The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 2, 1978-Page 9 Ron English plays the Earle By ERIC SMITH Since its opening late last year, the Earle jazz club has been a showcase for Detroit-area musicians. Wednesday night marked the opening of a four-day stint by the Ron English Quartet, consisting of English, guitar, Jerome Spearman, drums, Don Maybefry, bass, and Gary Schunk, piano. This is not simply another jazz group that relies on old standards, as the quartet amplydemonstrated its familiarity with contemporary material, including some of their own compositions as well.- The quartet presented an extremely extroverted style of music, at times over- stressed by the heavy amplification. The first set's opener, "Mas Quadro," a dynamic and hard-hitting number with metrical shifts beneath tense melodies, set the emotional tone of the evening. "SLIM GOODY," an English composition, began with a funky rhythm and then successively built and released tension. It was a showcase for Schunk, whose piano articulated a mood of soulful joy. Herbie Hancock's "Toys" was given an appropriately relaxed treatment, with bassist Mayberry playing short, sighing lines amidst the number's meter changes and mysterious tone qualities. English explained, "Our organization principle is one of drama or building up. It's an aesthetic experience too, a dialogue." A large part of this dramatic effect was created by drummer Jerome Spear- man, who revealed himself to be a sensitive musician, capable of executing decrescendo effects as well as crescendo. "Jumping the Blues" featured a Spearman solo which was marked by cautious and emotional timing. ENGLISH, whose influences include Kenny Burrell, Charlie Christian, Jimmy Rainey and Chick Webb, has a style that is difficult to pin down. His guitar michigan DAILY art s technique is more assertive than that of Wes Montgomery, but has a warm timbre that was sometimes marked by an easy, pleasant vibrato. His composition "The Lullaby" was interesting for its dramatic transposition from a meditative blues to bouncing rock. Detroit jazz buffs may recall that Ron English played with the Lyman Woodard Organization at Cobb's Corner in Detroit this past winter. "We played together for about four or five years," English said. He cited his appearance on the new Lyman Woodard album Saturday Night Special as an example of their team- work. When asked why he broke with Woodard, English said, "both of us compose and write music. There is only so much room in a group for one person's ideas. I guess I had been spending more time with (my) quartet in the last year or so." ENGLISH IS an instructor in jazz studies at Oakland University and is also president and co-founder of Allied Artists Association. The Paradise Theater Or- chestra Hall Jazz Series is one example of the many activities English is involved in, and he is excited about the growth of live jazz in Ann Arbor and Detroit. English said that Allied Artists has two new projects.in the planning stages. One is the redirection of the Orchestra Hall shows, with more emphasis on local Detroit area jazz composers. The second is a grant which will help jazz artists travel to Michigan colleges. -- Srn aeJn perform this was not the only moment of con- troversy. According to Harburg's son, Ernie, wealthier members of the audience were leaving the theater overr d See HARBURG, Page 10 Earn U-M Credits While You Are Home This Summer Why waste time this summer when you can earn credit through an independent study course? The University Extension Service, Independent Study department, offers dozens of courses in many subject fields, including: Literature Accounting Languages Economics Psychology Geography Conservation Writing Political Science Math Each course has an assigned instructor, who consults with you through the mail or over the telephone. And don't worry about not finishing up the course over the summer-you may take as long as a year to complete it. Drop into the office, or call today to get full details on how you can make this a credit-bearing summer! Independent Study Dept. U-M EXTENSION SERVICE 412 Maynard St. 763-2042 Daiy Photo by NDemEBER Guitarist Ron English will be playing with his quartet at the Earle through Saturday. E.Y. 'Yip'Harburgto By ELEONORA Di LISCIA E. Y. Harburg will be playing at the Earle this Sunday, and if that name doesn't ring a bell, maybe the song "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" will. Harburg is the man who wrote the wor- ds to that pretty tune, as well as the rest of the lyrics to the score of The Wizard of Oz. Winding back to the beginning of memory lane, Harburg, who was born in 1898, began his career graduating with a bachelor's degree in chemistry and running an appliance business up until 1929, when "they blew the whistle on me and everyone else." The business went bankrupt and Harburg was en- couraged by his friend Ira Gershwin to write lyrics. He was good, and was hired almost immediately by one of the Broadway revues. "I HAD always been writing poetry," says Harburg. "I was editor of the college magazine. I had always sold bits of it in a dilletantish way, never seriously. During the depression, I got into the real world and started writing." Harburg's first major hit was "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?", written in 1932 before Roosevelt's elec- tion. After writing 13 major shows for production companies like Ziegfeld Follies and the Earl Carrol Revue, Harburg was asked to come to Hollywood. In Hollywood, Harburg wrote songs like "Lydia the Tattooed Lady," for Groucho Marx in A Day at the Races, and "April in Paris." In 1939 came The Wizard of Oz. During the 40s, Harburg went back to Broadway. He wrote for a show called Bloomer Girl, which was the first play on Broadway to have a true story behind it and break away from the traditional chorus girl routine. The show was about feminist Dolly Bloomer, "the first one to say the hell with the hoop skirts." THE NEXT show to shock the traditionalists was Finian's Rainbow. Harburg wrote the book, the lyrics and directed the show, which was one of the first plays to have blacks and whites on the same stage together. At one point in the play, one of the white characters turns black. After turning white again, he gains a sense of compassion. And FOLK ART AND DESIGN mon. - fri. 1lto 9 saturday 10 to 6 sunday 12 to 6 123w washington ann arbor