ARTS The Michigan Daily Sunday, October 12,'1980 Page 7 DIXIE DREGS A T POWER Sure it's good, but can it sell? By STEVE HOOK For a doomed rock-and-roll band, the ixie Dregs surely can perform. The who?, you ask. Case in point. Okay: The Dixie Dregs are a five- piece instrumental band, combining lead and bass guitar, fiddle, keyboard and percussion, playing compositions that jump genres (rock, jazz, country- western, classical) with a snap of the finger. And with great flair-in fact, the Dixie Dregs are one of the most talen- ted, refreshing bands touring this fall. UNFORTUNATELY, BY the' very hature of their music-i.e., its lack of ull-scale marketebility-their future in this nation of two-bit, fly-by-night mnusic is in serious doubt from where I stand. Hell, their promo sheet reads like an epitaph: "The most difficult aspect about the Dixie Dregs is accurately categorizing the group's music. While some perceive this trailblazing in- strumental quintet's materials as rock and jazz 'fushion,' the members don't stop there. "We rarely think of labels,' says guitarist Steve Morris, 'but if we did, it would be something like electric chamber music.' " Doom. Death. Despair. Such an un- fair fate for such a vivacious band. AT POWER CENTER Friday night, they played hard and well for the 500 or so spectators that barely half-filled the place. They presented their recent works along with older favorites like "The Bash." Guitarist Steve Morse in particular, who grew up in Ypsilanti before moving south, displayed an awesome control of his craft. Per- cussionist Rod Morgenstein and bassist Andy West also stood out. When these guys get moving together, the end result is stunning, as it was Friday night. They're as tight and energetic a band as I have, ever seen since, oh, let me think, The Ramones. Four. years and four albums since their birth at the University of Miami, the Dregs, who now are based in Georgia, are riding as high as they ever have been-and probably as high as they will go. Though their artistry becomes more precise, more professional as time goes on, the current of the river they are trying to swim upstream in is just too swift. In a land of King Radio, the Dixie Dregs are virtually ignored. There is little time on WRIF for an eight-minute fusion in- strumental. And since radio play tran- slates into record sales and gigs, well, you know the rest.- AFTER THE SHOW, Morse, the band's nucleus on stage, was given just such a hint-that what this band is doing is excellent, but commercially futile. He disagreed.. "I don't believe that," he smiled, "I've just got a little faith in the men- tality of the music fans in this coun- try-that they can accept something Les Blank fitms tonight Ann Arbor Film Co-op and Cinema Guild are co-sponsoring an evening of short subjects by, documentarian Les Blank tonight at Auditorium A, Angell Hall. The filmmaker will speak and an- *Swer questions following the 7 o'clock showing. l'lank's unabashed identification with his subjects is quite unusual in the w6ld of documentaries. His, interest lies mainly in capturing local cuture -especially poor Southern blacks-with a special emphasis on his passions-music and food. However, his films are less anthropological ilocuments than they are sincere at- * tempts to communicate. There is very little analysis or interpretation in Blank's work, either by the filmmaker or his subjects. His special talent seems to be simply in capturing unexpected moments of honesty in the nmusic and the expressions of his subjects. This doesn't always make good film, as we. are often subjected to tedious "am- bient"' passages such as a group of people strolling down a dirt road and a child playing on a street corner, but the connections Blank makes with the *people in his films could be made by few other filmmakers. The moment when the harpist jamming with Light- nin' Hopkins in The Blues According to tightnin' Hopkins is so moved by the music that he begins to crawl laboriously across the living room floor on his knees while playing is worth more than a million words from the mouth of a sociologist on the meaning of the blues to poor Southern blacks. Other films to be shown tonight in- plude Always for Pleasure, an affec- tionate bow to the musical traditions that " have risen from, and been / other than the radio shit they're get- ting." He conceded that Power Center was ."too big a hall for us," and grum- bled that their agent is "just trying to get us lined up anywhere he can." Oh well, in a land where artistic merit and commercial success seem to negatively correlate, this state of af- fairs comes as no real surprise. But it sure gets depressing when it comes time to review: remembering how people waited three days in line to see a slob like Bruce Springsteen up close; recalling the empty balcony at Power Center Friday night-and wondering why, why. is preserved'on aJmmRWO nBU The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard Street AND - Graduate Library SPECIAL Italian Buffet y all you can eat for only $4.95 SUNDAY at BIMBO'S Hours: 2pm til midnight, Buffet open ti) 9 pm 114 E. Washington 665-3231 r DUVALL * MICHAEL O'KEEFE THEGREAT AflTifli Sat, Sun-1:05, 3:10, 5:25, 7:30, 9:35 D Mon, Tues-7:30, 9:35 MANN THEATRES DAILY DISCOUNT MATINEES VILLAGE 4 All seats $2.00 'til 5:30 375 N. MAPLE Mon-Sat, 'til 2:00 on Sundays 769-1300 DOUBLE FEATURE tllCoast to Coast (PG) BENJAMIN 3:30 7:15 1:15 315 515 Caddyshack (R) ® i7:30 9:45 1:45 5:15 9:00 DOUBLE FEATURE Why Would Honeysuckle Rose (PG) I lie (PG) 1:45 7:00 Willie & Phil (R) 1:30 5:30 4:00 9:15 3:30 7:30 9:30 CINEMA GUILD PRESENTATIONS TONIGHT AT THE MICHIGAN THEATER-1:00, 7:00 & 9:5 .THE WAY WE WERE An unlikely romance between a frizzy haired red head and a red, white and blue jock. With Streisand and Redford. AND AT AUD. A, ANGELL HALL FILMS BY DOCUMENTARY FILMMAKER LES BLANK At 7:00 Mr. Blank will show some of his most recent films and talk with the audience afterwards. GARLIC IS AS GOOD AS 10 MOTHERS will be presented in a run-around-an intense olfactory experience. At 9:00 two more films will be shown. This program presedteo in con- junction with Ann Arbor Film Cooperative. -I Sat, Sun $1.5C til 1:30' S INDIVIDUAL THEATRES vth Ae of Liberty 7619700 scr pr DTALLY REMODELED ew seats"new eens " new sound new concession new restrooms new carpet + new 'ojection system. BARRIER FREE MARTY FELDMAN RICHARD PRYOR (PG) Mississippi bluesman Lightnin' Hopkins is the star of the twenty-minute film 'The Blues According to Lightin' Hopkins,' one of five films to be screened tonight in a program of short documentaries by Les Blank. Blank will talk about his movies with Ann Arbor audiences tonight following the 7:00 program. The 7:00 and 9:00 screenings are being presented jointly by Cinema Guild and the Ann Arbor Film Co-op at Auditorium A in Angell Hall. sustained by, New Orleans' Mardi Gras; Hot Pepper, all about the bluesy LAST TWO SHOWS 2 P.M. & 8P.M. music of Clifton Chenier and its roots in rural Louisiana; Garlic is as Good as OCT. 9-12,8pm Ten Mothers, a musical visit to the Gilroy Garlic Festival; and, in a (Xor somewhat different vein, Werner Herzog Eats His Shoe, in which the celebrated German filmmaker does just that-after losing a bet with Blank. .C° Sat, Sun-1:05, 3:05, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 Mon, Nes-7:15, 9:15 r Poll shows Reagan would win race today E . From United Press International the race still is tight in many big nor- Ronald Reagan would defeat thern states Carter must win to stay in President Carter easily if the voting the White House. were held now with likely wins in the vital industrial states of Michigan, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, and New Jersey, a UPI survey showed yester- day. UPI political writers in each state assessed candidate standings based on interviews with key politicians and of- fice-holders, and concluded Reagan would carry 34 states with 365 electoral votes. THEY FOUND Carter would carry just 10 states and the District of Colum- bia with 121 electoral votes. Six states Monday' Oct. 13 with 52 electoral votes were rated tossups. Independent candidate John Anderson carried no state, though he was close in Connecticut. Tuesday, Oct. '14 E The survey showed Reagan has im- proved his position from a month ago when he had 30 states and 323 electoral Wednesday, Oct. 15 votes to Carter's 15 and the District of Columbia with 128 electoral votes. Five states with 87 electoral votes were rated as tossups in the previous UPI Thursday, Oct. 16 El survey. THE NEW SURVEY shows Reagan making a strong attack on Carter's Friday, Oct. 17 H southern base, with Alabama and canterbury loft 7