,. , ,. . ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, April 2, 1985 Page 7 Sig4 Cockburn: The cult hero breaks loose B Byron L. Bull EARLY INTO his opening set of Sunday night's show at the Michigan Theater, Bruce Cockburn. prefaced a song called "Maybe The Poet" with the wry observation, "The ones with the most to say are usually the least heard." It's a comment that applies to Cockburn himself, who cer- tainly had no trouble almost filling the hall with a responsive, attentive crowd, but who should by all rights be packing arenas the way Springsteen or U2 does. But if Sunday nights' bright, com- pelling performance was indicative of the rest of Cockburn's American tour, his following should begin swelling far beyond its ardent cult-status. Though initially a folk songwriter, Cockburn's recent work has taken him into considerably more adventurous ground, with singular, often stunning style of arrangements that mixes elements of jazz and hard rock into im- pressionistic swirls of melody and rhythm that also seamlessly incor- porates touches of traditional African, Carribean, and Oriental music. It's old, vitally alive music that's sur- pr'isngly closer to the kind of work Peter Gabriel and David Byrne have been doing than anything remotely folksy. One of the advantages an artist with a cult following has is that he doesn't have to worry about pleasing a large number of marginals in the audience, people familiar only with the standards or hits, so Cockburn freely concen- trated on his new material, without even playing his one genuine hit, "Wondering Where The Dragons Are".. Instead he focused on the more aggressive new material, the darkly romantic "Lovers In A Dangerous Time", or the fiercely embittered "The Trouble With Normal," songs with a strangely affecting sense of anxiety and intensity. Cockburn was backed up by a quartet consisting of Fergus March (bass and stick), Hugh Marsh (keyboards and electric violin), Mische Pouliot (drums), and Chris Sharpe (per- cussion), a well integrated ensemble of very talented musicians who never let their proficiency overshadow their in- stinct for raw, passionate playing. While many of the pieces featured ex- tended jazz-like solos and jams, they were executed with a sensitivity to the needs of the song, and never to self in- dulgent excessiveness. Cockburn, perhaps one of the finest, most versatile guitarist working in popular music on this continent, showed. wise restraint in emphasizing delicate shading over technical bravado. Probably the evenings finest moment was an improvisational duet between Cockburn and Sharpe during a version of "Creation Dream" wherein Sharpe stood beside him, slapping out tribal rhythms on a small leg-straddled drum which Cockburn counterpointed with a beautiful lyrical Spanish melody, to breathtaking effect. Politics and art make lousy bed- fellows, and political overtones are something Cockburn has had tricky success with, though he's been known to mar performances with excessive dialogue on the subject. But this time he conscientiously skirted the subject, save for one grim rumination on the genesis of a song that was inspired by a sanctuary camp in Southern Mexico where Guatemalan attack helicopters frequently ventured across the border to make strafing runs on the starving refugees, at which point he launched in- to a furiously terse version of "If I Had A Rocket Launcher", which must cer- tainly be this year's most powerful and misunderstood single. Cockburn proved a good natured, gracious performer, though there was a problem in that the Michigan's caver- nous orchestra pit distanced him from the audience, and the band was, strangely, placed far to the back of the stage, leaving him quite alone on cen- terstage. As relaxed a performer as he is, Cockburn still lacks the dynamic presence, the theatrical sensibility to completely shoulder the weight of so much focused attention. He's unpreten- tious and unassuming to a fault, and the rich, dark timbre of his voice was sometimes obscured by the overam- plification of the band, particularly on Cockburn's more wordy verses. The audience was respectful and though a bit reticent in their initial response, they quickly warmed up, and by the final set of encores, joyful celebratory versions of "Making Con- tact" and "Put Our Hearts Together", were lavishing the band with tumultuous applause. The "hip" crowd may have been at the Blind Pig last Wednesday savoring yet another Southern second-hand-store-clad band go through the predictable "quirky" variations on the R.E.M.-dB's sound, but the real show was uptown, and-if you missed it, your really blew it. ..". " "" " " " "" a " " ""U" U" UiUseUa a U"5"" t5 "U " "" " a " a" a " "a aa i " ts "a3" """3a3 a "" " " mm" mu"smsam"mam"ummmaaam"mums " " " a " e "a " " t " " "."" "a " a a " a ""a " a " " " a " " " a " a mmaa.. """"" "" "a " " " " " %s 1"a liUaa a a 1t"a sitaa aa aa liaa a iaiiataal E3 55! lass. m amuq - mae - eel WE. " s " a " " " a " " " " was: r . .. .. m e." iiao a... m.SED t " t. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Bruce Cockburn, a guitarist extraordinaire who utilizes his instrument as far more than just a stage prop, filled the Michigan Theatre with his stirring, stylized brand of rock last Sunday night. Jazz and American blase By arwulf arwulf HE ALTO saxophone writhes and Tsqueals, complex configurations afrming in the air as fast as thought. The drummer washes the surface of the ropment with tempestuous, thrashing thunder. The bass, nearly over- shadowed by this commotion, runs rampant, the bubbles of sound curling upside the chord changes. ;There's three men, playing and it sound like six. This is Jazz heard live. It's the highest form of self-expression kinown to us. Ideas, emotions and Whirling puffs of wonderment come at you often faster than you can take them in. It's a string of miracles and it's almost always best caught live. This music has been with us more than eighty years, and still we call it Jazz. The word "Jazz", in the stylized lingo of the turn of the century, meant screwing. Like Hey I Jazzed Yer Sister I4st Night. Jazz, from verb to noun. Not at all a nice thing to call such Yusef ... former Detroit jazz artist as many Jazz musicians living here as we do. many have left, and some will never bother setting foot in this haven of indifference ever again. Johnny Griffin, the great Chicago Tenor Saxophonist, has a farm in Fran- ce, not far from Antibes, where they hold Jazz Festivals without the aid of Tobacco Corporations. The biggest gig in the world today for jazz musicians is the Montreux Festival. Alpine welcome for expatriate brilliance. Coltrane visted Japan in 1966, prayed at the Hiroshima monument. The Japanese still honor him like a saint. And they've reissued almost every record he ever made. Trane sells here, too, but not like he used to. Then there's Africa, a logical place for a Black American Musician to visit. Randy Weston went there and stayed. He returns once in a while, but Morocco has been good to him and America has never recognized him sufficiently. Yusef Lateef is currently residing in Nigeria, and his recent LP on Lan- dmark records, Yusef Lateef in Nigeria, has about nine Africans working vividly alongside Yusef, who came up playing hard bop tenor in Detroit. He worked with Charles Mingus and Cannonball Adderly, and poineered the use of unusual and ethnic instrumentation in Jazz. I first saw him at the 1973 Ann Artbor Blues & Jazz Festival. You remember that, don't you? That's the festival that was banished by a republican majority on City Council. We Americans love our own music and reward it the highest honors. Yusef Lateef is alive and well in- Nigeria. You can go ahead and buy his latest album. It's on an American label. Buy American. And listen to those Americans, as they find other countries to work in. THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 YI Uk IP All' " O FriaydayRN :0: s a Ou p " so" s " Thursday s .. DE00 aaa sa y CAEB11 ousu e - '0 0NG00N 2" Z:000 .~I ." 13 s 1A1:0 Q.OU"PIN me. 7 -- a . Nrhu 1:0$ " . i". namema m.a. a. aa* a "'15""" "ass. "a. A*"1.. ~ p e Whil Suplses-as- . . 2%iff1li SEBTMdss.LGN "oy Nori Spcarers19. .'..f m "ama I"LJ JL aaiSUS s am". ..... 00".".." " OffEVERTING Stesfa apestm . " " " m.. . pens- sft: ggage andbackpacs.r $m9-a . a a hl S p le .s.e ' :::::: CAss icl Records - : .~s . . .SrrN S eilOres . asmes 'as' 20 %nOff allregularlypriced inbsii ItemU.5. aub mnadsdsde k w p s. sesm a a a RED TAGGED clothing. Traditional navy Michigan T-shirt: $4.95 : as Computer Supplies mesa'! sa" 20%oOff all VERBATIM disks. LEGEND 886"dot matrix printer: $199. s.. "".. s.ea. . "a"a m Sing15 m an0bl oed cmpt epaeolr: $1.9 tetlrMrmti "asse as Monossons nonsens "seem taluapsnsvncoosagA~~S~ter as ai e " mm "aasan asmas s igam~I~I.ae s a ss:aass" "au: aa 704peaets1.7.tsete3car:$9 :aaassese a:: asialecrd ass" 20%Off a" "a "e "ulaa r"r " " "i"ceda " bu " a a " "a " ! nw a" "" "a "" ar "" "" r" !r "" I a" i aa ar rsea" a" . a a "" sa "" a r "" """a aa"" a aa""asa aa aa ai a " i "asa r"*, ra "a aa a "! "" ""a" a aa a ""i"a .a aa" " aa" " s""am .. 3 r"r"ard~or) maaa"aas -_ ::t a aaI a saammsas noble, honest proceedings. Negative connotations swarm thickly in our racist popular culture. The way we treat this music is shamefully out of step with what many of us would like to believe is the enlightened modernity of the 1980's. But it's always been kicked around, and anyone who's been in love with this Ousic long enough to follow th lives of the musicians knows that there's been American Jazz Musicians in Europe, living thee, making good money, since the 1920's. Japan, nowadays, has become the Jazz marketing center of the world, with Europe a close second and America, the birthplace of this music, trailing third. Still, driving my Ford Pinto around this suburb of the. Motor City, I see the pnashing pride of the Americans in their hometowns; BUY AMERICAN. Lots of screaming about imports. It's so great to buy American. But this America has turned its back on a massive music market, and America emits some of the worst popular music available in the world today. If it isn't televised, why, the 1~R Date APR. 3 Time: 7 PM.& t poop- -