ARTS Tuesday, February 3, 1981 The Michigan Daily Page 5 De Johnette booming success By JERRY BRABENEC Ann Arbor jazz audiences got a look at Miles Davis' fusion legacy Friday night when Jack De Johnette's Special Edition quartet appeared at the League Ballroom. Moving through a wide range of moods, the quartet utilized open-ended, sketchy arrangements of free jazz, and balanced the set with Oterpretations of John Coltrane tunes and a more conventional ballad. the De Johnette concert demonstrated both the strengths and weaknesses of free, fusion-style jazz. The opening number started in a deceptively ten- tative, hokey vein, with a bass ostinato figure that opened into a bass clarinet solo by Chico Freeman. Freeman's low honks and high squeaks gradually coalesced into an urgent,, moving riff, and when the tune returned to the opening mood, the put-on quality of the theme was humorously apparent. THE NEXT SECTION (DeJohnette's mumbling ntroductions and the nature of the music made titles ifficult to pin down) opened with Peter Warren's warm sound on bass. Bowing near the bridge to produce an eerie, whistling overtone effect, Warren soon gave way to a definitive drum solo from De Johnette. After working out on his drum kit in a style reminiscent of his solos on Miles' Live-Evil, sounds began to drop out. Finally, playing only with one foot on the highhat, Mr. D. detached a cymbal mike from its stand, and proceeded to move the mike around the cymbals as e played, creating a fascinating variety of sounds. a recent interview, De Johnette mentioned the pains he takes selecting cymbals, going through dozens at' the Paiste factory before finding the ones that work. This attention pays off in his innovative, tour-de-force solos. De Johnette moved to piano next and opened up a dreamy ballad, "Pastel Rhapsody," from his up- coming album. This tune was a more conventional song form, with pretty harmonies and a pensive mood reminiscent of sentimental old ballads like "Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most," or even the music of Peanuts pianist Vince Guaraldi. PROSPECTS FOR EDUCAT/ON AND R(/RdI RECONSTRUCIIO I p -i i F Saxophonist Chico Freeman lets loose during the concert by the Special Edition band Saturday night. Date:*WedFE 4 at1/30-5:30 Thurs.,FEB 5 at9-noon&1- 4 P/ace: Henderson Rn., Mich. league Next came two Coltrane tunes from the current Special Edition LP, "India" and "Central Park West." "India" is a wide-spread, droning tune. De Johnette started on piano, then alto sax, bass clarinet and bass picked up the riff as.De Johnette silently moved to his drums, picking up the moderate waltz tempo on the cymbal. The solos here were overly long, lacking the passion of the rendition by Coltrane and Eric Dolphy. Freeman had a very smooth, melodic tone on bass clarinet, but lost pace toward the end of his solo, and Purcell's flute solo never completely developed. The lesson here is that freedom and open solos necessitate constant atten- tion to formal development. "Central Park West" showed how much has tran- spired since Coltrane's passing. Bucking the current jazz trend toward faithful reaffirmations of older styles, DeJohnette's arrangements treated Coltrane's tunes as springboards for stylistic ex- .. .Daily Photo by DAVID HARRIS perimentation. His use of a melodica (a windblown, hand held keyboard instrument that sounds a lot like a Magnus chord organ) gave the performance a reedy, quavery feel that was delicate and effective. The finishing number was the title cut from Special Edition's new LP, Tin Pan Alley. An intricate head arrangement led into a strong baritone sax solo by John Purcell, whose fine tone on this instrument combines the vigor of Pepper Adams with the light flexible tone of Gerry Mulligan. De Johnette's virtuostic drumming stole the show over Ann Arbor favorite Chico Freeman. Moving all around the beat with a wide variety of fills, booming out bass drum rolls like thunder, socking his crash cymbal, and backing up solos with sure intuition, De Johnette displayed the musicality that assures him a position among jazz's top drummers for years to come. The UnIversit of mkigon Michigan State University Committee on Southern Afrko African Studies Center Paris in the spring PiL style Some things never change. The sun still rises, the wind blows, and John Lydon is at :war with the, world. Only now he wants to fight alone. The most interesting thing about OPublic Image Limited's new live album, Image Publique S.A.-Paris au Printemps, is Lydon's perpetual and isolated confrontation with social idiocies up to and including his audien- ce. Lydon can make appeals for social welfare in songs like "Attack" while in- sistently isolating himself froh his listeners, and do it without batting an eyelash. WHEN AN AUDIENCE member shouts,, "Attack!" after the song is over, Lydon counters with "Shut up." Having taught audiences around the world to spit in his days with the Sex Pistols, Lydon now grouses, "I woke up in this state with you creeps spitting. Dumb!" And he apparently misses the irony. The lyrics are brim-full of the bitter mead of survival, thankfully sung wit- tily in Lydon's wonderfully manic, sliding voice. The songs are undeniably, finely-crafted, thriving on Jah Wobble's pulsating basswork and Keith Levine's curiously dissonant, squawking guitar blurbs. Lydon himself contributes occasional twittering, elongated synthesizer background and vocals measured both for effect and to let the lyrics sink in. They deserve it, for Lydon has added dollops of wit and subtlety to his me- against-the-world banter. FOR INSTANCE, "Bad Baby," has Lydon warning, "Don't you listen to one more sob story." "Theme" finds a Even the uninitiated will find that PiL is good only in bursts. The music is ex- cellent, Lydon's voice one of the finest to emerge from the new wave movement, but the constant recurrence of the word "I" gets tiring. The whining is inspired, eloquent, and often delight- ful, but when all is said and done, still amounts to whining. And this is nothing new. The live PiL is a placebo for the addicts, but this is still the story of Johnny Rotten. -Fred Schill ~ :I. 2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave at Liberty 761-9700 A FILM BY AKIRA KUROSAWAII aww THE SHADOW WARRIOR (R) TUES, THURS: 6:30, 9:15 WED: 12:50, 3:45, 6:30, 9:15 WITH TH1tS ENTIRE AD - one odrvriss.on $2 00 any fim Good Non thr'.iThvru'iEwes. Valid thru 215'81 'M A ROABERT ALTMAN FILM! LAST 10 DAYS (PG) TUES, THURS 630, 8:30:3 WED: 1220, 2:20, 4:30, 6:30, 8:30 COMING FEB. 13th "Incredible Shrinking Woman" -LILY TOMLIN--- desperate death wish countered in- stantly by reality: "And I wish I could die/I will survive." Still, all of the material can be found on the other two albums, and Paris au Printemps is interesting only if you don't have them. The performances are precise but not new, faithful but not dynamic. Join The Daily Arts Staff _ _ _ " THII S IS ITI Ideology ,The Event: Fifty Cents The Gargoyle Ideology Gargoyle Issue The chance you've been waiting for is here. We are selling the FEW remain- ing copies of the 1980 MICHIG0NENSI6N OUR ALL-CAMPUS YEARBOOK. 1" Ii T-1 y 1 T 1 "SW T /1 7 1+ 1 1 '\401'T7 1t T!11 u 11 T I"19 I