, not just in his performance but also in the way he handled the audience. Hicks and the Hot Licks have been together for some time, though it has only been recently that he has come into the national eye. As such, the band is extremely tight and precise. The vocals are the focal point of the band, and Hicks and his two female consorts, Mary- ann Price and Naomi Ruth Ei- senberg, handled them so effi- ciently and superbly, blending together very well with great strength and depth, that they were a delight to see in action. When the vocals were not dom- inating the music, the band re- lied on their two main soloists, "Symphony" Sid Page and the newest member of the band, gui- tarist John Girton. Girton is a mellow jazz-oriented guitarist who plays a lot of tasteful little runs that embellish the melody- line. Page is just a very fine musician who plays both violin and mandolin. Hicks and the Hot Licks came on dressed in superb style; slick and tasteful, but not at all out- rageous. Hicks is the obvious leader of the band; he handled most of the lead vocals, and in his rhythm guitarwork he is re- sponsible for much of the swing in the band's music. This swing came out well in Detroit, with Hicks setting the tempo with his guitar and Jaime Leopold, play- ing an acoustic bass fiddle, rip- ping up and down the neck of his bass. This rhythmic f o r c e was complemented excellently by the addition of a drummer who played a constant uptempo beat. The numbers that Hicks per- formed were all faster than the norm with only "I'm An Old Cowhand", sung by Maryann Price, being a concession to slow music. Hicks played some of his standards, but there were re- quests called out from the aud- ience that he never got around to doing. Two songs which high- lighted his performance w e r e "How Can I Miss You When You Won't Leave Me Alone?" and "Milk Shakin' Mama" which is perhaps Hicks' most famous song even though he has never re- corded it. As has always been the case, Hicks put aside his guitar during the middle of "Milk Shakin' Mama" to go into his normal dance act. He mas- terfully builds up an aura of an- ticipation as the audience thinks he is about to perform some un- usual feat, but then comes back with some absurdly simple step that contrasts well with the anti- cipation. He was joined in some simple vaudeville dance steps by Price and Eisenberg and togeth- er they did some simple but ele- gant choreography. Hicks had a penchant during his perform- ance for amusing nuances su1Th as going down to a hunched posi- tion or standing on one leg for no apparent reason. The band was really swinging and their interplay was as tight and relaxed as could be hoped for. Hicks owes a great musical debt to Bob Wills in his use of the Texas swing style, is certain- ly the dominant element in his music, but he also synthesizes elements of big band swing, prairie cowboy music and Mexi- can music into a brand that is completely his own. The band is very string-oriented and as such their swing is very delicate and unique, but still as rhythmically powerful as a big band. What was odd in the make-up of the audience was that a good percentage of the people had ap- parently come to the concert to see Bob Seger and didn't care about Hicks. Seger has been around the Detroit area for some time and it was hard to view him as such an important act, but he had a very strong core of fans who were determined to see him, with or without Hicks. By the time Seger did come on, there was a serious energy gap which he failed to fill. After the Hicks set and the following inter- mission, the audience apparent- ly became apathetic and Seger did not satisfy anyone but a small group swarming around the stage. He finally started to rock with his song "Rosalee" follow- ed by a basic rock 'n' roll song followed by "Ramblin' Gamblin' Man." By this time, the hard core had invaded the stage and Seger left after the song. He came back to do "Turn On Your Lovelight" as an encore, but he had lost his momentary energy. His fans were devoted, but he By BARBARA BIALICK He works methodically at light- ing his pipe, until the whorls of sweet smoke caress the room. Last year when I sat in this same too-large chair, I awaited some kind of verdict on my writing from my creative writing teach- er, Robert Hayden. His answers, then, as now, were honest and unpretentious, even though his reputation as a fine poet has long been established. Now he is staring at a spot in Robert Hayden: a gentleman, a scholar, and a fine poet Robert Hayden the window, visibly searching for just the right words to express himself. "Every creative person demand everything of you." Hayden, who has held creative writing classese here since the fall of 1969, does not believe that poetry writing can really be taught." Poetry, he says, is something one is "born" into; one cannot know why he has a fondness for words, only that his skills can be developed through hard work. "If you could know why you exist, you might know why you are a poet." Still, this man who grew up in Detroit's ghetto in the '20's, has committed himself to being a conscientious t e a c h e r even though the job makes it more difficult to find time for his own creative work. Though they are not the key to the writing process, Hayden does cite many values in taking a creative writing class. "You can give young writers guidance and make them self-critical . . . help them discover what they can do best . . . introduce them to each other's writing." There is value for the teacher too, who receives "a kind of security which he needs for his writing" by having contact with "young people try- ing to write." Although Hayden agrees with poet Donald Hall that there is a new poetry renaissance in young people, he complains that a good deal of the work in his classes is "lacking in real strength and im- pact . . . because there is a re- luctance to learn the craft of poetry." Hayden feels that too many students are influenced by some older poets who have "misled" them into thinking that if you like it, it's poetry. However, he explains, the "spontaneous ex- pression of emotions" is not all there is to poetry. "Each poet who develops technique puts his own stamp on it." Even the tra- ditional sonnet and blank verse are "changed by the pressures an individual p u t s to these forms." Indeed, for Hayden, form and content carry on an "organic re- lationship." He isconcerned with poetry as "an art which sets up, certain demands," but his goal is not to write "puzzle poems." Rather, he says, "I want people to understand what I write and react to it . . . I don't want to be so obscure that only intellectuals ("the, initiated") can understand me." The result is that the gentle- voiced Hayden is a sensitive, sensual writer whose poems are controlled and cut to the mini- mum words necessary for the greatest impact, as in "Sole- dad": Naked, he lies in the blinded room chainsmoking, cradled by drugs, by jazz as never by any lover's cradling flesh. A black man who grew up in a society that is prone to make judgments on the color of one's skin, Hayden would rather have his poems communicate to all human beings. He has been in- volved with the Baha'i Faith for over 20 years, and explains that one of their cardinal principles is the "essential unity of all races." Still, Hayden has always had a great interest in Afro-American history. His poetry, which for him is a way of "coming to grips with reality," naturally is the outgrowth of his own life. Thus, Hayden often presents in his poems beautifully carved sketch- es of people who have come into his realm of experience. His "purpose" is to emphasize the "humanity of the people (he) writes about, their human di- mensions," rather than race. In his poem about Malcolm X, from the book Words in the Mourning Time, Hayden seems to seek out the heart of the man whose struggle inspired his people: Sometimes the dark that gave his life its cold satanic sheen would shift a little, and he saw himself floodlit and eloquent; ... He X'd his name, became his people's anger, exhorted them to vengeance for their past; rebuked, admonished them,.. . He fell upon his face before Allah the raceless in whose blazing Oneness all were one. He rose renewed, renamed, became much more than there was time for him to be. ARTS Tin dimes neither. So long, pal. Hayden's most recent pamph- let is The Night Blooming Ser- ious (London, 1972), which was written for the Michigan Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. Although he thinks "the aca- demic environment is not con- ducive to real creativity," the academic world has often hon- ored him. He received a major Hopwood in 1942, the Grand Prize for Poetry at the First World Festival of Negro Arts in Dakar, 1966, and the 1970 Russell Loins Award. (National Institute of Arts and Letters). Hayden was educated at Wayne State University and then man- aged to become a part-time stu- dent at Michigan; he won a minor Hopwood that summer in 1938. He had a fellowship.here from 1944-46, and then taught at Fisk University for 23 years. After brief periods at the Uni- versities of Louisiana and Wash- ington, he was invited back to .Michigan as a professor of Eng- lish. Both a scholar and a poet, Hay- den believes "poetry as art is a worthy! enterprise." Indeed, in the poetry of Robert Hayden we must certainly find significance for ourselves. A powerful sense of understanding and v is i o n comes through in the work of this man who 'declares a life- long fondness of words. As a teacher or as a poet, Hayden would not force his methods on r 7 & 9:05$ . .. ..received only polite response who is teaching in a university I I .$ which contrasted sharply with faces a dilemma," he says. The Residential College Players Present: the large response that Hicks re- "Teaching is a full-time job, and ceived. poetry is a full-time job. Both 2 ONE-ACT PLAYS a THE LESSON by IONESCO CU I'WUREdC I r A AND SOMETHING UNSPOKEN by WILLIAMS ART-.UAC-Creative Arts Festival presents "Expanded Cine- 8:00 p.m. ma": discussion - screening with underground filmmaker - Feb. 23-25 EAST QUAD AUD. $1.00 Donation Stan VanDerBeek at noon in Angell Hall, Aud. B. m~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ------------.A."--..A"..............d............L.......... .T,........,:::s.reP. resent.Ts- T p Wpnrsn s iso ' L dow F i }::{}:r::WINNERSt} }r}.;;S}:;$4 DAILY AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. G-RATED "I'd Bet on 'Sounder' to Sweep This Year's Academy Awards. I Can't Recall Any Film That Was So Visually Moving." -Dave Sheehan KNXT-TV WINNE R OF 4 ACADEMY AWARD Nominations! " BEST PICTURE . BEST ACTOR " BEST ACTRESS *BEST SCREENPLAY and Lennon's In His Own Write at 4 in Frieze Arena. FILMS-AA Film Co-op presents Arkin's Little Murders at 7 and 9 in Angell, Aud. A; Cinema Guild presents Hart's Tumbleweeds at 7 and 9:05 in Arch. Aud; New Morning Films presents End of the Road at 7 and 9 in MLB, Aud. 3. MUSIC-U Symphony Orchestra, with Josef Blatt conducting, can be heard at 8 in Hill. Roosevelt Sykes appears at Blind Pig at 8:30 and 11:30; cover WCBN-A taped interview with director Frank Capra can be heard on WCBN (89.5 on your FM dial) at 7:10 tonight, Questions and comments on Capra and his movies can be phoned in to Prof. Marvin Felheim following the in- terview. , Hayden has a cosmic strength of vision. But he can also write of the ironies of the daily human experience, in a vaguely comic, "humane" casual rhythm, which movessas natural conversation does, as in "Aunt Jemina of the the Ocean Waves": Jemina sighs, Reckon I'd best be getting back. I help her up. Don't you take no wooden nickels, hear? tev. tonight 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 Operation Second Chance 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 ABC News 9 I Dream of Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 56 Making Things Grow 7:09 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 56 Zoom 7:30 2 what's My Line? 4 Festival of Family Classics 7 .Wild Kingdom 9 News 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Consumer Game 8:00 Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour 4 Adam-l2 7 Paul Lynde 9 NHL Hockey 50 Dragnet other people but his lessons are worth remembering. As a poet he stands somewhat apart from his 7a experience and struggles with his reality: Alien, at home-as always everywhere-I roamed the cobbled island, and thought of Yeats, his passionate search for a theme. Sought mine.' 56 America '73 8:30 4 Movie "The Norliss Tapes" 7 Movie "And No One Could Save Her" (1973) 50,Merv Griffin 9:09 2 Medical Center 56 Eye to Eye 9:30 56 Joan Sutherland: Who's Af raid of opera? 10:00 2 Cannon 4 Search '7 Owen. Marshall 50 Perry Mason 56 Soul! 10:30 9 Irish Rovers 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 One St Beyond 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "No Time for Sergeants" (1958) 4 Johnny Carson 7 Dick Cavett 50 Movie "The Fighting 69th" (1940) 12:00 9 Movie "Deadlier than the Male" (English 1967) 1:00 4 7 News 1:50 2 Movie, "Sitting Bull" (1954) 3:20 2 TV High School 3:50 2 It's Your Bet 4:20 2 News cable tv channel 3 3:30 Pixanne 4:00 Today's Woman 4:30 Something Else (rock) 5:00 stratasphere Playhouse 5:30 Local news and events 6:00 Consumer Forum 6:30 NCAA Sports 7:00 Community Dialogue wicbn 89.5 fn 9 The Morning After 12 Progressive Rock 4 Folk 7 Frank Capra 8 Rhthmn and Blues 11 Progressive Rock artistic writing? I1 you are Interest- ed in review ing poetry, and music, drama, dance, film, or writing feature stories a b o u t the arts: Contact Arti Editor, c/o The Michigan Daily. "SOUNDER" LAST SHOWING UAC-Creative Arts Festival ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS ! I Presents a Discussion-Screening with STAN VANDERBEEK UNDERGROUND FILM-ARTIST East Quad Auditorium, 3 p.m. FREE ADMISSION NEXT WEEK-TWO MORE FILMMAKERS Monday-MICHAEL SNOW Tues. & Wed.-STAN BRAKHAGE -BEST -BEST -BEST -BEST PICTURE DIRECTOR ACTRESS SCREENPLAY One of the yeo 10 best film;! -N.Y. Film Cri Wed. at 1 p.m., 3:30, 6p.m. & 8:45 Thur.-Fri. at 6:40 & 9:05 or s " 1 s. university tics I V Theatre Phone 668-6416 I Screen play by THE FIRESION THEATRE A career i n law 0 without law school. When you becomee a Lawyer's Assistant, you'll do work traditionally done by lawyers - work which is challenging, responsible and intellectually stimuating. Lawyer's Assistants are now so critically needed that The Institute for Paralegal Training can offer you a position in the city of your choice - and a higher starting salary than you'd expect as a recent collegee graduate. Here is a career as a professional with fi- nancial rewards that increase with your de- veloping expertise. If you are a student of high academic standing and are interested in a legal career, come speak with our representative. I Max von SydowvLiv Ullmann The Enigrante Technicolor'From Warner Bros, AWarner Communications Company starring Country Joe and the Fish, The James Gang, New York Rock Ensemble, Elvin Jones (formerly of the John Coltraine quartet), Doug Kershaw and White Lightnin'. plus SALVADOR DALI'S "Un Chien Andalou"-an avante-garde excursion into a land of surrealism and mind twisting pipe dreams. (16 min.) m UAC-DAYSTAR presents HERBIE HANCOCK septet and FREDDIE HUBBARD I Contact the Placement Office. A representative of The Institute I