Prine's prime is By Mark Gindin The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, March 8, 1983-Page 7 yet to come Jamaaladeen Tacuma stretches his digits at the U-Club last Saturday. Jakm aaladeen makes azz excane WHAT TO write about .i Jamaaladeen Tacuma? 0, what to ascribe about Cornell Rochester? 0, "what to elaborate about Olu Dara? Oh -oh oh oh oh! The name of their ensemble is Double Exchange, and they put on a jazz-filled show over at the U-Club last Saturday ,night courtesy of the Eclipse organization. Let's take the word ex- change and make a newspaper "story" about it. Exchange of seat's. I had to sit behind a pillar, and look around it to see the performers. But I didn't exchange seats with anyone. Exchange of concept. The first set by Double Exchange was a bare bones drum and bass combo. Sort of like Jazz- In-dub. Truly a gutsy concept, sort of ,like Da Vinci removing everything but the blacks and whites from "The Last Supper." Exchange of Punches, Pt. I. Jamaaladeen came out in what could .best be described as a citrusy suit, a burst of lime flavor. He, and Cornell Rochester stepped through the ropes in- to the squared circle. Tacuma dwarfed Dear Merchant. Did you'know * that Daily readers spend over $125 million on items you Iisel?______ GET YOUR AD! CALL 764-0554 his bass, and then became a bully on that poor little thing. Mommy, look at that mean man beating the shit out of that defenseless intrument. He whom- ped that sucker. Punched it in the nose. Lefts, rights, hooks, faster-than-the- speed-of-SugarRay-combinations. Ex- changing melodies, rhythms, and hooks like weight classes, Jamaaladeen resoundingly sounded a new basic sock and role. Exchange of punches, Pt. II. If boxing is an international sport then so is Cornell a global beating sort. Cor- nell's style was stick and move, search and destroy, pound and deploy. From riding bop to PanAfrican hop, Rochester exchanged regular drum sticks for Thor's magic hammer, kissing the sky with cymbalic breaking. Exchange of words. Jamaaladeen was a fun guy to watch, as were the other two too. Topics discussed with the crowd and each other ranged from Kung Fu to genitalia, to wow! look at that guy play ! Exchange of partners. In the 2nd set, trumpeter Olu Dara joined. To this mandance funky cake, Dara added an emanating outer space tradition, ex- changing African and traditional trumpets, and a mixing bowl. Sonic tonics of vibrations, clicks, bell like tones, and pops were thrown into the melee. Dara's pressure drop made for some more heavy stompin'. Exchange of time. Opening the show were locals Inserts, a mass of acid casualty improv data loop King Crim- sonish "art. " Dreaming on stage, the band suffered a case of the dirge drones, though occasionally the fretless bass and drums ironed the guitar wash of sound. To sum up, during one of their "songs", the guitar player checked his watch. Clearly, by exchanging pretense for funning, Double Exchange were won- derfully youthful and stunning. Look for Jamaaladeen and Cosmetic, his other band (another of several bands) coming Wednesday night at Rick's. Look for his solo album coming soon (with Diva's Wilhemina Fernandez). Coming soon, more energetic frenetics. T HE JOHN PRINE who came to town last week was about the same as the one who showed up in 1975 laun- ching the Common Sense tour and the one who returned a year later in a benefit for the Ark at the Power Center. Approaching middle age at 36 and a little larger around the middle, he speaks with the same slow drawl he has on stage, belying his sharp observations of the human state that comes through in the songs he writes. But songwriting isn't all he wants to do. Prine now has his own record com- pany. It can't distribute records quite yet, but he says he hoopes his new album will be out by September and the company might distribute it, with Prine doing the producing. It's a fascinating story, and he sat down after his Ann Arbor concert to conclude the telephone interview he had started the week before. He said he named the company "Oh Boy!" to match any sort of reaction a product might meet. "Oh boy, was that a great song. Oh boy, things aren't gong that great. Maybe we can open a Jewish branch and call it Oy Vey!" Sort of a name for.all seasons. Eventually, his production of other artists might become a reality. There are probably enough of them around who might like the way John Prine thinks an album should sound. Prine moved to Nashville after his divorce to live with his girlfriend a few years ago. "In Chicago, my friends were carpenters, plumbers, and other kinds of regular working people. In Nashville, I hang around with people who are in the music business, because that's what's in Nashville." As he explained in his concert at the Michigan Theatre Friday night, most of the newer songs have been co-written in Nashville. One of the reasons co-writing with friends is easier is because "we can criticize each other's work. We can make a song that neither would have written by ourselves." There are now about 20 new songs ready for the studio, Prine said, and hopefully 12 will make it onto the album, rather than the usual ten. "Record companies figured out that they pay for each song, so more songs (on an album) means they pay out more and have to sell it for the same price." If Oh Boy! can distribute the record, "I can sell it for two dollars less in the store and make two dollars more because there ain't no middle man. Release of a new album means a tour, and Prine said his would be "coast to coast," hopefully including Ann Arbor. That Prine, with his sarcastic, earthy slice of life lyrics is popular in Ann Ar- bor comes hardly as a surprise. But other parts of the country also listen to him. Steve Goodman, another prominent folk-tinged songwriter, often collaborates and performs with Prine, one of his best friends. He accompanied Prine on part of his 3%/2 week tour of the Northwest, just before he came to Michigan. "We broke some (attendance) recor- ds up in the Northwest, playing halls that Hank Williams and Roy Rogers played in," Prine jubilantly proclaimed form his hideaway in Hackson Hole, Wyoming, in the Grand Teton Moun- tains. "We deserve this vacation." But it is the music-buying public who ultimately judge his work and Prine has the utmost respect and thanks for DASCOLA STYLISTS You Wsh It .. . ...W'/ Cut It Liberty off State.........66-9329 East U. at South U........662-0354 Arboriand ..............971-9975 Maple Village ...........761-2733 them. "I could probably play a prairie and get more people than if I played in a city. In a prairie, there are usually cities around and my fans often come a long way to hear me, which just makes me feel great." Because he is still looking for the big hit that will make-him a "Star,"Prine gets most of his money from touring and royalties, just like any other songwriter. But he says touring is much more than a chore. "I'll probably keep playing for people 'til they.have to take me off in a wheelchair." His Ann Arbor show was not quite perfect because the sound system had a problem. It made his scratchy, honest voice incomprehensible when he belted out his songs. With a band like Black Sabbath, it might have meant the end of the show-but not John Prine. "You don't write eleven years and not have enough quiet, acoustic songs to last a show." Phillip Donnelly, Prine's stagemate for the past few years, said the un- scheduled break w as the first the pair had been forced to take, but "it was nor problem." Since the order of songsand what is played changes each show Doily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS John Prine and stagemate Phillip Donnelly relax backstage after their concert last Friday. 00 ESCAPE - to the Movies ONE PRICE FOR ALL anyway, it was easy to adapt when "everything went wrong." r .Donnelly, also based in Nashville, is originally from Dublin, Ireland, but a heavy brogue is almost absent. "People say I sing with an accent but talk without one." Although he only sang part of "Paradise" this time, "in other shows I sometimes sing a couple of my own. Things were different than normal this time." The pair brought six guitars on to the stage, but Donnelly remained with one electric model as Prine fluctuated bet- ween an electric and an acoustic. Asked to invent a genre to classify his music, Prine came up with the term "country rock and roll-a, with an em- phasis on the roll. People always drop the last syllable of a word, so I was ' E 'Lo tn. EFQP S O ,,,- HEQP , S excep ALL )t GAN[C shi. DHI I!M$THE MOVIES AT? BRIARWOOD) 94 K S St Aft 769 H8?~l A~It..rl wi X , JC Mo.,.IoPf e#,* , .. *l . c.Iy \,I,.t S200")Ca),.I j~}Pl4 T F.QR 5!!9 5_TAMTING . ipf R6 P M F FO X 3FO 375 N L MASEV t NL A G E y 1),4coutlI I S, 014 S HOW sST I IN f i( G tA How to procrastinate tastefully. taught to add an -a to the end of everything. That way you drop the -a and the word stays." The shine of Prine had not been diminished by the speaker failure in fact, he came out as the hero when he was called back for an encore. His fans are probably more loyal than ever after a long-awaited return to Ann Arbor. And Prine liked it too. "Yeah, I got off on it. Want to see my underwear?" Prine asked afterwards. Prine looks toward the future with hope. "It only takes 40 minutes to record an album, more if you take time to flip it over." As he asks in one of his songs, John Prine won't be buried, just cup up and passed around. And after his concert, nobody would ask for a refund. MEDICAL SCHOOL OPENINGS Immediate Openings Available in Foreign Medical School Fully Accredited ALSO AVAILABLE FOR DENTAL AND VET SCHOOL LOANS AVAILABLE INTERVIEWS BEGIN IMMEDIATELY For further details and/or appointment call Dr. Manley (716) 832-0763 / 882-2803 YOUR BSN IS WORTH AN OFFICER'S COMMISSION IN THE ARMY Pour yourself a cup of Irish Mocha- Mint. Chocolatey, with a hint of mint, it's a delicious way to postpone the inevitable. And it's just one of six inspired flavors from General Foods* CAWFIACAIS International Coffees. ... GFPNRAT l rnnrOTl'zINT2XTATTC)NJ AT --C)FT1 m I -