* THE MICHIGAN DAILY A rts & Enterta inm ent Thursday, March 18, 1976 Page Five Film festival inspires boredom s The 14th Annual Ann Arbor 16mm Film Festival opened' Tuesday night with a fairly mot-; ley collection of prints, rangingI from esoteric foolishness to; wild and innovative pieces. Some1 of the films were chai acterized' by their humor and good taste;i others fell flat. In any festival, if there are one or two good films a night, the festival is a success. On this year's competition, the juryI is still out. ** * The 9:00 p.m. showing in theI old Arch. Aud. was character- ized by whimsy and a discon- nected style. The films present-, ed attempted innovation inl story telling, but generally the! point was lost somewhere along E the way. The first offering, entitled' Creepy Blues, was an attempt at reproducing the effects of song form within the medium of animation. The sound track con- sisted of an original song, to which the movements of various' pieces: Paul Revere Is Here, by test explosions with a pathetict Mary Beams, and Ted Beck and sound track (IV, V, I bass tones Ken Finch's The Spirit of '76. I repeated ad inauseum). Paul Revere seemed to be a . training film for the young, as- Director (?) Bruce Conner; piring network documentarian. had not the decency to use his' The Spirit managed to present own footage (God forbid what its points with equal clarity, this thing would have lookedj greater sensitivity, and humor. like if he had), but lifted, -Jeff Selbst scratchy black-and-white U.S.: * * * A Army prints from the National For the most part, Tuesday's Archives. The film left one al- 11:00 p.m. showing represented most feeling as though Bikini experimental c i n e m a at its Atoll would be a more desirable. worst: an overly drawn-out, of- place to be during the screen- ten narcissistic, terribly boring, ing. and utterly pretentious collec- Gary Winter '75, a black-and- tion of images attempting to white effort by Dan Goldfarb, masquerade as art. was a haunting portrait of schi- There were two good films: zophrenia. The film depicted a No Breaks by Dan Manson, and rambling L e n n y Bruce-esque Pang by Bruce Nolte. Both monologue which first appeared films were satiric at the base, merely disjointed and unfunny, each deriving its humor from but later emerged as psychotic. the unexpected. In the first, we The words "Two weeks after were presented with a 464-foot- the completion of this film, Gary long loaf of bread (traced from was committed to a state hos- dough to sandwich), while in pital" at the end led to ,the; the. second, stop-action cliches dawning realization, and made' were paraded for foolish con- a. n terest either. Surface, an ab- the skin trade from the hookers' stract work by Nicholas Kan- 1 dau, intermingled water fluctu-1 ations with atonal music-not an especially original idea, but the film was slickly-made and en- joyable, with the liquid droplets{ assuming a kind of life of their own towards the end of thej work.1 Cream Soda, a documentary1 by Holly Dale, focused on the rituals of a Canadian sex par- lour. It presented a portrait of point of view which was in- teresting-, but just too dragged out and repetitive. More suc- cessful was Dispartes, a better- than-the-usual abstract film by Paul Brekke. The director blend- ed,a series of real and fantasy images into a study that was genuinely dramatic. In a fes- tival often dominated by eso- teric tedium,' Brekke's film was a pleasant exception to the rule. -Kim Potter Maia Muldaur Muldaur' s 'Harmon for sweet, captivatmi By KURT HARJU ON HER THIRD solo album Sweet Harmony (Warner, Bros. MS 2235), Maria Muldaur reasserts herself as one of con-E temporary music's foremost in- terpretive vocalists. She sings with such grace that one hard- ly notices that her approach is essentially unchanged since her initial success nearly three years ago. As a singer who freely adopts the styles and material of both the past and the present, Maria does not necessarily have to'be original to be creative, but it's crucial that she be very selec- tive. . Sweet Harmony shows that she still retains the eclectic imag- ination that can produce a col- lection as diverse as Smokey Robinson's "Sweet Harmony" and Neil Sedaka's "Sad Eyes", as well as old classics like Hoa- gy Carmichael's "R o c k in' Chair" and Harry Woods' "We Just Couldn't Say Goodbye". ' IT'S ON the strength of these choices that the ultimate value of this LP stands. Maria has al-r ready proven on her first two records that she is an unusual- ly-captivating vocalist who can make an old song sound fresh and alive. She has lost none of her ability to adapt to the par-I ticular demands of a new song, and so the only way of measur- ing her progress is by evaluat- ing the type of challenges shet takes on this time. As it turns out, Muldaur is not as daring or decidedly dif-' ferent as she has been in the past. She's toned down much of the sexual emphasis she ,dis- played openly on cuts like "Don't You Feel My Leg," and whereas previously she always balanced her LP's with equal amounts of slow and fast selec- tions, Sweet Harmony definite- ly reveals a perference for laid- back torch songs and ballads with which Muldaur can take her sweet time in unwinding. cal guitar on Wendy Waldman's "Wild Bird" is understated to perfection. The harmonies themselves are rich and sooth- ing and include a very special treat in the form of Hoagy Carmichael who joins Maria in reinterpreting his song, "Rock-' in' Chair". On the gospel tune, As An Eagle Stirreth In Her Nest",, Maria shows she can' still belt out a lyric with the best of them though her up- beat numbers suffered a little in that respect. Maria's message, is she has one, is that music and singing Refinedmi 4.. shapeson the screen were key-: tent. Daily Photo by TOM GOTTLIEB ed. But as the song is written NARCISSISM had its day in in ABA form, so too did the NRCISSIM had its h's I three films: Lainard Bush's shapes receive cyclical treat- Duramater,Pamela . Belding's menit. Thus, each musical re- Self Portrait, and Kevin Dole's' 1' frain carried with it a visual The Bitch Is Back. y m'anoan bes ut mfilmshall e consisted, and we - monotonous.shllete facts speak for~ STHE SHOW ING included themselves, of shots of a manj lying naked on, a bed fondling [ many films of little or no in- his penis, superimposed over 1 M- u si terst.One such was Roy Cl-' inane TV excerpts (ranging 1g muitsic =Mre'st.EE mer's 278, made up of shots of from Monty Hall to Howard K. moving automobiles in various Smith). No more can tastefully offer both the listener and the uninteresting, dull color config- be said. performer a fulfilling release. urations. Self Portrait contained mate- As she delivers the advice of In Preparation for the Feast, rial that may have meant some- the title cut, she goes straight Meryl Bronstein's paean to God thing to director Belding but: to the heart of the matter: knows what, exemplified the was totally irrelevant to the festival's preoccupation w i t h festival audience. The Bitch Is4 Stay in perfect tune lengthy, pointless works. This Back was the most engaging, In your unfamiliar song morsel consisted of scenes de- yet remained essentially a pixil- Make the world aware that picting different types of gross- lated home movie, or "What I You're still going strong. ness and brutality,Uand each Did On My Summer Vacation.": Whe sh ca dicovr iter dealt with meat. Understand- But lest you think that we~ When she can discover inter- I ably, this left the viewer dazed. have described the nadir of ex- esting material and match it Three Bean Salad, however, perimental cinema, there re- with a delivery on par with her. was a film of similar scope. Yet mains a fim which truly has to best work, it's proof enough that director C. Sempliner managed be seen (and endured) to be be- Maria still has something left to the affair with lightness, taste, lieved. It lasted 36 minutes, and say, and Sweet Harmony says' and good humor-thus proving in itself convinced these review-; it exceedingly well. that Feast's fault was not in its ers of the existence of hell. concept. Homage to Magritte suffered ENTITLED Crossroads, it was a"from a surfeit of length, yet also a dull, flatulent, idiotic, :su- si i iproved an interesting if rather; premely stupid, filched piece of slick offering. And the Bicen- crap. This sorry thing consisted 7 T 11 T 14 tennial was represented by two: of approximately 20 atom bomb SCIENCE FANTASY MARCH 05.Thousan by all the authors. FICTION- FESTIVAL 15-28 as of books greatest an untorgettabme imprSession. This film grew on you. Most of the rest merely grew tire- some. -Jeff Selbst and David Blonmquist The 7:00 p.m. segment con- tained no genuine clinkers, but few items of overwhelming in- POETRY READING with j TONY KL EIN reading from his poetry. THURSDAY, March 18-7:30 p.m. GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe Refreshments 8 p.m. Lecture-Thursday, March 18 "THE FIRDS AT ANCIENT EBLA" Professor David Noel Freedman You are cordially invited to attend the first public lecture in the U.S. on the finds of Tel Mardikh at ancient Ebla. This find may well be even more impor- tant than the Dead Sea Scrolls to Bib- lical Scholarship. Prof. David Noel Freedman recently re- turned from Rome where he was able to. view photographs of the cuneiform tab- lets that were found. at HILLEL-1429 Hill St. marks new Hll Lr By JOSHUA ROSENBAUM ing. Recorded live in June, 1975, at Bourbon Street, a noted jazz Jim Hall-Live (A&M SP-705) club in Toronto, the album, serv- is the culmination of Hall's es as a lesson in the art of jazz twenty-five year career as one improvisation. of the finest guitarists in jazz, On this record, he's joined by a career that has paralleled the two relatively unknown Canad- rise to prominence of his instru- ian musicians, Don Thompson ment. Originally relegated to the on bass, and Terry Clarke on rhythm section, buried under drums, both excellent perform- horns and reeds, it has since ers. Thompson, in particular, is emerged as one of the dominant an exceptional musician whose melodic instruments. nlaying compares favorably with But, unfortunately, something Ron Carter, Hall's previous bas- was lost in the guitar renais- sist. sance of the past decade. Virt- The trio relies on some well uosity has come to mean speed k n o w n standards: "Angel and vol'ime. Guitarists are mea- Eves", "I Hear A Rhapsody", sured by how many notes they "The Way You Look Tonight", can squeeze into a bar, or how Charlie Parker's "Scrapple niuch electronic gimmickry they From the Apple", and Thelonius can fuse onto their instruments. Monk's austere and beautiful Many have forgotten about the "Round Midnight". most inoortant qualities of mu- sic - craftsmanship, sensitiv- THOMPSON'S bass is a melo- ity, and soul. dious voice, capable of perform- Jim Hall is an exception ing agile and creative solos. University of Michigan School of Music Presents: UNIVERSITY DANCERS IN POWER CENTER i .j among contemporary guitarists. 1 Clarke proves to be a deft per- During his career with s u c h cussionist, one of those r a r e jazz luminaries as Sonny Rol- drummers who know how to lis- lins, Bill Evans, and Ron Car- ten. ter, he's waged a lonely cam- Listen to the way Hall a n d paign for lyricism and taste on Clarke play with the melody in &,itar. Hall has been one of the "Angel Eyes", the precisely in- few electric guitarists to ex- tonated duet in "Scrapple From nloit the instrument's potential the Apple", and Hall's f I e e t, for the subtleties of dynamics swinging solo is the same tune. and timbre. But he's never sac- Listen to the harmonizing in rificed those essential jazz qual- "Round Midnight", Clarke's ities of improvisation and swing. contrapuntal bass lines, and Hall's subtle shifts in. meter. Jim Hall-Live is Hall's most Buy Jim Hall-Live for a taste: recent release. It is outstand- I of what jazz can be. ...E. - - -. . -41 Part of this relaxed pace is due to the fact that the two stand-up, knock-down produc-1 tion' numbers she does attempt, "I Can't Stand It" and "Jon the Genrator", are simply not as effective as her classic ver-. sion of "I'm A Woman" or oth- ers of that nature. But she gives the majority of the songs aI gentle but thorough going-overj that especially enhances the title cut "Sweet Harmony", ','Rockin' Chair", and "We Just Couldn't Say Goodbye." 0F __. ___ i I 1 NOON LUNCHEON Homemade Soup and Sandwich 50c CLAIRE JEANNETTE Executive Director, The Women's Assembly: "Learn How to Affect Your Government" FRIDAY, MARCH 19 ot GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe IN KEEPING with the album title, the vocal work is the most appealing feature of the entire presentation. Maria's vocal is backed by a flute and a classi- Quarterbacl Tony Dungy of Minnesota gained 1,236 yards passing in the Big Ten last sea- son and is 'the first Gopher, to lead the conference in that de- partment. 8:00 p.m. March 19 and 20 3:00 p.m. March 21 Reserved Seats at $4, $3, 2 featuring: Gay Delanghe's SEVEN DEADLY SINS Music by William Albright (Seven Deadly Sins) Doris Hurmphrey's BRANDENBERG CONCERTO Music by Bach (6randenberg Concerto No. 4) FIL/L IIFESTrIVLL TONIGHT and TOMORROW at 7, 9 & 11 P.M. Saturday at 1, 7 & 9 P.M. Winners & High- ,. 1, r . -7 n r 1 n LkA . . ,- . * ... ii PINBALL, BILLIARDS, Elizabeth Weil Bergmann's FANTASIE Music by Vivaldi (Sonata in D Major) Other Dances by Vera L. Embree and Guest Artist Montreal Choreographer Martine Epoque, with The Chamber Ensemble Ii