/ The Michigan Daily-Sunday, February 26, 1978-Page3 Jazz teamwork thrills Hill By ERIC SMITH ROM THE very beginning of Friday night's concert, the Woody Shaw Ensemble showed itself to be a swinging group of artists. They elec- trified a near-capacity crowd at Hill Auditorium with deft displays of team- work and flexibility, providing an ex- citing evening of incisive jazz music. The rhythm section, comprised of drummer Victor Lewis, bassist Clint Houston, and pianist Onaje Allen Gum- bs, was a beauty. Gumbs, who has recorded with Norman Conners as well as Shaw, proved to be a very adept drummer, supplying complex and con- sistent rhythms. With b is equipment, Lewis could beat out prominent tempos in compositions like "Love Dance" or an obscured beat in numbers like "The Legends of Kia." But Lewis cannot be understood outside the total textural design that he creates with Houston and Gumbs, for these three seem to form a trio all by them- selves. GUMB'S COMPOSITION "One Step Forward, Two Steps Backward" fur- nished a showcase for their talents. On his keyboard he pumped out rapid ar- peggios and chord progressions, leaving enough space for Houston's bass to comment. The bass lines were exceptionally clear and articulate; Houston and Gumbs managed to ease , r U J I tones quavered and trembled even as he was pursuing a melodic line. Jimmy Vass, who doubled on alto saxophone and flute, produced shrieking, in- voluted tones that complemented Jef- ferson very nicely. JEFFERSON ALSO played the clarinet, showing his versatility on "Woody and Boo." Steve Turre, who played on Shaw's LPs Moontrain and Love Dance, was the sole trombonist. His phrasing was sporadic, his modulation extensive, and his pitch control marvelous. My favorite tune of the evening, "A Theme for Maxine", from Shaw's for- thcoming album, was a good illustration of Shaw at work. A slow rhythm builds to a climax, then the brass enters with the theme. Shaw con- trasted soft-loud pitches fluctuating over wide intervals amid many shifts in movement and tempo. I wondered why Shaw did not do more solos. After more than thirty albums as a sideman and five as a leader, Shaw has developed a sharp, agile style of his own. In an interview, Shaw once repeated an early criticism Art Blakely had made: "Where are you going? Take your time. . . start down, way down, tell a story." For an encore, the group played "Sunbath" from Love Dance. The crowd agreed Woody Shaw can tell jazz stories very well indeed. their instruments into harmonic duet at one moment and into a chase at the next. The effect was like hearing two old friends talking to one another. The ensemble's performance in- cluded a number of selections from their upcoming Columbia album Rosewood. The title song from this record reminded me of Herbie Han- cock's "maiden Voyage"; the brass chorus at the opening of each com- position is surely similar. But there the comparison stops. For one thing, Gum- bs isn't Hancock. And while "Rosewood" featured a moderate tem- po beneath prominent harmonies, the individual characters of the horns made it decidedly different. Carter Jefferson lent his tenor saxophone a kind of biting quality. His Woody Shaw 'Wilderness poet' has mellowed By CINDY RHODES and DAVID VICTOR T HE LAST TIME Gary Snyder read at Ann Arbor, he whispered his poetry in the grip of laryngitis. But last Friday night, at Rackham, the celebrated poet gave quite a different reading. Snyder opened the evening with a lengthy introductory talk about his poetry and his lifestyle - a welcome change of format from the typical poetry reading in which the reader plunges directly into his poems. Called a "nature poet" by the critics, Snyder admitted that the term is vague, as no one knows what that's supposed to mean. He went on to say that when he was growing up he was taught that Wordsworth was a "nature poet". But Wordsworth wrote about "sheep and people - domesticated animals", not about Snyder's themes. Snyder iden- tified himself as a "wilderness poet", a term which incorporates both the con- cepts of "wild" and "free". From this he turned his attention to speaking at length on the places people choose to live, calling on his knowledge of Japan (where he studied Zen at the monastery in Kyoto from 1956 to 1964) and of his native California. This led the poet into a sort of apology-explanation for his present home in the back coun- try (the title of one of his books of poetry) in the foothills of California where he has lived for eight years. WITH SOME understanding and a sense of communion thus established, the audience was eased into a pleasan- tly casual evening's reading, despite the large size of the crowd. At first reading a few of his older poems such as "Song of the Taste" and a couple of selections from his book Turtle Island, Snyder gradually reduced his commen- tary until he entered into the body of newer poems that comprised the larger part of the reading. The first of these, "The Bath", a description of the poet and his family in a sauna, demon- strated Snyder's unique oral inter- pretation as each of the several men- tions of "is this a body?" was rendered with a different inflection. The poems ranged over all aspects of the poet's present experience and a wealth of knowledge, from building fences with bad wood to trucking (he said that he learned a lot from the Zen masters in Japan but nothing about trucks), from classical Chinese and Japanese to classical Greek and Roman. Throughout the night, the distance and melancholy silence so charac- teristic of much of Snyder's poetry was. not as prominent as one might expect. He seemed to want to show how he is moving from the moods set by earlier poems such as 'The Snow on Saddle Mountain" or "Four Poems for Robin" in the direction of a toying playfulness. SNYDER'S SELECTIONS touched on such topics as all the great figures of myth and history that would be barred admittance to an ice cream parlor bearing a "No shoes, no shirt, no ser- vice" sign, or a playful word manipulation of Caesar to Sherry. One three-line poem about mananita trees, "Shady Lady", was :sung. Even the anticipated Oriental influences were light, resulting in such odd combin- ations as "Two Haiku on the Subject of the Word Through" or a poem in the Chinese mode entitled "Talking Lade With the Governor About the Budget" (Snyder is on the California Arts Cou,- cil and is a friend of the governor cf California). There were some poems more typidA of Snyder's style. One of his older opt ing selections dealt with skinning a for. Among his last choices, one was poignantly reminiscent of the Gild Snyder - moody, quiet, and distant, describing the sound of antlers rattliak as two bucks engage in combat in datp- celike splendor beneath a full moon Still, the overall mood was light anti Snyder's final selection of the eveninO, a playful poem entitled "For All", writ an excellent conclusion. The poem cap- tured the tone of the evening withoit losing the nature of the poet in all facets. "I pledge allegiance," he reas. "to the soil of Turtle IsLand . . . with i terpenetration for all." Join the A rts Staff 'ii Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Jacob Miller, left, and Bizzer Hertzberg, right, appeared in the RC Players production of Brecht's "The Baby Elephant", part of an evening of ode-act plays presented February 23-25 in the Residential College Auditorium. RC one-acts lack acting talent All DOVER BOOKS. 40%o off ONE WEEK ONLY ,ebruary 27th thru March 4th ' -' By JOSII PECK ACCORDING TO Susy Elder, the di- rector of "Poetic Justice," the bulk of Residential College (RC) acting talent is involved in an upcoming production of Chekhov's The Seagull. This helps to explain the high school level of virtually all the performances in the three one-act plays presented by the RC-players last week. Elder's tempered direction and a moderately interesting script by RC graduate Tom DeKornfeld almost managed to save the first spectacle, Three One-Act Plays RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE AUDITORIUM 'Poetic Justice" ............. Tom DeKornfeld, directed by Susy Elder "The Carrot Speech" ........Stephen Friedman, directed by Walter Bilderback "The Baby Elephant"........... Bertolt Brecht, directed by Walter Bilderback "Poetic Justice". "Justice" relies on a single comedic technique, that of mixing period speech with contem- porary banter. But a play needs more than a single gimmick to work. Of the players, only Diane Duvall and possibly Bob Camuto should even con- sider making a career out of the. It all adds up!, G~ 6~& & 99QQ91 theater. Even these two, though, have long lapses of severe incredibility. Camuto has an annoying habit of gaping, awkwardly posed, while other actors speak their lines. He should stop listening so loudly. "THE CARROT Speech" is a short and sweet preamble to "The Baby Elephant" by Bertolt Brecht. In it, con- testant Michael Gold delivers a ram- bling discourse on Brepht's life and works to a game-show panel of "in- tellectuals." The panel judges Gold's erudition by raising and lowering huge paper carrots. The skit makes a pungent point about America's treatment of Brecht, as the judges frown and lower the carrots wheneverthe contestant refers to the less savory aspects of Brecht's pasts, such as his interlude with the Com- munists. The players' final effort of the evening was "The Baby Elephant." Apparently the company thought that this mess would constitute the show's highlight. Director Walter Bilderback seems to have gone on vacation while his actorshbrewed a boring, 45-minute vision of chaos. "Elephant", according to the direc- tor's notes, was supposed to convey its main message through a play-within-a- play. But the incomprehensibly mud- died hatchet job done on that part of the action directed attention to the more focused interaction between the playgoers (within-the-play) and the players. The effect was a very broad and obvious swipe at theatergoers and their insistence on being entertained at the sacrifice of genuine art. It did not sustain 45 minutes of monotony. Before the RC Players embark on another dramatic voyage, they should see what they have to work with. It is a crime to put complete novices on display in major roles, especially when enough acting talent exists to forge at least adequate presentations. Maybe next time. ULRICH'S BOOKS INC. 549 E. University 662-4403 , .- _7 f tit X L' -. k - 3 1 _, _;. I1 WONDERING What to eat tonight? BELL'S has great pizza & grinders! S. State & Packard-995-0232 open from I I a.m. to I a.m. FREE DELIVERIES from 4:30 p.m. FACi Down Pries are GoingUp: Take Advantage of the Low Sale Prices Now, and Save Yourself a Bundle of Cash. 4- . All COLORADO COMFORT JACKETS and PARKAS are Reduced In Price From $5 to $30 * " 50% off on ALL Children's u Sizes. WOOL SWEATERS, AND Remaining SKI WEAR a * $5 OFF any Colorado Comfort VEST. Assorted Vests in Polarguard, Holofil, and Down -Values to $50. Prices Start NOW at $19.95 0 SALE PRICES on TURTLENECKS. THERMAL