ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, October 5, 1983 Page 7 . ......... . . ........ . ... . . ........ ........ Evolutionary win for Rich By Jim Boyd HANK GOD there's no more rock 'n' roll. Sure, some of you cried during the Who's final one, but most of us cheered. The beast had died, Elvis is King. Rock's fatal flaw was that it didn't adapt-something new and relevant' had to replace it. It clung tenaciously to power chords and lotsa brew; by definition it was unable to evolve. Jagger is the dinosaur, Costello the mammal. A wave of music biologically distinct from its predecessor sprang up. The old empire crumbled under its own drunken dissonance. But jazz, now there's an evolutionary master. Like the cockroach (an unfor- tunate analogy), this idiom adapts and flourishes. The structure of these organisms is successful and the environ- ment only forces it to adapt, it cannot force its extinction-even nuclear war would leave the roaches alive and kicking. While Jazz probably wouldn't survive a nuclear holocaust, it never- theless enjoys the security of being a successful organism that rides out the most difficult of times. The point of this is that Buddy Rich and his Big Band represent one of the latest and most promising hybrids in the jazz genre: this one's going to sur- vive. Buddy, 60ish, has got firm jazz roots but he's adapting with a iot of new growth. Rich's Monday night concert renewed the belief that jazz has an en- joyably viable place to go. Buddy star- ted off the show saying of the songs, "you probably won't recognize any of them." Well, we recognized a few, but a refreshing number of them really Were different. Buddy's progressive attitudes are reflected, not only in his music, but in the people who are playing it. He recruits barely post-pubescent college kids from top music schools who might not have much trench experience, but who make up for it in youthful vitality. He's the father figure to these trum- pet, trombone, and sax players who grew up listening to Pink Floyd and The Who. When they bow and acknowledge the appreciative audience, they've got a furtive, embarassed look about them. Ah, to be young again. The kids started off the show really fidgety. A trumpet player did a very hesitant solo and everyone looked to see what kind of a mood Daddy Buddy was in. But then he hit a couple of fast, tight tunes and father said, "I'm proud of you kids." The rest of the set was fan- tastic-when the kids gel, they can't be beat. A piano player showed us what Casablanca would be like in '83, and the bassist taught Jamaaladeen a few tricks. Other than Buddy, there is only one other veteran in the band-saxophonist Steve Marcus. He dazzled the audience with his incredible solos, possessing technical virtuosity as well as great creativity. Buddy himself was, of course, simply amazing. He does things that make you gape and giggle. One would think he's the youngest guy in the band. Talk about energy. The music was punctuated, moody, and very well mixed. At times each section sounded like a single voice. At the end of thedshow Buddy remarked, "We hope we did some good tonight. If not, so what." He had reason to be con- fident, a lot of good was done. FALL CYCLE CLOTHING AND EQUIPMENT CLOSE-OUT 15% off Buddy Rich and his Big Band mixed the old and the new at The Power Center Monday night. 'ellowman shows his true colors By C. E. Krell THERE IS TOO much fat and it is bad meat to start with. The color is all wrong; but even if it was green it wouldn't have to just sit there and swell like so much water weight-gain. Over- tone after overtone it just kind of soaked you in stupid sticky floury paste, like those impossibly colored syrups they put on good dead fowl. If you send an animal into a room with a very sharp and low ceiling fan, does that mean you have to stay around for the death vocal? Chew, chew, chew . .. No matter how much you bite this stuff it just won't go away. Almost cruelly it bulges up into your throat; all bitter and black and bilious. Look, I didn't expect the Spanish Inquisition to take me to their basement and tie me to a bench and force a funnel in my throat and just keep defecating this thing, this stupidly sour mash. So after a while, it was over, and somebody broke, and the air was instantly washed. After a long weight (wait, who cares-here they are the same), like some shapes started to bend them- selves onto stage. Picture yourself with aquarium eyes. Look at all the little fishies. Funny how they just keep flap- ping away; you see, if those little flaps stop moving, that means the fish will die. So its like everything started at a rolling boil. Little round bubbles at the bottom of a pot growing bigger and rising to the surface. You know, someone once said that the reason that pioneering rocker Bo Did- dly never became a star (besides the race thing) was that all his songs had }the theme of "I'm Bo Diddley." That is all they were ever about. So its like the lactic acids are building up. Oxygen in the blood begins to deplete as the star bends over, points a yellow finger, .and makes some very germane and appropriate point. The zmusic stops. He says it, there is a scream, and the ball starts to bounce again, just dribbling until they wind it I again, drop out, and another stirring ixmaster statement is proposed and cemented. Point after the point, then the clutch is pressed, neutral reigns, and a pop in- to the rain. Pouring out, the music boings and bams, little rubber people stretch and snap, another wry aside. This process continues and continues, yet like a good salad it stays crisp, without all that stupid buttermilk. Remember those little plastic tops you wound a string around, pulled on the string, and off they went, spinning into the plastic velodrome? The neat thing was that the more tops in the drome the more they knocked off each other and shot off at crazy angles. So the concert on Monday night was a real gangfight in that they would group, break off, regroup, solo, and then go onto some Jerome Robbins choreographed steps and struts and wriggle those but- ts. Meanwhile, some Third World Howard Cosell is telling you exactly what is going on. But unlike Cosell, this running commentary never paused to wax philosophical. Check that. Would the man at the typewriter please retract the following statement. O.K. what the commentary was was a distinctively Marxist (choose our own first name) judgment of a class struggle far removed from any Hegelian dialect. What he said was just as important as how he said it. Like Mother Goose, he seemed perfectly educational and reflective enough to achieve a certain muscular inflection known as frown correction. That's right, not frown in- jection but correction. He fixed it. Z 0 x Q 0 -BELLWETHER -ECLIPSE -CANNONDALE KANGAROO B I UO UIRC 330 s. state, strcet Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Yellow fever at The Second Chance. Damn it, a fixed fight. That's not fair, having the outcome already deter- mined before you go in. After a quick investigation, the committee comes up with a decision of not guilty. Old Mother Goose is saved from a life dominated by guilt complexes. The art of reportage lives! Class struggle exists on the stage, and Yellowman is hailed as the Grimm brother of the future! Good direction for True West By Larry Dean ASSEMBLING previews from pro- A motional materials-kind of like playing an existential game of Scrabble with Voltaire, Jean-Paul Sarte, and a hoarde of other dead social philosophers standing in line and hoping to beat the champ. Not a pretty picture, eh? Or at least not pretty to the average soul. Well, then, you try it, and see... See . .. many things ... many phenomena(s) . . . many sights ... and sounds. Like Sacramento's True West, here for the endurance test tonight at Joe's, 109 N. Main. r This, as Ronald Reagan would have you know, is the '80s, not the '60s. But bothers have taken it upon themselves to undermine authority and-embracing II. G. Wells-travel backward in time, in spirit if not in molecule .. . Back- ard, like a particularly stunning Meorge Harrison guitar solo, reeling and spinning in psychedelic spirals right out of the club scenes in "Blow Up. The Stray Cats and their ilk ain't got nuthin' substantial in their time- tripping. If they did, then Slim(y) Jim Phantom wouldn't be courting this cen- tury and the next's favorite courtesan, Britt Ecch!-land. No-they are merely going through the motions, quite Like all trends, this 'Psychedelia' thing is due to die. But in its wake will be the fittest, surviving. Certain inside sources spread rumors saying the Dream Syndicate are near a deal with Geffen, and their enormous popularity with live audiences has obviously won them some good points. Time, our hero, marches on. TrueWest are on Bring Out Your Dead Records, an unassuming Califor- nia label. Their self-titled debut EP is co-produced by Snydicate leading man Steve Wynn, who once flounced around with some of the Westerners in a group called the Suspects. Notorious for their independently- released single version of "Lucifer Sam," an old Pink Floyd tune penned by acid casualty Syd Barrett, True West contains not only that gem, but four others: "Steps to the Door," "Hollywood Holiday," "It's About Time," and "I'm Not Here." The attack is basic-guitars of the four and six- string type, and drums-a dislike of synthesizers has been mentioned. Queen, we fondly recall, made a bid deal out of it almost ten years ago ... But True West aren't Queen, nor are they the Dream Syn- dicate. . . they are merely.. . them- selves. To see is to believe. Non-Fiction opens. Join the Daily News Staff 93T1 6 . : u z ( m IN I" " G * See your Jostens' representative for a complete selection of rings and details of Jostens' Creative Financing Plans. I