'WI W V V V V rf. w W v .! I Music Roots music: Simien, Hammond are on target By Alan Paul This weekend is a treat for fans of roots music. Not roots rock. We're not talking about the Del Fuegos, the Blasters, or Los Lobos here. We're talking roots music. Real, unadulterated roots music. Tonight, zydeco wunderkinds Terrance Simien and the Mallet Playboys bring their bayou stomp to the Blind Pig as they crisscross PREVIEW the country yet again. Sunday night, again at the Pig, troubadour John Hammond, one of the last acoustic solo blues artists consistently on the road, plys his trade. Simien and the Mallet Playboys are a band on the rise. With each trip to town they seem to have risen a step in their quest for artistic and commercial success. Last March, at their first tree town appearance, they drew a medium- sized and very supportive crowd. They returned in April to open Los Lobos' Michigan Theatre show, and received a standing ovation, no small feat for an opening act. Their July appearance debuted the new and improved Playboys featuring Roy "Chubby" Carey on drums and guitar whiz Sherman Robertson. This time around, they are riding high on the heels of their appearance in the film The Big Easy, are gaining a national reputation through their incessant touring, and are even being courted by major record labels. "It's really strange," the 21 year old Simien said from his rural Louisiana home. "I never thought it would go this far. The movie's definitely helping. A lot of people had good things to say about the music and it opened a lot of people's ears." Success has come quickly for Simien. While much of this must be attributed to good timing - the exotic and highly danceable zydeco rhythms are just now getting more recognition - Simien's and the band's talent, energy, and relentless touring are the real keys. It is extremely unusual for a band to tour nationally without an album to support. Simien has now done it four times. "It's a lot of fun. It's something I've always wanted to do. It's hard being on the road all the time but it's the kind of lifethat's almost like a fantasy - so many good things that make it all worthwhile," Simien said. "It's been happening pretty fast for me and I'm just going to ride with it and see where it takes me. I'm keeping my head on straight." Having once been close to signing with boffo blues label Alligator Records, Simien has now backed off to listen to major label offers. The recent success of Buckwheat Zydeco's On A Night Like This, the major label debut of the musical gumbo, has caused record executives to take heed. While excited and flattered by the attention, Simien is adamant about maintaining control in the studio and upholding the integrity of what is essentially a folk music. "I hear a lot of people with different ideas. I listen to them and respect where they're coming from - but it's my music. The only way our music's going to get anywhere is if we can control our sound and play what we feel," Simien said. "I know a lot of people who had producers come in who didn't know anything about their music and try to work with it and they meant well but..., nobody knows the music better than we do. People want to hear the real thing - that's why they like us in the first place- music that can bring them back and at the same time take them somewhere they've never See SIMIEN, Page 6 LOGIE Continued from Page 12 Movies at Briarwood. First, over blasting trumpets, the screen "suggests" no'smoking. State Law requires no smoking in theaters. Common courtesy requires no smoking in theaters. But Briarwood only "suggests" that you consider Skoal Bandits instead. Briarwood also suffers by dint of being a 3uburban googolplex-too many screens frequented by too many people in too little space. Ushers make sure the bovine masses are flashlighted to their seats, but disappear shortly thereafter, leaving disgruntled patrons to wander the catacomb-like halls to register their complaints. At all area movie theaters, previews are becoming an endangered species. This is a shame, as they are an art form, and the only type of advertising which is really acceptable before a movie. The generally excellent (though small, subdivided, and asymmetrical) Ann Arbor Theater often comes up short in this department, in part, I suspect, because many of the independent films they go after don't have the financial wherewithal to produce promotional materials. There is of course, an excellent alternative - cartoons. Yes, cartoons cost more than no cartoons, but a good Warner Brothers cartoon makes everyone laugh, allows theater-goers to get settled, and makes up for the absence of entertaining previews. Perhaps I'm spoiled by the grandeur and attentiveness of the Michigan Theater, but I don't think so. Over the past few years things have grown steadily worse for area movie-goers. It's little wonder that many are turning to Super VHS. But it's important to ditch the cathode-ray-tubes every now and then, and see movies as they were meant to be seen...larger than life, with hundreds of other audience members screaming, crying, and laughing together, in a huge, beautiful, symmetrical building suffused with the aroma of popcorn drenched in real butter. N INTERVIEW Continued from Page 12 B: Well, they're all linked. Everything is linked. The things are not disconnected. When you struggle to change the educational system, in that struggle are included all the fundamental issues. The struggle against imperialism is contained in that struggle. Every- thing is a bigger or lesser version of the whole. So if you struggle for reforms in a revolutionary way, you are constantly telling people that even though you are gaining these reforms, they are simply reforms. Reform in a capitalist society is like a man in a wagon throwing meat to a lion. He keeps throwing meat to the lion, but pretty soon there will be no meat to throw out. There's only one piece of meat left. So, that's what reforms are. You have to work for them. If you don't, then you really won't be in touch with the people because I realize that most people aren't snarling revolutionaries. They want immediate change. So you have to work within the framework, while always providing the ideological fuel to see beyond it. D: Do you see your art and poetry as more of an ends or a means to a higher end? B: No, no. See art is an ideological reflection of society. My art is just a reflection of who I am. It struggles against imperialism just as I do. D: Yet, you consciously chose your career as a revolutionary over probably a more profitable and celebratory career as an artist. Wasn't that a shift in art as more of an ends? B: No, it's just an indication of maturity. You know, when you get older you begin to understand the world more. When I became famous by winning that best American play, I came to a real great revelation. The revelation was that now people would be asking me to say things, that they'd be listening to me. And then it suddenly occurred to me that I had a lot of responsibility. That all of the people that I knew - all the people that had died like my grandmother and grandfather - had told me about society and how evil it was, and I now had a responsibility to say that. I couldn't just be a famous asshole. So I think that was kind of a moment of crisis, and I said that this is it. I have to be committed to the things that I felt before. Otherwise, it's not worth* it any- way. It's something that you come to grips.with, and then you see that people are going to beat you up if you tell the truth. That's something that you come to live with. D: Do you feel that the white co- option of the Black enteiainment industry takes away Black dulture to a certain extent? B: No, what it does is that it deforms it so that it cannot teach what it should. First of all, it's a usurpation of its economic value. We are supposed to be prosperous based upon the music that we have made for centuries. We are supposed to be wealthy people, but you know we are not. Whitney Houston and Michael Jackson are rich but what about all the people around them-the engineers, the producers, the record label people? They're taking advantage of these Black people's talents. Why aren't they Black? But also the music is a teaching instrument. When you see it being played, when you listen to John Coltrane and Duke Ellington, they are teaching you things. Because our children cannot get to that teaching, they are left with the commercial version that teaches them bad things. D: It also could be the white culture taking over the Black cul- ture. When you go to see a great Jazz artist, 85 percent of the audience is usually white. B: That's imperialism. We don't have the money to go to those places. People who say that Black people don't like going to see jazz are really saying, "Yeah, we create it, but we're not interested in it." Come on! That's not it. It's just that we don't have the money to go to those clubs. The average Black family is a blue-collar family, domestic workers. Asides from the financial aspects, they don't have all the energy after all of the manual work that they do to go busting out to the nightclubs. If they're younger or middle-class we can because we have the money and social mobility to. But most don't, and that's the problem. D: Do you think that responses to racism have increased in the last few years? B: Responses? Racism has increased.I think this period that we are coming out of has been a downswing in the liberation move- ment. But I think that we're com- ing out of that and getting ready to go to the other side. The signs are imminent that we're getting ready to bust out of this. Always the sign is the self-consciousness - people beginning to ask questions even though they might not know the answers. They might be doing in- correct things, but they begin to ask beg D: ecor mor B and and war kno Urba ther mor to w inter send ener not over (laug COVER STORY Continued from Page 11 Ypsilanti area, or the study of how people become political activists. In recent years RC students have won over 150 Hopwood Awards for creative writing. Hecht estimates that over the years his students alone have won over 100 Hopwoods. One RC alum. Jennifer Levin recently published her third novel in five years. "There's a real stress on writing. The college in general has a strong emphasis on writing (with the freshman seminariand writingin other courses), so of course Residential College students are going to do well in a writing competition," said Hecht. The Arts and Ideas in the Humanities concentration combines the study of literature and visual arts. Students analyze works of literature and same In und movi of c andI skill at an imag take serio We and We enab - t We' of 1 thev educ best Terrance Simien and the Mallet Playboys rock the Blind Pig with zydeco tonight. Guitarists expand Joe Satriani Surfing with the Alien Relativity Records Surfing with the Alien is the second all-instrumental solo album from Joe Satriani. The usual problem with such albums, especially when the primary instrument is guitar, is that you hear the artist's entire musical vocabulary in about two minutes, and everything beyond that becomes tedious and repetitive. Not so here. Like Tony MacAlpine and Vinnie Moore, Satriani is a guitar wiz of the first degree, displaying total mastery of his chosen instrument. Unlike other solo albums, however, his displays not only his technical prowess, but a higher level of musical restraint and maturity. In other words, he doesn't blow his whole wad on the very first tune. And what a wad it is! The man has it all down, from furious speedpicking and fingertapping to tastefully executed melodic passages. He wrenches an assort- ment of "neat noises" from his guitar that would turn Steve Vai, a former student of his, green with envy. It's not hard to tell where Vai picked up some of his style. Satriani's wild approach to the guitar gives him a unique sound which is totally his own. Alien's cuts range from fast boogies to slow grooves, mostly in a hard rock/fusion vein. The title cut is one of the best, with Satriani setting up a straight-ahead rock rhythym, stating a melody, then going wild with mutating this melody into new alien sounds.- Another great song is "Satch Boogie," which sounds like old Van Halen or ZZ Top back when those bands really rocked, and features more crazy guitar. Don't get me wrong, the guitar playing is more than today's standard high-speed blithering drivel that most of today's hard rock/metal guitarists seem to aspire to; but it is at its best when Satriani just cuts loose. One thought that came to me while listening to this album was "Wouldn't it be great if he got together with other musicians of his calibre and formed a whole band, with vocals and everything?" We can only hope to see something horizons like this in the future. Meanwhile, if you're into great guitar, this album is highly recommended. -Chuck Skarsaune Michael Hedges Live on the Double Planet Windham Hill Since the glory days of Hendrix, Townshend, and Page, a small lot of diverse stylists have come up with that really one-of-a-kind guitar sound whose identity you can recognize in just a few notes. There's The Edge of U2, with his cascading echo-effects, and the evocative fingerpicking of Mark Knopfler, to name a couple, as well as the sparkling, acoustic flourishes of a guy named Michael Hedges. And while Hedges' unique niche in the pop/jazz music scene, pushing at the horizons of the folk- singer genre, may obscure him from the big-time, it affords him the freedom to daringly re-shape a six-string legacy with innovative new ideas, creating a distinctive, unpredictable style. Hedges' ambitious synthesis of See RECORDS, Page 6 BALALAIKA ORC DETR RUSSIAN, EAST EUR( NOVEM 8 RACKHMN UNIVERSIT Tickets: $10 at Michi TICKETMAST Sponsored by the University c East European Studies and the Literatures and the Hebrew Da JEWISH COMMUNAL SERVICE CAREER DAY TUESDAY NOVEMBER 10 10AM-4PM HILLEL 339 E. LIBERTY 663-3336 II 000000000000 0000 0000000 000000000000 000000000000 000000000000 000000000000 000000000000 000000000000 000000000000 000000000000 000000000000 000000000000 Here is your chance to meet with various organizations to explore a career in Jewish comm unal service. Agencies to be represented include nearly every field of Jewish work: social work, education, rabbinical, administration, personnel, journalism, public policy, etc.Reps from the following major organizations will be on hand: JWBJewish Community Center, Hebrew Union College, Jewish Theological Seminary, Jewish Vocational Service, and more. Appointments may be made beforehand to meet with specific representatives. The University of Michigan STUDENT STRUGGLE FOR SOVIE presents a symposium on SOVIET JEWRY SUNDAY, NOV. 8 7:30 PM RACKHAM AMPH. Speakers will include, MARK LEVIN Director of the Nat'l Conference for JEAN SIMON member Otthe Congressional Wit ALLA KAHN Ann Arbor Action for Soviet Jewry TANYA ZUNSHAIN recently released refusnik MWi~ A Guitarist Joe Satriani explores new territory. PAGE 4 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 6, 1987 I1ll WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 6, 1987