Wednesday, June 12, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page F'i ve Opening night at the Knob By CHUCK BLOOM Music, I guess, like politics, makes for strange bedfellows. At least it seemed that way last Saturday night at the Pine Knob Music Theatre. Opening its fourth summer season, the outdoor palace locat- ed in Clarkston brought togeth- er the strangest mixture of peo- ple for the concert of 60's oldies. The crowd was predominantly suburban, totally white, and generally older than what one would expect for a "rock" con- cert. On display were all the Jama- cian tans, suburban fashions, and Mr. Phyllis coiffures. Many of the on-lookers watched with a scotch and soda in hand and $10 bottles of wine were as visi- ble there as Ripple is at a Michigan football game. Where in Ann Arbor dope is passed through the crowd, at Pine Knob, it is a bucket of chicken, a barrel of fun, good-bye, ho- hums. It resembled the audience one would expect for further Pine Knob extravaganzas such as Bob Hope, S-mmny Davis, or Johnny Mathis. But here they were, 10,000 strong to see and hear songs they didn't know. As for the concert itself, it was an excellent comeback from two of the acts and a slick show from the third. The show opened with Tommy James and the Shondells, a grop that touched all musical bases darine its zenith. James was in excellent voice and he had a good ,tight group behind him. After opening with "Drag- gin' the Line", he and the Shon- dells went back into time, .down memory lane, with a good boogie number, "Mony, Mony" and that bubble-gum standard "I think We're Alone Now." His 30-minute stint closed with his two biggest hits, "Crimson and Clover" and "Crystal Blue Persuasion", which are a pair of decent num- bers. It would be nice to see James record again. Three things, however ham- pered the performance: the per- enially bad Pine Knob sound system, the ho'sr of the day (it was too light outside to get the crowd away from picnick- ing, and the fact that James put a lot of energy (voltage- wise) into the show. And for that crowd, it was the wrong thing to do. The whole theatre was elated with the appearance of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. The falsetto - voiced singer from Belleville, N.J. delighted the throng with classics like "Dawn", "Stay", "You're Too Good to Be True", "Silence is Golden", and many, many others. Back by the Motown orchestra he new records with, Valli and the "new" Seasons stirred the hearts and memories of the au- dience to the tune of five stand- ing ovations after the hour- long set. What the audience appreciat- ed, taking in mind the median age, was the Vegas-type smooth- ness with which Valli perform- ed. The wrap-up was a local group made good, the Four Tops, and even though their act was good, they were poor- ly treated by the crowd. When the Tops were halfway through the show, around 10 p.m., there was a noticeable exodus on the part of the "youthful" clan. While they were not complaining about the show, many mentioned late din- ner dates, open bars, and coun- try club parties as the reasons for their rudeness. But Levi Stubbs and company continued like real troopers. They went through their repe- triore of songs, both past and present. Opening with "Are You Man Enough", continuing with their early hits "Baby I Need Your Loving", "Ask the Lone- ly", and "It's the Same Old Song", and finishing with "I C'an't Help Myself," the De- troiters, refugees from Motown Records, gave that polished act that has come to be expected from all the old Motown stable (i.e. the Temptations, Gladys Knight amd the Pips, etc.). All in all, it was quite an opening night -- as though one had been at a theatre opening or in a night club. It was that type of crowd. Michigan Daily Arts Record counterfeits: The multi-rn lion dollar r4-of By TIM REITERMAN Associated Press Writer SAN FRANCISCO - Counter- feiters are pressing bogus pho- nograph records which fool most customers and cost the record- ing industry millions of dollars each year. "These parasites wait until a record becomes a hit, then move in and try to skim off the top," says an attorney for Co- lumbia Records in Los Angeles, "They victimize the artist, writ- ers, companies and public with lousy records." Detecting counterfeits poses problems for the consumer, be- cause both the sound and pack- aging are copied. In fact, it us- ually takes a keen eye to spot the cover art's slightly faded colors and sloppy lettering, and a careful ear to pick up most audio failings. Though impossible to accur- ately compute the number in circulation, the Recording In- dustry Association of America estimates about five million phony discs have been sold dur- ing the past two years at a loss of more than $15 million to the industry. In addition, the indus- try claims it loses millions in pirated tape sales. In New York, Jules Yarnell, special counsel on piracy for the 55-company association, said 12 to 15 companies reported record counterfeiting in the past year alone, Capitol, CBS, A&M, Warner Brothers and RCA were among the companies hit. Counterfeited artists included Elvis Presley, Paul Simon, Sly and the Family Stone, Bill Withers and the late Janis Joplin. In some cases, Yarnell said, bogus albums were easily spot- ted because they sold for less than $3, below what the retailer normally pays for a legitimate hit album. In other cases, he said, counterfeits have been sold at the same price or higher than the real product. Usually, counterfeits are dis- covered when consumers return records with complaints. As the Columbia attorney said, "The customer who unwittingly buys a counterfeit and doesn't like the quality will see our label and think we ripped him off," Concern over damage to its reputation and financial losses led Columbia to post bounties, offering its hundreds of field staffers $50 for each tip result- ing in an arrest or a civil suit. The counterfeiters do not con- fine themselves to big corpor- ate prey who can usually absorb losses. The Grateful Dead Re- cording Co.'s first album Wake of the Flood," barely hit the streets last October before imi- tations started competing for sales. "We went out and bought 60 or so counterfeits for a couple of bucks each," company presi- dent Ron Rakow said in San Ra- fael, Cal. "We gave the distrib- utors a few copies each so they could compare them with the real thing." An FBI affidavit filed last De- cember quoted one Los Angeles record dealer as saying he was offered 100,000 counterfeit Grateful Dead bums at $1.50 each, compared to a wholesale price of about $2.40 for the legi- timate product. A Berkeley, Calif. dealer pur- chased 297 counterfeits and a Denver dealer was offered the same Grateful Dead album at $1.65 per copy, the FBI said. Both outlets dealt with the same Van Nuys, Calif. distributor. "There have been no arrests but we have served some search warrants," said FBI spokesman John Morrison in Los Angeles. "As to where the counterfeits are originating from, we don't know at this time." The penalty for violation of federal copyright statutes can include a $100 to $1,000 fine and as much as one year in prison on each count. However, Asst. U. S. Atty. Robert Brosio said felony charges of interstate transportation or stolen proper- ty and mail fraud would be likely companion charges. While law enforcement offic- ials are pursuing the origins of illicit records, the record com- panies are attempting to shut off the flow at the retail level. That presents great obstacles, too. Pat Nichols of Discount Re- cords here, a division of CBS retail stores, said the store ac- cidentally received some coun- terfeits through its regular dis- tributors. "We had them on our shelves briefly but returned them when we found out," he said. "Counterfeiting is an easy thing to do," said Bob Tolefson of the seven-store Record Fac- tory chain here. "You take a picture of the album cover, front and back, paste it togeth- er and press the record. The average customer can't even tell the difference." Stan Goman, manager of Tower Records here, said, "It's a bizarre thing that's hard to control because unscrupulous dealers always will be looking for cheap counterfeits, "We haven't noticed any here," he said. "But maybe they're so good you can't tell them from the real thing." Genuine Counterfeit