Page 6-Saturday, July 8, 1978-The Michigan Daily Stones' fans get what they want By TIMOTHY YAGLE grounds, running from reasonable fac- The tension andexcitement was elec- a satisfying dose of oldies. Above all Detroit's beautiful and acoustically similes to ridiculously fake imitations. tric just before the Stones assembled on numbers like "Honky Tonk Womer perfect Masonic Auditorium was the All three major Detroit television stage, and on their arrival the they affirmed that their ability setting for one of the grandest concert stations sent their ubiquitous mini- boisterous crowd went wild. Jagger, mesmerize an audience has not hb events the city has experienced in cams to the auditorium and filed live looking like a puppet on a string, was withered by the years. The show years. Every detail surrounding the reports, each shooting thirty seconds of clad in brown leathemr pants, red socks, overpowernmgly loud, and much of Rolling Stones' Thursday night appear- concert footage. Members of the white tennis shoes, and a shiny red music, not tomention t obligat ance had an aura of momentousness. Michigan football team escorted the leather cap, and was the picture of surrehyicasruninelge. I band to Masonic, all the Stones except flashiness next to Keith Richard, who such technical rough edges ne Jagger (who came in an old T-bird) gave new meaning to the word "scruf- seemed to matter much - Jagg arriving in a police paddywagon. Both fy." Ron Wood was a bundle of energy. perpetual motion can still keep WRIF and WABX had representatives Bill Wyman looked barely alive. audience hopping. Jagger was in co delivering live, eyewitness reports. plete control. Whirling around a THE STONES went through most of taunting his frenzied fans, he revea UNLIKE so many rock concerts the material on Some Girls, but offered himself as the quintessential audiei where general rowdiness is simply the See STONES, Page 10 rda of tho da thic undtf ti(M ua , in n," to een was the ory But ver er's an am- and led nce There was no local media advertising - one radio station leaked the ticket in- formation the day before tickets went on sale - and the show sold out in a scant two hours. On the day of the con- cert, scalpers hawked their product for as much as $250. There were numerous counterfeit tickets circulating the oraer o me aay, Es crows of 5,0 was obviously genuinely excited over the Stones. Under the circumstances, everyone was reasonably patient with the opening act, the Etta James Band, which began the show with some funky blues and soul music. Lead singer Etta James did her best to emulate Aretha Franklin, and the audience got a kick out of it. NOW SHOWING Mon.-Tues.-Thurs.-Fri. 7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun.-Wed. REC ORDS show parody. What many people don't realize is that Mull had established a recording career for himself long before his first appearance on Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. After several years of recording for Capricorn Records, Mull moved to ABC last year and released I'm Everyone I've Ever Loved, an outstanding LP which featured superior musical productions of Mull's genuinely humorous songs and parodies. This year's offering is Sex & Violins, which for Mull should be seen as a terrific step sideways. It's at least as entertaining as his previous album, but sex& vioins the musical concept is quite different. Martin Mull I'm Everyone I've Ever Loved featured ABCAA-1064 a notably bizarre conglomeration of By MICHAEL BAADKE song styles, from disco to bossa nova to Fans of TV's America 2-Night should Philadelphia Soul. immediately recognize Martin Mull as ALTHOUGH Sex & Violins is cer- Barth Gimble, host of the late-night talk tainly not a vinyl version of America 2- Night, the recording is dominated by an intentionally over-lush orchestration RICHARD DREYFUSS in arranged and conducted by Frank THE APPRENTICESHIP DeVol, who portrays bandleader Happy Kyne on the show. The music on Sex & OF DUDDY KRAVITZ Violins, again, is superior in quality, Duddy is a hustler, a schemer, a add once the orchestration idea sinks dreamer and most of all, Richard into the listener's mind, it's damn funny Dreyfuss at his cutest. The most as well. likeable of heels, Duddy is certainly Mull opens the album by taking two a hero. With Randy Quaid. bites out of the Hammerstein and Kern composition, "Can't Help Lovin' That Sun: Duster Keaton's Man of Mine": THE NAVIGATOR (Free at 7:30) Birds gotta swim Chaplin's THE TRAMP (Free at 9:30) And fish got to . .. fly; swim- Um, no wait a minute. . . Cinema Guild He spits it out after forty-three seconds. Tonight at7:30 & 9:30 For the remainder of the album Mull Old Arch. Aud. sings his own compositions, including one collaboration with former room- mate Steve Martin. See MILL'S, Page 10 NOW SHOWING Mon.-Tues.-Thurs.-Fri. 7:30-9:35 Sat.-Sun.-Wed. 1:30-3:30-5:35-7:40-9:45 JILL CLAYBURGH Look who's moved Into the campus areal Catch herl R U 3' w NOW SHOWING Mon.-Tues.-Thurs.-Fri. 7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun.-Wed. 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:30-9:30 The Ann Arbor Film Cooperotive presents at MLB Saturday. July 8 REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE (Nicholas Ray, 1955) 7 only-MLB 3 A teenager gets into trouble in school and runs away with his girlfriend. There are-many reasons to see REBEL, but James Dean overshadows them all with his best screen performance. You'll probably never see acting this good again. With Natalie Wood, Nick Adams, Dennis Hopper, Sal Mineo, Jim Backus. Plus Short: JAMES DEAN INTERVIEW (1955) Scenes from an early TV role in THE UNLIGHTED ROAD, prcedes Dean's interview by Gig Young. An interesting look at a great actor. 5W l!H r ABrwt... pM 70N 1aWi5PS1C THE GRADUATE (Mike Nichols, 1967) 9:15 only-MLB 3 Dustin Hoffman stars as a college graduate who has his first s+ with a friend of his parents (Anne Bancroft) and proceeds to fall woman's daughter. The first movie to deal with the "I refuse tofi theme. "The freshest. funniest, and most touchina film of the encounter e with that uilty" youth r."-Hollis