The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 30, 1980-Page 7 SATURDAYNIGHT JAZZ Tale of two tenors By MARK COLEMAN The audience this past Saturday night at toe Jazz festival got a taste of the best, and worst in contemporary jazz. Chico Freeman and quintet presented an extremely progressive vision of the musical mainstream, while Stanley Turientine and his sextet made a regressive stab at lowest-common- denominator appeal. *Sqn of respected Chicago tenortnan Freeman built carefully considered solos into a multi-orgasmic climax of texture and tone. Opening with "Undercurrents," the Freeman group seemed to pick up where the Miles Davis quintet of the middle-sixties left off. Drummer Billy Hart's cymbal flourishes at the start set a cool distance, complemented by vibraphonist Jay Haggard and pianist Donald Smith's harmonics. The piece solo into the surreal, seemingly playing two melodies at once. FREEMAN COMBINED the wildest influences and the more familiar with an easy grace, prefacing a luxuriously warm ballad with an iconoclastic, jagged solo. The transition, from the expected to the unexplored, were smoothly executed by the band mem- bers, who often functioned as a four- piece rhythm section, echoing and playing off each others' ideas in a relaxed flow that was demanding but never presumptious. Freeman also exhibited a pronounced sense of humor, performing a tongue- in-cheek vocal rendition of "You Send Me," then adding a riveting, soul riff out of sheer perversity. This guy could be the next George Benson, if he wanted to, but he's far too versatile to be caught in that trap. Picking up soprano sax for the final number, Freeman played the instrument like a trumpet, issuing assualtive, emphatic bursts of melody while the group forged straight ahead in a richly percussive exchange. AFTER Freeman's triumph it would be easy to put Stanley Turrentine and his group down simply for playing elec- tric music. Purism aside, that wouldn't be fair because Turrentine was so bad that he transcends criticism. The band, minus Turrentine, began with a bland up-tempo piece too turgid to be called funk. Enter "Elektra-Asylum recor- ding artist" Stanley Turrentine, who led his group in a stripped-down reading of Weather Report's "Bir- dland" that would have been more ap- propriate in the lounge of the Briar- wood Hilton than Hill Auditorium. Then came his signature piece "Don't Mess with Mr. T," a cheaply sensual ballad that dragged on interminably. Turren- tine- earned something of a reputation for sensitive 'ballad treatment fifteen years ago, but Saturday he was content to go through the motions, allowing a soporific synthesizer player and ham- fisted drummer to set the atmosphere. Turrentine's detachment and outright irresponsibility became ap- parent as he left the stage ("out of respect for the dead" sug- gested Free Press critic W. Kim Heron) to allow his' band to perform John Coltrane's "Naima." The less said about that the better; rest assured that if there is a God in heaven, these men will have to answer for this malicious sacrilege. Closing with another bald attempt at funk, Turrentine pointed out the ob- vious problems of matching up "popular" jazz performers and more serious artists. Somebody comes out looking bad. Let's hope the audience will take Chico Freeman's advice and keep listening to "Great Black Music" and relegate has-beens like Turrentine to obscurity. the ann arbor film cooperative Tonight PRESENTS Tonight THE 17th PARALLELThe war in Vietnam, filmed from the point of view of the North Vietn- mese. With short-NIGHT AND FOG Alain Resnais' powerful and moving exploration of Nazi Concentration Camps. Awd . A ell Hall) PUT'ED Cretes a AWAY If you can live without your cigarettes for one day. you might find you can live without them forever. 9 A DAY. TONIGHT AT CINEMA GUILD 7:0 A 9:05 BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE : 115 3:15 5:15 7:,5 9:30 SUNDANCE KID "Who are those guys?" And why are they chasing the nicest and cutest outlaws in the West? It's tough for an honest thief when the world changes I I 1 and stealing as adventure becomes obsolete. But going straight is worse. Newman and Redford have that great screenchemistry and Katherine Ross stirs up the solution. Winner of five Academy Awards. WEDNESDAY-DON'T MISS JOHN FORD'S 1:15 3:15 5:15 LJ 7:30 9:30 'THE SEARCHERS DOUBLE FEATURE A masterpiece from the masters of the Western genre. John Wayne stars Honeysuckle Rose as a man who searches 15 years for his niece who was kidnapped by 1:45 7:00 Indians... G. Is located at Lorch Hallban Cowboy 4:00 9:15 (PG) o E 0 ,tOC' .a+"+ewrt9tOw o dn-'. .c.oww..n, - - - Ut.nn The D.R.E.A.D. WGOLD CARD Will Be Available October 6 At: Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM Tenor-saxophonist Chico Freeman turned in a startling performance to open the Saturday night program of the Ann Arbor Jazz Festival. An extremely versatile musician, Freeman combines disparte influences in a melodic style that brought the Hill auditorium crowd to its feet. Von Freeman, Chico brings a youthful flair. and vitality to his father's in- strument. A thoughtful and thorough improviser, Freeman interjects sharp epartures into avant-garde, territory throughout his characteristical melliflous, smooth style. Supported by an extremely sympathetic group, picked up momentum when Freeman's sax lines became increasingly varied and rich, as Hoggard and Smith became increasingly percussive on their instruments, matching and mixing it up with Hart's busy attack. By the end Freeman had extended his Sarah Vaughn holds her own ground qW (continued from Page 6) (only loud enough for the farthest member of the audience to hear), "How thehell am I gonna get it out of here?" Sarah is seductive. "I've Got It Bad Ad That Ain't Good" becomes a frustrated lament, replete with- a steamy oscillating tone, vulgar gesticulation, and lyrics .so lust-filled they become unintelligible. It doesn't matter, though; the words aren't telling" the story. Sarah is clever. She sings a rosy tune from the kids' show Sesame Street with the lyric: "Picture a world of honey wafm haze." She knows well that, metaphor must have been coined with her-is mind. 'Sarah is beautiful. Her treatment of "Send In The Clowns" is the only one I've heard that didn't bore me. She is so genuinely pensive, so wistful, that every familiar word comes across as a newly-discovered gem. And when she reaches for a piercing major seventh, the effect is poignancy to the point of pain. 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