Saturday, February 24, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage inree Hall: By WARREN ROSENBERG Was that Woody Allen breaking up the audience at the UGLI multi-purpose room Thursday? No, it was only Prof. Donald Hall mixing poetry and personality in a reading which exhibited clearly that Hall is, poetically speaking, beyond categorization. Hall, who has been at the University since 1957, kept the audience entertain- ed with a series of prose-poems ("When you find a new form you can say things you've never thought you had to say"), limer- icks, surrealistic pieces, and what he . termed his "golden oldies" gleaned from his five books of published poetry. Let me immediately reveal a bias. I don't particularly care for surrealistic poetry. Surrealism made brief appearances in Hall's earlier work, but more recently it has become his dominant mode. Poetry and personality It is to his credit that the ap- proach works in a number of poems ("Stories"), but I felt that he lost control of the technique in a poem like "The Brain Cell" where the message seemed sub- merged and strained by the over- riding image. Hall delighted the audience, however, with a prose-poem he is still in the process of writing (He-informed us that he has been known to work and re-work a poem for as long as 17 years!), about a poetry festival. The be- ginning of the-poem "mocks the debasement of our language by statistics" as the poets are chos- en by computer from the hun-. dreds of poetry anthologies, few of which print the same people. For the festival itself, Hall bril- liantly utilizes surrealistic imag- ery to parody (and generally to destroy) his contemporaries, among them Bly, Robert Merwin (a glacier), James Dickey (a wrecking ball bent on destroying his competitors), Richard Wilbur (a foppish pair of identical Chinese twins), and Hall himself (a walking stomach who eats the entire building). Hall, who received his B.A. from Harvard in 1951, concluded his reading with some "golden oldies," poems that I had been waiting for from what many con- sider his best book, A Roof of Tiger Lilies, and from The Alliga- tor Bride. "Skill is cheap," was one of Hall's aphorisms during the reading, but a careful reading of his poetry reveals the kind of craftsmanship that could not come cheap. Poems like "The Table" exemplify what I think Hall does best-capture simply and lyrically the sensations of his youth: Walking back to the farm from the depot, Riley slapped flies with his tail. Twilight. Crickets scraped in the green standing hay by the road. The voice of my grandfather spoke through a motion of gnats. I held his hand. I entered the sway of a horse.. The last line of this quotation, "I entered/the sway of a horse," is the key to Hall's skill (with apologies to him) as a poet. It is the sense of rhythm, the care- fully chosen line breaks, the sense of expectancy and tension multiplying from line to line, that elevates Hall's best poems. He, of course, can be very visual, very sensual, but as he reveals in a poem "The Three Movements" C/w,'c/t k/v'4hiip_e*ice4 ~aa FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, l SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Avenuel SUNDAY: 10:30 a.m.: Worship Services, Sunday School (2-20 yrs.). Infants' room available Sunday and Wednesday.' Public Reading Room, 306 E. Li- berty St.: Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat., 10-5; Closed Sundays and Holi- days. For transportation, call 668-6427. Church School. * * * UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 9:15 and 10:30 a.m- Worship Services Sunday at 9:15 a.m.-Bible Study. Wednesday at 10 p.m.-Midweek * * * UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron 9:30 a.m.-Discussion Classes. 10:30 a.m. - "Filled with the. Spirit." Speaker: Calvin Malefyt. 5:30 p.m.-Students' Supper, 75c. 6:45 p.m. - "Christianity, Ecol- ogy, and Industry." Speakers: Dr. Tom Werkema and Dr. Bob Mo- lenaar, Dow Chemical Co. HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH: 3150 Glacier Way Pastor: Charles Johnson For information, transportation, personalized help, etc., phone 769- 6299 or 761-6749. Worship. * * * ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 306 N. Division 8:00 a.m.: Holy Eucharist. 10:00 a.m.: Holy Eucharist and Sermon. * * * FIRST CONGREGATIONAL On the Campus at the corner of State and William Sts. Rev. Terry N. Smith, Sr. Minister Rev. Ronald C. Phillips, Assistant * * * FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Avenue Services of Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 a.m.-Sermon: "A Matter of Walking." Preaching: Robert E. Sanders. COLLEGE PROGRAM Bible Study-Tuesdays 12:00 to 1:00. Holy Communion - Wednesdays 5:15 to 5:45. Supper Program - Wednesdays 6:00. BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 Ministers: T. L. Trost, Jr.; R. E. Simonson. Associate Ministers: Dennis R. Brophy and Howard F. Gebhart. 9 a.m.: Morning Prayer. 10, a.m.: Worship Service and Church School. * * * PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST 2580 Packard Road, 971-0773 Tom Bloxam, Pastor, 971-3152 Sunday School, 9:45 a.m. Worship: 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Training Hour: 6 p.m. * * * CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Rev. Peter Paulsen Services-: 10:00 a.m.-Morning Worship. 6:00 p.m.-Evening Service. * * * LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH (ALC, LCA) (formerly Lutheran Student Chapel) 801 S. Forest (Corner of Hill St.) Donald G. Zill, Pastor Sunday Folk Mass-10:30 a.m. Sunday School-9:15 a.m. Sunday Supper-6:15 p.m. Program-7:00 p.m. Wednesday Eucharist-5:15 p.m. * * * FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDA- TION - State at Huron and Wash. 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. - Worship Services. Sermon by Dr. Donald B. Strobe: "Jesus: Radical or Con- servative?" Broadcast on WNRS 1290 AM, WNRZ 103! FM, 11 a.m.-noon. WESLEY FOUNDATION Sunday, Feb. 25: 1:45 p.m.-Meet to go to Detroit for experience with prisoners in a Halfway House; return by 6:00 p.m. Thursday, March 1: 6:00 p.m.-Grad Community Din- ner Dnt n,neinn nor the various paints and edges of scenery. It is, he says, familiar when come upon, glimpsed as in a mirror unpredicted, and it appears to understand. It is like himself, only visible. This is poetry that appeals to the inner ear. Somehow, as a result of the careful placement of words like "not," or the clipped phras- ing, or the balancing of words that end in "-ed," we feel in- side us what Hall is trying to say. It is truly knowledge that is "glimpsed." Hall uses many forms in his poems, rhymed couplets, sestinas, free verse, iambic pentameter, and a number of themes recur, building and destroying, trans- formations (of land and people), and man and nature. His very best poems unify strong rhythms with clear visual images and ges- tures ("In The Kitchen of the Old House," "The Man in the Dead Machine," "Digging"). His weaker ones either drown the reader in abstract words coupled with a slackening of form ("The Scream"), or prosaically and im- potently strike out at society ("Crew-cuts") in the mode of Ferlinghetti's later poetic mis- takes. But Hall's mistakes are few, and in a poem like "Gold," which he read to conclude the reading, we are told what is, in the final analysis, of the greatest significance: Pale gold of the walls, gold of the centers of daisies, yellow roses pressing from a clear bowl. All day we lay on the huge bed, my hand stroking the deep gold of your thighs and your back.... We made in those days tiny identical rooms inside our bodies which the men who uncover our graves will find in a thousand years shining and whole. I- Sonny and Brownie piay gospel-blues By LORRE WEIDLICH Sonny Terry and Brownie Mc- Ghee come to Detroit's Raven Gallery several times a year, and several people I know make a point of going to hear them every time they pass through. People into blues recognize them as two of the most important ar- tists in the field. Their album, Sonny and Brownie (A&M SP 4379), will probably be eagerly picked up by blues freaks in Ann Arbor. The album is a mixture of some really fine cuts, some aver- age cuts, and a few that a r e merely filler. It's far from the country blues Brownie and Sonny started out with 33 years ago when they began their act: the g,!est musicians inclide Arlo Guthrie and the songs range from their own material to R a n d y Newman's "Sail Away." The album opens a Curtis May- field song, "People Get Ready," one of the less exciting cuts on the album, despite its up-beat tempo. The arrangement is poor, and a lot of potential goes to waste, including Sugarcane Har- ris' fiddling. The song establish- es one of the thematic trends of the album - a gospel sound, taken up with more success by by several songs on the second side of the record, "Big Wind" and "Jesus Gonna Make it Al- right." "Big Wind" has the same up- tempo feel as "People Get Rea- dy," but a far more effective ar- rangement, from the more subtle and mellow background vocals to the harmonica, which isn't just there, as in "People Get Ready," but actively contributes to the song. "Jesus Gonna Make It Al- right" is one of the most taste- fnl bands on the record, a mel- low sound with dobro and piano adding some nice sounds. The host of back-up musicians play everything from Moog syn- thesizer to banjo. At one point the extra instrumentation seems to detract more than add to the album - the thumb piano on "Sail Away" is gimmicky, thrown in for unusual effect ra- ther than incorporated into the total arrangement of the song. Some of the back-up musicians are worth noting: Besides Sugar- cane Harris and Arlo Guthrie, John Hammond and John May- all both add some nice touches. Hammond's slide guitar stands out on "Walkin' My Blues Away," a McGhee-Terry compo- sition with more or less typical blues lyrics, and Mayall's piano on the same cut and !harp-play- ing on "Sonny's Thing," an otherwise undistinguished instru- mental, and several other cuts, are really fine. At least two other songs de- serve mention. Sam Cooke's "Bring it on Home" includes the best examples on the album of Brownie's guitar and Sonny's harmonica-playing, plus some noteworthy fiddling by Sugar- cane Harris. "White Boy" is an amusing account of someone do- ing him damnedest to be bluesy and ending up chained to his ear- phones and feeling mean and con- fused after listening to Sonny's harp-playing. The harp-playing, Brownie's electric guitar, and the piano accompaniment combine to make this one of the high- points of the album. The album closes with "On the Road Again," a personal remin- iscense: "Do you know actually how long me and you, been to- gether?" "Yeah, pretty close around thirty-three years." "Mighty long time to be with a man, ain't it?" Sonny's recollec- tion of working a week to earn the quarter to buy his f i r s t harmonica, the story of the ser- vice station attendant who wouldn't "fill no black gas," re- membering Bill Bill, Lightin' Hopkins, and the other musicians they've played with - casual, off-the-cuff stories are sand- wiched between choruses of "On the Road Again." It's a nice account of a long partnership. Hall from his first book of poetry Exiles and Marriages, it is move- ment that is the essence of poetry and of life: Yet perhaps, he thinks, I speak With knowledge, but perhaps forgetting the movement that intrigues all thinking. It is the movement which works through,, which discovers itself. in alleys, in sleep, not expected and not in the books of words and phrases Have a flair for artistic writing? If you are interest- ed in r evie wing poetry, and music, drama, dance, film. or writing feature stories a b o u t the arts: Contact Arts Editor c/a The Michigan Daily. Daily Photo by TOM GOTTLIEB From Mozart to 'Boulez Claudio Arrau, Chilean master of the piano, made his third Ann Arbor appearance last night at Hill Aud. See review in tomorrow's Daily. 0 i ner an i scussionU, -. L SAMARIA LUTHERAN, LCA 272 Hewitt Rd., Ypsilanti Rev. Dean Tyson, Pastor! Family Worship and Nursery at 11:00 a.m. Faculty and Students welcome. UAC-DAYSTAR presents HERBIE HANCOCK septet and FREDDIE HUBBARD and his bond TON IGHT' $4.50, 4.00, 3.50, 2.50 reserved seats Tickets today at the Union 11 :00-5:00 & at the door from 6 p.m. on tonight 6:00 2 4 News 9 This is Your Life 50 star Trek 56 Thirty Minutes With 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 Reasoner Report 9 Fishin' Hole 56 Consumer Game 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 George Pierrot 7 News 9 Untamed World 50 Hee Haw 56 Industrial Film Festival 7:30 2 Young Dr. Kildare 4 Adventurer 7 Town Meeting 9 Beachcombers 56 E ye to E ye a m y 8:00 2 All in the Family 4 Emergency 7 Here We Go Again 9 NHL Hockey 56 Movie "The Rules of the Game." (39) 50 NHL Hockey 8:30 2 Bridget Loves Bernie 7 A Touch of Grace 9:00 2 Mary Tyler Moore 4 Movie "I Walk the Line" (1970) 7 Julie Andrews 9:30 2 Bob Newhart 10:00 2 Carol Burnett 7 Jigsaw 56 Mysterious Mr. Eliot NEW WORLD MEDIA presents 10:30 9 Document 50 Lou Gordon 11:00 2 4 7 9 News 56 Bolero 11:15 7 ABC News 9 Provincial Affairs 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "God's Little Acre" (1958) 4 Johnny Carson 7 Movie "Tony Rome." (1967) 9 Movie "To Kill a Mockingbird" (1962) 12:00 50 Movie "Frankenstein-1970." (1958) 1:00 4 News 1:30 2 Movie "The Whipping" 7 Movie "The Fat Man." (1951) 3:00 2 7 News wcbn 89.5 fm 9-12 Maranatha Music 12-4 Radio Prison 4-8 Jazz 8-11 Progressive Rock 11-3 The Potato Show CULTURE CALENDAR DANCE-Turkish dance workshop in Barbour Gym from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; 2-5 p.m.; dance with "Lightning" and "Locomobile" in Couzens Hall cafeteria at 8:30; Her- Self newspaper and Gawk co-sponsor a Women's Dance at 8:30 in U of M Women's Athletic Bldg; UM Dancers in Concert at Power at 2:30, 8. FILM-Cinema Guild presents Kozintsev's Hamlet at 7, 9:05 in Arch. Aud;. Cinema II shows Mankiewicz' Guys, and Dolls in Aud. A, Angell at 7, 9:30; New Morning Films presents New York Erotic Film Festival II at 7, 9 in Aud. 3, MLB; UAC-Mediatrics show Shaft in Nat. Sc. Aud. at 7, 9:30. DRAMA-Residential College Players present Williams' Something Unspoken; Ionesco's The Lesson at 8 in RC Aud.; Ann Arbor Civic Theatre presents Thieves' Carni- val at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre at 8. UAC-BLACK AFFAIRS-Take 3; show and dance in Bursley at 9:30. MUSIC-Herbit Hancock and Freddie Hubbard in concert at 8 at Hill. WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-Ark, Joe Hickerson (Fri., Sat.) admission; Blind Pig, Okra (Fri.,* Sat.) cover, Clas- sical Music (Sun.) no cover; Golden Falcon, Oz Nova (Fri., Sat.) cover; Mackinac Jack's, Detroit (Fri., Sat., Sun.)- cover; Mr. Flood's Party, Cadillac Cowboys (Fri., Sat.) cover, Diesel Smoke and Dangerous Curves (Sun., 3 p.m.) cover; Bimbo's on the Hill, Cricket Smith (Fri., Sat.) cover; Del Rio, Jazz Music (Sun.) no cover; Rubai- yat, Irish Bell Adventure (Fri., Sat., Sun.) no cover; Bim- bo's, Gaslighters (Fri., Sat., Sun.) cover; Pretzel Bell, RFD Boys (Fri., Sat.) cover; Odyssey, Brooklyn Blues- busters (Fri., Sat.) cover, Okra (Sun.) cover. STurkish Foikdance, Workshop BORA OZKOK of Adana, Turkey iwill teach Turkish dancing: Fri., Feb. 23-8-11 pm Sat., Feb. 24-9:45 am-12 pm; 2:15-5 pm a R ARMIHTRf .VM PLEASE STAND BY' "In the very near future a band of radical freaks will take control of a communica- tion satellite and broadcast bizarre mes- sages to a captive world T.V. audience." MUSIC BY- JOHN LENNON and YOKO ONO DAVID PEEL and the LOWER EAST SIDE TEENAGE LUST & 1984 NEW RELEASE A film by JACK & JOANNE MITON coming soon-Sponsored by New World Film Coop 665-6734 SUNDAY NITE POETRY READING with Lemuel Johnston Linda Silverman Simone Press n nn r I I V 111frn