-W w ~w-ww -4w -4w 14w- T MICHELLANY I like heavy metal (and I'm not Satan) I NEVER LISTENED TO heavy are intellectually brilliant. And they metal in high school. I avoided made me feel like an intellectual metal because the people who didn't and artistic slug. were scary. So, after The Protagoras, where They all had dirty blond hair and LOG I E does one go? In my case, I went to acne: they spent too much time see AC/DC. Artistry, while present using their mouths for bong hits, to a degree, was not the issue. and too little time speaking. When Entertainment was. The music was they did speak, invariably they said fashion-conscious, and hipper than deafening. The lyrics were clever " r things like, "People say Coda is a they were. I'm a little smarter. I without being brilliant. And Angus rip-off because it's all outtakes and still wear goofy stuff. I'm a little Young's metronome-like head- shit, but they're forgetting that bit hipper, I suppose. But the big banging was a nearly hypnotic these are Led Zeppelin outtakes. difference, in my case, is the change visual treat. Heavy metal is not The album is kick, if you ask me." in my attitudes toward rock's big appreciated in the same sense that a Of course, no one had asked. throbbing dinosaur. wine-and-cheese party with the Back in Grand Rapids Led Zeppelin I'm only a minor-league head- Philosophy department might be - was considered a fairly overt banger, but I have done battle on it is felt, experienced. Metal is as strategem by Satan to convert the main floors in front of several big as it can be. Big lights, big innocent teenagers from Christi- of the current giants, including explosions, big drum kits, big INTERVIEW anity to seething, dog-mutilating Motorhead, Judas Priest, and Van loud, big, BIG, BIG! blood-worshippers. The backwards Halen. My record collection sports Subtlety gets boring after a masking flap hit the City of many AC/DC records, some while. Man cannot live on caviar Churches pretty hard, so teenagers Aerosmith, some Zeppelin, some alone. Every so often, you've got knew that if they liked "Stairway to Van Halen, and best of all, the to have a Big Mac. Heaven" they were in fact "special leather edition" of Heavy metal seeks primarily to subliminally reacting to a reversal Motorhead's No Remorse. I like entertain, and though I'm perfectly of "my sweet Satan," and that they Ratt more than I should, and willing to be educated and edified Detroit jazz percussionist says racism were a good thirty miles down the Twisted Sister, too. ninety percent of the time, I cherish , highway to hell. Every time I I think it's all Plato's fault. my mindless times. After a month has stifled the greatest American art form listened to metal on the radio, I Plato's writings contain brilliant of trying to be sophisticated, clean- couldn't help feeling, well, dirty. thoughts, and they're brilliantly living, and civilized, it's time to Freshman year changes people. presented. The dialogues are often spend a few hours thrusting pointed Detroit native Roy Brooks is one of modern jazz's finest drummers. Born They become smarter, more as well written and as funny as they See LOGIE, Page 11 in 1938, Brooks big break came at the age of 21 when pianist Horace Silver hired him; subsequently he freelanced in New York and worked with jazz giants like Wes Montgomery, Pharoah Sanders, Dexter Gordon, and Charles Mingus, playing in virtually every jazz style. In 1973, OFF THE WALL PRINT FROM THE PAST Brooks formed a band called The Artistic Truth, and became involved in experimental orchestrated drumming. After returning to Detroit in1975, I'M SICK OF GRAFFITI WRITTEN ' he founded the Aboriginal Percussion Choir. He continues to play with BY NAIVE, CONSERVATIVE, LIT - both groups. Brooks and The Artistic Truth will be appearing tomorrow TLE RICH BRATS WHO DON'T night at 8:00 at Ypsilanti's Depot Town as part of WEMU's Winter Jazz KNOW A FUCKING THING ABOUT s_ Series. Brooks spoke recently with Daily staffer Alan Paul. REAL LIFE. Daily: You were in New York for a long time, 16 years. Why did you i.e. life away from mommy and come back to Detroit? daddy and the U of M.! Brooks: Well, because guys like John Coltrane and Kenny Dorham and (in reply) Lee Harvey aren't there. They were there when I was there and it was a and mommy and daddy's money whole different New York. My inspiration for being there really (in reply)> diminished. And I was having another child and I wanted a... better living Who are you to say what "real life"y condition. So I decided to come back. is for anyone but you? Too many D: It's interesting that there really is a tremendous amount of musical liberals or radicals are actually talent from Detroit... facists. B: Oh yeah... blues, jazz, soul, rock and roll. All of them. (in reply)a D: Why do you think that is? FROM THE MOUTHS OF BABES... _ B: Detroit was at one time strictly a factory town. You had people that -Graduate Library migrated here from the south that took on a different kind of bag. So their music came with them and it changed and evolved here because the Oh boy, look at us. All (fools) pace was different, probably faster. These people longed for different with our heads bowed to out books' May 26, 1962: students left their books behind to attend a University musics like the blues. Jazz is out of the blues. It's an extension of the bindings - wasting our time and Symphony and Varsity Bands evening concert on the Diag. blues, as is rock in a different direction. potential energy. Trap the smart and D: You worked with a lot of the jazz greats. Who really stands out? force them to study instead of B: All of them, all of them do. Horace Silver, Yuseef Lateef, Wes letting them form mass movements Montgomery, Charles Mingus. He was really a lot of fun, really while their young minds are still THE DAILY ALMANAC extravagant. There's so many of them. I'm with Max Roach. We've been and especially idealistic and strong. together since 1970. Let them get drunk on the 20 years ago - February 13, ficials at the Canadian border, where D: When you played with these people, is that how you developed your weekends; it'll maintain the status 1967: A capacity crowd filled Hill he attempted to pass a taped speech own style? Picking up one thing here, another there? quo. We are so maleable! Auditorium to hear ex-Harvard over the border to a group of Uni - B: Right. Exactly. I've had that opportunity alot. I don't have to really -Undergraduate Library professor Timothy Leary advise versity of Toronto students who try to be different. (Laughs.) It's just natural. them to "turn on, tune in, and drop were fresh from a "psychadellic D: You call Art Blakey your musical father. Can you explain that? MEL FARR SUPERSTAR! out." weekend." B: My father on the drums. Because he calls me his son. He put me on (in reply) "We forget that we were meant Leary broadcast from "the station the drums at the Bluebird when I was 19 years old. He said, 'This guy Whoever wrote this was obviously to live in the Garden of Eden," he within his body" - WDNA - and Roy Brooks can play the drums. Go on up there and play.' And I played. bored, or simply another sad victim said. "We must wake up." told the audience: "Each of you go He let me play. He got off the drums and let me play. He still does that. of the media. Leary's visit came minutes after home and turn on Mom and Dad. See INTERVIEW, Page 11 -Graduate Library he was detained by immigration of - Don't use words -just do it." PAGE 10 -WEEKEND/RFE8UARY'13.'1987 CAMPUS CLASSICAL There's p1 By Rebecca Chung CLASSICAL MUSIC LOVERS face a seemingly insurmountable problem: their tastes often exceed their budgets. Even album or CD collections come to about $15 per horizon-broadening experience (cas- sette tapes, which like to complain in their old age, do not lend them - selves to posterity). Then there are ticket prices, an especially painful subject. But there is reason to take heart. Except for the opera lovers (who, at $50 a recording, have already lost all sense of proportion), there is a way to ameliorate the latter dep - rivation, if not the former. The University - yes, the same place that brings you aesthetic oddities like the UGLi and the football team - is trying to make amends, and it deserves an 'A' for more than effort. The most notable University concert purveyor is, of course, the University Musical Society. They offer the finest concerts of any organization in the state and have an impressive international repu - tation as well. UMS's outgoing director, Gail Rector, wishes that students would take their musical education as seriously as their academics. "Do they feel that their education is indeed a 'higher education?' " he said. "We give a standard of musical excellence and performance by the things that we bring here, because it's a world standard - artists from all over the world. And if they can experience this in their four years in school here, they willtake away from their experience in the Uni - versity something that is especially worthwhile. "I keep hearing that students can't afford concerts, yet the theatres are very popular, and they charge as much as our rush tickets - $5 each for one of the finest concerts in the world. 208 S. First, Ann Arbor 996-8555 This Week at The Blind Pig: Feb 13 THE BUZZTONES 14 STEVE NARDELLA'S ROCK & ROLL TRIO 15 WOMEN'S NIGHT 16 HYSTERIC NARCOTICS 17 FRANK ALLISON and the ODD SOX 18 THE FUGUE 19 MAP OF THE WORLD Drink Specials Every MON $1 SHOTS TUE $3 BEER PITCHERS WED $2 MARGARITA MUGS THU $1 WATERMELONS Lenty to hear, and much of it' S "When you list or enroll into a course, you pay quite a price for a course you are taught," he con - tinued. "If the student would regard this is a concert course, and volunteer themselves, on their own initiative, to say, spend a hundred dollars... they're going to get as much from that as'they would from a classroom." For those whose budgets are ailing, there are two relatively unpublicized yet surprisingly satis - factory alternatives. The first is the home-grown talent of the School of Music. Over 100 faculty members and 800 students work to put on some 350 performances annually. There is usually something happening every night (call the School of Music for a schedule, or dial the 24-hour Music Line at 763- 4726), and almost everything is free. Even better - the bigger the audience, the better the per - formances, according to Music Director Gustav Meier. "I'm happy, of course, that whenever our ensembles perform, whether it's the band or the orchestra or the choir, that we have a real appreciative audience," he said. "It's tremedously encouraging for the students. And they do play better with an audience. It makes them a little bit uncomfortable, perhaps -'My God, I didn't expect that somebody would show up! Maybe I should have practiced more' - right? But there they are on stage, with their instrument, and with an an audience out there, and they have to deliver." When planning a concert program, Meier selects pieces according to his students' needs and preferences. But he does not think that should detract from the audience's enjoyment. "I don't really think too much of the audience" he said. "I think mainly of the diet for the students, which is varied. Basically, the programs are shaped by them... so that they can have different styles, different composers, different centuries, different approaches and techniques of the composers - that all is covered within one year. "I try each concert to come up with a combination of works which also make it bearable during the rehearsal time - you can't do all 16th century works in one concert." Last, but determinedly not least, is the Arts at Midday series, held on Thursdays at 12:15 in the Pendelton Room of the Union with no charge for admission, as well as on the first Tuesday evening of every month (admission charged). Arts at Midday has a more varied program, which has included ethnic and interpretative dance, a shamisen player, a percussion ensemble, poetry readings, faculty perfor - mances, and many students from the School of Music. "The recompense to the student performers, since it is not a paid situation - and yet I'd like to emphasize that way over half the people are really young pro - fessionals - (is that) many are already playing in the Flint Sym phony or the Toledo Symphony,' said coordinator Shirley Smith "We've something of a smal bureau of reference. For instance the Prism saxophone quintet, whici developed out of the School o Music, started in the Pendelton Room. A lot of groups did. Peopl call back, and they ask, 'We have a No other cards hug you the way ours do .-. ©RPP, inc. ' Valentine Cards & Gifts from 1205 S. UNIVERSITY 761-7177 k store r'lA 9:30-6:00 MON-SAT 9:30-9:00 TH, FRI 12:00-5:00 SUN WEEKEND/FEBRUARY 13. 1987