Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY MAGAZINE THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY MAGAZINE March 27, M17 March 27, I W7 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAE MAGAZINE L appenings. events and entertainment week of Mar. 27-Apr'. 2. Toward a new musi Consisani ib the rading svs/em tfudents have been indoctrinatd in, the films hae been as:s.iud approfriae let- ter nrades ranain- from A+ to E. sund aV CINEMA And Now My Love - (Cinema 11, Aud. A, 7 & 9) - Claude Leouch, who'scored with the romantic A Man and A Woman, directed this airborne love story con- cerning an ex-con and a bored, rich. Up the River and Judge Priest - (Ann Arbor Film Co-opt MLB 4 7 & 9 respec- tively) - Yet another John Ford douje bill from the 1930's. Up the River, a 1930 release, features Spencer Tracy's film debut in a comedy about two convicts (the other played by Hnimphrey Bogart) and their unique way of handling the prison blues. Will Rogers excels in a tragicomic portraval of a Kentucky judge in Ford's Judge Priest, a funny and stirrina film that was later reworked into Ford's The Sun Shines Bright, which was screened last Sunday. Early Spring - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. 7 & 9) - A 1956 Japanese film about the hopes and desperation of a white collar worker. Subtitled. B. Immoral Tales - (Mediatrics, Nat. Sci 7. 8:30, 10) - A slick, soft core pornorama of the Victorian era, laden with elenentarv symbolism and se' f-con- sciously arty cinematography. BARS Anchor Inn - M'iggsy $2 cover. Ark Coffee House - Frank Wakefield (mandolin). $3. Blue Froge - Sam Sanders & Visions, $2 cover $1.50 for students. Casa Nova - John Brown & George Mallory. no cover. Del Rio - Free jazz in the afternoon. Mr. Flood's Party - Dick Siegel, no cover. Second Chance - Masquerade (rock), pitcher night, $1.50 cover, 1 for students. EVENTS Major Events - Rufus featuring Cha- ka Khan, also.,Donald Byrd & the Black- byrds, Crisler Arena, 8 p.m., reserved seats $7 and $6. Second Michigan Conference on Music Theory - Cady Music Room, Stearns Bldg., 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Degree Recital - Roderick Bieber, vio- lin: Recital Hall, 2 p.m. Trombone Students Recital--Cady Mu- sic Room, Stearns Bldg. University of Michigan Wind Ensemble and Symphony Band - H. Robert Rey- nolds, conductor: Hill Aud., 3 p.m. Degree Recital - Teresa Acevedo, pi- ano: Recital Hall 4 p.m. Degree Recital - David DeVoll, trom- bone: Recital Hall. 6 p.m. Opera- Mozart's Cosi Fan Tutte; Gus- tav Meier, conductor, Ralph Hderbert, stage director: Mendelssohn Theatre, all seats reserved, $4.50, 8 p.m. Degree Recital - Mark Wilson, double bass: Recital Hall, 8 p~m. Horn Students Recital - Cady Music Room, Stearns Bldg., 8 p.m. monday CINEMA Ikiru - (Human Development Center, MLB 3, 8 only) - In a recent interna- tional film critics poll, this film was vot- ed one of the all-time top 20. The film details the efforts of a terminally ill man to find meaning in his life, conveyed in a beautiful and artistic manner that high- lights the notion that it is death which gives life its meaning BARS Ann Arbor Inn - Shimmer, no cover. Blind Pig -- Boogie Woogie Red, $1 cover. Blue Frogge - Sam Sanders & Vis- ions, $2 cover, $1.50 for students. Casa Nova - John Brown & George Malhwy, no cover. Mr. Flood's Party - Fred Small, no cover. Second Chance - Lighnin' (rock), te- quila night, $1.50 cover, $1 for students. EVENTS Degree Recital - John Murphy, DMA piano: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. tues day CINEMA A Touch of Zen - (Ann Arbor Film Co- op, Aud. A. 7 and 9) The ultimate Kung- Fu movie, making its Ann Arbor pre- miere. Hearts and Minds - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. 7 and 9:05) FREE. A must- see documentary, a searing portrait of the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam con- flict. BARS Anchor Inn - Lightnin' (rock), quarter night. Ann Arbor Inn - Shimmer, no cover. Blue Frogge - Sam Sanders & Visions, $2 cover, $1.50 for students. Casa Nova - John Brown & George Mallory, no cover. Mr. Flood's Party - Stu Zonder and Steve Sofferin, no cover. Second Chance - Flipper, women's night, $1.50 cover, $1 for students. EVENTS Robert Altman Film Festival - Molly Haskell, Village Voice film critic, 7:30, Rackham Aud., $1.25. Mahler's "Symphony No. 8", Thomas Hilbish, cond., Hill Aud., 8 p.m.; tickets $3, $1.50 for students, available at the Music School and Hill And. box office. Degree Recital - David Phillips, DMA piano: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. wedinesday CINEMA Early Documentaries-(Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. 7 and 9)-The first program, at 7, offers European documentaries, in- cluding the pioneer films of Lumiere, Vertov's Man With A Movie Camera, a forerunner of cinema verite, French painter Fernand Leger's Ballet Mechani- que, an amusing and subliminally sexual experimental film employing common household objects and machinery in mul- tiple exposures and wild close-ups, H20, an abstract film about ,water, and the English propagandist film, Night Mail. At 9. American documentaries, including The River, whose classic form has been imitated in countless, boring elementary school "educational" films and a portrait of photographer Edward Weston called The Photographer. B Zardoz - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Aud. A. 7 only) - A flawless and fascinating sci-fi film, distinguished by lush cinema- tography, inventive special effects, dra- matic intensity and stand-out perform- ances by Sean Connery and Charlotte Raupling. A plus. Night Moves - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Aud. A. 9 only) - An adult detective mo- vie about the parallel search for a miss- ing girl and a personal identity, featuring an unparalleled performance by Gene Hackman. A minus. BARS Anchor Inn - Lightnin', (rock), quar- ter night. Ann Arbor Inn - Shimmer, no cover. Ark Coffee House - Amateur Night, 75c.. Blind Pig - Danny Spencer and the Shock Patrol (jazz), $1 cover. Blue Frogge- Sam Sanders & George Mallory; no cover. Mr. Flood's Party - Satchel Paige, $1 cover. Second Chance - Flipper, $1.50 cover, soc for student.s EVENTS PTP - "Bingo", a play: Trueblood Theatre, 8 p.m., $2. Degree Recital - Joel Dulyea, tenor: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Student Recital - Douglas Walter and Phil Thompson, cond.: Cady Music Room, Room, Stearns Idg., 8 p.m thursday CINEMA Hearts and Minds - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, And. A. 7 and 9) -- See Tuesday's listings. The Women - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. 7 and 9) - A free-for-all catfight amongst the upper crust of the cocktail set. Love and Death - (PBC Films, Nat. Sci. 7 and 9) - Woody Allen meets the Russian novel, and the result is a polish- ed, amusing hyperbole of his zany, neu- rotic technique. Bplus BARS Anchor Inn - Jacobs Ladder, quarter ni ht. Ann Arbor Inn - Shimmer, no cover. Ark Coffee House - Dale Miller, $1.50. Casa Nova - John Brown and George Mallory, no cover. Mr. Flood's Party - Satchel Paige, $1 cover. Second Chance - Flipper, $1.50 cover, $1 for students, dorm and frat members free. EVENTS Musket - "Music Man", a play: Pow- er Center, 8 p.m., $3.50, $4.00, and $4.50. PTP - "Bingo": Trueblood Theatre, 8 p.m., $2. Collegiumn Musicum - Edward Par- mentier, director: Italian vocal and in- strumental music of the 17th Century: Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. University of Michigan Concert Band- Allan McMurray, cond.: Hill Aud. 8 p.m. Degree Recital - Elizabeth Stewart, double bass: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Degree Recital - Loretta Fensterma- cher, piano accompanying: Cady Music Room, Stearns Bldg;, 8 p.m. fr11iiday CINEMA And Now For Something Completely Different-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7, 8:45, and 10:30)-Who could resist these English jerks cutting-up in a full- length motion picture? I could, and you should, although Eric Idle is an appeal- ing little loony. D plus Monterey Pop - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. ?, 8:30 & 10) - A blast from the aao-drenched past with the late Jimi and Panis starring. Go bombed. A Thieves Like Us - (Cinema II, Aud. A, 7 and 9:15) - Shelley Duvall and Keith Carradine star in Robert Altman's affectionate reworking of They Live By Night, which weaves a love story and a crime drama into a seamless study of the beautiful, but bygone 1930's. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother - (Couzens Cafe, 8 & 10) - A ridiculous film with an all-star cast of such geeks as Gene Wilder, Marty Feldman and Madeline Kahn, who should wait patiently for a casting call from Pe- ter Bogdonavich. C minus Eiger Sanction - (Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. 7:30 & 9:45) - Clint Eastwood at his best as a mountain climbing political hit-man in a suspenseful, action-packed thriller. A BARS Anchor Inn - Jacobs Ladder, $2 cover. Ann Arbor Inn - Shimmer, no cover. Ark Coffee House - Original Sloth Band, $3. Blind Pig - Dave Workman Blues Band, $1 cover. Casa Nova - John Brown and George Mallory, no cover. Golden Falcon -George Overstreet & Friends (jazz), $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Satchel Paige, $1. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys (bluegrass), $1.50. Second Chance - Flipper, $2.50 cover, $2 for students. EVENTS Major Events - Harry Chapin: Hill Aud., 8 p.m., $6.50, $6.00, $5.50 and $4.50. PTP - "Bingo",: Trueblood Theatre, 8 p.m., $2. Musket - "Music Man": Power Cen- ter, 8 p.m., $3.50, $4.00, and $4.50. Lecture Demonstration - Louis Stout, French horn; "The I-orn: From the For- est to the Concert Hall": Rackham Ad., 8 Pm Degree Recital - Deborah Little, vio- loncello: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. saturdayl CINEMA Duck Soup and Animal Crackers - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Soup at 8:30, Crackers at 7 & 10) - An obvious feast for Marx Brothers fans. plus Stay Hungry = (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 3, 7 & 9) - Jeff Bridges pumping iron with Mr. Universe,- Arnold Schwarz- enegger, under the stern direction of anti-hero specialist Bob Rafelson, who put Jack Nicholson through his paces in Five Easy Pieces and King of Marvin Gardens. Sally Field, a sensous ex-Gid- get, sizzles in her long-awaited acting comeback. a minus King of Hearts - (Ann Arbor Film Co- op, MLB 4, 7 & 9) - Is there a soul left alive who hasn't seen. this film? You'll never catch Alan Bates in a more charm- ing and sympathetic role. A The Bride Wore Black - (Cinema if, Aud. A, 7 & 9) - Truffaut's homage to Hitchcock, The Graduate - (Mediatrics, Nat. Sci. 7:30 & 9:30) - Fine performances by Dustin Hoffman, Katharine Ross and Ann Bancroft save this classic "new genera- tion" film from becoming too ponderous. BARS Anchor Inn - Jacobs Ladder, $2 cover. Ann Arbor Inn - Shimmer, no cover. Ark Coffee House - Original Sloth Band, $. Blind Pig - Dave Workman Blues Band, $1. Casa Nova - John Brown and George Mallory, no cover. Golden Falcon - George Overstreet & Friends (jazz), $1. Mr. Flood's Party-Satchel Paige, $1. Pretzel Bell - RFD Boys (bluegrass), $1.50. -2Second Chance - Flipper, $2.50 cover, $2 for students. EVENTS PTP - "Bingo": Trueblood Theatre, 8 p.m., $2. Musket - "Music Man": Power Cen- ter, 8 p.m., $3.50, $4.00 and $4.50. Degree Recital - Heather Blackie clarinet: Recital Hall, 4 p.m. Degree Recital - Frederick Weldy, pi- ano: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Degree Recital - Brandon Cooper, trumpet: Recital Hall, 6 p.m. University of Michigan Men's Glee Club - Leonard Johnson, cond.;. music by Purcell, Wagner, Bruckner, Ives, Pou- lenc, Romberg, rel, and others: Hill Aud.,, 8 p.m. Reserved seats, $4 and $3, general admission, $2, available at Hill Aud. bo office. University of Michigan Wind Ensemble - H. Roberts Reynolds, cond.: Rackham And., 8 p.m. Degree Recital - Brenda Kee, DMA piaio:: Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Degree Recital - Michael Jordan, DMA baritone: Cady Music Room, Stearns Bldg., 8 p.m. Happenings filn reviews are written by David B. Keeps. Events and Bars are compiled 'by Jim Simson. By PAUL SHAPIRO OVER THE YEARS, jazz in America has taken many different forms, served many different functions. It has always been a music of tre- mendous growth and rapid change and there have always been men w h o s e creativity has given direction to that change. Anthony Brax- ton, who lectured and performed in Ann Arbor last weekend, is one of these men. Braxton's ideological approach to his music is one that is based on the works of a variety of composers and musicians: from Charlie Parker and John Coltrane to Antoine Webern and Igor Stravinsky. He is a member of the Association for the Advancement of C r e a t i v e Musicians (AACM). In his lecture last weekend he talked about these influences as well as tracing the roots of his music in terms of what he describes as, "the black aesthetic." To understand Braxton's creations one must trace the historical progression of jazz as it re- lates to the creative improvisor. Braxton's own account goes like this: "Before the work of Charlie Parker (one of the innovators of bebop) creative music in the black aesthetic-largely swing-had been viewed ps functional music having to do with what I call the bi-ational principle. "The bi-ational principle consists of a func- tional form and also a creative, i.e. music that one can dance to as well as music that has a creative thrust." In the post World War II years, the predomi- nantly functional aspects of swing music gave way to more creative forms. "Parker expanded this music. The transitional cycle dictated that bebop had to emerge, because it was a com- ment on the social asereesions of black people, i.e. their mie'ration from the South to the North and the fact that blacks were beginning to make Pa?! d Shahiro is a freqiten 'ontrdbft/or tIr the Sunday Magaz&le. Jazz redefines the Musical sentence inroads into American culture. What we call bebop has to do with the solidification of a crea- tive thrust which could take into account the changing meta-reality of creative music as it relates to the black aesthetic," Braxton explains. WITH THE EMERGENCE of such musicians as John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman and Albert Ayler, another re-evaluation of the structure of jazz took place. Braxton sees the progression from Parker to Ayler as a spiritual-emotional development as compared to W e s t e r n art-- music's concrete intellectual developments. Braxton and his co-workers at AACM have proven themselves to be a positive extension of their jazz and predecessors. They came together, as Braxton describes, "because we had to deal with the fact that if we wanted to continue the thrust of Coltrane, Ayler etc., and if we did not come together we would probably die-after all, we were starving together.'- Braxton has contributed to growth in jazz in a number of ways. First, he has expanded the instrumentation of the music (he plays a sa"- pranino saxophone, contrabass sax (6 feet tall and 95 lbs.), contrabass clarinet, bass clarinet, as well as flute and alto sax). Second, he has expanded the function of the composition in terms of its "language." For example, a sentence is constructed in a certain way and so is a musical composition. Braxton's work is expand- ing the possibilities of musical freedom while still containing a definite form and structure for his players to work from. In a sense, his DailI The innovat, Revolution in notation W+ZI y I -4 g.24 BASS PgRcussTO~I . i AWZ +z zmj~ 1, . - - - /T innovations might be ar veloping new forms in importantly, Braxton an have begun to re-disco "time zone" of jazz, fr Ellington through peopl man. IN HIS LATEST work, M u s i c 1976," Braxt from what might be I swing," to parade music sions for the creative ir the importance of imi "affirms the moment of or isn't." He goes on to s is the celebration of ac sense of the word." He s with this as "having to d what the principle means, what creativity time zones from Louis Ax Ayler junction, we see change in each state of see liberation in each p principle will expand. B cat like Ayler, he's play he's not even concerned cerned about tapping th creativity is supposed t zone seems to be a time ing to look at what they' they're looking at it. A ago, well, a c major s5 seventh man, if you di you don't get the gig." Beyond his innovatior ton is simply the best re playing technique is r1 emotion, and through A. himself with musicians t porting him in his mus Braxton. one gets the fi exploding with possibili might take you, and his varying from sheets of sc Anthony Braxton is a volved in his work, but breaking down the com: of creative music in all f most basic factor we ai West is the controlling el on us and taught to us- and cannot do. And if wf that juncture, we're not no, that's not true." / / -t--------- 4 The diagram above, which Braxton calls, "Cell structure and language design," conveys a specific set of instructions to his musicians. The numbers within the circles refer to a "lan- guage chart"-a numbered set of instructions to each individual musician. Through the con- nection and interaction of these cells of "longuage," the-25 members of Braxton's workshop create a cohesive piece of music. For example, the percussionist is given a language chart listing 10 instructions including: "snare drum roll," "play free," "mallet roll on cymbals," etc. These numbered instructions appear within the circles. The verticle lines are temporal structures, analogous to bar lines in standard music notation. The numbers above and below the circles refer to minutes of dura- tion of the phrase (plus indicating how long to play, minus noting how long to wait) and the lines connecting the circles refer to the instruments, as well as durations. The last event, No. 3, refers to a sheet of written music which all the musicians play in ensemble on Braxton's cue. So the diagram intergrates a strict structure and a sense of greative improvisation. -t