ARTS The Michigan Daily Thursday, December 11, 1980 Page 7 Still searchin Weather Report 's same new thing By JERRY BRABENEC Some records are calculated to take the world by storm, some to capitalize on earlier successes, and some are sub- dued efforts, intended simply to con-, tinue a style and please established fans. Some new releases in the latter category "would include Steely Dan's Gaucho, Neil Young's new one, and our subject, Weather Report's Night Passage. Weather Report functions these days in a well defined style that combines superfast electronic bop, big band bop, and moody, exotic ballads. This ap- proach has won. the group a larger following than they've ever enjoyed, and the new album continues in the same vein. The title tune is a relaxed midtempo number, while "Fast City" and "Port of Call" are ultrahigh velocity. "Rockin' in Rhythm" is an I4llington tune, with Shorter's tenor and Zawinul's keyboards simulating a big band's sax section. Milhaud, Gershwin, and Ellington all influenced the slow tunes, which, though a little dull and (quoting Whitman by way of Bradbury) was ambitious and heavy, but still very successful-one side of trippy studio pieces, and the other, excerpts from a brilliant live recording released in Japan as a two-record set. Conflicts between Zawinul and bassist Miroslav Vituous became evident on the next album, Sweetnighter. Zawinul brought in a studio electric bassist to double Miroslav's acoustic lines and recorded the band's first="hit," "The Boogie Woogie Waltz." The move toward a more popular, funky sound continued on the next two albums. Mysterious Traveller is a wonderful space album,' named after theastronomical flop of modern times, the comet Kahoutek. Tale Spinnin' had a Caribbean flavor and lengthy, thoroughly-composed arrangements by Zawinul that seemed quite antithetical to the band's earlier emphasis on group improvisation. Then, with Black Market, came the big break-the arrival of Jaco Pastorius, the bassist of Zawinul's dreams, equally adept at feedback Hendrix-. style lead solos and bop lines like Donna Lee. Jaco's presence cemented Zawinul's control of the band, and Shor- ter receded into the background, playing note by note lines that Zawinul had composed earlier on his keyboards. Columbia had done everything they could for the band from the start, and Shorter and Zawinul had credentials that commanded respect, but now the band took off. "Birdland," off Heavy Weather, is one of the great jazz hits of recent years, a big band tune hearkening back to Zawinul's early days with Maynard Ferguson's big band at the famous New York night club thattboreaCharlie Parker's name. Maynard even recorded his own ver- sion, every bit as exciting as the original. That brings us to the present, but the! band's popular gains represent the losses of the-cognoscenti, for the band has lost its sense of adventure. Weather Report is becoming the Steely Dan of jazz-competent and. popular but rather dry. For really prime Weather, check out the early releases, and par- ticularly the Japanese live set. By DENNIS HARVEY Five years ago, The Hissing of the Summer Lawns heralded a new direc- tion for Joni Mitchell, and to most critics and fans it looked like a misstep. Ambitious, lurchirigly experimental, unfocused, definitely trying to get at something but vaguely unpleasant in the attempt, Hissing was an intellectual outsider' s probing reach for jazz-a query and an appreciation, awfully serious, mysteriously but very noticeably lacking the intuitive grasp of the genre that could have removed its strain. Joni didn't give up after that fir- st stumbling probe, abandoning the delicate reflection of her earlier folk- based music for more curiously distan- ced, intelligent explorations into jazz as musical form, myth and mystery. Through four albums, chilly critical an dwindling public response, she's stayed interesting-even noble-on her con- stant "safaris to the heart of all that jazz." But she remains outside looking in-a very smart white lady trying too studiously, too abstractly, for something that continues to elude her. SHADOWS AND LIGHT, her two- album live set, condenses Chapter One of jazzy Joni just as Miles of Aisles in 1974 provided the last (albeit uneven) word on Joni as an acoustic observer before the complex pop bridge of Court and Spark. As a result, it has a thematic charge, a sense of wholeness, that none of her post-'74 albums (possibly excep- ting Hejira) have had. The clutter of studio effects, all desperately trying to evoke some lost chord of primitivism, is gone, and the relative relaxation of the stage show relieves the material somewhat. The songs still smack of ar- ty pretentiousness at times, but the live setting and the general tautness of her current band help to deflate the rhetoric. NOT COMPLETELY, though. The ominous rumble of Joni's jazz sound keeps things all too earthbound, alas, still shackled to the struggle to be something when you just want it all to take off. Shadow and Light works better than any of Mitchell's other jazz ex- periments-in other words, the taste of vague failure goes down more easily than ever before. As a lyricist, Joni has become steadily more impressionistic and playful, if less compelling. In fact, it's all too easy to ignore what she's saying most of the time now, though the sub- tlety and visual charge of her imagery is still intriguing on further scrutiny. She'll probably never be as emotionally direct as she was during the golden period of Blue and For the Roses articulateness is now directed toward being something of a jazz historian, with some traces of the old reflec- tiveness. She recycles and tries to re- interpret the mythos of urban glamour in 1940's visions of the city's exotic under- side ("Edith and the Kingpin") and the musicians she worships ("Goodbye Porkpie Hat," "Furry Sings the Blues" and "God Must Be a Boogie Man," all off the failed Mingus collaboration). These are, usually, her least appealling (and now most common) compositions, interesting on one level as rambling musical explorations but uninteresting as songs. FEW OF MITCHELL'S jazz songs really stand out from the others lyrically or musically, and- that's a major problem-"Coyote" is the only one that's won any kind of wide recognition, and typically, that's the only song here to get more than a fairly subdued audience response. "Hejira," with its slowly mounting musical tension (which doesn't really go anywhere) and the ear-ballad "Amelia" don't really come together the way Joni's folk pieces used to, but they come close enopgh. Joni's voice has changed a lot since her folk days, too-once lithe and wide-eyed, skittering around the upper registers, she's now a harder-edged, sometimes harsh stylist, hitting the right inflections with cool precision. But she's still no real jazz vocalist; that voice is still too light, too depthless. Although it works better at the playfulness of near-skat (especially on Court and Spark's ''Twisted"), the in- cisiveness can get too metallic, as.it does here on The Dry Cleaner Froth Des Moines. She probably couldn't sound convincing on her folk songs anymore; it's definitely the wrong time for the one folk revival here, no less than "Woodstock" (dredged up for the 0a g inJa encore, and still in search of a definitive version), but her delivery-low, cool, methodical-calculatedly drains whatever life there is left in it. . There are, still, moments of real suc- cess here. "In France They Kiss on Main Street" loses a few flourishes that r it had on Hissing of the Summer Lawns, but it remains a rhapsodic surrender to romantic conversation, a rush of ec- static images, and Mitchell's phrasing grabs its every possibility. ."Shadows and Light," a murky farewell mass on the same album, has developed enough grandeur to be acceptable as a sort of before-and-after anthem-by now, its lyrics seem like a dignified answer of self-defense toward the "critics of all expression" Mitchell has dealt with since Hissing's bewildered reception. zzland The Persuasions' guest spot is a bit too conspicuous on that reprise, but perfect on "Why Do Fools Fall in Love" turned into a doo-wop riot-it's more fun than anything else on the set, and fun is what Mitchell has desperately needed in most of her jazz experimenting. Joni Mitchell hasn't gone stale or just* faded away-how many other circa- 1971 folkies'could claim that?-and her efforts to grow and change, to get it right (even if she never goes) remains admirable. I'll always like her for what she has done and what she, con- ceivably, could do in the future, though hard as I try, I can't really like the music she's creating now. Shadows and Light, more than any of her other jazz works, can be appreciated, but it's still only halfway to being really enjoyable. The word's out on campus. ..0 If you want to be in the know, you should be reading The Daily . . . the latest in news, sports, les _affaires acodemiques, and entertainment .. . CALL 764-0558 to order your subscription today 1 I THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER JIMMY STEWART, MARGARET SULLIVAN, FRANK MORGAN. A comedy set in the romantic Budapest of -times gone by. The benevolent but formal owner 'of a leather-goods shop is being cuckholded but suspects the wrong man, an employee who, in fact, is conducting an anonymous lonely hearts correspondence with another clerk. In their everyday lives these two keep feuding. Vintage bubbling champagne brewed to perfection by the magic of Lubitsch. 7:00 & 9:05 tonight at Lorch. Friday: WUTHERING HEIGHTS with Olivier, Merle Oberon Saturday: Chaplin's THE GREAT DICTATOR CINEMA GUILD We're showing through the 20th DOM HELDER CAMARA ARCHBISHOP OF OLINDA-RECIFE, BRAZIL LATIN AMERICA PASTOR & PEACEMAKER "We can't settle for trivial reformn, we need to build a complete, humanizing revolution without the shedding of blood. For all the talk of foreign aid, the rich are getting richer, while the poor are, getting poorer every day." "No Peace Without Development" FREE PUBLIC LECTURE Rackham Auditorium, 3:30 Sunday, Dec. 14 Also Workshop/Discussion with Clergy and inter- ested Laypeople on Saturday, Dec. 13,3:00-5:00 at First Presbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenaw. (REGISTRATION REQUESTED, INTERFAITH COUNCIL 663-1870) e.5 NDEROSA DDec lat PON --- y BONU Save $2.79 OLIDAY NU Get6 oh on two Regular fponderosa Sirloin Strip Dinners Gift for i Dinners include " Baked Potato " Warm Roll with Butter - All-You-Can-Eat Salad Bar. OME CUT OUT THIS COUPON EEE5EUE CUT OUT THIS COUPON 0E00 TWO REGULAR SIRLOIN TWO REGULAR SIRLOIN STRIP DINNERS...$5.99 STRIP DINNERS.. $5.99 Beverage and dessert not included. Limit one Beverage and dessert not included. Limit one coupon per couple per visit. Cannot be used coupon per couple per visit. Cannot be used with other discounts. Applicable taxes not with other discounts. Applicable taxes not included. At Participating Steakhouses included At Participating Steakhouses. Offergood Offergood Dec. 5thruDec. * Dec21 * Dec21r - -- - m -m A - -m M .M, pretentious, still create a pleasant am- bience through their pacing and sonorities. All in all, this is very in- telligent, state-of-the-art stuff. MILES DAVIS' and John McLaughlin's fusion developed vir- tuoso instrumentals, sophisticated composition and eclectic influences that later bands have been challenged to equal. Shorter and Zawinul left Miles to form Weather Report, and their first four albums were strong contenders. The first album, Weather 'Report, dating from around 1972, achieved a quite ethereal effect, at once rhyth- *mically exciting and free, acoustic and electronic, tightly arranged .and im- provisational. This is, a chamber jazz that owes more than a little to the Modern Jazz Quartet. The second album, I Sing The Body Electric ,. F Join Ulbe Batlig Arts Staff ENDS TONIGHT: INDIVIDUAL THEATRES (G) "MY BRILLIANT CAREER" at 7:10, 9:00 5th Ave at liberty 761*9700 (R) "ONE TRICK PONY" at 7:20, 9:10 - 1IYAM .___ F STARTS TOMORROW SHE DO VA sOLtVE OY i