0 Page 8-Sunday, January 27, 1980-The Michigan Daily S bley (Continued from Page 3) An aesthetic success in which musicians like Charlie Haden, Gato Barbieri, and Don Cherry shared some of their brightest moments, it was financially doomed and disbanded at the turn of the last decade. Bley's first solo record project (on JCOA's label) took the earlier group's ambitiousness to a new extreme. Escalator on the Hill not only includes Cherry and Barbieri but rockers Jack Bruce, John McLaughlin and Linda Ronstadt. Linda Ronstadt! Who cares if the album is basically unlistenable (due mostly to Paul Haines' awful lyrics) - any artist with enough nerve to bring such supposedly incompatible perfor- mers together is worth watching. At least one of these cuts is noteworthy; "Jack's Traveling Band" is a raw precursor of the punk rock movement five years later. After this critically proclaimed ven- ture, Bley formed her own Watt Recor- ds label with Mantler. They have released a steady stream of albums un- der each of their names, pairing a suc- cession of eccentric English art rockers with respected jazz players of varying backgrounls. The consummation of her rock infatuation should have occurred funny . (Continued from Page 5) gation of New Comedy was forgone, and no major disappointment. It is discouraging, though, to consider the ways that even the hippest arms of the media will automatically shut off cer- tain performers. Buried under a layer of rank cynicism in the movie The Can- didate was the reasonably intelligent point that even the most sidcere (if slightly softheaded) politicians can't really maintain touch with a mass following-can't accomplish their goals on any meaningful scale-unless they play politics. But what is a comic to do if, like Richard Pryor, his entire performer's instinct plays in searing opposition to the politics of celebrity? Pryor's television special and short-lived series were blotchy downers, and they were painful to watch, because you could see that no matter how much he resented the TV censors, he still wanted to "use the medium," to tune in to the largest audience possible. In this summer's Richard Pryor-Live in Concert, when Pryor made whitey jokes, he didn't talk about "us" and "them"; he said "we" and "you," never denying the distance and hostility between blacks and warhol. (Continued from Page 6) leads us to believe Warhol, if only in un- seen privacy, is scratching his head and pondering the biggest problem he has probably yet faces: what the hell to do next? After Warhol we'll never be able in the ill-fated Jack Bruce-Carla Bley band formed with Mick Taylor after he left the Stones in 1974, but once again the group disbanded before recording a note. Bley has been uncharac- teristically reticent concerning this band, allowing only that the details are too "horrible" to see the light of day. - After this abortive attempt at poten- tial mass acceptance, Bley turned to the music underground with renewed vengeance. She and Mantler formed the New Music Distribution Service, the first distributorship to attempt releasing truly diverse music to an un- suspecting public. "We don't listen to any of it," says Bley. "If it's new we distribute it without passing judgement. We don't want others to be passed over the way we were." NMDS is now preparing a new updated catalogue with hundreds of unheralded new artists. On their own Watt releases Mantler and Bley remained adventurous throughout the seventies, with results ranging from the sublime to the ridiculous. At one extreme is Mantler's adaptation of the Harold Pinter play Silence, featuring arcane art rockers Robert Wyatt and Kevin Coyne in a project that was doomed to pretension: whites, but never pretending that the two will ever stop mingling. That's why Pryor is our most humanistic and perhaps our greatest comedian: He has more anger than anybody, but also a vision that can cut through to all the rainbows on the other side of his rage. Instead of bemoaning Pryor's relatively cultish status, I suppose I should be glad he's around in the first place. I cringe at the idea of labeling him a "serious" comic. Fact is, unlike Martin, Belushi, et. al., Pryor's is comedy with a vision-life through the funny lens. That makes him more of a moral comedian than Woody Allen, whose self-conscious "concerns" are always distinct from the source of humor in his jokes; with Pryor, the joke and the emotion, be it rage, -joy, or whatever, are one. Perhaps the Steve Martin alternative-humor whose lack of responsibility and point-of-view is 'its essence-has outlived its usefulness. Undiluted zaniness wears this as a doily after awhile, and by now most of us have probably o.d.'d on it. Something tell me, though, that we aren't so jaded that we're not ready for something else. After all, 'tis better to have laughed and lost ... to treasure art as we once did. But that's only half a promise: after destruction must arise something new. And with Warhol, there's a possibility of fulfillment that more than justifies the longest of waits under the most discouraging of circumstances. Mantler should have known better. The other extreme is Bley's Dinner Music, which brings the ultimate studio hack band, Stuff, into a spontaneous musical situation in which they are forced to prove their overinflated reputation. And they do; spurred by Bley's arrangement and Roswell Rudd's careening trombone, Dinner Music is a well-honed, humorous yet dramatic work that is both an eloquent sum- mation of seventies mainstream jazz and a brilliant parody of it. Currently Bley is pushing in a direc- tion where no big band has tread before. "The most avant garde, in- teresting music in the world right now is punk rock," she says. Although Bley's definition of punk is a lot further out there (Pere Ubu as opposed to the Ramones) than most people's, she's totally committed to integrating it with her vision of jazz. After a brief, anonymous stint with an actual punk band known as the Burning Sensation, she returned to jazz with a decidedly warped perspective. "I'm coming back to my big band with everything I've learned from working in the new wave and I'm still learning from listening to punk groups," she said at the time. What could Bley possibly learn from listening to bands like Ubu and the Feelies? For one thing, that fundamen- tally serious musical experiments don't have to be unapproachable. They can even be danceable. "The way I sang things on Escalator on the Hill sounded like I was on a couch dying of tuber- culosis" she has said before. "Now, you don't have to go to our music - it's going to come to you. A fusion of two seemingly divergent musical forms requires something beyond musical expertise and ex- perience. Bley's ability as a leader has been well proven over the years, but the new Carla Bley Band cooks not only with authority but with an authenticity that's absent from their previous effor- ts and "fusion" music in general. Carla Bley understands that attitude, not pyrotechnics, is the heart of rock and roll. And attitude is one thing she has plenty of. She has embraced the new wave of rock and roll with a messianic fervor. As she says,. "From now on, I write nothing but songs with lyrics." And while the unselfconscious humor of pieces like "Boo to You Too" isn't exac- tly profound, it's a vast improvement from pretentious dribble like Escalator. Pairing D. Sharpe's Rich- man-like vocals on "Mineralist" with a well executed "satire" of minimalist composer Phillip Glass is more than a sophisticated joke; it's a musical statement of policy. Like many new wave rockers and virtually all avant garde jazz artists, Bley's work, even when aesthetically .successful, has met with something less than commercial success. That Bley's purposefully erratic career has per- sisted at all is largely due toy her organizational ability and continuing interest in the business end of making music. As the corporate giants expand their monopoly on American musical tastes, Bley's extra-curricular activity becomes increasingly more significant: without NMDS, some wor- thwhile (and a lot of potential) talent would remain unheard. Bley's own position is as precarious as any other Do It Yourselfer's. Her record company, and distribution ser- vice manage to break even, but the Carla Bley Band has been a consistent money loser. The logistics are simple enough - a big band is a costly operation, and a musically controver- sial one is a gamble the music industry isn't ready to take. So consider yourself lucky if you saw the Carla Bley Band at the Power Cen- ter two weeks ago; it was the only show salvaged from a tour cancelled for strictly financial reasons. Don't worry about what a group that plays that well unrehearsed would sound like afforded the luxury of financial support. Because Carla Bley certainly isn't going to give up - rather she seems anxious to confront mass tastes as they slowly catch up to her. Punk jazz could well be the dance music of the eighties - a lot more unlikely things have hap- pened. Who would have predicted the eventual success of Patti Smith and Talking Heads way back in 1975? 1 u ndag 115 chocolate (Continuea trom Page ?) 1 t. paprika 1T. salt 4 t. thyme 1/8 t. ground all spice E 1/8 t. nutmeg 2 T. vinegar 6 oz. tomato paste 6 cups water 1 oz. bittersweet chocolate, grated 1 T. cumin 1 t. oregano 1it. basil % t. ground, mixed pickling spices 1 bay leaf " t.fenogreek In a large, heavy bottomed pot, saute onions and garlic until golden. Add the beef, cooking until brown. Add rest of igredients. Cook three hours. Serves four very generously. May be frozen. u n d ayg Co-edtor inside: Elisa Isaacson RJ Smith Comedy today. Ha ha. Warhol, in the 70s A bittersweet ron with chocolate Cover photo by Maureen O'Malley Lyfnda Falevsky, 1474 . .a- .iY. mtrit. f .i...ma e r' .u ! . ... rffi.:. if .,x! # . _i -A ..+& ,gi -.a ns #. S 'Supplement to The MkbJcj Pb D~ily - -'A - - " . ay J-nar 2, 9~ , :*,