Tuesday, February 27, 1973 I HE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Tuesday, February 21, '1973 1HLMICJ-IIGAN DAILY Page Three Hancock soars, Hubbard grounded By BERT STRATTON Herbie Hancock and Freddie Hubbard had their night at Hill Aud. last weekend. Herbie Han- cock was great, and Freddie Hubbard wasn't so great. The concert contrasted the intricate electric compositions of Hancock with the facile slick tunes of Hubbard. First up was Hancock and his septet. They came out with an armful of instruments and they used them all-everything from cowbells and wood blocks to an arp synthesizer. They played a small bundle of tunes rolled into a couple lengthy pieces. All of the tunes were fair- ly new ones and all of them were rhythmic masterpieces. It seems the new electric jazz is moving more and more towards rhythm in an attempt to free the melody from any narrow chordal restric- tions. Herbie Hancock's septet is leading that movement. Miles Davis' group is interested in that too. In fact it's hard to talk about Hancock without mention- ing Davis' influence on him. What Hancock played Satur- day night could not have hap- pened without Miles Davis com- ing first - especially D a v i s' "Bitches Brew" album of a couple years ago. Miles Davis established the OPEN DAILY AT 12:45 SHOWS AT 1:10-3-5-7-9 P.M. new modal electric music. He popularized the electric piano and the electric bass, and he brought in the Latin. percussion- ists and all the hells. Hancock's followed up on it. He's listened to his Sly Stone, his Miles Davis, and his R&B, and he's synthesized a new mu- sic which is every bit as good as Miles Davis'. Actually it's bet- ter, because Hancock writes very beautiful ensemble arrangements (which his horn section plays periodioAlly throughout his num- bers), and these unison arrange- ments tend to hold Hancock's compositions together, g i v i n g them a unity that Davis' tunes lack. Hancock's music is dangerous stuff. It should only be tried by people who've played with Davis -men like John McLaughlin and Wayne Shorter. There's too much room for shucking in the music. Another thing - I think Han- cock's music is too demanding for most people. Some people out there are only kidding them- selves. They've been caught up in the recent apotheosis of Miles Davis and all he stands for. Some people are just riding the weirdness w a v e, waiting for something great to happen again in rock music. And I'll admit it-I can't stand most of the new electric jazz. It's too pretentious, too overtly searching for cosmic conscious- ness. Ray Charles is a lot more cos- mic than Miles Davis is at this moment. I think Hancock's music falls somewhere in between. Hancock's on the front lines of innovation but he's not making a big revelatory thing about it. He's an unassuming person and his music shows it. He gives his listeners some aids, just enough. As for Freddie Hubbard's group, there's not much to say. They came on and did a version of McCartney's "Uncle Albert." Then they did "The Godfather." It was as slick and shiny as Hubbard's record covers. But it wasn't terrible. It was occasionally very mellow, as when Hubbard played his flugel- horn. But it rarely got off the ground. His sidemen were incredibly b o r i n g. Their improvisations sounded prerecorded (as oppos- ed to Hancock's sidemen, who were very cohesive and interest- ing). Freddie Hubbard has taken a job in the soul-jazz factory, re- working pop tunes by putting in a couple standard embellish, ments, and then going out and making big money. He used to be an upcoming trumpeter with promise. Now he's beyond help. He can put you to sleep, especially if you listen to him right after Herbie Han- cock. tonight Hickerson brings new songs to Ark By LORRE WEIDLICH Every time Joe Hickerson per-. forms at the Ark, even the most critical of Ann Arbor's folk audi- ence go to see him. Yet per- forming is not his full-time job; archiving at the Library of Con- gres in Washingtton, D.C. is. In charge of the largest folk- lore collection in the country, Hickerson assembles and cata- logues all collected songs, from recorded and taped sources as well as books and manuscripts. The archives were begun by the Works Project Administraftion during the Depression and are now maintained as a valuable record of dead and living U.S. traditions. Because of his experience in the Library of Congress, Hicker- son always has new songs to perform, and he wants to teach them to everybody. He seems to have a very special attraction unshared by other performers. I've yet to hear anyone say that he's "just not exciting" or -that they've overdosed on his music. Partly this is due to the fact that evenings with Joe bring out the very best in the whole Ark scene -he creates a mellow, com- munal-type atmosphere in which people can relax and join in the choruses. Partly it's the variety of his repertoire-he sings every- Doily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI Herbie Hancock at Hill 6:00 2 9 50 56 6:30 2 4 7 9- 50 56 7:00 2 4 7 9 50 56 7:30 2 4 7 4 7 News Courtship of Eddie's Father Flintstones Operation Second Chance CBS News NBC News ABC News I Dream of Jeannie GQilligan's Island How Do Your Children Grow? Truth or Consequences News To Tell the Truth Beverly Hillbillies I Love Lucy French Chef What's My Line? You Asked For It Price Is Right MIDWEST PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT! 9 Protectors 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Evenings at Pops 8:00 2 Maude 4 Movie "I Love a Mystery" (1966) 7 Temperatures Rising 9 UFO 50 Dragnet 8:30 2 Hawaii Five-O 7 Movie "Connection." (1973) 56 Bill Moyers' Journal 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 9 News S6Common Ground 9:3052 Movie "Call To Danger" 9 Front Page Challenge 56 Black Journal 10:00 4 America 7 Marcus Welby, M.D. 9 Our Costly Cleanup 50 Perry Mason 56 Detroit Black Journal 10:30 56 360 Degrees 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 One Step Beyond 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "All the Fine Young Cannibals" (1960) 4 Johnny Carson 7 Movie "Five Desperate Women" (1971) 50 Movie "Desperate Journey" (1942) 12:00 9 Movie "The Hell with Heroes" (1968) 1:00 4 7 News 1:40 2 Movie "Pardners." (1956) 3:10 2 TV High School 3:40 2 It's Your Bet 4:10 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 Love and the law 6:30 NCAA Sports 7:00 Community Dialogue 8:00 Yesterday's City Council meeting wc bn 89.5 fm By HERB BOWIE Back in the days of the early Yardbirds, fans used to scrawl "Clapton is God" on the walls around London. Well, Clapton is not God. We all know that. But' who else could still have people believing in him after having gone so long without performing any miracles? The latest "new" Clapton al- bum is simply, and deceivingly, entitled Clapton (Polydor PD 5526). "Deceivingly" because, al- though, not billed as an an- thology or a greatest hits album, it contains nothing but four songs from Layla and four from Eric Clapton! Were unsuspecting re- cord buyers to miss the tiny, fine-print statement in the bot- tom left-hand corner of the back of the album cover - "The con- tents of this record have been previously released in other col- lections" - they might quite nat- urally assume that these ver- sions are different from t h e originals. Apparently this is what Polydor hopes will happen, for why else release such a strange collection (the four songs from Eric Clapton are quite obviously about the worst ones on that al- bum) and package it in such a manner? The whole thing verges on fraud, and I think it highly unethical for stores to even sell the record. In Concert (RSO SO 2-8800), by Derek and the Dominos, is quite a different story. Although I can only assume that the double al- bum - coming as it does, near- ly two years after it was re- corded - was a mere mercenary afterthought on the part of the Robert Stigwood Organization, it's a pretty good album. Not great, you understand, not t h e new Clapton album we've all been waiting for, but pretty good. The first couple of times I heard it, I was sure I'd hate it. Duane Allman turned down an offer to tour with the group, and Bobby Whitlock makes no effort Cia pton may not be God, but he'll do in a pinch to compensate for the missing lead guitar by improvising a lit- tle on keyboards. Instead, he plays incredibly simple rhythm parts, and I expected the album to suffer as a result. There are also some just plain dumb moves on the album. There's an utter-. lv worthless drum solo in "Let It Rain" that lasts about five min- "tes; Whitlock plays piano on "Presence of the Lord" - a hymn, for Chrissake! - instead of org9n. And, on "Tell t h e Truth," the band absurdly re- Deats the bridge, whose only finction is to build a little ten- sion before the chorus, about 50 times while Clanton improvises. Despite all these blunders, I found myself liking the album about the third time around. In Concert has a raw vitality to it that was totally absent from the restrained vrecision of E r i c Clacton and was pretty m u c h buried on Layla under the lush- ness of all those guitars. Here, Derek and the Dominos finally deliver what the band's name has always promised: a double shot of 100 proof rock 'n' roll. In fact, this album just about convinces me that, had Derek and the Dominos stayed together,, they could have given the Roll- ing Stones a run for their money as the greatest rock 'n roll band in the world. Like the Stones, Derek and the Dominos was basically just a plain old-fash- ioned rock 'n roll band, with a touch of blues thrown in f o r variety. And, again like t h e Stones, the Dominos had a uni- que refinement of that simple rock 'n roll base: in the case of the Stones, it's Jagger's lyrics and vocals; for the Dominos it was Clapton's guitar. And finally, as In Concert shows, the Dom- inos, like the Stones, was a great live band. Clapton is absolutely at his peak here, doing exactly what he does best: playing rock guitar with an unmatched combination of power and grace: explosively exciting yet also precisely controlled, wildly improvisational yet always staying within the song, constant- ly pushing it along and building it. The vocals, both Clapton's and Whitlock's, are just about per- fect - raw, hoarse, and ear- thy, and showing more spontane= ity than they ever have in the studio. Jim Gordon's busy drum- ming works beautifully, keeping everything moving at a frantic pace, and Carl Radle and Bobby Whitlock provide simple, b u t solid, rhythmic support for the group. To be sure, In Concert has its low points. Its highs, though, more than make -up for them. The chorus of "Let It Rain," with Clapton and Whitlock scream- ing out the vocals and Clapton's guitar frenetically working be- hind them, punctuating and ac- centing eloquently; Clapton and Whitlock trading hoarse shouts on the bridge on "Tell the Truth;" Clapton's guitar on "Why Does Love Got to be So Sad," as good as anything he's ever done: these moments, and others on the album, are good enough that I'm willing to predict that this is going to be the live album of the year. Hopefully, though, not the Clap-. ton album of the year. Joe Hickerson thing from ballads to spirituals. Partly it is because of a sense of expectation-what new songs will Joe be coming with this time? His involvement with folk mu- sic is quite a change for a man who began in physics. Joe had some interest in folklore and playing the guitar when he be- gan as an undergraduate at Ob- erlin, but he found that the years he spent there intensified his in- terest, not only in performing (which he did at Oberlin), but also in finding out about songs. In fact, by the time he gradu- ated he found that he wasn't much interested in physics and very interested in folklore. So he went on to Indiana University, which has the oldest folklore program in the country, to pick up his M.A. What's Joe's advice to anyone thinking about being a folklorist? Find the available courses in your university and take them. Moreover, see if your university has a folklore society or club and take advantage of it. Hicker- son believes in folklore societies; he founded Oberlin's. ARTS I am trying to bribe you with uncertainty, with danger, with defeat. ... forge luis borges That's mostly what you'll find if you commit your life to the millions in the Third World who cry out in the hunger of their hearts. That...and fulfill- ment too...with the COLUMBAN FATHERS Over 1,000 Catholic mission- ary priests at work mainly in the developing nations. We've been called by many names - "foreign dogs" .. ~hope-makers" . . "cc.pital- ist criminals"..."hard-nosed realists"... Read the whole story in our new FREE BOOKLET 9' 12 41 7' 81 11 3 The Morning After Progressive Rock Folk This Week in Sports Rhythm and Blues Progressive Rock Sign-off EMU-MAJC PRESENT J. MARK AL OR EVENTS COMMITTEE FS: MOND and FOCUS TICKETS ON SALE: $2.50, $3.50, $4.50 McKenny Union Ann Arbor Music Mart Huckleberry Party Store MAIL ORDERS: E M U Major EventsCommittee McKenny Union Ypsilanti, Mich. 48197 4 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS! INCLUDING -BEST PICTURE -BEST ACTOR -PAUL WINFIELD -BEST ACTRESS -CICELY TYSON & BEST SCREENPLAY Salvation Records is having a special on J. Geils, Mark Almond, and Focus albums for $3.29 each. 330 Maynard St. Ann Arbor-9-8:00 p.m. "ANN ARBOR'S OWN SALVATION" D)AIL3Y Al 7, 93 5G "SOUNDER" A Robert B.Radnitz/Martin Ritt Film "* * %... Sheer and unexpected terror! A tough, bitter little sleeper ofa movie about four times as good as you'd expect! Unbearable tension!" -Chicago Sun Times 1 Lst 2 Days 7:20 & :00 761-9'700 CULTUR \INLAR' SPECIAL CONTEST TIP - David Bromberg look-alike con- test in the Fishbowl at 7. ANAIS NIN-lecture and readings from her works at 8 in Rackham Lecture Hall. FILM-AA Film Co-op presents Peoples' Sweet Sweetback's Baadassss Song in Aud. A, Angell at 7, 9; Cinema Guild shows Mann's Winchester "73 in Arch. Aud. at 7, 9:05; New World Film Co-op presents Please Stand By, followed by discussion with filmmaker at 7, 9:30 in 'Aud. 3,.MLB; History 104 Film Series shows Satyjit Ray's Devi in 1528 CC Little at 7:30. CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL-"All Things That Are, Are Lights"; discussion - screening with filmmaker Stan Brakhage in Aud. 3, MLB at 3; Brakhage's Sexual Medi- tation Series and Act of Seeing With One's Own Eyes, followed by discussion with filmmaker, at 8:30 in Nat. Sci. Aud. MUSIC - Black Music series: Anderson White talks on "The Organization of Instrumental Ensembles in the Black Community;" Music School features John D. Lar- kin conducting the U Varsity Band at 8 at Hill. Wednesday and Thursday, February 28 and March 1 Department of Speech Communication and Theatre Student Laboratory Theatre PRESENTS SOME IMPROV FIGURES developed for performance with a new play WE CAN'T ALL BE HEROES by ALDEN FLANDERS ARENA THEATRE FRIEZE BUILDING Promptly at 4:10 or earlier if the theatre is filled ADMISSION FREE * TONIGHT. Midterm blahs set in? Escape for a little while and join us: Infnrmation DOUBLE FEATURE-STARTS THURSDAY Jack Nicholson, Bruce Dern, Ellen Burstyn in Bob Rafelson's "KING OF MARVIN GARDENS." Also Stacy Keach, Jeff Bridges, Susan Tyrell in John Huston's "FAT CITY.". Telsi NEW WORLD MEDIA presents * PLEASE STAND BY * starring DAVID PEEL as FREEMONT ZAPATA "THE ROBIN HOOD OF GUERRILLA TELEVISION" Columban Fathers St. ColumbansNeb.68056 Please send me a copy of your E booklet. No strings. MUSIC BY DAVID PEEL and THE LOWER EAST SIDE JOHN LEN NON and YOKO ONO ...... i 4 . . . .U1.fe WITH: Wendy Apple (Putne.y Swope) Alex Bennet (WPLJ FM) Roberts Blossom (Slaughterhouse-5) nn,;A D aI I I