w SIMIEN Continued from Page 4 been before." Simien has been writing songs with Art Neville and Dickie Landry, an avant garde saxophone player who has recorded with Philip Glass and Laurie Anderson. He has set aside January and February as months for taking time off the road and concentrating on writing. "I plan on doing a lot of stuff in English with lyrics that really make sense. I want to take the music and give it lyrics that people can really understand. I'll do a few songs in French, keep it a folk music, but a lot of the old lyrics, to be honest, don't make such sense," Simien said. "It's good moving music but the lyrics are so weak that sometimes it's hard to relate to. I'm writing new songs and also giving new lyrics to old songs. My lyrics are influenced byinfluenced by guys like Bob Dylan and Paul Simon. I want to combine different musical traditions- learn from what they did and combine it with our traditional music and make it something totally different." "We're going to get together and come out with an album that will shock the world and I believe it can be done. I see the reaction to the music and I think the only thing it's lacking is strong lyrics. You've got to aim high. We've already gotten further than I ever thought was possible and I don't want to stop here." John Hammond never recorded an album that shocked the world. He's never even tried to. He hasn't strived to create new forms of ; , V V w w q 0 f m music. Rather, he's helped to keep a very old tradition alive, one that is central to the development of Black music. Hammond got turned onto acous - tic blues in 1958 when he first heard a recording of legendary Delta bluesman Robert Johnson. "I was a blues fan before that," Hammond said, "but when I heard his stuff I actually felt inspired to go out and play. And I did." 9 During his 25 year career Hammond has played with many of the finest blues and blues influenced musicians in the land, including Duane Allman, Michael Bloomfield, John Lee Hooker, Dr. John, Robbie Robertson, and Steve Winwood. Yet, Hammond has chosen to remain solo and true to a pure form of the blues for most of the years. "There's a certain intensity and powerful impact which a solo artist stately simplicity of the Dylan original as well as the propulsive strumming of the Hendrix version, and his funny, stripped-down run at Sheila E's "A Love Bizarre" gives the Prince lyric an eerie profundity I'd never noticed. Hedges winds up the LP with a sing-along romp through the Beatles' "Come Together." Hedges' instrumentals range from pretty, ambient sound-pictures ("Breakfast in the Field," "Rikki's Shuffle") to manic, open-ended variations on a jazzy theme, kind of like acoustic- period Pat Metheny on an acid trip ("Silent Anticipations," "The can put across which I just don't think a band can create," Hammond explained earlier this year. "In a band the focus is diffused, even if just a little bit. A solo artist, when everything is right can be much more effective (than a band)." "It's harder on a solo artist because there's a lot more pressure," Hammond continued. "You can't hide anything when you're up there alone. It's much more intense. It's really a unique thing. You just see this one guy and all his emotions come out." "The blues are an American mus - ical form. It's a unique music which can capture the power and passion of living." Lots of emotions will flow this weekend at the Pig. Showtime tonight for Simien is 10:30 pn. Hammond will play two shows Sunday, art 7:30 and 9:30 p. m. M COVER STORY Continued from Page 9 RC senior Edwin Munich said he discovered the RC by accident, applying to the Residential College because he thought he was applying to live on campus. But once he started to receive brochures about the RC, he was attracted by the sense of community, the small classes, the discussions, and the written evaluations. "I felt there was more room for me as a person to come out. I didn't want to be in a small college. I wanted to have the facilities of a big University," he said. "I feel a community between faculty and students and there's not this barrier. I've had experiences sitting in the Halfass (Halfway Inn) talking to a professor about how the class went that day. That's just incredible. You can be sitting there with the teacher talking about the class." When the RC began in the '60s, students opposed the idea of across- the-board requirements. Soon after its inception, a core curriculum that dictated what classes the RC students should take was abolished. Today, RC students have to take a first-year seminar, complete an arts practicum with hand-on experience in the creative arts, and reach proficiency in a language. Proficiency includes a comprehensive exam in speaking, writing, reading, and aural comprehension. Students have to take a reading course in the language after they complete proficiency. Students can take language classes in LSA, but the RC offers intensive language courses in French, Spanish, German, and Russian. The classes meet eight hours a week - half of the student's course load. The structure encourages high-level development of speaking skills in and out of the classroom. There are foreign language lunch tables and coffee hours which give students further practice in conversation. In addition, many RC activities take place outside the classroom. The East Quad auditorium is used by a chamber orchestra, the RC Singers, and the RC Players - a theatre group that performs professional and student-written plays. The RC uses the Halfway Inn, asnack bar located in the basement of East Quad, as a meeting place for students and faculty or for programs sponsored by the college. Most RC students take about half of their course in LSA, but RC junior Anne Marie Hubbell is one of the few students who has never taken a class outside of the college. "It was not a conscious decision," she said. "When I looked for classes they fit into my schedule and they all were something I wanted to take." Hubbell is working on an independent concentration program in drama and creative writing. She feels her classes "all have a unique approach to what they're talking about." "It's a personalized method of teaching. I don't feel like I'm interchangeable with anyone else." She said the RC is marked by the interest of the students. "There's a lot of people who are socially aware. They (RC students) tend to be people who are extremely active in all kinds of things." The RC offers interdisciplinary majors that cannot be found anywhere else at.the University. The social science concentration, one of the RC's more popular, combines the study of many fields such as psychology, political science, anthropology, or economics. The program has a research requirement that gets students to integrate theory and practice. Students can fulfill their research requirement by engaging in a field study which carries 12 hours of credit for students. Students and faculty work together on a project in small groups and write up the result collectively. This work breaks down °he mystique of rc r ad distinction betM - -ifaculty and students, said RC social scicnce lecturer Charlie Bright. Past projects have examined local topics such as West Virginian migration to the See COVER STORY, Page 13 PER5ION IN THlE H-A '1N { ' f oo 6tRLL 1 'MUPR " of A CbE-K p tiN A. o~l~fIr - I WPALTO, Ti " I"sib" AI T r -NN S ' WMT my w John Hammond sings the blues sunday night at the Blind Pig. Women In Judaism Series Presents MARCIA FALK MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16 Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union THE SPIRITUAL JOURNEY OF A JEWISH FEMINIST Marcia Falk, a poet and professor of literature at the Univerity of Judaism In Los Angeles, will speak about the creation of new liturgies and will present her new Hebrew and Englis blessings that transcend the gender of divinity and will describe the process she uses to create new liturgy. For more info call Hfflel 663.3336 ll RECORDS Continued from Page 4 Knopfler-like, spacious timing and the Edge's type of simultaneous rhythm/lead playing, punctuated by his own quick scratching and harmonics, gives him a palette of sonic colors full enough to assay the surprising variety of numbers on his new Live on the Double Planet LP singlehandedly. He shows a real hand with covers; "All Along the Watchtower" pays homage to the IF YOU'VE BEEN THINKING ABOUT ORDERING CABLE TV... NOW IS THE TIME! $5.00 INSTALLATION CALL AND ORDER CABLE T.V. BEFORE NOVEMBER 14TH AND YOU'LL SAVE $20.00 ON YOUR INSTALLATION. COLUMBIA CABLE Parcheezies The Final Slice. Slice of Pizza 990 afterY NLYpm' SUNDAYS ONLY Funky Avocado"). On the other hand, Hedges' own vocal pieces feature gorgeous, folky tunes and richly poetic lyrics, hansomely sung. Hedges introduces "The Funky Avocado" whimsically: "This sort of starts off with a medium R&B tempo, eases out into hard rock, and ends in a fit of disco fury." It's entertaining evidence that this album is as essential a catalogue of a master player, as of a showman having fun with new possibilities. -Michael Fischer. Diamond Diamond MiJems Records At first it seems like Diamond is just another copy-cat band trying to cash in on the Bon Jovi-Cinderella- Poison pop metal success of late. However, this album could kindof be defined as heavy metal, but the band never really turns it up and rocks out. Diamond features mostly hard rock ballads, with an instrumental piece being the hardest rocking tune. The thing that makes all these ballads palatable and even enjoyable is the talent of the vocalist, who displays a wonderful voice (somewhat of a rarity in hard rock). -Chuck Skarsaune - - - ---- ' LIFETIME GUARANTEE ' KING HEART t F. PRODUCTIONS I ' -- CUSTOM T-SHIRTS 200/$2.95EA. I 1000/$2.75EA. V' 250 CAPS $2.5OEA.I 150 SWEATS $7.75 EA. 50- I $27.50 EA PRINTED ' FREE I SCREEN WOR !RWTHSAD Pric" asujet ohaneWlooiH c CALL ANYTIME 20323W 8MILE RD. , WE2 ETROITMI ' WE DELIVER I lhfQ/BG Rlo/G ' sausage ,"", onion ..- .* " " qwc~o a O 5tRA( r , ;' . 1 " Q( 1.4 ' 0- 2 aoan aa eYj thfa eM k* 11 1 * pg0-123 'SuO MAef 1 . . " ar a olives s ,a s . Geer epe roooo& O A N N A R 8 0 R A73 A CALL TODAY: 973-2266 t a *does not include veggie or deluxe Michigan Union, Ground Floor 7G3~ L. LIV..a- g ,vvd Mon.-Sat. 10-9, sun. 10o-8 Now carrying largest CD selection in town. For classical music visit SKR Classical, 539 E. Liberty PAGE 6 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 6, 1987 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 6, 1987 PAGE 6 WEEKEND/NOVEMBER 6, 1987