ARTS The Michigan Daily Saturday, February 2, 1985 Page 5 Londoner sings of life and hard times By Hobey Echlin It was with high hopes that I entered the still-open Joe's Tuesday night for the none-too-publicized appearance of East End London's Billy Bragg. I had seen him once before, when he warmed- up, unbilled and unexpectedly, for Echo and the Bunnymen last summer. The guy sure had guts, getting up to play his solo electric guitar show in front of a theater of anxious E and the B-men fans. And it was with even higher hopes that I left Joe's after a truly phenomenal show. But more about that later, Who is this Billy Bragg you ask? A 22 year-old Socialist Labor party member who grew up with Anglicized American culture fused into his musical soul. He got his first guitar when he was 11 and his first electric a year later. He began writing poetry when he was 8. Between Jan and Dean and Motown, among countless other in- fluences, he formed his musical background as an East End kid growing up hearing songs about America. But he's also got a reality far removed from the "Route 66" of his growing up. This is a hard reality: an England that won't let the world know its mining industry is shut down because of a strike to which the gover- nment offers no mediation or aid, only censorship of any press that tries to alert the world to the English miner s plight. This reality is living with the fact that your government sends 280 servicemen to foreign graves in order to gain 180 seats in Parliament, while the rest of the world thinks the Falklan- ds War is a grand show of nationalism and rightful imperialism. And on top of that he's had his share of love and strife, and combinations thereof. Add to this one hell of a per- sonality, a likeable cockney accent, and a solo electric guitar played through an undoctored Roland amplifier, and you have the most refreshing and inspiring twist in modern music since Simon and Garfunkel's acoustic tales of life and love. Enter Billy Bragg, the kid from East End with a scratchy guitar and a fistful of original songs. The close intimacy of Joe's Star Lounge provided the medium for this inspired performance. Everything seemed to click right. Audience reac- tions were perfectly timed. The fun songs gained a smile, the humorous ones a chuckle, and the serious ones a second look at the issues presented. I mean, here's a guy who, armed with a single guitar and lone amp, can keep your attention and awe for as long as it takes him to do what he wants to do. A little laughing, a lot of thinking, and almost two hours later, he's ready to let you go. He's shown you his funny side and his serious side, blended just right: he's no preacher, he's no comedian, just a solo performer. He'll make a lit- tle fun of the guitar solo, distinguishing between the Prince and the Van Halen solo position. A few songs later and he's telling you about the English gover- nment's censoring of the press. Another two songs and he recounts a meeting in a New Jersey restroom with Bruce Springsteen, who tells him to write more songs about women in cars. Add to this Billy's impersonation of Bruce's "Born in the U.S.A." urination stance, and you want to buy this Bragg a beer. Musically the show excelled, again aided by the comfortable intimacy of Joe's. Drawing from Life's a Riot with Billy Bragg, his first EP and even more from the new Brewing Up with Billy Bragg, the 2-hour set stood not as a bunch of politics and love songs, but rather a profession of one man's talent and diversity. From the humor of "Richard" to the political commentary of "Island of No Return" Bragg shared his certain knack for musically tran- slating the headlines and his broken heart on equal footing through a few chords on a noisy guitar and a voice that echoes an inner spirit. The guitar consciously echoes the emotion of the voice and the soul: the poet has his lyre, Billy has his gift. Just as his "Myth of Trust" hit with its own sad heartfelt style, so did "It Says Here", with its an- themic exposition of British censorship, rile the crowd in its slashingly sarcastic way. This is no-illusions emotion. No gim- micks, no effects, no abstract imagery to choke on, just a bare-bones literal transformation of feelings into some catchy songs. Pennie Smith, known for her tour photos of the Clash and the Jam, captures another Britisher, Billy Bragg. Is this an omen of things to come? Richman hits Halfway Inn Dvorak cantata at Hill By Dennis Harvey History forgets a lot more than it remembers, and as time passes there's generally only room left in the memory for the truly great and the true eccen- trics. The debate has been raging (well, at least among the few of us who care) for years whether Jonathan Richman belongs among the elevated former, or whether he's just a particularly alar- ming example of the latter. whatever your verdict - and it's likely to be one extreme or the other - you haven't led a completely well-rounded life until you've seen Jonathan Richman live, and the opportunity is no further away than Saturday, Feb. 2., at East quad's Halfway Inn. Richman first won attention in the early '70s as lead singer for the Modern Lovers, a monicker he was to hang onto throughout the next decade's band per- sonnel changes. The original Lovers also included future members of The Cars and other bands of import, attrac- ted a lot of culty media attention, and had already broken up by the time their first album came out in 1974. The sensibly titled Modern Lovers fast became a cult favorite, with cuts like "Roadrunner" and "Pablo Picasso" an- ticipating the stripped-down sounds and aggressive oddity of the upcoming punk explosion. ImmediatelyafterwardRichman started confounding fans of that record with a series of LP's on Berserkley that moved toward a sort of folk '50's- rock/children's music slant - genially clumsy, Mom's-basement-as-studio music with self-explanatory, wide-eyed names like "There's an Abominable Snowman in the Supermarket," "I'm Nature's Mosquito" and "Ice Cream Man." Many's the listener who's run screaming from the room when first exposed to the stuff, and it can quite easily be cloying, but if you can locate that shred of complete gullibility somewhere inside you, Richman's whimsies get perilously charming and addictive fast. From there, it's just a short jump to grinning idiotically as Jonathan kneels on the floor and looks like a begging puppy while singing "I'm a Little Dinosaur," which he will no doubt do at the Halfway shows. Halfway shows are scheduled for 9 and 11 p.m., and tickets (at $9) are available from P.J.'s Used Records, Schoolkids, and all Ticketworld outlets. By Mike Gallatin The Prague Symphony Orchestra along with The Festival Chorus will be presenting Dvorak's The Spec- tre's Bride this Saturday evening at Hill Auditorium. The cantata is scored for soloists, chorus, and or- chestra and is known for its display of Dvorak's lyrical gift as well as his sense for the dramatic. Magdalena Blahusiakova will be the soprano soloist; Michael Sylvester, tenor; and Ivan Kusnjer, baritone. The elaborate chorus parts create the proper mood and atmosphere and the orchestra evokes a sense of the super-natural. The three part scheme of the music corresponds to the three scenes in which the dramatic tale has its setting - the girl's room, the journey by night, and the graveyard. Dvorak's sense of nationalism and interest in folk tales motivated him to select The Spectre's Bride from the ballads of Czechoslovakian poet K.J. Erben's work, "Garland of Folk Poetry." Antonin Dvorak's music is charac- terized by warm color, pronounced rhythms, and abundant, free flowing melodies. His popular Slavonic Dan- ces distinguished Bohemia. much like Chopin's mazurka's did Poland. while perhaps best known as the composer of the New World Sym- phony, the Cello Concerto in B minor and the oft-parodied Humoresque, Dvorak also composed many operas and vocal works. Stabat Mater was so well received that he was com- missioned to write a cantata, The Spectre's Bride in 1885. The work, like his operas, has not been as popular internationally as it has within the confines of Czechoslavakia, but recently there has been a revival of interest in its performance. Jiri Blohlavek is an able-bodied young conductor and with the polished Prague Symphony Orchestra at his. disposal it is most likelly that renewed respect will be created for this needlessly neglected work. "I'm not eccentric," Jonathan Richman seems to be saying. See the show and judge for yourself. Who says clarinet is ju with solo classical clarinet literature w By Neil Galanter can be easily solved this week, and no' it is not a crash music history course in nh r those of you who remember play- Clarinet Lit. 100. It is the brilliant young fa Aing an instrument in a high school clarinetist Richard Stoltzman, who will ts band or orchestra, the memories may be appearing with the Detroit Symr - be a mixture of good and bad. Remem- phony tonight at Ford Auditorium in te ber the uneven wind section? Too many Detriot in a performance of Mozart's p clarinets, not enough oboes, and worse Clarinet Concerto in A Major. p yet not even one single bassoon. Too Stoltzman is one of the preeminent hi many clarinets I said? That's right, the leading soloists on today's concert clarinet was always the most popularly scene and he has soloed with more than played instrument. Peter played it, Joe sixty orchestras throughout the world p played it and so did Susie, Cindy and including appearances with the sym- le Michelle. phonies of New York, Toronto, San A What's the point though, of all this Francisco, Philadelphia, London and chitter-chatter about the clarinet? The Montreal, just to name a few. point is that after a high school band Born in Omaha Nebraska, Stoltzman H situation, moving into the classical attended Ohio State University and i music world, the clarinet seems to lose went on to receive a Masters degree C its "overplayed-ness" considerably, from Yale University where he worked G especially as a solo instrument. There with Keith Wilson. He also studied with are really very few solo classical Kalman Opperman at Columbia clarinetists on the concert scene, but University. In the summer of 1967, that really doesn't make much sense Richard Stoltzman began an because as a solo instrument the association with the famed Marlboro clarinet is absolutely sublime. Music Festival in Marlboro, Vermont The solution to not being familiar and there he met pianist Peter Serkin .R with this entire ad $1."0 off adult eve aA N U' iu dmission. Coupon good for purchase of 1 or 2 ! " OFF tickets good all features thru 217185 except ! 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Recordings come next on the list. e received a 1983 Grammy Award for is recording on RCA of the Brahms larinet Sonatas with pianist Richard oode, and he is contracted as a recor- school? ding artist with Desmar, Orion, and Red Seal Recording Companies. A highlight in his career was in 1982 when he became the first 'clarinetist ever to give a recital at Carnegie Hall. His regular recital activities have in- cluded performances with such well known pianists as his friend Peter Serkin and pianist Emmanuel Ax also. Tickets range in price from $10 to $19 and are available at the box office of Ford Auditorium in Detroit. EARTHSHAKING KEY OF DAVID MATH, TEXT AND REVELATION $6.00 POSTPAID GRAPHIC SOLUTION TO THE WARREN REFORTERROR,4.50 ToTHE KEY BOX534 PARKCHESTER, NY 10462 0 SPACES STILL AVAILABLE IN THE FOLLOWING MINI-COURSES: I STRANGER THAN PARADISE SAT., SUN. 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 MON. 5:15, 7:15, 9:15, SAT. AT 11:30 P.M. (R) " s " " "AN EXTRA- GOLDEN GLOBE ORDINARY MOVIE!" 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