Page 8-Wednesday, July 26, 1978-The Michigan Daily Burton:Is 'pleasant' enough? (Continued from Page 5) BURTON'S playing Monday showed a lot of the lyricism of Corea's piano playing - no accident, considering their long history of fruitful collaboration. Throughout the show at the Earle, however, it was the sound of another contemporary pianist that dominated Burton's solos: Keith Jarrett. Plaving Jarrett's "In Your Ouiet created purely by Burton for the vibraphone. Here was the best handling of Bur- ton's style. Alternating with and parallel to those bright chords, Burton would introduce a succinct melody which would be circularly repeated but changed each time, broken and opened up perpetually without even a quick glimpse back at the starting point. Place" on his vibraphone sans his band, USING THOSE rich, pastoral strokes Burton did his best work, sounding that Jarrett does so well, Burton's "In beautifully dense chords which rose Your Quiet Place" was one of the and fell while he chimed convoluted highlights of the show. thematic variations. Although it Another highlight came in the song greatly bore the mark of Jarrett's that followed "Place," another Keith work, it was also infused with effects Jarrett song whose title was obliterated TONIGHT-S P.M. POWER CENTER Box Office Open 6pm 763-3333 Michigan Rep Ticket Office: Mon-Fri: 12-5 pm in the Michigan League, 764- LORRAINE HANSBERRY'S DRAMA 0450. 'THIE SIGN IN SIDNEY BRUSTEINS WINDOW OPENS TOMORROW: Show's MAJOR BARBARA by the babblings of some CBer.After a plain solo by Burton and a mixed-up one by Japanese trumpeter Tiger Okoshi, the drummer ripped into a mostly won- derfully humorous solo. Springing from one tempo to another and wildly jux- taposing odd rhythms, drummer Moses at first sounded as dangerous and as gleeful as a madman. After a while the energy wore down and he employed campy gimmickry to elicit laughs, but all in all it was funny and exciting. THE BAND ,consisted of Moses, trumpeter Okoshi, and electric bassist Steve Swallow, all of whom played competently, but hardly seemed in- terested in meshing with each other. Okoshi possessed an irritatingly fat,' muddy sound masquerading as rich gruffness. And while he exhibited some in- teresting chops on bass, Swallow only let loose once, on a duet with Burton in one of the songs of the second half. There was nothing. wrong with the Burton band - so why do I feel like building a fire under his vibes, in hopes that he and the whole band might play with a little vitality,a little vigor? They were good, I suppose, but less than in- teresting or important. Perhaps less of an eye for the pretty, and more of one for swing and intensity is in order. The 16-century Italian musical theorist Ludovico Zacconi, an Augustinian monk; earned his reputation from one great work, the "Prattica di Musica Utile et Necessaria si al Compositore ... si Anco al Can- tore,"-one of the three standard works of theory from the Polyphonic period of music. Uneven Encounters' at Meadow Brook (Cntinued from Page 5) that his muzak tendencies overpowered oom-pa-pa which, while admittedly the pieces. The Star Trek theme had an giving it a sprightly beat, would have been more at home at a skating rink than a concert. AFTER PERFORMING "The Blue Danube," which bears a tenuous con- nection to celestial matters via its ap-