The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, January 29, 1980-Page 7 Jazz duet labors into obscurity A sweetheart of old Sigma Chi Thought she'd switch to a Phi Iappa Phi. So she worked out a plan For herself and her man, And they lunched at the League on the sly! R.M.B. CAFETERIA HOURS; 11:30-1:15 5:00-7: T5 . SNACK BAR 7:15-4:00 By MARK COLEMAN The existence of an ongoing, active jazz scene in Detroit probably isn't readily apparent to the Ann Arbor listener. Local appearances by Detroit performers are sporadic at best, and just don't seem to draw audiences or at- tention, whether it be the slick fusion of Lyman Woodard or the ultra- progressive Griot Galaxy. So when two of the area's most prominent and in- novative musicians, guitarist Spencer Barefield and saxophonist Anthony Holland, finally make it to Ann Arbor, it's something of an event. Even when, as in the case of Friday's duets at the RC auditorium, the performance is somewhat uneven. The absence of a rhythm section and the almost total emphasis on im- provisation presents a challenge to both performers and audience. This challenge is heightened by Barefield and Holland's unusual pairing of classical six string and twelve string guitar with a variety of reeds. When this combination works, the instrumen- tal incongruity and divergence of ap- proach add arresting impact. When it doesn't, the music's effectiveness is ob- scured by stylistic confusion. FROM THE onset each performer established a definitive stance that in- dicating a great disparity of execution and approach. Barefield assumed the restrained role of the academican,his prodigious reading of his classically- trained chops is awesomely well disciplined. But by consistently ignoring melodic constraints, he turns a show of skill into an isolated display of pyrotechnics. The cool distance of Barefield's guitar style usually reinforced the exuberance of Anthony Holland's work on tenor and soprano sax and bass clarinet. Holland builds basic melodic riffs into a cascade of sharp, caustic statements that are violently ex- pressive. At times he penetrated. Barefield's icy barrage, at other times he became absorbed in it. ALTERNATING individual com- positions that are largely joint im- provisations (bearing interchangeable, indecipherable titles) the duo seems so absorbed in their musical quest that they are oblivious to the demands of their audience. Spencer Barefield, especially, plays snue dextrous runs and complex chord changes so. melodically and emotionally unadorned that they become indistinguishable from each other. Certainly, his aOn- plification of the six-string classical guitar is unique but only adds a shrill dissonance to the muted tone of the nylon-stringed instrument. Leaving no milestone unturned, Barefield hesitatingly toys with an electronic device and engages Holland in a minimal percussion duet on discarded oil drums that seems pointlessly sim- ple. But more often their ambition suc- ceeds, most prominently in a tribute to their mentor, Roscoe Mitchell. The song's chorus is an exhaustive ex- changeof simultaneous variations of a one-line theme, in subtly varying suc- cession. Listening is like climbing an endless staircase, with occasional pauses for increasingly intense solos; the conclusion leaves one gasping for breath. BAREFIELD AND Holland com- mand a good deal of respect simply for attempting to be original, even if their efforts aren't completely realized. Purely aesthetic pursuits (especially one this single minded) usually don't qualify as being instantly accessible. So Anthony Holland and Spencer Barefield are fated to play to thirty-odd people (and a dog) who consider themselves lucky to get the chance. Meanwhile, life continues as usual. Avant-garde musicians play difficult music that no one understands unless it gets regurgitated as tomorrow's pop trend. But even when it doesn't quite gel, the music of this calibre certainly con- stitutes a noble effort. TheMichigan L&d J Next to Hill Auditorium Located in the heart of the campus. it is the heart of the campus. " Send your League Limerick to: Manager. Michigan League 227 South Ingalls You will receive 2 free dinner tickets if your limerick is used in one of our ads. Detroiters Spencer Barefield (guitar) and Anthony Holland (saxes) absor- bed in a very ambitious duet F last Friday night in the RC auditorium in East Quad. U. Dance Company prese'ntS Un1icor' By CAROL KOLETSKY Gian Carolo Menotti's make-believe creatures The Unicorn, the Gorgon, and the Manticore were bright and lively on the Power Center Stage Satur- day in this madrigal fable presented in celebration of the International Year of ,the Child (IYC). In all of forty-five minutes, the University Dance Company, co- sponsored by the University Committee' on IYC, enacted more than danced the fable, and satisfied the adults and ,children present. The narration, sung by the Ann Arbor Cantata Singers and backed by light or- chestration, accompanied the dancers *and helped to clarify the plot. Begun with three couples skipping onto the stage arrayed in 'elaborate blue, orange, and green costumes, the dance itself could have told the story. The fable iis about a poet, a man, who, according to the townspeople, "must be out of his mind." He shuns parties, town-meetings, and church, and one day, even brings a unicorn to town. Everybody laughs at him until one couple decides they want a unicorn. Once they get one, the others follow. The poet feigns to grow tired of his unicorn and tells the townspeople that he killed it. He then brings to town a gorgan. The townspeople dispose of the unicorns and get gorgans, When the poet disposes of his gorgan in favor of a manticore, everyone copies him again. Finally the townspeople discover the poet surrounded by the animals they thought he had killed. He shows them how foolish they have been in mur- dering animals in exchange for the latest in fashion. He will die surrounded by his loyal pets. The only subtle hint of symbolism in the performance was in the creatures' costumes. The animals symbolize the poet's fancies, his dreams of youth, manhood, and old age. The unicorns appeared in bright white, the gorgans in silver, and the manticores in dark grey and whiskers. The preformance was a reprise of a production performed last spring to mark the beginning of the second hun- dred years of music at the University. Chorepgraphed by Elizabeth Weil Bergmann, chairperson of the Univer- sity's Department of Dance, The Unicorn showed that fanciful creatures aren't just for kids. . . .......... . ....... 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