Thursday, May 31, 1 973 THE SUAMMER DAILY Page Five I Guess Who pave way for Maple Leaf rock By GLORIA JANE SMITH The Guess Who are understandably the foremost Cana- dian group on today's rock scene. They were pacesetters- Winnipeg musicians who broke through a long-endured bar- rier between Canada and solid rock music. Beginning back in 1958 under the name Chad and the Expressions, the band received little recognition until after personnel changes in '65 when Chad Allen left the group and was replaced by current lead vocal and piano man Burton Cummings. By 1969, their recording of "These Eyes" went top five on U. S. charts and struck gold. Today, they are ready to release their tenth album, ap- propriately entitled Number Ten. Summer Daily Airts In their recent Detroit appearance, the Guess Who played three cuts off this upcoming release (should be in the racks right about now). The sound reflects a definite pro- gression of style. They seem more musically conscious, strong- er on their vocals. "We're a much happier band now," Burton reflected after the concert. "The production level is definitely up." Happier, yes. And also internationally acclaimed. Discussing their recent tour which stopped in Tokyo and New Zealand, Cummings said he was surprised that audiences there "mouthed the lyrics to all our songs . . . even some that most of the fans here wouldn't remember." Fans here, however, do remember most Guess Who hits. Nostalgia was definitely a key element at their Detroit con- cert date. Almost a decade's worth of followers turned out to hear oldies like "American Woman", and "These Eyes" recent cuts off their latest album Artificial Paradise and the very new samplings off their upcoming Number Ten. The strength of the group obviously lies in Cummings' vocal lead and piano work which receives some tight backing from Bill Wallace, bass, Donny McDongall, gnitar, Garry Pet- erson, drums, and Kurt Winter, guitar. Strong and growing stronger, the Guess Who don't con- sider themselves ' crusaders" consciously working to set rock standards or trends. Their influence however, can barely be ignored. Without the glam and glitter or the staged theatrics that supplement many rock performances, the Guess Who lay down just plain good music. Glo-ia Jane Smith is the Dail)'s Arts Idior. The Guess Who Casting a glaAir nce to Broadway By WILLIAM GILOVER Grest aithors winced. A cookie- maker grinned. Reform shook ancient dynasty. Angels quailed, the British retreated and com- puter Arthur got acting waves. Broadway during the 1972-73 s e a s o n, as usual. was busy amassing such motley events with its tr-0;tional zeal for the unpredictable and topsy-turvy. Counting over the delights and blights of New York stage effort is a rite associated with the pe- rennial onset of the Jane-until- September production halt. Altogether, 54 shows opened, six more than the prior season. Box-office gross dipped though by $S million, despite upped, ever upping ticket scales. Of all the arrivals, seven suc- cumbed to critical blasts on opening night, eight others last- ed less than two weeks. There was, of course, one sur- prise sleeper to confound prog- nosticators of doom. Seesaw, which cost $1 million, opened to divided yea-nay n o t i c e s with scarcely a dime in the till, and developed word-of-mouth endorse- ment that rocketed it into stable orbit. A lot of other musicals, 10 out of 15, vanished down the drain of broken dreams rapidly, the- de- loge led by Via Galactica and Dude. The theater's two ranking au- thors. Arthur Miller and Tennes- see Willias, were stung acute- ly with disastrous critical and public response to, respectively, The Creation of the World and Out Cry. A stirring revival by the Lincoln Center Repertory of A Streetcar Named Desire later softened Williams' ache. The Lincoln Center company itself, however, disbanded after eight years of strenuous effort because of a board unwilling or inable to raise inevitable deficit funds. Joseph Papp and his manifold New York Shakespeare Festival organization were enlisted to take over next year. *The takeover continued the rise of the man who last year supplanted David Merrick as Broadway's busiest impresario. There were some signs, how- ever, that the Papp phenomenon was- losing some steam. His hail- ed song - dance version of Much Ado About Nothing folded on Broadway at a $172,000 loss. The same organization's five new exhibits in its off-Broadway headquarters failed to turn up a success comparable to the ear- lier Sticks and Bones and That Championship Season., The major main Stem winners were that last-named drama, along with the other still running comedies, Finishing Touches and The Sunshine Boys, and mu- sicals Irene, Seesaw, Pippin and A Little Night Music. The Tony trophy as best mu- sical went to A Little Night Mu- sic. Shelter was the sole melodic offering of the season composed got the Tony for A Little Night Mush'. t;th r :'n i-divida iwinners of Bridway's s i 1 v e r medallion wer Ben Vereen, the star of Pionin, Aln Bates and Julie harris for respectise drama stiats in Btley, the only closed shuw that made a profit, and The last of 'Mrs. Lincoln. Re--ersing the accent on Eng- li' 5-lents, oly six plays writ- ten by or starring performers fr's t.-T -"ri-ske the Atlantic hi, ad ot 'Sllly hl'oumed. Off - Br,)-lws v cr)itrib'ied a Is lf hinirIt sh'iws to the play p-rade, 'nd like Brisdwav dis- played declining interest in ver- bal and visual extremism. Four- tee-s naked men in The Changing Room -in fact stirred no percep- tible public reaction. To ro--nd off appraisal of the season, note that seen long-run holdoa'ers from previous seines- ters continued to thrive, along- side 14 current season survivors. As further reassurance -hat the Fabulous Invalid is far 'rom turn- ing tip its toes, a dozen projects have already pledged production, and several score others been announced for 1973-74. William Glover is a drama writer for the Associated Press. Debbie Reynolds . . . making it big in 'Irene' by women, sadly eking oi tjst 31 performances despite the pres- ence on stage of that prop com- puter named Arthur who could sing and create galactic images. Broadway at times took on the appearance of an old movie mar- quee with a parade of such talents as Eddie Albert, Rhonda Fleming, Myrna Loy, Maureen O'Sullivan, Debbie Reynolds and Glynis oJhns. Many soon dis- appeared. Reynolds made it big, of course, in Irene, and Johns Joseph Papp . Broadway's busiest impressario