ARTS The Michigan DoilY Wednesday, February 3, 1982 Page 5 p Prince displays talents Mimi By Mark Dighton HE EXCITEMENT at Hill Auditor- ium was such Monday night that it didn't seem to really matter if either of the bands played well at all. The audience was united with the knowledge that we were onto something good that others were only beginning to recognize. Yes, hipness is a heady drug and we were high on it Monday night.' We all knew that Prince is so hot that this would probably be the last time. we'd see him before the arena circuit puts him out of touch forever. Already he seems to be evidencing that separation. But more often than not we still held that connection with him, and through him, with each other. As the lights went down for warm-up band The Time, the feeling of mass an- ticipation was almost tangible. And The Time didn't disappoint. If it didnt mat- ter how well they played, they didn't seem to know it; they turned out an im- peccable set of keyboard-drive funk. The Time are perfect foreplay to Prince (a metaphor which I'm sure Prince would approve). Their sound is obviously derived from Prince, but they make it distinctly thrilling in their own right. Their presence filled Hill Auditorium, not just with an arena- sized sound, but also a magnetism that held the audience together. They managed this energy like pros, holding it just under the breaking point, sparking it only when Morris Day touched someone in the audience or tossed them a rose. Then it passed like an electrical current through the audience, inciting screams or shudders from most. After that ecstatic foreplay, the sex was a bit disappointing. Not that it wasn't good; just that it wasn't quite as good as the preceding might have led you to expect. PrinZe is at a difficult point in his careern; he's definitely made it to the top. That much is quite clear. However, he no longer seems clear on what it was that originally got him there. In con- cert, he plays down his music i4.favor of his by-now-infamous unchained-libido persona. But even that is beginning to show signs of strain as it's.being blown up to fit major-pop-star proportions. Whereas before, hehandily played with the contradictions of his presen- tation-black/white, gay/straight/, male/female, tough/vulnerable-he seems to be resolving those anbiguities too facilely in order to develop a coherent and consistent image., The first to go seems to have beeni the last listed. Prince's emotive vulnerability now seems lost to coy posturing and his indubitable coolness has edged into macho posturing. In fact, the first four songs of his Monday night set were lost to an egocentric ex- cessiveness typical of heavy metal bands. The two (formerly) slow songs-"I Wanna Be Your Lover" and "Why You Wanna Treat Me So Bad"-were completely flattened out of the appropriate feeling of bruised in- nocence with an unflattering ego- strutting one would have thought unlikely from Prince. Of course, the band didn't help much either, steamrollering the musical sub- tleties of these softly textured soul tunes as Prince trashed their tone. It is indeed unfortunate that Prince can't play every instrument in concert as he does on records, because his every lick on keyboard or guitar was just so right there was no room for doubt. The band's track record was a lot less certain. For every indisputable delivery (e.g., "Annie Christian," "Private Joy") there were also the dubious renditions like "Controver- sy" and "Jack U Off," where something just seemed to never quite happen right. An ideal pairing would have been the musically punchy Time with Prince at the forefront, but that was obviously not to be. And despite any signs of bad weather on Prince's horizon, he was in top form. His guitar-masturbating and stage- humping schtick is still this side of trite, still reminding us of taboos dared. One has to wonder, though, how long it will be before these actions will just be taken for granted by the audience, ex- pected by them in return for their money, not unlike Alice Cooper's guillotine, just part of the act. I still have a feeling that amid all the androgynous attitudinizing, Prince has some points he wants to make, statements that are all the more sincere for their unacademic and uncom- plicated nature. But his ideas border in- trinsically on the sensationalistic, so that the very point of his argument may be his eventual undoing. In fact, the Hill audience was somewhat at an advan- tage because of the ban on Prince strip- ping down to his customary jockstrap. Hopefully, denied the chance to peruse his sex, we' spent out time pondering sexuality. But don't try to tell me some folks didn't go away feeling gyp- ped just because they didn't get a chan- ce to see his buns undraped. It seems that -though Prince is still near his peak, he might be just a bit on the far side of it. No doubt he'll continue to be an exciting and provocative musical figure for years to come, but I fear he may never quite recapture the personal magic and thematic clarity that already seems to be slipping from his grasp. If the ambiguities he now ex- plores just become a character he assumes, then he won't be different from all the other self-serving rock stars. Already, he seems to be distan- ced enough from his audience that it is no longer a question of how much he will give us in a show, but how much we'll get out of him. But even though it was a short set, Prince packed a lot into it-some great- songs and a lot of little gestures that said more than you might believe. Maybe his point is more simple than I think. Perhaps just presenting himself as a consummately sexy human being is enough. If that is the case, then there's no doubt he succeeded in making his point Monday night. No per- son who touched him or made eye con- tact with him that night will ever forget it. :*B 2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5h vealie *r t770 RICHARD DREYFUSS Whose lfeis it anywva Daily-7:00, 9:15 (R) WED-2:10, 4:35, 7:00, 9:15 5 W ith This Entire Ad One 0w f Ticket $1.50 MON, . -WED, THURS. EVE. Good Thru2/4/82 (Except REDS) "M" I The Comic Opera Guild presents F.... irj'JA'iU MICHIGAN THEATRE v Tickets on sale: Michigan Theatre Box Office: 2-6 p.m. Mon.-Sat, also at Hudson's Briarwood and Wherehouse Records : ~4 ':i. Warren Beatty Diane Keaton 1i REDS j ' DAILY-8:30 WED-1:00, 4:45, 8:30 (PG), WED-$2.50 Til 1:30 PM Prince reigned at Hill Auditorium Monday Night. 375 N.MAPLE 769-1300 in MAPLE VILLAGE S HPG CTRBAGAIN SHOWS $2.543.Moro 6 Pmo Moe-Fri Meore 3 PM Sat-sun ON THE STREET 1:15 THE REAL TRICK IS 3:05 1 =' STAYING ALIVE' : 0 11:na en 30-3.0-:15 7:00 Walt Disney's 1:30 A130 3:20 I A3:30 5:15 OR LI5:VE30 N:45 in concert 9:34 Morris, The Time are still very cool The Time and Prince are Warner Brother's leading progressive-funk acts. After Monday night's show at Hill Auditorium, Melissa Bryan talked with Morris Day, lead singer of. the Time, about their style, the tpur, and their relationship to Prince. Q.low long is'the tour? A. We're getting toward the end of the tour. I think we'll go to the middle or end of March., Q. How do you think it's going? A.. I'm pretty pleased with the suc- cess of the tour. We try to keep things new every night. We tried to keep an encore into the show, but it just doesn't work. Since we were an opening act, we get only 35 minutes or so, and we just have to keep things shorter than we like.- Q. I noticed that "Cool" is different than it is on the record ... Do you think that your audience wants to hear each song just as it is on vinyl? A. We try to keep things the same, but (we) have a time limit and some things, have to be shortened ... just like "Get It Up" is shorter, too. We only have time for 5 or 6 songs, but each night is different, and we make suggestions within the band and try things out to keep it interesting. . }-Q. Are you only touring with Prince? c, A. Yes, basically, *we work well ogether, and our audiences seem to like it. They're looking for a new ,ound ,and we can give it. 'Q. I've heard rumors about The 'Time's association with Prince, and I would like to clear some of it up.What exactly is your relationship with Prin- ce? Are some of the members of the Time related to Prince? Is that true? A. No, that is definitely not true. Q. I'te heard that you are produced by yourself and Prince (using a pseudonym). Is that true? A. No, The Time is produced by me and Jamie Starr, and he's another per- 'on entirely. Q. You have been accused of acting and sounding too much like Prince. How do you feel about the comparison? A. Well, I feel OK about it because I feel we prove more and more as time progresses and as we perform that there are no similarities whatsoever. Q. Proving it, how?. A. Well, our actual performance, our persona, "being cool". :. stuff like that. When we got together in Min- neapolis a year and a half ago, we were already living like that (being cool), and we chose to use that in our perfor- mances and on records. Q. Prince .has chosen a theme of- sexual revolution. . . does the Time want to make "cool" the theme if its forthcoming records? A. Cool will be a key word on our next albums, but that is not to say that each record and each performance won't be different. We chose to be cool and have a cool image because it's easy for us. Each member of the Time is'cool. Q. Where have you been best received? A. In Detroit. We play here often because we draw a good audience. We were the main act at the Royal Oak Music Theater last fall, and we sold out both shows on the same night. It was great. Q. Do you see changes being made in disco? If so, being made by whom? A. I think that Prince has made a lot of changes, and so are we, and that's why we're touring together. There aren't many people doing new things. A lot of stuff sounds like it's coming out of a producer's bag, and it's real tight and real clean, and it sounds like a lot of well paid musicians doing the tracks, and that's basically where music has been for a while. Q. Have you done any previous recording or studio work? A. Yes, as a drummer. I'm a real good drummer. I don't do any of the tracks on the first album because I had my hands full with singing. I started singing when The Time started up. I do some back up singing for studio tracks, too. Q. Musically speaking, who are your major influences? A. I don't have any real influen- ces-no one that I really have drawn things from. As- a drummer I've listened to a lot of jazz and picked up certain things, but as a singer I've never had an idol or anything that I've liked so much that I've wanted to copy it. There's a lot of songs I like and would like to do, but I guess that's why wefell See MORRIS, Page 7 "Gimme aD Gimme an A' Gimme an 1 . . L ...V * Give the MICHIGAN DAILY that old college try. CALL 764-0558 to order your subscription - A great orchestra of which Bulgaria can be proud. - Paris PHILHARMONIC Vladigerov: Bulgarian Rhapsody "Vardar" Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto in D major Mincho Minchev, violinist Dvorak: Symphony No. 8 in G major Thursday, Feb. 4 at 8:30 Hill Auditorium 'r" ___ _ m nn his n nn n n n m n