Sunday, November 1 9, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Th l Sundy, ovemer 9, 972 HE ICHIAN AIL Pf-Il Th III * * CINEMA I PRESENTS: * * SUNDAY 19 NOVEMBER 7:00-GOLDDIGGERS OF 1935 BUSBY BERKELEY. "The master of scenic prestidigitation." With Gloria Stuart, Dick Powell. 9:00-LA DOLCE VITA FEDERICO FELLINI presents "The Sweet Life" and the sad decay of Contemporary Rome. AUDITORIUM A * ONE DOLLAR Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK James Taylorf By MIKE HARPER JAMES TAYLOR played his sad songs for a large crowd at Crisler Arena Friday night, and t h e feeling of self-pity mixed w i t h forlorn romanticism was certain- ly one of deep satisfaction f o r most, if not all in attendance. Taylor opened the show by in- troducing his back-up group, the Section, who are now recording on their own for Warner Bros. records. His words - "prepare yourselves to have your e a r s cleaned out" - failed to ring true though, as the all-instrumen- tal band played long and 1 o u d without much apparent show of talent or inspiration. The band, comprised of respec- ted session men, Daniel "Kootch" Kortchmar, Russell Kunkel, Le- land Sklar and Craig Doerge, opened with a poorly-mixed num- ber, then proceeded into a fair- ly-jazzy version of Otis Red- ding's standard, "Sittin' On the Dock of the Bay." Kortchmar seemed somewhat more interest- ed in putting on a good show than playing his guitar, while bassist Sklar played overly loud and slightly (quite annoyingly) out-of-tune. Pianist Doerge's work was uneven, while Kunkel's drumming was adequate to good, depending primarily on the vol- ume put on his miked drums. Unfortunately, the band did not improve with the passing of their set. Their longest number, a vary- ing piece called "Mahudavah," sounded very interesting in a musical sense but what it lack- ed in its execution was enough to render the work ineffective. Generaly, the piece was musical- ly wasteful, as it lacked cohes- iveness. Each member played against and not with the others, creating free-form, jazz-based garbage along the lines of neo- classic Pink Floyd. In o t h e r words, sheer boredom. Another long piece, a series of intertwined numbers begin- ning with "Second Degree" and ending with "Zippo Dippo," sounded overly tinny with touch- es of Chicago, Santana and, once again, Pink Floyd thrown in for good measure. Somewhere in the middle of this long section of their set, was a good, thought- fully-short drum solo by Kunkel and an adequate percussive movement by Kortchmar, Kunkel and Doerge with Sklar holding down the bass chores. Other than these aforementioned mo- ments, the rest of the piece was too drawn-out and repetitive to maintain the audience's interest. Their best number was a dance tune called "Doin' the Meat- ball." The music was basic rock, and their performance of the song was straight-forward a n d showed signs of inspiration. So it would seem that the Section should stick to the more-stand- ard, less-complicated rockers, and leave the difficult time-con- sumers to bands with more tal- ent and desire. THE SECTION plays music which is, in itself, interesting; their performance of it is not. It's as simple as that. James Taylor opened his por- tion of. the show with his stan- dard opener, "Sweet Baby Jam- es." Accompanying himself on an electrified Gibson acoustic, he proceeded through about a half-dozen songs, including an excellent version of "Long Ago and Far Away." Also, Taylor got off an inspired version of JamesTaylor: lyrical craftsman #9E 2%#EN Ma.*.*.*.*. .. .%#2#0 WEE ##s.:......sm55 "Makin' Whoopee," a song made popular many, many years ago. Kortchmar joined Taylor on electrified dobro for "Lo and Behold." The dobro added a "certain" necessary touch of ras- pyness and, as a result, the song was fuller-sounding and subse- quently better. Kunkel and Sk- lar then helped out on a couple of songs, including Taylor's lyri- cal "Something" from the Ap- ple album. Taylor's reading of the song lacked the feeling of earlier performances, but it was nonetheless full and pretty. Two Taylor classics received slight, jazz-improved rework- ings, "Sunny Skies" and Carole King's "You've Got a Friend." "Sunny Skies" was somewhat lost in all the "trimmings," while Taylor's hit single fared some- what better, as it was more go than show. Taylor showed some energy in an excellent version of "Caro- lina On My Mind," certainly one of the two or three best songs of his set. He then proved himself a fine guitarist on an instrument- al piece called "Instrumental No. 2." Kortchmar and Taylor trad- ed licks, with Taylor appearing to be the most impressive guitar- ist of the two. A LARGE PORTION of T a y- lor's set was given over to elec- tric numbers employing the en- tire Section band and the ar- tist, and, in most cases, t h e 1. performer was lost amid much musical static electricity. "Chili Dog" was cluttered with too much piano and a seemingly slop- py arrangement. "Country Road," one of Taylor's more-direct, ly- rical songs, was completely rap- ed by a muddled, loud arrange- ment; the volume of the drums and bass kept forcing the lyrics into an uncomfortable position of subordinance. A long and complicated piece, titled simply "Hymn," from the new album, One Man Dog, lack- ed the sincerity of Taylor's oth- er songs. Complete with an un- easy sense of everincreasing in- ternal tension, "Hymn" suffered from too much rock volume and not enough sensible, lyrical full- ness. Adding the fact that a good deal of the piece was straight Section-performed in- strumental breaks, Taylor's min- iature "Thick as a Brick" w a s lucky to come off as well as it did. Taylor did a good version of Kortchmar's "Back On the Street Again," and an even bet- ter version of his own "Don't Mixing good farce with poor dram Let Me Be Lonely Tonight "Lonely" wasn't overly seni mental or sad, it was "merel pretty; the instruments almos quietly backing Taylor's hig pitched but crystal clear voic "Steam Roller Blues" clos out the regular show, and though Sklar and Doerge we inadequate, Taylor and Kortc mar more than made up the di ference, giving the song an ii spired and lively reading. Kor chmar was actually good, as I played some mean riffs to Ta lor's half-solid, half-improvise words. Taylor came back for one ei core which was, of course, "Fx and Rain." Performing with jui his guitar, he sang his muc swooned-over hit in the san tired and thin voice he had use all evening, playing the chorc and notes in the same technicall- proficient and moreover satisfi ing way as the twenty-odd song before "Fire and Rain." It's n surprising then, that both t h man and his song were soundi applauded . Quite frankly, as a on-stag performer, James Taylor is tc tally boring. He has no stag presence whatsoever, other tha that of tired and true troubadou out singing his sad songs jus one more time. Disregarding th man though, his "true" worth in his music, his words. F o James Taylor is a lyrical crafts man of the utmost skill -- l him stand alone on that meri w I r Folk duo create O ! intimacy at the Ark By LORRE WIEDLICH that are sensitive and out of Friday night was one of those the ordinary: a Bob Colter song eautiful evenings that make the about Robin Hood's dying rk special to those of us who thoughts, the werewolf song "The > there regularly. Guy Carawan Greasly Bride," and the much- id Ed Trickett established an requested "Jon Hinnert," which ny performer-audience gap. Ed sang while accompanying Carawan and Trickett, both himself on hammered dulcimer. ng established as important Guy Carawan was probably grformers and interpreters of new to this audience, since he rk music, came together to re- hasn't performed here for some r e a t e an evening singing years. Like Ed, he is a man who ound a campfire two years ago prefers to make music with oth- the FoxaHollow Folk Festival. er people rather than to claim Ed Trickett is one of the fin- the spotlight for himself. He re- t folksingers to frequent the vived songs popular years ago n Arbor area. His finger pick- during the folk boom. This was g is expert and tasteful, and the spirit of the evening: Ed in- has a knack for finding songs troduced one song with the com- ment, "I feel an old favorite coming on." Guy played a variety of instru- ments, but his banjo tunes were particularly delightful, musical- ly and lyrically: Love it is a teasing thing Shaped just like a lizard. Crawls up and down your spine And nibbles at your gizzard. The songs the two men sang together probably came nearest to recreating that long ago Fox Hollow evening. Their harmonies were simple and effective, their guitar parts perfectly matched, and neither tried to dominate the other. Ed's hammered dul- cimer is always well received by Ann Arbor audiences, and the hammer and frail duets were one of the highpoints of the eve- ning. A R T S By TONY CECERE "Sister Angelica", opera in one act by Giacomo Puccini taken from the operatic trilogy 'Trittico". Libretto by G. Forzano. "Angelique", a farce in 1 act by Jacques Ibert with words by Nino. English texts by Herbert Win- ters and Ezra Rachlin, respectively. Texts revised by Josef Blatt. Josef Blatt, Musical Director and Conduc- tor. Ralph Herbert, Stage Director. Lighting by Curt Osterman, Stage Design by Alice Crawford. At Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, November 17- 20, 21, 1972 at 8 pm. This fall's opera production was an unorthodox double bill, combining a delightful farce by Ibert with a dreadfully boring one act nothing by Puccini. The two works presented fortunate- ly had nothing to do with one another, save the divine affecta- tion of the titles. The entire eve- ning was a showcase of disparate extremes with the intermission as the dividing line between the land of urbane wit and the sea of mediocrity. "Sister Angelica," despite the excellent Puccini score and the equally excellent musical per- formance, was a tedious and ov- erbearing exercise in dramatic morality. With the exception of the confused stage movements of too many nuns on a miniscule stage, the production was good. The quality of the singing was impeccable, as was the quality of the orchestra's performance. Kim Krajewski was a fine Angelica and Pat Deckert was a perfectly pretentious Princess. This was, unfortunately, little compensation for the slow pace and namby - pamby quality of the libretto. After all, an opera with an en- tirely female cast and only one character not dressed in a nun's habit has three strikes against it before it even nears the thea- tre. The plot of "Sister Angelica" is fairly simple when compared to most of Puccini's operas. Sis- ter Angelica enters a convent to atone for the sin of (sic) hav- ing an illegitimate child. She hears nothing from the outside world until seven years hence, when her aunt the Princess visits her. The Princess informs her her son's death and asks An gelica to relinquish all rights t her family's fortune. Angelica consents only after a complet breakdown and then commit suicide, finally realizing tha suicide too is a sin. She prays t the Holy Virgin for forgivenes and dies assured of salvation. Fortunately for the audience "Angelique" was the total anti thesis of "Sister Angelica." Her again the production was, excel lent - the difference was tha there was so much more to wor with in the Ibert. Ashley Putmai was an exquisite bitch in thi role of "Angelique." Boniface her henpecked husband, wa well portrayed by Bruce Hall an< Edwin Toliver was uproarious)3 funny as the gawky African King The story of "Angelique" il typical of the urbane Gallic wi found in Ibert's music. Angeliqu is such a nuisance that her har ried spouse Boniface and hi friend Charlot decide to sell hea to an unsuspecting tourist. Char lot deceives the beautiful bu bitchy Angelique into acceptin the plan, but things run amok un til Boniface says to Angelique "The Devil take'you!" The devi appears and carries her away only to return her because sh has made a mess out of Hell. "Angelique" was a sheer de light. I guffawed and laughe for the entire length of the farce Special credit must be given tC the orchestra for their superio handling of the knotty Iber score. The sets were charmin and the lighting (as it was it "Sister Angelica") was done with extreme good taste. Fortunately, the ,diction It "Angelique" was much bettei than the diction in "Sister An gelica". There were spots where the orchestra was too loud fox the singers in the Ibert, but these were few in number. How ironic it is that "Angelique," an ir- reverent farce, should be the sal. vation of a banal opera dealing with contrition and confession. , 7he ~ceite tonight 6:00 4 News 7 Movie "Is Paris Burning?" (French- U.S.; 1966) 9 UFO 50 Star Trek 6:30 4 NBC News 7:00 2 TV 2 Reports 4 George Pierrot 9 Tom Jones 50 Lawrence Welk 56 Art Auction Continues 7:30 4 World of Disney 8:00 2 M*A*S*H See LISTINGS, Page 8 SUNDAY and MONDAY- QUARTER NIGHTS (BEER and WINE) I. ........... . . .. HOUSING OFFICE In Residence Staff Application Forms for 1973-74 Academic Year Available Starting November 21, 1972 in Ms. Charlene Coady's Office 3011 S.A.B. FROM 8:00 A.M.-12:30 P.M. & 1:30 P.M.-5:00 P.M. MONDAY-FRIDAY POSITIONS INCLUDE- RESIDENT DIRECTOR, ASSISTANT RESIDENT DIRECTOR, RESIDENT ADVISOR, RESIDENT FELLOW & HEAD LIBRARIAN Advisory positions generally require upperclass status for the CUIL'URE CAI'WINAR FILMS - Cinema Guild shows Lubitsch's Ninotchka toniglh at 7, 9:05, Arch. Aud.; Cinema II shows Berkeley's Gol Digers of 1935 tonight at 7 and Fellini's Lo Dolce Vit tonight at 9, Aud A; Cinema Guild shows Brown's Th Eagle tomorrow night at 7, 9:05, Arch. Aud.; Psych. 1T Film Series features The Sixties; Afrikaner tomorroC afternoon at 4, UGLI Multipurpose room. SCHOOL OF MUSIC - Ellistine Perkins Lewis, soprano, thi afternoon at 4:30, SM Recital Hall; Opera: Puccini' Sister Angelica; Ibert's Angelique tomorrow night-at Mendelssohn; Violin Student Recital tomorrow night a 8, SM Recital Hall. MUSIC-Handel's Judas Maccabaeus will be presented thi afternoon at 2:30 at the First Presbyterian Church (191] Washtenaw). Donald Bryant will conduct the 50-voicc choir and 30-member orchestra from the Harpischord. 4 Performances Dec. 2 and,3 ., n. . unnirfn uni i suo nnnnu