Page 10-Friday, April 20, 1979-The Michigan Daily 17- I arts & entertainment The Crusaders capture Hill By MATTHEW KOPKA funky2 (fun ke) adj. -kier, -kiest [orig. Negro argot, lit. smelly, hence musty, earthy obs. funk, smell, smoke, prob. Fr., dial. funkier, to smoke VL.* fumicare, for L. fumigare: see FUMIGATE] * Jazz having an earthy quality or style derived from earthy blues The amalganation of styles from jazz and rock music that was dubbed "Jazz- Rock" or "fusion" a few years ago, and produced some interesting and oc- casionally memorably music as artists crossed barriers and went for the money, has been considered unique. In some ways it is, but jazz and the blues (from which, everyone knows, rock n' roll is derived) had been trading ideas since Jelly Roll Morton started syn- copating on Bourbon Street. Since the 1950's when they were called the "Jazz Crusaders," one group has stayed very popular doing just that. AT THEIR BEST, the present-day Crusaders will hit on a beat that moves the listener, overlay a clear-eyed melody and wail on it. That is the secret, but you've got to have it in you, and the more imaginative the musicians the more ways they can find to make you cailbrate your heart to their simple rhythym. This was apparent Wednesday night duringtheir Hill Auditorium concert. For the first half-hour or so their music lacked passion, as the group stumbled through three or four numbers from recent albums. But it was no accident that a rousing, almost angry drum solo by drummer Sticks Hooper put fire in the audience and band, and left me with something redeeming to write about. Drumming and dancing must have been born together. The Crusaders were fronted by the Billy Mitchell group, who did a decent "The World is a Ghetto" (the WAR tune) before songstress Renee Crawford joined them. The woman is graceful, and barbors a sultry voice, but she lacked the volume and the projection to truly reach me, and I was in the fourth row. I found myself examining the proceedings critically, as a producer might: throw out this bad lyric, give me a few more decibels here, stick to the numbers that -jump, and let's have some shouting!! Crawford's perfor- mance was stuck in a kind of solf-soul afternoon. THE CRUSADERS include Wilton Felder on horns, Hooper on drums, and a couple of new players, Jamey Jamison on bass and Barry Finnerty on guitar. Finnerty and Jaimson are new to the group and Jamison was quite ten- tative at first, refering to tt'e scars on his music stand as he played. Undoub- tedly a strong bass is central to the Crusader's sound and Jamison's inex- Harry's Army Surplus intends to stay In February we reported that the turreted building at 201 East Washington, corner of Fourth, was about to be renovated by owners Bonnie DeLoof and Estelle Schneider, and that the lease for Harry's Army Surplus was expiring in April. Harry's president Garson Zeltzer tells us that yes, technically the current lease expires, but he still has three three-year options to renew, and Harry's is not about to leave its present location. "We have a stake in our Ann Arbor location," he said. "We've spent a great deal of money building up our business here. I wouldn't have located here if we hadn't been able to stay." Harry's has been at the location since 1974, when, he says, he signed the original lease with the renewal options. When Concept IV (a development group composed of DeLoof, Schneider, and their husbands) purchased the building, they saw only a dif- ferent, later lease with no men- tion of the options, according to DeLoof. "We obviously wanted to restore the building," she said, "and we never would have bought it under those con- ditions." Zeltzer intends to keep Harry's where it is. He likes the location on the campus side of downtown because it's accessible to two dif- ferent markets. (In addition to being the only real military sur- plus outlet in town, Harry's sells camping and backpacking equipment and casual clothing.) Both DeLoof and Zeltzer have stated the dispute could well end up in court. "There's no question we're willing to fight this," Zelt- zer said. PAID ADVERTISEMENT 2f 'At their best the present-day Crusaders will hit on a beat that moves the listener, overlay a clear- eyed melody and wail on it. That is the secret, but you've got to have it in you, and the more imaginative the musicians the more ways they can find to make you calibrate your heart to their simply rhythm." rut choreographed safely for sales- sake. There will nonetheless be those who will buy her new album this very offers credit and non-credit classes in all levels of: Ballet Modern fro-E merican Jazz May 7-June 15 Pick up a schedule of classes at the Dance Bldg., 1310 N. Univ. Court behind CCRB perience with the music may have con- tributed to the lack of definition in the beat early on. Later he was visibly more relaxed. Finnerty had an en- thusiastic presence and blazed away throughout. He and Jamison traded some inspired licks toward the show's close. Joe Sample, the group's keyboard player, is a fantastic musician. After Hooper's solo, he switched to acoustic piano for a lovely pastoral composition, soloing at length and then being joined by the others for the coda, a rhythmic joining of the elements from the im- provisational passages, by the rest of the group. The piece was slightly marred, however, by Hooper, who like an angry Odin picked up a hammer and walloped the gong behind him to end the piece, fully missing the beat. WILTON FELDER next displayed his musical abilities with a baritone sax solo. Utilizing an echoplex he sounded as though he were high in the moun- tains, blowing bouncily down into a chasm. Then he alternated between the echo and unaugmented playing in a style distinctly reminiscent of the etherea of Stravinsky's Rite de Prin- See FUNKY, Page It