ARTS Saturday, September 29, 1984 The Michigan Daily Page 5 A return walk on the wild side ... 6s: By Byron L. Bull W HEN LOU REED hits the stage at the Royal Oak Music Hall tonight, all eyes and ears will be turned forward in expectation. It's been six years since Reed and company last embarked on an American tour, and in that interim one of rock's most influential and fascinating figures has undergone some radical changes. From despairing nihilist to sensitive but embittered romantic to his newly revitalized, reaffirmed self that some people still insist must be a passing fad or even contrived image. While any of these possibilities seems ridiculously remote, the acid test is tonight when Reed, known for his on- stage soul purging, will put all questions to rest. Reed's career has been one of the most intriguing and convulted of all rock figures. He found legendary im- mortality purely for his grounbreaking work with the legendary avant-punk band, Velvet underground. Velvet broke more conventions and rules in their three short years than most bands ever accomplish. With John Cale's adventurous musical experimentation, and Reed's innovative and delicate guitar work, The Velvets were far too adventurous for ears grown staid by late sixties folksiness and soppy psychedelia. The Velvets broke and battered all the pop/rock convention that would have gone unscathed until the advent of punk in the mid-seventies. Lyrically, the band waltzed through taboos as nonchalantly as if they were nonexistant. Their squalid, hopeless explorations of street life and human depravity in songs like "Heroin" and "Waiting For The Man" rank as some of the most startlingly despairing pieces ever recorded. The post-Cale albums - in which Reed focused the band more toward his own sordid visions - were where their most influential work was done. Reed's eclectic tinkerings have been the source of constant irritation to his tirelessly loyal following and to the critics. When Reed flirted with a sexual am- biguous personae (encouraged by then reigning drag queen David Bowie) on Transformer, with songs like "Make Up" and his one hit, "Walk On The Wild Side." Likewise his inability to decide if he longed desperately for or viciously disdained love turned many a shy listener off. While ambitious in his plans, Reed always seems to have a proper outlet. His conceptual Berlin, full of literary pretentions and overwrought emotional gestures, never held much narrative weight. Instrumental experiments like the brutally offensive electronic noise collection, Metal Machine Music and the muzaky The Bells, were admirable for their attempts to push their creators limits, but still failures. Despite some classical training, Reed has always had trouble locking onto a melodic muse. His music often has a choppy, unfinished feel, and for a while Reed had to turn to friend Nils Lofgren to set his words to music. Now, quite surprisingly, Reed's recently released expurgatorial New Sensations finds him wiser, more assured, and in full control of his art. The music is simple, rhythmic rock and blues, with light synth and horn ac- cents. More hardcore afficianados might be turned off by its warmth and find it too tame and accessible, but it is perfectly in touch with his new tone. Aside from a few typically quirky character sketches (one about a club weilding psycho. and the other a disen- chanted starlet) New Sensations is a collection of unabashed confessionals sans the expected cynicism and self- loathing. With its uncompromising honesty and well measured sense of dry humor, the album ranks as the most affecting self portrait by a songwriter since Pete Townshend's 1979 Empty Glass. Reed's current band features two of the musicians from the last album sessions (bassist Fernando Saunders and keyboardist Peter Wood), with Lenny Ferrari replacing Fred Maher who's gone back to drumming chores for Material. But the most significant member of the band - other than Reed himself - is Robert Quine. Quine, who was absent from the album, will return to the stage with Reed for some invigorating duel guitar work. Quine's return also squelches nasty rumors of a rift bet- ween the two musicians. The show at Royal Oak opens with The Swimming Pool Cues - who have been opening for Reed on this leg of the tour - at 8:00 tonight. Take a walk - you know where. Lou Reed plays in his first U.S. tour in six years at Royal Oak on Saturday. Abbey Lincoln .. .delivers 'The Word' By Marc S. Taras ABBEY LINCOLN Aminata Moseka. The very name shimmers with etic strength and magical charm. Strength and charm are but two of the endearing, utterly human qualities that Abbey Lincoln brings to her music and song stylings. To glimpse some of the others, read on. But to realize the power and ex- cellence of the woman, and the artist, be sure to attend one or both of Lin- coln's shows at the Michigan Union Ballroom this evening at 8:00 and 10:30. There and then the mysteries will be revealed in all their simplicity. A woman began life in Chicago as Anna Marie Wooldridge. She came as a child to rural Michigan with her paren- ts and eleven siblings. She grew up in the Jackson area where she attended a one room schoolhouse. She recalls fin- ding "her power at the piano, doing something for myself." Abbey has always been alert and responsive to her background. "I believe that people who do not respect &heir ancestry are doomed to perish. We live through our ancestors," she said. She was familiar with the works of her contemporaries through the radio and was strongly influenced by Billie Holiday. "If it hadn't been for Billie Holiday's work, I wouldn't have known where to begin." A major turning point in her life came when she met Max Roach. Roach had been a key figure in the development of he new music that was called bebop. He was convinced of Abbey Lincoln's genius and introduced her to many of the music's pioneers and current luminaries ranging from Coleman Hawkins to Eric Dolphy. She and Max were married for a decade, through the turbulent sixties, and parted amiably. Their musical career together was long- and fruitful though unfortunately under-recorded. This was in part due to the fiery, political nature of their music. Recor- dings like "The Freedom Now Suite - We Insist!" raised eyebrows and even concern among some of the white-ruled recording establishment. Lincoln has never seen her art as 'political' per se. Demonstrating what is for her a typical wisdom of the heart, she insists, "I have never been political. I am social. People take social things and make them political, but I am not running for office. I'm interested in mores and social standards because I live here." She began her film career in 1956 in The Girl Can't Help It. In 1959 she toured with the national company of the Broadway musical Jamaica playing the lead part. She continued her acting throughout the sixties considering her co-starring with Sidney Poitier in For Love of Ivy to be her most significant work. It was through an agent, Bob Russell, that she became Abbey Lincoln. She has reemerged more bright and beautiful than ever. She has been given a new name; Aminata Moseka. This name was conferred upon her by two African heads of state while she was visiting and vacationing there with her friend Miriam Makeba. The name Aminata Moseka is the feminine of an African god in the form of a maid and is appropriate for one who is so acutely aware of the in- terrelationship of man and woman. "There's a war between men and women because men don't see women as they see themselves, and vice-versa. The concept of God is worshipped as a He....I am a she-God, and when I find a he-God, we'll get along just fine." Like Billie Holiday, Abbey Lincoln always begins with the words. "I sing the words, I want the words to be heard. Sometimes maybe I will sacrifice a sound for the spoken word." Perhaps. But not much is sacrificed in the way of sound, I assure you. Her voice has grown deep and broad, and full of emotional conviction. She can whisper and roar, cling to one vowel so clearly you could cry, or holler from the bottom of her soul so as to make you shake. Abbey Lincoln delivers the word! Her art is visual as well. She frequen- tly wears African apparel in perfor- mance and never forgets that she is on stage; never forgets that she is an ac- tress and that people come to see as well as hear her. "A lot of times you have to tell musicians, 'Put on your best, you're coming to the Holy Temple, the Inner Sanctum. Bring the best of everything you have."' She is always conscious of and deliberate about the quality of the images which she presents whether she is selecting a song or considering a role. She never forgets her artistic respon- sibility. A responsibility to the people which she is able to view in religious terms. Abbey Lincoln will perform at the Union Ballroom - not U-Club, folks - on Saturday night. "I've always tried, like the ancient ones, to use art as a tool to develop character. We live a universal life, and it's possible to speak to everybody on some level. I try to remain observant of everything, and I sing about what I like in my life -- when you hear certain things over and over again, it becomes a kind of prayer." As Abbey Lincoln Aminata Moseka, the artist has arrived.This is her time of fulfillment. "I am in my golden years on the planet and I'm aware of my own increased sensitivity to life. I have discovered the scope, vastness, and perception of people I come from, and it's given me a way of seeing myself in direct relationship to who we come from and who we are." This evening offers each of us a rare opportunity. The artist reveals herself that we may recall ourselves. She is seen that we may see. She delivers the word that it may be heard! Even her name speaks of the long path travelled and the many mysteries revealed. She is Anna Marie Wooldridge Gaby Lee Abbey Lincoln Aminata Moseka. Come. Share with her, with all of us, the music of life it- self. RNN 5th Avenue at Uibertty St 7 6 - 70DA IL Y 1 s t M A T IN E E $ 2 0 0 "Rare and Exemplary -REX REED. N Y POST W ENDY H UGH E'S Hnuqt bear yu FR. D 20 0 2930 1130PM. SAT. 1250 35,720,9:3011:30 SUN.1250, 3.57:209:30 "SEDUCTIVE" -NEWSWEEK ANOTHER COUNTRY John Lee Hooker in the Soup Kitchen By Howard Stern JOHN LEE HOOKER, a legendary figure in the field of authentic blues and earthy rhythms, will be making his way to downtown Detroit for two special engagements at the Soup Kit- chen Lounge tonight at 10:00 and later migrated north to Chicago and Detroit, creating the unique blend of country and urban blues. John Lee was a pioneer in this step- ping-stone of blues music. He left Mississippi, moved to Memphis, and later settled in Detroit, where he worked as a hospital orderly and in an automotive plant to finance himself denied. His classic "Boogie Chillin" was redone by Canned Heat, who did a thirty minute version of it live in con- cert. In 1965 the Animals redid another classic of his "Boom-Boom." His style of playing his guitar and singing vocal riffs in unison an octave or two apart has also been copied by several blues artists including Johnny Winters who W.uI .] f r U- Vu ri ".V L 1 J.T I "IW U. ! .' 1JM1