THE MICHIGAN DAILY Arts & Entertainment THEsMaCHAGAN DA1LY age Five Thursday, April||| 7, 1977 ||E| |||| ||| || P-g Fiv * Siegel By MIKE TAYLOR "THE EXPRESSION of emotion is not always a pleasant, pretty, painless thing. I'm a believer in intensity," states local musician Dick Siegel. Siegel's rich, authentic voice is the peifect instrument to convey the amus- ing incidents and deeply felt experi- ences that are his songs. His colorful melodies are frequently beautiful and always evocative of feelings and situa- tions, his lyrics filled with imagery and ewnotion. Eiegel's guitar and harmonica accrnrpaniments are as imaginative and spirited as his songs. Although he lists among his influences such diverse artists as Louis Jourdan, Rosco Holkum, Fiirray Lewis, Doc Bogs, Roosevelt Sykes, Elvis Presley, and Van Morrison. he doesn't really sound like any of them: in the last few ytits he has forged a musical and Kvr- ical style completely his own. In short, Dick Siegel is an immensely talented musician. AS A KID, Siegel had lessons in "lots of instruments", but the only one he really liked was self-taught-drums. Af- ter leaving his native New Jersey to become a University stident in 1967, he took iii, guitar. "I liked to sing and I wanted to have so-ethint to s ie with," he exnlained. The gvita led him to the traditional bl"'^ nrd folk music that nlavs a strong rolo in h .nUtrent msic. Ha ddn't write his first sone wt-1 9f*'.r he had finichad schelt ;and mnst of hs writine has been do'e in "the nast two or three veoro" HO WDOES SIEGEL write one of his marvelous songs? folk virtuoso See 'Tambourines' "The light songs come easily. The more intense the emotion, the more deep it is, the more difficult it is. To write about a painful experience you have to keep re-experiencing and re-experiencing it. I have the constant sense that this thing will never be written. It requires a great will to finish it. I try to avoid working on it." Siegel views his tunes as "vehicles for creative expression to . emulate through. It's like a dream. Most schools of thought relegate' the unconscious to the 'not real'. To me, the unconscious is very real and always operating." A COUPLE OF 'IMES a year, Siegel is the Thursday "local night" attraction at the Ark coffee house. He also plays at almost every Wednesday night Hoote- nanny at the Ark, and shows up from time to time at local spots such as Mr. Flood's Party. "It's always been good at the Ark. Mr. Flood's is a noisy bar. There've been times there when people at a table five feet ,away are busy yelling at each other. When I'm performing. for me to enjoy myself I need people to be at- tentive to the music. The music I play is not background music," Siegel com- ments. The last time Siegel played local night at the Ark, he came on in a $200 suit he had bonriht for $7 at a Kiwanis auction sale. An amsing, earthy effect, it set the tone for what was to be a wonderful performance. Siegel's songs are as di- verse as his manv experiences. "Gator" is a funny tale about a bully who makes all the neighborhood kids take off their clothes and dance in front of him. THE SONG Siegel wrote when he thought he might lose an eye, "Dear Sam", is a haunting ballad. "For Elisa" is an up-beat, Dylanish effort with a hilarious story line. Siegel's intense, powerful voice was at its best during "The Ballad of Eddie Cantor". "Just for You", a "little love song", is just that. Most fun of all, however, was "Hee Bee Bee Bee Boo", Siegel's contribution to the art of the nonsense song. Although Siegel is able to create ex- cellent melodies and moods with just his buitar and harmonica, he frequently plays with a couple of local musicians happily called the "Ministers of Melo- dy." Tom McGovern on flute and har- mony vocals and Bruce Dondero, on acoustic bass, provide a jazz counter- point to Siegel's folk and blues back- ground. When played by the Ministers of Melody, Siegel's sones are longer and more complexly developed. "I really en- joy performing by myself, but playing with Tom and Bruce is more musical and prettier", Siegel commented. WHAT WILL the future ' bring for Siegel? He'd like to move to a metropoli- tan area, perhaps somewhere in the East, where "I could make this a liv- i-g." He's in the process of making demos to send to record companies. His performing style may also be changing. "An advantage to electrifying your guitar is that you can play with other instruments and still be heard," he re- marks. In any case, Dick Siegel seems certain to go a long way. Catch him around town while you still can! By JOSHUA PECK SWEET GOSPELamusic and a close look at a "store- front church" in Harlem will' highlight the final PTP Guest? Artist production, Tambourines, to Glory, running April 13-17 at' the Power Center. The musical, co-sponsored by the Black Theater Program and the Professional Theatert Program, centersionaa versionl of the Faust theme as a ghetto hustler, Buddy Lomax, corrupts the morals of one of the two female ministers of the ghettoi church. Laura, the minister, is wooed by the slick Lomax into' selling bogus holy water, help-. mg to run a numbers ring, and1 other such unsavory enterprises.t Melodramatic and comic mo-I ments alternate as the playI builds to a violent climax, land-i ing Laura's innocent sister min.- ister in iail.t Langston Hughes, better known as a poet, wrote the book for Tambourines and collabor-j ated with Jobe Huntley on the< music. When the play opened, on Broadway in 1963, it was, treated harshly by the critics.T Von Washington, the director of ' the current production, believes that at that time, white theater- goers (including the critics) were too ignorant about black home and church life to appre- ciate the plot and flavor of the play. Since then, though, "musi- cals like Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope and My Arms Too Short to Box with God have given whites an understanding of the black experience, and particularly of the storefront church. Roots has helped too." Director Von Washington notes that the Broadway pro- duction of Tambourines to Glory used an orchestra, where- as only a piano and organ will be used in the current produc- tion. "I have a bone to pick with Broadway - they com- merialize everything. We're us- ing only a piano and organ be- cause those are the instruments that are really in the churches." There will be performances next Wednesday through Sun- day at 8 n.m. plus one at 2 on Sunday. Tickets are on sale at - the PTP Ticket Office in the Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby at the Michigan League. Dailv Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Dck Siegel r (JUDGEMENT AT NUREMBERG': UAC brings 'Magic' revue TH E UNIVERSITY DANCERS Present: April 8th & 9th at 8:00 P.M. TWO SEPARATE PROGRAMS n Ne1% .k STUDIO THEATRE A Dance Building SDonations:$1.00 POETRY READING WITH ROBERT CLIFFORD JIM ROBINS READING FROM THEIR WORKS THURS.. April 7-7:30 p.m. at GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (Corner of Oakland) REFRESHMENTS Ophuls' Il F By MICHAEL BROIDY and the Pity. Ophuls, in the new film, utilizes old documentary FILM FANS recently witnessed film which has been given new the Ann Arbor premiere of meaning with the addition of Marcel Ophuls' The Memory of new commentary or by being ! Justice, a decidedly important placed in a new context: old; work. material crosscut with new foot- The film takes its title from 1age (usually of the same loca- Plato and is, in fact, a search tion or person as they appear for the Platonic idea of justice. in the present); interviews with Most of Ophuls' almost five-hour both prominent and obscure peo- quest attempts to reconstruct ple who were involved with and reconsider the Nuremberg 1 these events, such as Dr. Ger- trials, leading to the question hard Rose, a medical officer which lies at the heart of the who was implicated in the in-! film: Who are we to judge ... human experiments performed what collective and individual on concentration camp inmates; guilt was in Nazi Germany? Albert Speer, a confidante of Were the Nuremberg prosecu- Hitler; Lord Shawcross, the tors blameless and do their con- British prosecutor at Nurem-! ceptions of guilt and justice ap- burg; Telford Taylor, the Amer- ply to day to Vietnam, Algeria, ican prosecutor, and members and Latin America? of Ophuls' own family including Ophuls doesn't provide any his wife Regine, who was once easy answers to these questions; a member of the Nazi youth in. perhaps there are none. Rather, Germany. his probing interviews, justa-' posed with old newsreel foot- The Memory of Justice is in- )robes i By ANDREW KURTZMAN V VEN IF you've never been a' fan of Broadwav music- exciting show that tries its best to show the versatility of mu- sical theatre at its best." really don't know what I ex- als it would be a mistake to Musical Magic is based on a pected," she remarks). We watch the then young woman pass up UAC's song-and-dance revue Lazarus conceived two walk past one of her captors, revue this weekend. Musical years ago, which will be touring and Ophuls freezes the frame, Magic chronicles over seven de- Poland and Russia this sum-t preserving this moment in his- cades of the best in musical mer as a sort of 'good will am-a tory. theatre in a sparkling and emi- bassador'. This weekend's show Other moments capture this nently enjoyable show. is produced by UAC's Jim mixture of horror and irony. Stern, who also produced last Dr.' Gerhard Rose (the medical semester's How To Succeed in officer implicated in the in- Musical Magic's talented and Business Without Really Try- human experiments) relates that energetic cast of fifteen will be ing. Music director Mike Stock- he was condemned to a life term presenting numbers from such ler and Choreographer Sherri in prison or appropriate places musicals as. A Chorus Line, Fenkel agree the show is bound in prionnmn.a phlprpit ore West Side Story, 110 in the to be entertaining: "The corn- of confinement. Ophuls then Shade, The Fantastiks and Bye pany is a very talented and cuts away from a tight close- Bye Birdie. There are no sets hardworking group. They can't ,up of Rose's face to reveal an or costumes. As director Scottmiss." attractive living room and, with Lazarus explains, "It isn't a another cut, an outside view of clumsy, pretentious production. Musical Magic will be pre- his beautiful house and garden; Musical Magic is an intimate, sentedtonight, in the .Union it is a devasting, yet quietly_.___- stated irony brought about by a filmmaker in total control of his medium. THE MEMORY of Justice is! GOSPELIMUISI rich with scenes such as those l just described, along with in-f by the sights and characters sweeping the entire spectrum of human!U.tOF M GOSPEL H( experience - victims, murder- OF CH ers, philosophers, ordinary "peo- (formerly Trotter House Choir) ple on the street." Truth and the meaning of justice are con- FRIDAY APRIL 8-12:15 tinually sought, but Ophuls nev- -15 pm er makes things easy - the spectator must write his or her ON THE DIAG own conclusion. And it is an un- IN FRONT OF THE GRAD LIBRARY forgettable experience. (in case of rain, in the Fishbowl) Sponsored by several campus ministries( )w 'Legs _ Choreographers for the con- cert are Barbara Baum, Caro- lyn Dorfman, Jan Engholm, "<'. Marguerite Harper, Cecile Keith, Susan Melton, Kathy Morse, and Julie Schneider. Tickets for the concert are the suggested donation of $1 at the1 N *h'* !door ..... Ballroom and Friday and Sat- urday nights in -the Union's Pendleton room. The show be- gins at 8 p.m. and admission is $2. at the door. As director La- zarus states, .Musical Magic is the perfect show for the person who is unfamiliar with Broad- way musicals, and a real treat for the connoisseur." UAC PRESENTS UAC PRESENTS ThoNciT, Performance: Pendelton Room APRIL 7-9 8:00p.m. TICKETS $2.00 on sale Michigan Union A COLLAGE OF SHOWSTOPPING NUMBERS FROM BROADWAY'S GREATEST MUSICALS!! cmn it idI- age, enlighten and lead the viewer to further thoughts and questions, about the vitally im- portant issues raised in this film. THE CINEMATIC TOOLS with which Ophuls conveys his ideas are, to say the least, prodigi- ous, surpassing even those util- ized in an earlier historical doc- ument by Ophuls, The Sorrowl undated with magic moments of irony, truth, and compassion. For example, Marie-Claude Vail- lany-Courtier, a survivor of Auschwitz, recalls her testimony at Nuremberg, accompanied by Ophuls' footage of Her testimony of some thirty years earlier. She realizes thirty years later that her Nazi captors looked like rather ordinary people ("I I t Senior dancers sh( Changes In Latitudes, { Changes In Attitudes / HavaaDamdreamin' IMMY BUFFETTf JIMMY BUFFET Changes- In latitudes Changes In Attitudes J"HE SENIORS of the Univer- sity Dance Department will appear in concert Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Stu- dio Theater at the new Dance Building, 1310 North University Court, behind the Central Cam- pus Recreation Building. The senior concert - "Legs' and guitar. Dances will be per- formed to music by Luciano Berio, Jeffrey Evans, Roland Hanna, Leo Ornstein, Jean- Pierre Rampal and Claude Bol- ling, and Gwendolyn Watson. Slides and sculpture will round out the two varied dance eve- nings. Jimmy B u f f ett and his Coral Over Easy" - will be an inter- arts experience for local dance' viewers. As the graduating pro- duction for eight students, the concert offers a completely dif- ferent program each evening, R I including a group piece by each choreographer as well as the performance of a solo. Featured in the dances will be kTTENTION STUDENTS: ESERVE EARLY AND SAVE $ MOVING CENTER T.M. Iand fte sdnge girl, kk poetry by Carolyn Clougn ,.ob- ert Frost, and Wendy Ellen Schacknow. Live musical accom- paniment will include percus- sionists - singly and in ensem- ble - the Collegiate Chorale Jain The Daily Arts Staff & /" /"' /"\ /" /" /"x/"\ r Do it in DEX, the big-bottomed shoes with sole. Do it with style, all clearly defined with savvy stitching on super-supple Nature Hide in the gentle colors of a hillside. Want to get talked about? Get yourself DEX-rated. Fast. DEXTER Reefer Band are back and with their CHANGES IN ATTITUDES the time has come for reefer madness. 66MAINMIC FOR MONEYtOA' AS I tea ()IIIs A PIRATE LOOKS AT fORTY NAUTCAL WHEELERS 99 540 E. 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