The Michigan Daily-Saturday, May 12, 1979-Page 7 Patti in person leads DSOstars By MIKE TAYLOR Patti Smith and Fred "Sonic" Smith, Detroit's leading hard rock visionaries, have decided that it's time for the kids to start going to see the Detroit Sym- phony Orchestra. "I would like to see a lot more young people attending their concerts," Fred said at a Detroit press conference Wed- nesday. "I think the Detroit Symphony is perhaps one of the greatest or- chestras in America, if not the greatest. The maestro, Antal Dorati, is a very wonderful, charismatic person." PATTI ADDS, "Dorati is such an in- spiring guy. He's inspired the Sym- phony to produce music that's majestic and graceful, and he also inspires the people. He's pretty much directly res- ponsible for inspiring us to do this thing." "This thing" is a pair of concerts Pat- ti and Fred are putting on next week to benefit Dorati and the DSO. The shows, which will play at the R.O.C. Center at U-M Dearborn May 17 and the Punch & Judy Theatre in Grosse Pointe May 18 will headline the Patti Smith Group and Sonic's Rendezvous Band and feature local groups like Flirt, the Mutants, R.U.R., A*Moms, Vantage Point, Focus, and ... the Rembrandt String Quartet. The press conference was held at the Lindell AC Bar on the corner of Michigan Avenue and Cass, a hangout of Tiger fans and Tigers alike. Patti and Fred, who share an apartment on Jef- ferson Avenue, sat in a dark corner and talked to reporters one by one under the watchful eyes of old Tigers' photographs on the walls. "THE DETROIT Symphony isn't sup- ported by the city of Detroit-it's not a government agency," Fred explained. "If people don't do things for it, then it won't exist." A cynic might suspect that the benefit concerts are just a ploy to sell more copies of the Patti Smith Group's new Wave, or to boost Sonic's Rendezvous Band's career, but the two certainly seem sincere. When Patti says things like "When I was a little kid my favorite records were Madame Butterfly and 'The Girl Can't Help It' and then lists Edith Piaf, Maria Callas, and Little Richard as her great inspirations, one laughs, but also believes her. THREE YEARS ago, Smith engaged in a monologue during a concert: "Giuseppe Verdi was my big hero because Giuseppe Verdi was born in a bell. I think that's great. Can you imagine if someone in our generation was born in a bell? I wonder where Jimi Hendrix was born. If you were born in a bell, the first things you'd have heard before you heard your mama singing "be my baby, be my baby" would've been DING DONG DING DONG DING.. . Fred, who played guitar for the legendary MC5 before founding Sonic's Rendezvous Band a few years ago, remembers listening to "jazz and classical music - John Coltrane, Eric Dolphy, people like that" on the way to MC5gigs. "MUSIC MUST be approached in the broadest terms possible," he says. "Whenever you hear a symphony playing, it's part of history. It's basically music that was written and performed before recording equipment was ever dreamed of." Patti smiles, and says, "Jackson Pollack loved Michangelo, you know." Asked what was in store for her band, Patti replied, "I think we'll be opening up, expanding in other directions. I'm working on my piano playing, and Fred said something about teaching me saxophone one of these days." AS FOR SONIC'S Rendezvous Band, Fred said, "We're going to go into the studios sometime very soon and do some more recordings. We have a new song called 'A Clock With No Hands' which may be the new single." Fred and Patti promise "diversity" at the benefit concerts, which will cost $10 at U-M Dearborn and $10 and $15 at the Punch & Judy. "A*Moms and R.U.R: are New Wave, Vantage Point and Focus are jazz, and the Rembrandt String Quartet is classical," Fred said. In addition, he noted, "A speaker from the Detroit Symphony is going to speak See PATTI, Page 8 Patti Smith