The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 22,1977-Page 7 A Ramblers warble atArk By WENDY GOODMAN and MIKE TAYLOR "We all come from different back- grounds, and we've tried to open our music up so that all these different roots could form part of the organism we are," remarked Tommy Thomp- son of the Red Clay Ramblers after their Tuesday night performance. at the Ark coffee house. The Ramblers, consisting of Thompson, switching between banjo, guitar, and bass, Bill Hicks, bowing his fiddle, Mike Cra- ver, pounding and strumming his piano, guitar, and bass, Jim Watson on mandolin, guitar, and bass, and Jack Herrick, plucking, and blowing his bass, guitar, penny whistle, and trumpet, put on a fine show that drew from diverse sources of material, yet came across as a well-integrated It was amazing to watch the endless combinations of instruments being formed. From time to time, various band members would step out, leaving the remaining, ones to create simpler instrumental tex- tures. Herrick, the group's main bass player,' often appeared to be a dancing appendage of his instru- ment. Sometimes Watson strummed his mandolin so enthusiastically that it seemed like he was reaching into the sound hole. As with most good groups larger than one or two people, . . it was impossible to decide who to watch at times. It was like being at a three-ring circus. Each member of the band sings, allowing almost as many vocal arrangements as instrumental ones. They sang a few tunes a cappella, providing ample proof of their mar- velous harmonizing abilities. "Dan- iel Preyed" and Parting Hand, two old spirituals done without instru- ments, were among the most moving works of the evening. Although the band works as a unit, the individual members are not lost in it. The lead singing was shared by all of them, giving an individual tough to each of the numbers. In addition, each one took vocal solos from time to time. Craver per- formed a beautiful blues tune he believes has =Dixieland origins. "At least it came from a Dixieland book," he explained. His soft, soaring voice combined with his exquisite piano work to form one of the even- ing's highlights. "A tenth of our repertoire are our own songs," noted Thompson. The band's original tunes peppered the performance, adding spice to the evening. "I Got Plans," one of Thompson's songs, was an amusing and melodic effort. Its content could easily be compared to the lives of numerous Ann Arbor residents, and its chorus of When I grow up, I'm gonna settle down sums up the whole experience. The bulk of the group's material, however, consists of old American folk tunes such as The Yellow Rose of Texas and Deep Elum Blues. Champagne velvet for the folks on the hill - Blue Ribbon for the boys at the bar, written by a textile union organizer in the thirties, was a. spirited social commentary. Accom- panied only by two guitars, a Carter family song, Anchored in Love,. aroused warm feelings. Described by the band as, "typically nonsensical", and the Uncle Dave Macon tune called Rabbit in the Pea Patch was just that. "You look like pretty hard-nosed people. Try to be more sentimental," kidded Thompson before Stolen Love," the title track of one of the Ramblers' three albums. Craver's piano shone on Wahoo, Wahoo, Wahoo, a song with naughty lyrics. "We thought we'd do one in the language of the Beefalo, in memor- andum as it were. We can't translate Beefaloese, so we call it 'One Beefalo Special'," noted Herrick as the group launched onto another of Thompson's zany originals. The lyrics were a bit obscure, but the instrumentation was fantastic. Although Hicks wrote the words for Company Blues, Watson sang them. This song featured piano, bass,'and fiddle. Instrumentals popped up every now and then, giving the members chances to show off their instrumen- tal abilities. At one point, they played .a couple of fiddle tunes, Fire on the Mountain and Sugar in the Gourd. Later on, the band played a few Irish numbers, as well as a small collec- tion of jigs. "Ramblers is a traditional name for mountain bands like us, and the soil where we live is red," explained Thompson, -discussing the origin of the name of the Chapel Hill, North Carolina based group. "Chapel Hill is a music town," he continued. After playing together informally, like many other musicians in town, the . three original members of the band decided they could make it as a touring group. When the Ramblers left the stage, the crowd kept clapping. Obviously, an encore, a rare event at the Ark, was needed. The group came back to do a rousing version of Rockingham Cindy. This got the crowd even more z ext ited forcing a second encore. This time Herrick came on with his trumpet. What followed was one of, the evening's most outstanding mo-, ments. "Merchant Lunch", which will be the title of the Ramblers' next album on Flying Fish Records, is a beautifully orchestrated, cleverly written tour de force about a bar in Nashville, Tennessee, so sleazy that "it looked like half past midnight in the afterno'on," and a man who went there. It was a stylish end to a wonderful evening. It was also the Red Clay Ramblers' first appear- ance at the Ark. With luck, they'll be back again and again. THE ANN ARBOR FILM!CO-OPERATIVE is looking for energetic people with a strong in- terest in movies. Stop by one of our showings for details Bzzzzzzzzzz ... APP Olivia deHavilland appears in a scene from the soon-to-be-released epic thriller, The Swarm. Iggy, Foghat release new albums Live Foghat If you really enjoy Foghat's music, this new album may prove itself the piece de resistance. Foghat Live (Bearsville BRK 6971) is both new and exciting. The group has been known for years as a good heavy blues-rock band; this album underscores the fact by ad- dihg the live touch. Like Fleetwood Mac, Foghat is a British band popular in this country but virtually unknown in its native land. The group is an offshoot of the Savoy Brown band; guitarist Lonesome Dave and drummer Roger Earl are original members. ,Lead guitarist Rod Price, and bassist Craig MacGregor were ad- dedto the lineup. The hit single Fool for the City gets the disc off to a start. Crisp drumming and heavy bluesy guitar 'make this tune, as well as others, exciting to listen tQ. This particpilar so i js nded with an exceptionally long agir'solo by Price., aiome in myHand lbegs with a good drum-guitar combination and then everything seems-to blend into one long chord until the end. I Just Want to'Make Love To You be- gi.ns with a long, suspense-filled pre- lude, then the band explodes into the spirited melody. Both melody and prelude material come back together at the end. .Sounding very similar to the Aero- smith hit Train Kept A Rollin,' Honey Hush is a fast-paced rocker with a driv- ing rhythm guitar and an ear-splittig Price guitar solo with an abrupt ending, unlike all of the other tunes. 'Providing a great finale to this hour of live, driven music, the Fool for the City album smash hit Slow Ride with a deep, basslike lead guitar and a thump- inig drum that complements it. Everyone seemed to enjoy it. Foghat is one of the top heavy rock- blues bands today thanks to hits like I Just Want To Make Love, Fool for the City, and Slow Ride. This is one of the best live LPs I've listened to. The cuts are filling the FM airways in Detroit and as drummer Carl puts it, 'It's one of our most successful efforts ever." - TIM YAGLE REPLACING SYNTHETICS NEW YORK (AP)-Replacing syn- thetic fibers with cotton would require 4U million acres of cotton-growing land -- nearly the total arable land in Mtssissippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, Ala- bama and Texas, according to the Society of the Plastics Industry. -The essential role of manmade fibers such as nylons and polyesters becomes obvious when a theoretical attempt is made to replace them, .said Ralph L. Harding Jr., president of the industry group. Substituting wool for synthetic fi- bers would demand a billion acres of grazing land, equal to all the agricultur- al land in the UnitedStates, according to Harding. * ": * * ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S * SPELLBOUND * *GREGORY PECK thinks he's a Mental * * Hospital director, but he's not really *cr nn1I ..DRflANDC set him ~ Iggy POP' When Iggy Pop's old band, the Stooges, succumbed to the fast-paced, non-stop existence they flaunted, a live- ly and innovative force disappeared from the rock music scene. The Stooges were a crazy bunch of punks from the Ann Arbor area that played ear crunch- ing rock n' roll with an intensity almost unheard of before, or' heard since. The Stooges were among the forerunners of what is now called the "New Wave." Their primitive music and menacing lyrics attacked all that was considered proper in musical circles. Unfortunate- ly, the band members ended up in drug centers, the cemetery, and, in Iggy's case, a mental institution. However, Iggy has returned to the world of the vinyl disc. Earlier this year, Iggy released The Idiot, an album filled with intriguing avante-garde sounds. The album was a result of a col- laboration between Iggy and David. Bowie and his band, and was recorded' in 1976. Unfortunately, The Idiot lacked the energy, emotion, and reckless aban- don that made the Stooges so vital. Now, with his new Lust For Life, the thorazine-contrived music of The Idiot is abandoned for a gutsy, alcohol fueled mix of straight-forward rock n' roll that is much closer to the original spirit of the Stooges. Bowie is back again as producer, pi- anist, and background vocalist. His presence is best felt on tunes like "Some Weird Sin,'' a tune reminiscent of the hard rock music Bowie used to play earlier this decade. Soupy Sales' sons Hunt and Tony'- play competent drums and bass, and Carlos Alomar and Ricky Gardner, from Bowies' most recent band, play guitar with great fer- vor. Although the instrumentation is quite simple, the song structures in- corporate rapidly changing tempos and melodies to produce a record rich with variety. Iggy has a number of unusual per- spectives on the world, and his lyrics reflect this. Some of his songs, like "Fall In Love With Me," "Sixteen," and "Tonight" deal with love and in- terpersonal relations from a decidedly different point of view; others such as, "The Passenger," "Turn Blue," and "Neighborhood Threat" come across as visions of a madman. Pop's soul- searching vocals mark him as one of rock's intensest singer, and considering the band's quickly changing rhythmic patterns, Iggy sings with remarkable precision. The record opens with a flurry of frefizield drum beats, reminiscent of "She Has Funny Cars," an old Jef- ferson Airplane number. Iggy screeches of his unrequited love for all facets of today's technology: "I'm worth a million in prizes with ny torture film. drive a gto wear a uniform all on a government loan ... well, I'm just a modern guy. " Filled with ominous guitar chords and highlighted by Bowie's piano work, "Sixteen" is Iggy's version of a teen rock ballad. "Fall in Love With Me" uses keyboards to achieve a 'hypnotic effect on the listener. "The Passenger" replies on Pop's voice to convey a sim- ilar feeling. A surrealistic track vague- ly reminiscent of Antonioni's film of the same name, it is about someone who sees without ever being anyplace or do- ing anything. Iggy Pop, along with other luminar- ies such as Jonathan Richman, Lou Reed. Tom Verlaine, and Patti Smith, is able to transcend mediocrity in musi- cal writing and simultaneously offer a personal glimpse of a reality very dis- tinct from the overdosed "grooviness/guilt" trip to L.A. slick- ness, or'the depthless "down home" style of Southern boogie. Iggy's music exists in a world of it own, somewhere west of Detroit and north of oblivion. Lust For Life is a successful album. Successful in the fact that it comes close to rekindling the magically manic brand of rock n' roll the Stooges were once famous for. Iggy's maturation as an artist is also clearly evident on Lust For Life, although his growth is far from complete. It will undoubtedly be continued on his future recordings. One more piece of advice: kick out your roommate before listening to this record; Lust For Life begs to be played loud. -ALAN RUBENFELD NOW STUDENTS, LET'S TURN TO PAGE THREE William Holmes McGuffey, well- known educator and author of the fam- ous "McGuffey Readers," was born near Claysville, Pennsylvania, on Sep- tember 23, 1800. Eventual sales of his "Reader," popular as a standard text for almost a century in some areas, topped 122 million. McGuffey's birth- place is now part of Greenfield Village, Dearborn, Michigan. ~eG llpse .. s" 0 0 u 6i mc MASS MEETING FOR tUSRERS MICHIGAN UNION ASSEMBLY HALL THURSDAY, SEPT. 22 7:00 p.m. art & craft classes beginning Sept.26 Uu of m artists & craftsmen guild 2nd floor michigan union 763-4430 FIRST PROGRAM BROWNE 2 Introductions, 3 Cadenzas, and 6 Maps C4 ~* kriom'O 00 0 hkCoopr, 1,,001.1. c J Uo d .IrOwn1 ,Cariivrc SCHUMANN SCHUBERT Scott Y7ooCWC4Ve, yiotC; TO~rg 5kTwCdii4 etk i i Liederkreis (Eichendorff) antonaF minofornPanoDun Bo t 'Fanta si inm F minor for Piano Duet JAZZ "Chicago in the 1920s°