Page 8-Sunday, April 2, 1978-The Michigan Daily eclipse (Continued from PageS) meshed electronics with a heavier, funkier rock sound. Then the sound wafted back to the traditional with Keith Jarrett, whose improvisational piano recitals are classified as "jazz" mostly because of his roots in the old Miles Davis band. One critic said that both Tyner and Jarrett avoid the electric piano "like they were afraid of electrocution." After the mellower sounds of Jarrett, the series again swung back to the fusionists, witi Weather Report, the most highly-regarded of today's jazz- rock groups (with the possible excep- lesser-known acts. "We try to keep it cheap," Grof- sorean said. "If you're paying seven bucks a ticket you can't afford to ex- periment." Grofsorean explains that season tickets also allow people room to ex- periment. By putting lesser-known ar- tists like Anthony Braxton into a season schedule with heavies like Chuck Mangione, the unknown can ride in on the coattails of the more popular jaz- zman. "Chuck Mangione doesn't need dates," Grofsorean said. "Anthony Braxton does." By the time the second Eclipse season got under way, the series was joined the Residential College in presenting a series of concert- workshops by lesser-known artists. The series, dedicated to the late Rahsaan Roland Kirk and held in the East Quad auditorium, is being billed "Bright Moments" (the title of a famous Kirk tune). To cut back on expenses to make the smaller series possible, Eclipse Jazz is spending less on advertising, using only a small, fold-out poster. - Eclipse operates under the auspices Qf the Major Events office, and is par- tially funded by a federal grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. "To do something in this town, you have to have a haul," says Grofsorean. "'And stage, the keyboard virtuoso reconfir- med that he did not need an amplified Rhodes piano to make beautiful music. His Spanish-flavorea improvisation showed enough of Corea's variance of temperment and meticulous attention to detail to reaffirm his command of the instrument, and the standing ovation audience still wonders why he ever left. With vibist Gary Burton in duet, Corea again showed not only his mastery for improvisation, but most impressive was his ability to mesh like a finely-tuned machine into what looked more like a symbiotic relationship than the free-wheeling improvisations of two musicians who had not played together for months. Eclipse's Grofsorean said that the Corea/Burton concert was one of the series' success stories. "We got Corea back into acoustic music," Grofsorean asserts. "We made him realize it was"fun and he could make some money doing it." And with his own rediscovered acoustic talents fully mastered, Corea returned to show his gratitude just this March in another acoustic duet, this time with fusion-renegade Herbie Han- cock. H ANCOCK STARTED the rush to jazz-rock with his 1973 Headhunters LP, which be- came a million seller. Next came his Man-Child record, where the formerly traditional jazz keyboardist succumbed to the commercial audience appeal of the heavy-handed fusion sound. On that album, Hancock handled five different synthesizers as well as his electric Rhodes piano. Hancock, 37, has recently "seen the light," and began his move back into the kind of jazz that made him famous. With saxophonist Wayne Shorter, trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, bassist Ron Carter and Tony Williams on drums, Hancock's VSOP group began touring in a string of sold-out concerts, pumping new life into traditional Han- cock standards like "Maiden Voyage." When Corea and Hancock came together at Hill in March, the last stop on their concert tour, it was like an inevitable meeting of the minds. And for Eclipse Jazz, the concert marked the watershed between a fledgling operation and a respected, well- attended jazz showcase. Like the Corea and Hancock re-birth, Eclipse Jazz had come of age. Likewise, thanks to Eclipse, and to the unknowns it has brought to town and the new musical modes it has helped introduce, Ann Arbor audiences have broadened their appreciation of the various spokes of the wheel that make up jazz. "People always play well when they come here," Grofsorean says. "I don't know what it is. When they come to Ann Arbor they get a little spark." l% EU Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Eclipsoids en masse: Those wonderful folks who bring you jazz in Ann Arbor. tion of Hancock's). And finally, the first season of Eclipse Jazz closed with avant garde artist Cecil Taylor, again a return to the acoustic sound, albeit in its most extravagant improvisational form. the traditional and the jazz- BY FLUCTUATING between rock styles, Eclipse man- aged to attract both of the warring factions of the jazz world. And with that successful balancing act, a new credo developed for the Eclipse series-to introduce Ann Arbor audien- ces to the many facets that make up jazz. Jazz pianist Count Basie once described jazz as a wheel, and all the various forms were the spokes. At one extreme is the tight acoustic jazz of Tyner and Taylor. At the other is the commercialized funk-sound of Les Mc- Cann. Eclipse tries to cover the entire spectrum, and discover some. new spokes of the wheel along the way. "Our functi6n essentially is to get people into the hall," said Eclipse's Grofsorean, "to convince people that it's worth a chance to experiment. Jazz has different sounds. You can have very avante garde sound or commer- cial sound. "If someone hears an avante garde concert and they don't like it, they don't have to sell jazz down the river. There are different kinds of concerts." Grofsorean said that one way Eclipse gets Ann Arbor jazz buffs to "open up" to unknown kinds of sounds is -by keeping the ticket prices low. Tickets for Eclipse Jazz concerts never cost over $4.50, and are usually $3.50 for the already beginning to look like a suc- cess. The season beginning in Septem- ber of 1976 again spanned the jazz spec- trum. It began with the acoustic duet of Chick Corea and Gary Burton and finished on a high note with the unique sound of the late Rahsaan Roland Kirk, who played on instruments of his own invention, like the manzello and stritch. The next season cut a similar path through the various facets of jazz, from the bop of old-timer Dizzy Gillespie to the folk-reggae-blues sound of Taj Mahal., The Fall, 1977 season began with the commercial fusion-oriented violin of Jean-Luc Ponty and blended into the jazz regulars, like Sonny Stitt. Eclipse also introduced audiences to the unheralded Dexter Gordon, for many years a Parisian expatriate, and the new jazz of the Art Ensemble of Chicago. F REE JAZZ workshops which accompany many of the concerts also help expose local artists and interested jazz listeners to improvisation sessions and historiographies. Both Sonny Rollins and Dexter Gordon held far- reaching discussions while the Art En- semble had a "jam session" for local musicians and a jazz lecture for the non-musically inclined. "A lot of musicians are educators," said Lee Berry of Eclipse. "A lot of those guys leap at the chance to have people hear what they've got to say." At least one jazzman, Archie Shepp, applied for a professorship. In addition to the regular five-concert schedule and workshops, Eclipse Jazz to have a haul you have to be affiliated with the University." The concert series usually loses money on the less popular artists like Braxton, and can barely break even on one of the jazz heavies like Ella Fitz- gerald, who charges some $15,000 for a performance. The federal grant offsets some of those losses, as well as big dollars made by big names like Chick Corea. Corea is an Eclipse Jazz tradition in himself. Known to Ann Arbor from his tour with his Return to Forever band, when he was delving into that enticing and lucrative new ballpark of jazz- fusion, Corea was "reborn" to his acoustic roots when he opened the 1976 Eclipse series in a duet concert with Gary Burton at Hill. That concert marked Corea's return to acoustic piano. Despite-what Corea claimed was an attack of nerves on ndaxCn-diksizine Co-editors 1 Iinside: Patty Montemurri Tom O'Connell Books Editor Brian Blanchard Cover Photo of Archie Shepp by Andy. Freeberg Krishna Books: Patti ,, consciousness Smith's poetry in Ann Arbor of communica Film: Monday tLion Oscar fe Supplement to The Michigan Dail) Ann Arbor, Michigan--Sunday, April 2, 1978 0