V V V V 7W FILM V 7W x ..: a a c a;. :F MUSIC Saturday's show- Shepp's sax sounds Local duo tackles featur By Marc S. Taras T HIS SATURDAY EVENING Ann Arbor residents will have the op- portunity to hear the music that legends are made of at the Ark. Ann Arbor's folk emporium, rapidly becoming known as the hottest venue for jazz in town, will play host to the Eclipse Jazz presentation of the Ar- chie Shepp quartet. The original fire- breathing dragon of the turbulent '60 s school of tenor saxophony. Spiritual kin to John Coltrane and Albert Ayler. Lecturer, poet, and social reformer. Archie Shepp returns to the midwest for two anxiously-awaited shows at 7:30 and 10 p.m. Archie Shepp was born in Fort Lauderdale, Florida in 1937 but gravitated to Philadelphia, a musical spawning grounds, by the time he was a teenager. He began playing clarinet and alto sax, landing his first gig-on clarinet-when he was still 15. During these Philly years Shepp first made the acquaintance of Lee Morgan, Jimmy Heath, and John Coltrane. He majored in drama and graduated from Goddard College in 1959, leaving for New York in search of a job as an actor. Thankfully, he was unable to find such work and turned to music making with a Latin sextet, even- tually hooking up with the monolith of modern piano catastrophe, Cecil Taylor. His recordings with Cecil revewal a Shepp sound that is already restless; an insistent, angrified voice that acknowledged the masterworks of John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins. He did make it to the stage-as a musician-in the productin of Jack Gelber's play The Connection. By 1962 Archie Shepp had teamed up with fellow New Thinger Bill Dix- on for a quartet LP. This association led to the formation of the stunning New York Contemporary Five with Dixon and Don Chery. His fellows in that group included another fiery reedman, John Tchicai, with whom Shepp would record the first of his many exciting LP's for the Impulse record label. 'Four For Trane' was in- stigated and supervised by Coltrane himself. The LP included hair-raising readings of Coltrane material as well as provocative original, 'Rufus (swung his face at last to the wind then his neck snapped).' Shepp's own compositions henceforth would typically have an element of socio- political reflection. Archie Shepp was, and is, an artist with an agenda. During the '60 s Archie Shepp recorded regularly with all of the reigning giants of the new music. He was a searcher, and his playing took on new dimensions, greater in- dividuality, and crystalized vision. He would be a featured soloist on the awe inspiring John Coltrane 'Ascension' sessions. He was spiritually connec- ted. In a reflection upon the Coltrane composition 'The Father the Son and the Holy Ghost' Shepp would observe that Coltrane was the father, he (Shepp) was the son, and the Albert Ayer was the holy ghost. Fair enough. By the end of the feisty and frustrating '60s, Archie Shepp moved to Europe. He held court in Paris, France with many luminaries of the New Thing and recorded several out- standing records for the Actuel lablel including the magnificent Blase. He returned to America in 1971 to record Things Have Got To Change with singer Joe Lee Wilson. During the '70s, Archie Shepp spent a lot of time playing, recording, and touring in Europe. He worked in numerous different sessions and musical collaborations including exciting sax-piano duets with both Horace Parlan and South African giant Dollar Brand (Abdullah Ibrahim). A couple of years ago Shepp released a fine new album in By Martha Sevetson and Rolf Henrikson E VER THOUGHT about shooting a ;film? It would take a lot of money and experience, right? Not always the case. Just ask director Tom Chaney and producer Gregory J. Lanesy. The two have teamed up to form Monolith Pictures and will shoot their first full length feature film, Whiskey River. This is quite an undertaking, especially when one considers that the pair met only last year. Last sum- mer, Lanesy landed a lead role in a low budget film, The Carrier, produced in Manchester,Mi. "It was a stroke of luck," he admit- ted. "When you consider how few films are produced and how many people there are in this country, it's very difficult to get involved in a film." Once he was cast, Lanesey contac- ted the producer, and found himself and additional position as assistant producer for the first five weeks. This provided Lanesey with ex- perience that would help him pursue his career in film while making use of his education. "I've always been interested in ac- tors and film," he said, "I realized I could get my foot in the door on the buisness side of it." On the set of The Carrier, Lanesey met Chaney, an aspiring director and senior film major at Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti. Chaney had an idea for a film that in- terested Lanesey, so the two collaborated. This quickly developed into a partnership _ Monolith Pic- tures - when Lanesey and Chaney realized the potential in the com- bination of their varied backgrounds. Lanesey, 22, a 1985 University Business School graduate, was em- ployed in Switzerland working on computers, but he quit because of a lack of challenge. He also turned down job offers from Roadway and Dupont to follow his dream of a career in film. "I don't like the idea of working 9 to 5 and following a certain schedule," he said. "You're just a nut that goes into a bolt that holds a big machine together. In independent film produc- tion you're a very large part." "Since I studied business, and he studied film, we can each get things done," explained Lanesey. "That's our really strong advantage as an in- dependent production team." Currently Lanesey and Chaney are working to raise $1 million to produce their screenplay. The film is about four ex-war bud- dies who reunite (in 1972), hoping to leave the war-torn fields of Vietnam behind. After breaking through the intitial uneasiness of the situation, the four rekindle the friendship forged in war. But what starts out as a happy and relaxing weekend, quickly becomes an entanglement of tension, turmoil, disaster, and death. "We're making a low budget film," said Lanesey, "somewhere bet- ween $1 and $1.5 million." Lanesey is using his business degree in raising the money from private investors. The two are over half the way there e-length already and won 't start filming until early August. "It will take about eight or ten weeks to film," says Lanesey, "ten probably because of the weather." After that Lanesey and Chaney will edit, finish, and try to sell the film. "It will premier in Ann Arbor no mat- ter what, though, hopefully June 1, 1987. That's our goal." Lanesey and Chaney do not expect to make any profit on this venture. To pay the bills right now, Lanesey has a 20-25 hour a week job with ITT Han- cock Industries, and Chaney magages Video Hut in Ypsilanti. The completed film will easily make back the invested money through videocassette sales and European releases, said Lanesey, but this money will never find its way back to their pockets. "At our stage as an independent filmmaker - without having ex- perience - you have to give away everything, all of your rights, because you want to get the film in the market," explained Lanesey. These rights will be negotiated away in a settlement with a distributor at a film festival, and any excess profit will go to the investors and crew. "But it doesn't matter if you make money in your first film," he con- tinued, " because once you've done one film you've earned credibility, and they'll give you the money for the next film. Basically you just establish a na dust for f an depr inve and the you. La: over disc their reac peop two can, pow Ai Eas Riv tinue ding not thir keep for t NI prod and abou dust fere plai videi vest you Saxophnee muster A rchie She ,n America for Varrick records The Good Life, was Arch American release in a decad fully, material is still pourin Europe, including his wonde Note release, Down Home Ne This LP, teacher-figuratively and literally; ie's first he is a professor in the W.E.B. Debois e.Thank- department of African-American g in from music at Amherst. His performances rful South and records are peppered with ew York. reminders and urgent with the heart of the Shepp agenda. Things have got is a to change! BOOKS The story of a small town boy Archie Shepp Blues Kings B. B., Albert, Bobby Bland hit Detroit By Alan Paul T he Kings of the Blues are coming to town! Tonight, at the Masonic Temple in Detroit, the two guitarists who influenced and inspired Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Robbie Rober- tson, and Jimmy Page are perfor- ming on the same bill. Albert and B.B. King, as well as vocalist Bobby "Blue" Bland, are playing at the Detroit Bluesfest. The impact of the Kings, par- ticularly B.B., on rock and roll is im- mesurable. B.B., who has been recording for over 35 years, developed a style of playing featuring his trademark "bent" note stylizations that has influenced virtually every guitarist in the blues and rock fields. Riley "Blues Boy" King has dominated the blues scene for more than 30 years, gigging an average of 300 days a year and spending most of the other two months in the studio. Though purists have at times objec- ted to his bold forays into other areas - he was the first bluesman to incor- porate strings, .to reach out and ob- tain an mass audience, and to recognize the importance of country :music ("It's the white man's blues.") - few could deny that he is THE king. His record sales surpass every other blues artist and his mastery of lead guitar and influence over a wide range of other players support the claim. Furthermore, in 1979, he became the first bluesman to tour the USSR, playing 20 dates. He has received honorary doctorates from Tougaloo College and Yale Univer- stiy, as well as the keys to several cities including Berkeley, California, and Memphis, Tennessee, which have held "B.B. King Days". Ironically, for the man regarded by many (and not just blues freaks) as the world's greatest lead guitarist, B.B. admits that he can't really play rhythm nor can he sing and play at the same time. Thus, he adopted a call and response pattern of plantation work songs, alternating powerful vocal lines with guitar riffs which per- fectly complement the lyrics. Most of King's songs are characterized by his vocal mix of high falsetto and gospel- influenced tenor paired with guitar improvisations featuring a flood of of- ten "bent" notes. B.B. created a style which has become an integral part of the blues tradition. In the Encyclopedia of Rock, Nick Cogan wrote of B.B., "A superb showman, King is one of the world's greatest guitar soloists, and is cer- tainly the best known and most in- fluential bluesman of them all." There are many similarities beyond the obvious between B.B. and his unrelated counterpart Albert King. Both are in their early 60's, were born and raised on plantations outside of Indianola, Missippi, sang in church choirs for years, and were "discovered" by Ike Turner. Albert is probably B.B.'s closest rival for the "King of Blues" title. A 6 foot 4 inch, 250 pound giant of a man, Albert King's blues lean toward rock and country, while B.B., though he has experimented widely, tends to closer ties with jazz. The left-handed Albert plays a rocket shaped guitar slung upside- down, which practically looks like a ukelele in his massive hands. The man looks cool. In the late '60s, Albert garnered a large white rock audience who liked his mumbled vocals and sharp, stinging guitar lines. Blues Power, a live album recorded at the legendary Fillmore West, captured Albert at his hard- driving, gut-wrenching best. Rounding out the Blues Fest lineup is Bobby "Blue" Bland. He too has been a dominant figure on the blues scene for over 30 years, hitting the charts in 1957 with the gritty "Farther Up the Road", which was a top-40 hit for Eric Clapton almost fifteen years later. Bland has recorded several albums with B.B. King, with whom he frequently tours. Tonight's concert promises to be more than exciting, more than great; it will be awesome. It's not every weekend that three people who have influenced popular music to the extent of the Kings and Bland perform in the area, much less on one bill. So, hey, all of you people who think yourselves classic rock fans and listen to Hendrix or Clapton, get off your butt, round up a car, dig into your wallet, and GO TO DETROIT to see this show! THE PRICE IS RIGHT! MUSIC TO YOU: Home of the $3.85 cassette tape Jimmy Buffett Marvin Gaye Billy Joel Paul McCartney Steely Dan The Who ... over 700 CBS & MCA titles Send for our FREE catalog. You'll never buy any place else again MUSIC TO YOU: 612 N. Michigan Ave., Suite 217, Chicago, Illinois 60611 American Fool: The Roots & Improbable Rise of John Cougar Mellencamp Martin Torgoff St. Martin's Press, 222 pp., $10.95 Well I was born in a small town And I live in a small town Probably die in a small town W:ITH HIS last album, John Cougar Mellencamp returned to his roots, and embraced the reality of his life. He also made it okay to be from the Midwest and a small town. In fact, he made it a source of pride. Both delighted and curious by such facts, Martin Torgoff sets out on a pilgrim- mage seeking John Cougar Mellen- camp. In his introduction, Torgoff declares: "(I had) the intuitive sense that, yes, I know this person. We were, after all, the same age...I knew we'd have a lot to talk about...he sur- mounted each obstacle thorugh sheer will, tenacity, the power of his per- sonality, and his ever-developing talent. He succeeded despite the od- ds..." Each page that follow gushes with admiration and the adolescent awe of a fan until finally it seems Torgoff has lost objectivity. In' relaying a television interview that went poorly, Torgoff writes: "Felicia (the interviewer) came after him like a shark after bloody meat." Torgoff continually explains that Hohn has always been taken out of context and misunderstood. If one can get beyond Torgoff's nonobjectivity, his style and substan- ce are palatable. He is a conver- sational writer with contemporary perception. He provides images like: "To walk the peaceful, treelined streets of Seymour on a drowsy sum- mer day is to realize that Andy Hardy lived in a place like this..." The style fits the material: pure Americana. Torgoff packs the book nicely, beginning with Mellencamp's family history and ending with the death of John's grandfather, Speck Mellen- camp. The whole family offers in- sights into John, as do his friends, thereby giving the work credibility. One begins to see the same Cougar Mellencamp Torgoff sees: loyal, giving, misunderstood, poet and frustrated artist. Each record falls in the chronology, enabling the reader to see it in the context of John's life. One sees his maturity and the price he pays for it. One begins to understand his lyrics as he meant them, and feel what he felt. Besides the insight, one is also privy to photos of John throughout his life. The book provides all the material necessary for a comprehensive biography. Most significant however, is John's own input into the book. The development of his philosophy is tracable, so when he finally says, "I guess I started realizing that I get my strength from my roots. Indiana's my home and everbody I love is here. I actually stay home a lot - I'm pretty reclusive by nature. I decided to just live and work here - write songs and record them about very basic, human emotions," the reader wants to pat him on the back. In spite of all the odds, John Cougar Mellencamp rose from being a Mid- western, small-town misfit to become a rock and roll success. He owns several cars, motorcycles etc. and still talks to his old friends. What a story! Now ain't that America? Gloria SanaA t C NEW CHICKEN TEl AVAILABLE 6 PIECE, 9 & 12 PIECE APPEARING IN N AT * 458 Briarwood Circle, Briar " 725 Victors Way, Ann Arb BURGER KING - ----------- -- BUY ONE i DOUBLE CHEESEBI GET ANOTHE I DOUBLE CHEESEBUR4 I Please present this coupon before ordering. L ' customer. Not to be used with other coupot x here prohibited by lamx. This offer exp Gudonlr at: " 458 Briarwood Circle, Brij " 725 Victors Way, Ann Arl IBM XT COMPATIBLE COMPUTER SYSTEM Aims _ . U. U. 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