The'Michigan Daily-Saturday, February 23, 1980-Page 5 JOHN MA YALL AND LUTHER ALLISON Just how blue can you get? By MARK COLEMAN John Mayall and Luther Allison are an especially good match; they both play lively blues fueled by a decidedly rock and roll influence. Though this in- fluence is not an overwhelming one, it makes them immediately accessible to a generation of blues fans brought up on Eric Clapton and the Allman Brothers. Mayall, of course, is the "father" of the British Blues movement. His more famous "children" Fleetwood Mac, Mick Taylor, Clapton) have gotten rich and decadent while he cranks out'hot one-night stands, sticking close to his adopted roots. Allison picked up his authoritative guitar and vocal style in Chicago, the birthplace of electric blues. He's added to those roots a pervasive rhythm and blues approach, and the result is something like "a cross between Jimi Hendrix and B. B. King." PURISM IS meaningless as far as the blues goes. It's the underlying emotional communication translated in a fairly rigid, yet flexible musical style that locks you into that nodding, twelve bar groove. It doesn't matter if the people playing or listening are white or black or whatever; only the groove matters. John Mayall had this groove going for him before he ever walked on stage at Second Chance. Luther Allison and his four-piece group left the audience with an appreciative, eager-to-hear-more- blues buzz. Playing a surprising selec- tion of cover versions, Luther recited what seemed The Best of The Blues As Recorded By English Rock Stars. While maintaining the level of virtuosity they lent the blues, Allison shows so much gut emotion and down to earth im- mediacy that one .can't question his motivation. Sure, songs ..like "Crossroads" and "Baby, What You Want Me To Do?" have been recorded ad nauseum. But when Allison delivered them Thursday night, they sounded amazingly fresh. He salvages a certain self-restraint in his blistering guitar attack that brings back some of the brooding urgency of the originals. He's not only funky, but thoughtful - and could probably blast Eric Clapton or Jeff Beck off the stage. AT RICK'S the night before, Allison had more of a chance to stretch out a bit, and play some of his excellent originals. At Second Chance on Thur- sday he threw all his eggs in one basket, and nope of them broke; the familiarity of the material and Allison's playful showmanship delighted the audience. On guitar he countered back-breaking technical intensity with dramatic use of dynamics. LutherAllison is a convincing, if con- ventional, blues singer; his inter- -pretation of B. B. King's "The Thrill is Gone" was strong and appropriately understated. His solo here took an unexpected turn, combining short jazzy runs with a George Benson-like ap- proximation of scat singing. By the time he got to his tribute to Otis Red- ding and Jim i Hendrix, I wondered why he doesn't do more of his own songs in concert. The audience seemed so blues-starved that I don't think they'd have minded hearing tunes not instan- tly recognizable.' BOTH BANDS played "Hideaway," a Freddie King instrumental made popular by Clapton and Mayall in the Bluesbreakers. Allison took the suc- cession of riffs that make up the song to a few places that Eric Clapton passed over, with his band interjecting a soulful organ and drum shuffle. In. Mayall's hands, "Hideaway" becomes the loose, boisterous boogie it was originally, leaving the image of Clap- ton's trembling fingers a pleasant memory. Moving through a varied selection of old, new and borrowed songs, Mayall played a tight, well-paced set. The band established an energetic rapport with the crowd, building on that with the consistency developed over a million or so gigs.' Surprisingly enough, it's not boring, but almost reassuring that John Mayall still can find a guitar player who doesn't mind a straight slow blues now and then. Yeah, he still plays boringly "evocative" songs like "California," still does the speech-like harmonic gurgles on "Room to Move," and he still can't play piano all that well. But he communicates such sin- cere and simple feelings that his shor- tcomings are easily passed over. On Mose Allison's standard "Parch- mant Farm," bassist Angus Thomas' outgoingly funky approach and Soko Richardson's rock-solid backbeat put Mayall's vocals and great harp work in fresh perspective. If these guys can breathe new life intoa song this over- done, it bodes well for the blues as a vital, still evolving art form. If you'd like to keep this groove going, write Eclipse and encourage them in their.ef- forts to bring Son Seals to Ann Arbor. In the meantime, Thursday night's per- formance stands as a healthy first step in the right direction. Kidney treatment keeps ailing Tito alive Daily Photo by LISA KLAUSNER Say it, JohnY Veteran English bluesman John Mayali not -only looks like a lion, but he can roar like one also. He may be a little old to wear hot pants but his harmonica playing and singing are as tough as ever. ~Loft stages off beat 'Godot' From UPI and AP BELGRADE, Yugoslavia-Artificial kidney treatment could keep President Josip Broz Tito alive for some time but . the collective state and Communist Party leadership has already taken firm control of Yugoslavia -and is consolidting its rule. The official bulletin from the Ljubljana clinic yesterday confirmed that the 87-year-old leader has been receiving dialysis treatment, although there has been no substantive change in his "grave" condition. DOCTORS BASING their opinions solely on the medical bulletins said that if the kidney failurewere Tito's only problem in recovering from a leg amputation, then dialysis might keep him alive for some time. Tito has been confined to Ljubljana Medical Center in northern Yugoslavia since Jan. 12. His left leg was amputated Jan. 20 after complications arose from a blood circulatory problem. He was reported earlier to have developed heart weakness and digestive problems, but his doctors have not mentioned these in more than a week. Top officials indicated that they are not counting on Tito's recovery. Behind the scene, however, a power struggle is developing and a top government official admitted that some members of the two ruling committees were more equal than others. He also gave clear indication the collective was running the country as if Tito were already dead. TIM'S and CHRISTINE'S TAILOR SHOP REASONABLE PRICES New and Special Zippers 22 years at the same location 663-6223 213 S. MAIN ST. By GILLIAN BOLLING Sometimes a director will change a play's casting, setting, or surroundings with the end result being variety for the sake of variety. In casting a woman in the lead role in Waiting for Godot, director William Sharpe has raised new shades of meaning in this controversial play, ordinarily cast as all-male. Waiting for Godot, written by Samuel Beckett in. 1952, is currently being produced at the Canterbury Loft. Shapre's approach has given a fresh angle to the play. The burning question of whovGodot is and what he signifies becombs less focal 'Instead, the very real physical relationship between the two wanderers who are endlessly waiting for something meaningful to enter their lives becomes the central in- terest. THE SETTING consists of a tree and a platform Where the two questioning vagabonds, Estragon and Vladimir, pass their lives. The intimate at- mosphere of the Loft is perfectly suited to this production of Godot. The audien- ce surrounds the players and becomes a part of their timeless world. We jump when they jump, shifted in our seats as the two discuss the tedium of life, and share in the anticipation of "waiting for Godot." This production marks the debut of the Canterbury Stage Company. Their aim is to present theatre with a "point of view," which will "affect the audien- ce's view of the world rather than sim- Be an angel ... Read ( 764-0558 CANTERBURY STAGE 'n COMPANY ply entertain," according to Sharpe, the company's managing director. AS WITH any group of actors and designers who seek to form a collective, the players must be finely tuned to one another. The Canterbury Company achieves this. The members of the en- semble possessed energy to spare and this was the primary reason that Godot, which can become quite heavy and dull, easily held the audience's interest. Jane Kinsey, as Vladimir, carried the play through several mood shifts. She possesses great talent for physical comedy, using her body as a limber tool. She showed Vladimir to be a thoroughly complex yet understan- dable character through nuances of tone and attitude. She and Norman Scaggs, as Estragon, fit sharply together like pieces of a puzzle. Scaggs played the more resigned of the duo, and while he occasionally carried his mopiness to an extreme, he generally provided a perfect match for Ms. Kin- sey's tense, highly-strung Vladimir. THE EMPHASIS of the production was decidedly on the earthy and slap- stick side rather than the metaphysical and philosophical. The effect came across as being very humorous, a sort of intellectual vaudeville show, with the actors clowning and miming while questioning the vagaries of life. The company's immense skill at slapstick humor and physical banter provided the play with both its strongest and weakest moments. While the physical actions enhanced the meanings and were very expressive, a few times director Sharpe got carried away. Long sequences in which strong emphasis was placed on the use of props or on comic hits became tedious. Meanings were lost and lines became secondary, as some of the farcical elements were over-physicalized and overdone. James Danek provided an ap- propriately disruptive force as Pozzo, who enters and is at once mistaken for Godot. Danek exploited his vocal talents to great effect, expressively ranging from booming to whimpering. Ellie Klopp, as Pozzo's human slave, ironically named Jane Kinsey and Norman Scaggs in the Canterbury Loft's production of, Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot. The play will be performed Saturday evening at 8:00 p.m. and Sunday afternoon at 2:00. Lucky, played with the right amount of miserable dejection. When commanded to "think" by Pozzo,=she spews out a string of intellectual hogwash that is confusing, yet tells much about the quality of some thoughts. The speech is meaningful gibberish and should have been projected and articulated more ef- fectively in order to build to an intensity matching the other players' reactions. Ms. Klopp, who is primarily a dancer, and not an actress, garbled the speech disappointingly and it did not achieve the startling effect it could have, since we wait so long to hear Lucky speak. THE CAST was rounded out by eight- year-old Will Foster, who bore messages from Godot. From this small part to the leads, the group worked well together, and this facilitated a vast variety of mood and pace. Much work was evident in the physical interplay and the cast rarely missed a beat. The Loft is willing to take chances and experiment with the theatre. This experiment pays off Waiting for Godot. MOSHE MIZRAHI'S 1949 MADAME ROSA Egyptian-born Israeli director Mizrahi Won an Academy Award for best for- eign film with this story of a dying Jewish prostitute (SIMONE SIGNORET) who runs a one-woman orphanage for Parisian prostitutes' children. Samu Ben Youb is Momo, her favorite, a brooding Arab boy who shares Madame Rosa's fantasies of the past and the reality of her impending death. With glimpses of her former sexuality intercut with the grossness of her physical decline, Signoret draws a portrait of her own life in this sentiment- filled elliptical film of Arab-Israeli reconciliation. Sun: Walsh's MANPOWER CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:O0& :.. $1.50 ! ' Feb. 18-29 lz Vj I Lo kbl"l ),i1iItug iTie l gathering place *ialf rice