The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 8, 1978-Page 5 Folk p tpoU S01 out By BILL O'CONNOR KEN BLOOM was tired. He'd beeni up late the night before, recording a disco balalaika part for a vodka commercial in Chicago. But fatigue wasn't part of his act, so he played a high-energy show instead for the Friday evening crowd at the Ark.- Unfortunately, the crowd was subdued. When faced with a sleepy audience, Bloom just gets crazier. Flailing his arms, mugging, and mouthing off, he looks like a Lily Tomlin character gone beserk on guitar, bagpipes, or some autoharp-like instrument. But the sounds that come out are exquisite. SITTING UNDER THE LIGHTS in his wrinkled, white dress shirt, his black hair looking neat but resistant to training, Bloom hardly looks like an ex-session man for Linda Ronstadt, The Monkees and Carol King, or like a former co- musician with three of The Eagles. But he swears he's done it all. Bloom's musical roots are exotic. He played clarinet and sax "on the Bar Mit- zvah circuit" for awhile, he says, as he launches into "Makin' Whoopee." He also worked in a country band, "Buffalo Crotch," singing numbers like "I've Got a Lunchbox Full of Broken Hearts." Rock-soul was his focus in other years, as evidenced by his rendition of a James Brown hit on dulcimer Friday night. "I love jazz, traditional, rock, and all kinds of stuff," says Bloom, "but im- provised music has always been my main interest." IN HIS ECLECTIC WANDERINGS, Bloom has picked up some strange in- struments for improvising. Zither, a Bavarian cross between autoharp and guitar, is particularly suited for jazz, he says. Presently, he is perfecting a solid-bodied variety with electric guitar hardware. Amplified Northumbrian bagpipes will be his next creation, with dials and controls built into the bellows. They too will be in stereo. ,ri graces Ark Admitting that the electric pipes are unconventional, Bloom replies, "After you've played an instrument for awhile, you start wanting to get more from it, sound-wise." BLOOM'S BEEN PLAYING the coffeehouse circuit for only four years, though he started performing professionally at age 16. Rumors of his musicianship and stage presence are reaching all corners of the folk scene - folkies can't believe this mild-mannered multi-instrumentalist is bringing old cocktail lounge favorites like "La Paloma" to the folk clubs. But on Friday night, Bloom graced the Ark with artful schlock, plus blues songs, Irish and English fiddle tunes, and Ukranian ballads (in the native tongue, no less). Bloom was not always a full-time musician extraordinare. He needed only one more semester to graduate from law school when he decided to make the big break to music. "I'D ALREADY PAID TUITION on my last semester in law," he says, "so I asked for a refund, and got it. I took the money and ran. It was enough to set me up in L.A., pay the rent, and eat." Soon after, he began working for Screen Gems as a demo man. "A drummer and I would go into the studio with all our instruments, and tape and retape a potential hit till it sounded like an orchestra." He also worked with Linda Ronstadt, along with Glenn Frey, Randy Meisner and Don Henley, soon-to-be the Eagles. Now the Eagles and Ronstadt have their gold records, and Bloom's finishing his first album for the Flying Fish label. Is Bloom looking for gold record success? "I don't hate money," he says. "I'd love to play to a large audience, and I think the electric zither will help. It's really versatile." "Still, I'm doing what I want to do. Life has been good to me. I can do quite well playing for commercials, and in studios, and in places like the Ark." Live Lo Night After Night Nils Lofgren A&M SP707 By MIKE TAYLOR M OST LIVE ALBUMS simply aren't worth the vinyl. Who wan- ts to hear a bunch of sloppily performed hits with applause thrown in here and there? Every now and then, however, a live album comes along that does what a live album should. By containing ex- panded versions of songs superior to the original studio tracks, the record shows that the artist can be a dynamic stage performer. Luckily, Nils Lofgren's Night After Night is such a live album. The double set collects many superlative Versions of former Grin leader Lofgren's best songs. The lesser numbers, from Lofgren's recent solo work, show that Lofgren could have had a great single album had he only exercised a little more restraint. Lofgren -is relaxed on all the tunes, but he still manages to conjure up the necessary intensity on certain songs. It's a powerful album, filled with a buoyant;vibrant, live atmosphere, Lofgren puts so much into each song that it's hard to believe he was able to do concerts like this "night after night." THE BAND supplement's Lofgren's ifP9 fgren LI vocals and lead guitar with energy to spare. Lofgren's brother Tom provides good guitar and organ, as well as back- ground vocals. Wornell "Sonic Prince" Jones contributes a solid bass, as well as background vocals. David Plat- shon's drumming is consistent, and Rev. Patrick Henderson (who used to play with Leon Russell) lends tremen- dous piano, organ, and background vo- cals. Lofgren and David Briggs have done a marvelous production job, as each of the instrumentalists can be heard dis- tinctly. This gives the album more dep- th than most live albums, or even Lof- gren's recent solo albums. Although Lofgren has made one good solo LP since Grin disbanded, Nils Lof- gren, his last two have been plagued by production problems and an apparently declining songwriting ability on the part of Lofgren. IN A LIVE SITUATION, "Cry Tough," "It's Not a Crime," and "In- cidentally ... It's Over" lose the cum- bersome production of the original ver- sions, coming off as good rockers. Not much can be done, however, for "Code of the Road" or "I Came to Dance." In fact, the expanded versions of these two songs (both last .about nine minutes) are hard to listen to all the way through. The live versions of old Grin songs and tunes from Nils Lofgren are breath- taking, however. The record opens with. a shot% "Take You To The Movies," a hits the mark soft, comic way to begin the album. When Lofgren comes in on electric guitar on "Back It Up," the album ex- plodes. This tune is Lofgren-at his live best. On Nils Lofgren, the song is over in two minutes. Here, Lofgren plays it for over three times that length, fully exploring each facet of the delightful rocker. Filled with exciting and varied instrumental breaks, the song ends with as much punch as it began. "KEITH DON'T GO," another ex- cellent tune from Lofgren's first solo ef- fort, starts with an interesting guitar progression that turns into a fuller, and struggle: This is a write-away letter I've got to mail it today Straight to my main inspirer/ Says'urgent from the U.S.A." It's got my heart inside it/ The postage in my soul Contains a message fronmillions/ Says "Keith don't go" "I'm going to calm things down for just a second - but we'll get back to rock'n'roll soon enough," says Lofgren as he begins "Like Rain," a gutsy Grin tune. Starting as a bluesy ballad, pun- ctuated by a scorching guitar solo, it de- velops into a melodic ballad, and then into'a fine rocker. A highlight is-Lofgren's striking treatment of the Carold King-Gerry Coffin song made famous in the mid- sixties by the Byrds, "Goin' Back." Al- most twice as long as the Nils Lofgren version, Lofgren for the first time taps the musical potential of this superb number. His piano playing is lovely. "Beggars Day" and "Moon Tears," two great Grin rockers, are performed with incredible verse. The former is reminiscent of the rough rock'n'roll of pre-Frampton Comes Alive days. The latter is a frenetic piano tune featuring tight playing by all the band members. With live records as good as Night Af- ter Night so unusual, this is quite a find. I can't think of a better introduction to Lofgren's lively music. Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Ken Bloom Fall 1978 COURSE MARTWi DEADLINES Winter 1 979 For consideration as 1978-79 offerings, Course Mort' proposals for Fall 1978 AND Winter 1979 must be completed and submitted by the deadline: FEBRUARY. 6, 1978. To;'COURSE MART COMMITTEE 2501 LS&A Building 764-6465 (Info and applications available now) more developed version of the original song. Lofgren's message to Rolling Stone Keith Richard seems ironic in light of Richard's current cocaine 'Wodehouse Playhouse'a bit of English fun By NINA SHISHKOFF T HE WORKS of P.G. Wodehouse are an acquired taste. Sme might even find his stories rather silly, considering they concern lords who play golf, and have nieces who envariably get en- gaged to A and B before realising they were made for C, forgetting that their uncle hates C because he thinks C tried to steal his prize pig and instead prefers that his niece marry B, although B isn't really B, he's D in disguise, trying to steal some valuable papers the lord picked up by mistake. Silly? Well, of course. For some mysterious reason, the United States is practically the only English-speaking country in the world never to have run a television series based on the stories of Wodehouse. Un- til now. Wodehouse Playhouse can be seen every Saturday night at 8:00 on Channel 56. Actually, the reasons for such a series' conspicuous absence aren't that mysterious. For one thing, the humor is British, whatever'that means, and Americans aren't traditionally sup- posed to be capable of understanding it. For another, in this decade of Comedy- with-a-message, what 'American wants to watch a comedy set around the turn of the century in a mythical English never-never land of lords and flappers? Does anyone care whether the heroine, who looks and talks like she had a perpetual cold, as well as snort- ing a lot, marries the hero, whose face resembles that of a dead mackeral? Who can sit through a show where the laugh-track explodes at the following exchange: "Rollo, elope with me!" "Elope with you? What about your mother?" "You don't want to elope with her, do you?" IN FACT, Wodehouse doesn't adapt at all well to television. Despite valiant attempts to use outdoor settings as much as possible, the sequences are static, like one-act plays set in the drawing room. People walk on camera, deliver their lines, and walk off again, just in time for the next character to do the same. The lines themselves are pure Wodehouse, and as such, sound absurd emenating from the mouths of normal human beings: "Oh, I say, it's terribly boring here. This place makes the House of Usher seem like Folies Bergere." The cast, however, isn't at all com- prised of normal people. Through almost supernatural casting, the characters look and sound exactly like people out of Wodehouse. The aforementioned snorter is Pauline Collins, who plays all the dippy Wode- house heroines. The mackeral is John Alderton. With these two, one can almost believe that the course of true love can be altered by the outcome of a single golf match. I say again, this is Wodehouse. You either take it with all its faults and bask all bumps-a-daisy in its giddy ridicu- lousness, or you change the channel to something like The Bob Newhart Show. Quite a choice, old chumps. MHT (for the benefit of t Care Action Center ' of Education) E AN EXHIBITION AND of fine art prints featuring the works of Chagoll, Dal v Gauguin. Van Gogh, Breughel, C Frankenthaler, Homer, Klee, Mir Magritte, Picasso, Rembrandt, F Toulouse-Lautrec, Wyeth, andc over 1200 different prints TWO LOCATIONS THE FISHBOWL w the Child r-School )SALE CHA RLAND SCHLESIN GER CRESSMAN prints &drawings january 6-29 i, Matisse, .esanne, o, Monet, Renoir, others. 'S L .. opening: jan.6, 7-9 HOURS Tu.4-Fr. ,1-6 Weekends. 12- 6 764 - 3234 Denver d I Want to Live1 John Denver RCA A../4, 12521. By PATRICIA FABRIZIO A FEW YEARS BACK, when ev- eryone was buying Winnebagos and munching granola, John Denver came into vogue with "Rocky Mountain High," which became the virtual an- them of the back-to-nature generation. Now, Denver has come with a very un- exceptional album entitled I Want to Live. Predictably, it covers the same theme as all of his post-"high" mate- rial: nature. Denver is stuck in neutral. Nothing is horrendous on this album, but it's nothing new. Thp Q .,lkim' z hit cinciiP "Ho n'. I 0 A 0 oes it agair tamer than its predecessor, if that,'s; possible. "Ripplin' Waters," another; non-original, is a fine song in all ways, using good images and a strong melody line. The title track is Denver's attempt at social commentary, and the trouble is he doesn't know how to go about it. The result comes off sounding like something fresh out of Sesame Street. The final song, "Druthers," finishes the 1, literally album on an optimistic note by putting Denver where he is most comfortable, as a country boy. This is a good reflection of the album as a whole; when Denver does what he does best, the music comes off as relaxed and artistic. When he forces too much "Ah, Nature!" upon us, the result is contrived, and lacks the "natural" beauty his songs try to reflect. FN FIRST FLOOR MICHIGAN UNION TlH MICIG.AN' " UNION LOBBY- Ever E:~ZEACHi JAMI*943~~r~ A- AUDITIONS for UAC Musket's WEST SIDE STORY pFINE QuULTY ~" FAST Ncv N