Ron, Betty Carter mesmerize Hill By ERIC SMITH At its best, jazz has the capacity to bring an entire audience under its musical spell. And that's what happened Friday night when the Ron Carter Quartet, along with Betty Carter and her trio, held a Hill Auditorium crowd spellbound. This was not an evening of "jazz-rock" or "free jazz," but music for the jazz purist. When the Betty Carter Trio opened the show without Carter, it seemed she was simply waiting for her walk-in cue. But it didn't happen that way, as the trio, composed of pianist John Hicks, drummer Clifford Barbero, and bassist Razoel Harris, played the entire number alone. The dynamic keyboards, thick bass lines, and well-commanded drums served as ample initiation to Carter's music. WHEN CARTER HERSELF appeared, her impact was like that of a musical sorceress: her charm both repels and attracts you. Carter brings to scat-singing a full resonant tone that sets her apart from more acclaimed singers like Ella Fitzgerald. Carter's technique of kneading low and high notes may sound odd at first, but her voice soars and scoops bebop phrases with such ease that one soon feels she is performing in her natural language. Her hand gestures seem to mold the notes, transforming standards by infusing them with her own unique idiom. "The Trolley Son," for example, was given sporadic delivery, as Carter slowed down to 4/4 time, then reverted to a faster tempo, all the time singing with vibrant but precise intonation. CARTER'S ARRANGEMENTS were distinguished by abrupt harmonic and rhythmic shifts, musical demands the trio handled well. Barbera displayed fine control on drums. On acoustic piano, Hicks was a harmonic asset, pla:'ing swinging melodies and leaving the real ornamentation to Carter. Harris' bass lines seemed too muted when compared with that of a former Carter bassist, Lysle Atkinson. On the whole, the trio was not an accessory, but a framework for Carter's vocals. The trio played appropriately in a rather subdued mellow mood which let See RON, Page 13 The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, July 25, 1978-Page 7 Daily rPoto by PTi ER S5LING Betty Carter, pictured above, performed along with Ron Carter last Friday evening at Hill Auditorium. Black Sheep's witty 'Forum' fills the bill By STEPHEN PICKOVER Stephen Sondheim, the musical genius of the sixties and seventies, master of assonance and inner rhyme, is having one of his earlier works, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, performed by the Black Sheep Repertory Theater Company, A Funny Thing Happened On The Way to the Forum Book by BurtbShevelove and Larry Gelbert , Music and Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim Robert G. Horner, director; Douglas Estlund, set designer; Barbara Thorne, costumes; Robert Beaupre, lighting;bRoert Ferris, musical director Presented by the Black Sheep Repertory Theatre huddled away in Manchester, Michigan. The musical has Burt Shevelove's and Larry Gelbert's clever book, a treasure-trove of pun and wit, however only two or three of 5ondheim's melodies are memorable. The play drives its appeal not only from its parody of ancient Rome, but also from its parody of the musical genre itself. Director Robert Horner caught this aspect ,of the show's hilarity nicely, developing it throughout the perfor- mance. THE ACTION is narrated and com- mented upon by Pseudoles, a wry, freedom-thirsty, craft slave, owned by We specialize in lodtes's and chdren's DASCOLA STYLISTS *615E. libery-668-9329 .3739 Washtenaw-971-9975 Hero, the cherubic protagonist, if you haven't already guessed. Hero promises Pseudoles his freedom if he can devise a way for the naive, seemingly post-pubescent young man to gain the object of his comic affec- tions, a virgin courtesan (somewhat hypocritical) residing in the house of ill- repute located conveniently next door. The slave, obsessed with his freedom, hastily agrees, and the comedy begins. It is unfortunate that the Black Sheep Theater has such a limited stage, one with little depth. In order to keep the movement fast-paced, Horner kept the characters running frantically back and forth, having the action frequently resemble a well-played tennis match. It kept things lively, but became tedious after a while. It seemed that once he had a good piece of shtick, he con- tinually employed it until it became an- noying. TAKE THOSE flying leaps which were strewn through the first act. When Hero employs an air-born pirrouette while singing of his love, it is funny because it is awkward and mocks him- self at the same time it reinforces his character. Yet, when Pseudoles kicks his heels together in mid-air, the first time it's gleeful, the second cute, the third common and bordering on boring. Sondheim often writes long show stoppers, building the intensity by ad- ding a new person each verse, and frequently tossing in the brass towards the end, building to a triumphant finale. In Pacific Overtures, it's "Please Hello." In A Little Night Music it's "A Weekend in the Country," and in Forum it's "Everybody Ought to Have a Maid," a delightful romp on the- sexual pleasures and obligations of & rinnwn domestic servants. The number was performed well, but of all the numbers in the show, this one should be laden with gimmickry, bits, and be comically entertaining. Horner's staging fell slightly short. Here the repetition amused, but the number would have been more powerful if it had ended with a tableau or chorus line. I HAD A bit of trouble with two of the! character interpretations, one with Hero's father and the second with Mar- cus Licus, the owner of the bordello. Hero's father is henpecked, an honest and respected citizen who, when of- fered a nubile young maiden, jumps, or, perhaps at his age, crawls at the chance to seduce her. He is not sleazy, nor does he lift his toga at unsuspecting young ladies. The actor (unfortunately the program does not list who is whom) playing the part had this slimy sheen about him, that aura of depravity which accompanies perverse pederates. Marcus Licus, the purveyor of flesh, was played as a modern pimp, cool, hip and enticing. Though carried off welf, however, the interpretation did not fit See FUN, Page 1:3 Sot-sn-Wed 130-330-5:30-730-9:30 hilippe DeBrocas IDeari ins pco ir -"R" "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown" based on "Peanuts" by Charles M. Schulz presented by Ann Arbor Civic Theatre July 26-29 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Tickets: CURTAIN 8 pm $4.00 Weds. & Thurs. $4.50 Fri. $ Sat. Children 16 and under who are accompanied by an adult ore $1.00 off the regular price. Weds., July 26 M JtxOffice (in the theatre lobby) will beopen on. July24 through