The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 23, 1977-Page 7 jEjJ sCSVS Prairie League disc lacks variety By PAT GALLAGHER Increasing 1 g For some reason, there seems to te much more in the way of artistic activ- ity going on in Ann Arbor this year than in years past. I base this judgment on empirical data; obviously no one counts the number of concerts and plays and divides by three or anything silly like that, but I have worked with the Daily's Arts and Living section for a number of years, and the paper tries to monitor these things fairly closely, for obvious reasons. Of course, in certain areas, events have markedly decreased. The Music School, for example, used to have a regular performing group composed of four of the school's professors, known as the Stanley Quartet. I was only able to hear one or two of their concerts before they disbanded - but I have vivid memories of a performance of the Brahms Piano Quartet in G min. which I will cherish forever. Since then have arisen the Faculty Chamber Concerts (one of which is to be performed Sun- day, 4 p.m., at Rackham Aud.), so I suppose the net loss is nil. But I have heard nothing of late of the Contem- porary Directions concerts (unfor- tunately) or the Wind Ensemble (fortu- nately). I love wind chamber music, but I had the misfortune of hearing one of the latter group's ill-prepared pre- sentations and swore them off forever. In the area of film, the offerings have lessened notably in the last few years. The old stalwart film societies carry on - Cinema Guild (which has been around since, I think, 1948), Cinema II, the Ann Arbor Film Co-op, and the UAC films, which seemed to have dropped their former name Mediatrics. i There was a time, a few years ago, when one could choose literally from at least two or three films nightly, and sometimes six or seven on weekends. Now there seems to be only one film most nights (from Cinema Guild) and the other aforementioned groups op- erate mainly on'weekends. Well, this is the 1970's, and ends must be Inet. The halcyon days were fun, though. Qn the whole, though, I think the number of events one may attend has gone up. The University Musical So eiety is presenting just as many of- ferings as ever; Ann Arbor Civic Thea- ter,,while no longer requiring the use of Mendelssohn Theater, is still quite ac- tive - and the number of road acts coming through town is on the up-and- op. A friend of mine remarked the other 40y, as I was $nuLig this over with him, that it oughtn't really to matter to me; I have classes and a great deal of schoolwork, and I can't attend more than an event a week, if that - why should I care? I really don't know, except to say that a booming cultural life is essential to the vitality of a community, even if one hasn't the time to attend everything, or even a small part. This is, I think, what the planners of downtown Detroit's fu- ture fail to realize. While RenCen is pleasant enough, to draw convention- eers and suburbanites to the city, one must have something for them to do on- ce they get there. Just the existence of a nightlife makes a city a more pleasant and exciting place to live whether dr not one is personally involved. ** * Trash certainly doesn't pull the crowds it used to, I .guess. A corres- pondent tells me that, at a recent show- itg of the 'venerable paean to Bad Taste, the film Pink Flamingos, there was an audience of somewhat less than fifty. Fifty people! For a film of this di- mension and importance! I was shock- ed. She pointed out that, at the beginning of the term, perhaps not too many stu- dents knew that it was being shown. t s activity Still, I remember when the film was fir- st shown in Ann Arbor four years ago, word-of-mouth excitement ran high, and while its initial showing wasn't a sellout, all subsequent showings were packed. The film is the story of a feud between Connie and Raymond Marble on one side, and the redoubtable Divine on the other, each vying for the title of the "Filthiest Person Alive."In it, a num- ber of incidental perversions are per- formed, en route to the assumption of this honor. The perversions were responsible for Flamingos' original notoriety, and yet they are actually a drag on, the tail of this kite - its point was never in what was shown, but rather how the film was made. Proceeding on the assumption that a) some movies are so bad that you ac- tually enjoy them, being forced to giggle attheir inept inanities, and b) a laugh is a laugh whether derived from intentional or unintentional junk, can- not one make a film that is SO BAD, deliberately, that one laughs? In Pink Flamingos, the script is stiff, the acting wooden, the editing choppy, the print quality cheap, the costuming ridiculous - in short, just like all those '50s grade-Z flicks that you've laughed at for years. The result is hilarious. In fact, I recall predicting that Divine, the transvestite hero/heroine (who prefers to be referred to as "shim"), would turn out, actually, to be a fine actor, should he/she pursue a serious career. I was right. Divine is played by a Roy Brocksmith, whose Broadway credits include Joseph Papp's short-lived The Leaf People in 1975 (for which he received fine notices); more recently, the much acclaimed Papp production of the Brecht-Weill Threepenny Opera, in which he performed the role of the Bal- lad-singer, who sings the famous open- ing number Mack the Knife (Moritat). Vindication is sweet. Rarely does an extraordinary live re- cording appear from ,the ranks of an average studio band. Pure Prairie League's newest effort, Takin' The State is no exception. Ever since the Bustin' Out album, made famous by the immortal Amie, Pure Prairie's music has steadily slid into monotony. The loss of Craig Fuller may account for most of their troubles. Fuller and the League produced dy- namic leads and steady vocals with a range of soothing to hard-driving. Ful- ler's departure came at the zenith of the band's creativity, directly after Bustin Out. Partially as a result of their sepa- ration, both the band and Fuller have fallen into mediocre musical straits. The album was recorded this past summer during five separate concerts across the east and midwest. As many live albums do, Takin' The Stage suf- fers from engineering and circumstan- tial difficulties. Distracting crowd noise disturbs the entrance to nearly every song. A Detroit columnist recently made an interesting observation about crowds: I always figure when an audience ap- plauds the first few bars of an artist's music, they really are applauding themselves for recognizing the song and disturbing the rest of us who want to enjoy every note. If so, Pure Prairie League certainly played to very vain audiences. Luckily, the notes obscured by the self-applaud- ers weren't much to miss. The actual recording of the album is barely above average. Volume levels often erase instrumental support, over- emphasizing vocals which should be un- deremphasized. Musical mistakes nor- mally edited in the studio are also dis- couraging to hear, although one can't place much blame on the mechanics for they only work with the quality of sound the band produces. So now how does one account for Pure Prairie League's troubles? It is disil- lusioning to see a group of capable musicians lose creativity, but this hap- pens constantly, and to every type of musical artist. Raw creativity is the basis of fine music. Creativity cannot emerge from restful minds, approaching their con- structions with indifference. It must come from a troubled mind, troubled not emotionally, but by the strain of perceiving infinite possibility, and molding it into expression. Without opening the mind to endless conbina- tion and novelty, fresh creation is stifled, and in its place comes a dis- guised, restatement of a previous or even stolen effort. The musical mind bogged by comfort does not search in- tensely for the new, rather conveniently extracts memories in camouflage, rationalizing the work as creativity. Once creative people stagnate as suc- cess' grip becomes more and more pro- found. Success, however is not the only demon. Countless other causes, most due to human frailties can weaken or destroy the creative mind. Obviously these forces are not beyond an indi- vidual's control and the powre of a per- son's creative energies may overcome the easy idleness of comfort. So far Pure Prairie League's energies have not exceeded their comfort. Pure Prairie's music has regressed into very basic themes. Two thirds of the material contained in Takin The Stage might just as well have been one song for the amount of variation pro- vided. Like a recurring dream, similar guitar arrangement fill out similar beats. Slower attempts are plagued bl weak vocals. Pure Prairie League des- perately needs a singer, and the need aches as they struggle through thei: classic, Amie. The lyrics sung are dull with few exceptions. The same api proaches to male-female relationships used for years, along with sentimental appeals about traveling and homeland' can no longer excite anyone who intent ly searches lyrical content for mess- ages. The band is missing its potential and it shows everywhere in their sound, Their endeavor does contain somb promise, however in small proportion to the whole. John -David Call's steel pedal and banjo are enthusiastic. His solos provide some relief. One song ero- titled I'll fix your flat tire, Merle is a funi tribute to country and Western star, Merle Haggard. These successes; though few, hold hope for the League' future. g LOUIS MALLE'S 1971 MURMER OF THE HEART A frank and humorous portrait of the coming-of-age of a young French boy. 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