THE MICHIGAN DAILY S id E O NE usic in review Thursday, February 12, 1976 Page Five =h Weak lyrics mar I 'Inner Worlds' By STEPHEN HERSH JOHN McLAUGHLIN'S problem is that he has horrible taste in lyrics. As a guitar player, he's a maestro. Not only is his technique superb, but his style is the model for the current S generation of jazz guitarists. And as a composer andf " band leader, he's repeatedly demonstrated brilliance, pro- ducing lots of impeccable jazz recordings. But McLaughlin's new Mahavishnu Orchestra has pro- duced a slew of abysmaly bad songs, most of them suffer- ing from shoddy lyrics. AND IT'S this poor taste of his that spoils a good part 1 of his latest album, Inner Worlds (Columbia PC 33908). Several of the sngs are turned sour by their lyrics. The N music itself is good, but the words are so annoyingly satur- ated with syrupy guru-religion that they spoil the tunes. "Planetary Citizen" is a good eample. It's a rocking, up- tempo number by bassist Ralphe Armstrong which has the #x feel of a tough Motown recording. But the lyrics include > , such gems as: We're planetary citizens of the human race And we want to make the world a better place. Love is the answer to all the wars. When we love one another we can open the doors. And then there's "In My Life," a folky tune using acous- tic piano and 12-string guitar which sounds almost like ~ - a James Taylor recording. The instrumental backing is very pleasant, especially McLaughlin's long, rapid, guitar riffs. But the words ruin the effect. Several of the album's non-vocal numbers are very ef- fective. "All in the Family" starts off an exquisitely com- plex drum, conga and marimba passage, changing to a Latin-flavored jam. McLaughlin's solo is good but not spe acular.N "MILES OUT" features .a funky jam sandwiched be- 1j tween a couple of long stretches of feedback, which sound4 like the opening notes of Jimi Hendrix's Electric Ladyland. r McLaughlin plays lots of tasty chords, and plays his leads m .'h through something called a "'30' systems frequently shift g er." The solo sounds bizzarrely electronic. m a "Lotus Feet" has an Indian-style drone humming in the c background as Stu Goldberg plays gentle synthesizer leads. n h "Inner Worlds" is spotty, and only a few of its best mo- hi ments stck up with McLaughlin's best work. n C t " Ei SS r ' p 4... 4,. W PP C -]92 ................. ........ ...... ...................... .. .... . ..i4 Bette Miler's new album: Pleasant, quiet 'Depression' Bette Midler By JEFFREY SELBST BETTE MIDLER'S style has always been, to use that old word, eclectic. On her monu-' mental first album, she com- bined the Andrews Sisters, Leon Russell, John Prine, and the wack duo of Buzzy Linhart and Mark Klingman, to produce a snazzy, jazzy disc which alter- nately pined, sighed, laughed and sang. The Divine Miss M then came out withanalbum a year later, called simply, Bette Midler, on which appeared some more of her old campy numbers, such as "Uptown/Da Doo Run Run", (corresponding to "Leader of the Pack" on the first album), Glenn Miller's "In The Mood" (after the famous "Bugle Boy")r and the "Lullaby of Broad- way". But on her second album, too, were some arty songs, such as her breathy and moving, rendition of Kurt Weill's "Sura- of which on occasion seems almost us beautiful. Yet even Beatrice's ts, celestial majesty cannot save rd- a piece that too often appears ed to be a transcription of Verdi's rse Requiem. or- The wretched sonics of the al- ser bum (the result of an econom- so ically - minded live recording) nd, further hampers the Paradiso ge- Choruses. The composer may have also felt a bit unsure of re- the quality of his creation as he ing included a full minute's worth My of applause at the end as if to ous reaffirm its musical worth. to Such indulgence only strength- ich ens the irritation. ure INCLUDED with the Chorus- HAR UTINO'S CHOR USES.- baya Johnny", Hoagy Carmi- "Superstar," from her first al-I chael's "Skylark", and Dylan's bum, lacks . the vulnerability' "I Shall Be Released". captured here - and it is the only time she comes anywhere NOW, FOUR years after her near it on this disc. vinyl debut, Bette Midler has This leads right into "Samedi, come up with another album, { et Vendredi", a stylish little Songs for the New Depression. French cafe number, of which But who is she parodying and/ the lyrics were penned by Miss or venerating now? The only M. The song amounts to a co- number which lays a signifi- lossal snicker, a mix of her cant claim to the name of camp innate inferiority feelings and is "Stranger in the Night", and a thumb of her nose at her. de- let me tell you: if the song tractors, as she has undeniab- bored you when Sinatra did it, ily "made it." it'll irritate you when Midler Samedi et vendredi et lundi 'Paradiso' does it. She attempts an up-; tempo, contemporary black' sound with it, using her backup vocalists in a cross between bad Motown and gospel. Side Two is, not unusually, much more interesting than Side One. It opens with a plain- I tive and lovely ballad, "Shiver | Me Timbers", which rivals "Do ' You Want To Dance?" for sen- sual yet tender expressiveness. ._ hell es are three insipid composi- tions for acoustic instruments and tape by' Daniel Pinkham.; It is almost pathetic to experi- ence such innocent incompe-! tence from a usually interesting composer. Pinkham's new works show an embarrassing ig- norance of the mechanics and, potential of electronic music and a severely limited use of organ and English horn in asso- ciation with the tape. Suffice to say that one need, only listen to similar groupings by Davidovsky (Syncronism no. 3), Berio (Thema), or Druck- man (Animis I) for examples of quality. et dimanche Anouilh Belmondo, Fernadel et Bardot Montalban Ricardo la la la SHE IS listing off the celeb- rities who appear to her in her "cauchemars", her daydreams, and though we are given to un- derstand that she is the little girl worshipping the feet of the greats, we also know this: she is no longer the little girl, she is the STAR who hobnobs with, just these people. Which is not to say that this comes off conceited or snobby,! because it doesn't. It is quite cute and whimsical, though a1 song on Side One, "Mr. Rocke- feller" (lyrics by Miss M), is a; forced and unsuccessful attempt at replicating "Twisted" with all its, slightly off-the-wall im- plications. After all, no one, really calls up Nelson Rockefel-; ler to find out how he is. No' one cares. Me, says Midler, I care. But that's silly, and emerges as merely boring. The next song on the side,; "No Jestering", is a bouncy, up-tempo cross between AM: radio and calypso-reggae-r&b. The only refrain that is identi- fiable after listening is Midler's plaintive "Mummy, mummy, he loves your daughter / No Jestering", which makes one think that "Jestering" is some- what akin to "Jive Talking", or at least in spirit. What is Jes- tering, anyway? For that mat- ter, what's English? And why does Midler always have to play' coy? ENOUGH ranting. You will hear nothing but praise in this corner for Midler & Dylan's rendition of 'Buckets of Rain" on Side One. The song, from Dylan's Blood on the Tracks album, is performed here with- out that self-pitying mush that makes the quiet, lovely num- bers of Dylan so hard to take when he sings them. Yes, his odious squawking .vpice is evi- dent asshe sings this number in duet, but it took Midler to give this tune some life. When Midler plays a tough woman, she's fun to listen to; when she's a sensual panther, she's marvelous; 'when she's little girl-sexy, you just want to slap her. THERE ARE a couple of numbers which are more or less incomprehensible - includ- ing something called "Old Cape Cod" (and who knows why she did that), and the bridge be- tween "Shiver Me Timbers" and "Samedi et Vendredi", which consists of seagull noises. Is Bette Midler going Andy Warhol? All in all, Songs from the New Depression is a quiet, pleas- ant little album that is lacking in Midler's real strength: vital- ity. By KEVIN COUNIHAN F ATE IN his career and in the midst of the twelve-tone age, Arnold Schoenberg re- marked, "There is plenty of good music to be written in C major." Schoenberg correctly anticipated the eventual reac- eptance of tonality, but it was not until many years later that is premonition came to pass. George Rochberg, a promi- ent and continually exciting omposer, set many heads turn- ing with his neo-Classic Third String Quartet and with the Paradiso Choruses (Golden Crest NEC 114), Donald Martino appears to be following a simi- lar path. Representing 'the third and final act from his opera - in- rogress based on Dante's Di- vine Comedy, the Paradiso Choruses were designed to cor- respond to the Paradise section of the poem. Through a mixture of choruses, orchestra, and: ape, Martino tried for an in- spired dramatization of Dante's Paradise but, instead, produces a veritable inferno for the lis- tener, too often on par with the poem's seventh ring. THE ESSENTIAL problem is one of size. Scored for the 'Choruses" were an 83-piece rain' ulnS guitar his own Flamencan pieces such as Noches in Malaga (Nights in Malaga), a final arrangement played by the entire group. his fingers crossed and leaped con- tantly, drawing -out extrardi- nary tone color. The flamboyant encore - Flamencan variations written by he group - was certainly ro anticlimax as the tireless quar- et went to great lengths trying o outdo each other. Grinning and tapping their heels, each one nonchalantly performed liquid "rasgueados" (rapid strumming movements), arpeggios, one- handed flourishes and the "golpe" (tapping the wooden body of the guitar). orchestra, a mixed chorus 128 voices, a children's chor of 32 voices, twelve solois and ten channels of pre-reco ed tape. As with complicat machinery, a large and diver ensemble often present unf seen problems to a compos simply because there is much that can 'go wrong, ar in Martino's case, things lar ly fall apart. Dante has inspired the c ation of many works, rangi from Liszt's Dante Sympho to Berio's Visage. The obvi problem in setting any text music is finding a sound whi corresponds to the literate and thus illuminates it with( merely imitating its ambian Unfortunately, Martino's fa into the latter category. Through the utilization of t ed voices and children's ch Martino attempted to rece the angelic atmosphere of D te's journey to the Ten He ens. As the image of light the most dominant symbol the third section, special e phasis is placed on recurr passages of chorus and br ensemble but the final impr sion is largely one of acader program music. THE VOCAL writing, h ever, is imaginative and surely the work's most succe ful element. Throughout Choruses, Beatrice sings well - developed vocal I out ce. ap- oir, ate an- av- is in 'm- ing ass es- mic oV- is ess-- the a ine TONIGHT: A film by BERGMAN THURSDAY, FEB. 12 HAME (Ingar Bergman, 1969) SHAME AUD. A--7 & 9 War disrupts the lives of two musicians on their island home. This film chronoloaues the growing rif~t between Jan Rosenberq with his unheroic deternination to remain alive and his wife Eva as she maintains her humanity and strength. Described by one critic as a document just before extinction, SHAME is the third installment of a triloay which includes HOUR of THE WOLF and PERSONAL. Liv Ullman, Max von Sydow. Swedish with subtitles. In AU D. A, ANGELL HALL--$1.25 FRI: 8mm FESTIVAL 2nd Truffaut double feature! },.:?ira5,:4:.~..Riri;i:;v }:$ii::}}d:; '"f" ~<}3i''::r';:t.{'"V'::v:;{;ir: 'i.::......e.i" }."S~Y°.>aS ; }r:} i.~f.";,":.. '..".k. v..4,.... o:".. 4 :v.."":..:... " :J:.,, o. fln.jj.J T'":.%.'" y:.y . The Romeros.- first family of the ' By LOIS JOSIMOVICH ANY, MEMBER of the Ro- mero family playing alone1 would have been enough to ex- hilarate a classical guitar en-1 thusiast. The four of them to-1 gether, as they were at Power; Center on Monday night, was enough to bring the audience to' its feet in a standing ovation. 7 The Romeros, known as "Spain's first family of guitar,": are well worthy of that name. Father Celedonio Romero and his three sons, Celin, Pepe andA Angel, each revealed in concert that mark of the great guitarist1 -an iron grasp with the ap- pearance of infinite delicacy. Unlike many guitarists who limit themselves to a cer'.ain period or style of playing, their repertoire included Bach and Mozart, as well as 19th century Spanish music and the tradi- tional Spanish Flamenco. THE CONCERT opened with the "Concerto in D major forl Four Guitars" by Georg Philipp Telemann, transcribed by Cele- donio Romero. The four players brought out with fluid ease the counterpoint and repeatingg theme of the Baroque piece. This was followed b. an ab- solutely beautiful performance of the popular and rapid second Allegro movement of Bach's "Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G major." The piece, with its 3/4 rhythm 'and twelve-note themes, requires great evenness of tone and timing made espe- cially difficult on a plucked in- strument such as the guitar. The four-player sections of thej ish fortress palace in Granada. CELIN played a piquant con- temporary piece-a "Sonatina" by Federico Moreno-Torroba- that showed his skill in coaxing harmonic vibrations from every string. Pepe played an extreme- ly difficult transcription of "Variations on a Theme" from Mozart's "The Magic Flute," by Fernando Sor (an early 19th century composer). With stiff, though affectionate, competition from all three sons, Celedonio was still unbeatable in his graceful command cver the guitar. This became appar- ent in his rendition of works by Isaac Albeniz (a 19th century Spanish folk composer) and in h f: s t1 a ti ti a r CI '1 OVne of the most visually dazzling works in the history of film... stunningly cinematic it ravishes the A A- 11 - 1- eye and enthralls the ear... David Sterritt, Christian Science Monitor A RIDDLE: WHAT IS 2ff6 of "PLAZA SUITE" by NEIL SIMON 3 6 of "LOVERS AND OTHER STRANGERS" by RENEE TAYLOR 2 /6 of "You Know I Can't Hear You When The Water's Running" by ROBERT ANDERSON ANSWER: "THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE, 7/6 OF A PLAY" PP l' -1