ARTS S The Michigan Daily Thursday, January 14, 1988 Pog .7 Carter to bebop at the 'Bird' By Marc S. Taras In the mind of jazz singer Betty Carter everything is new. Even the past is recreated. Old songs are revitalized and approached in new ways. For Betty Carter, performing a song the same way is equivalent to thinking the same way, and in jazz flexibility is an asset. Betty Carter is coming home to Michigan this week for three nights of jazz at Ron Brooks' Bird of Par- adise. She appears tonight through Saturday at 7:30 and 9:30 nightly, with an extra 11:30 show added to- morrow and Saturday. With her trio, Carter is sure to cook up a new storm at the Bird. Carter was born Ella Mae Jones in Flint in 1930. She studied voice in the Detroit Public Schools and piano at the Detroit Conservatory of Music. As a teenager she won an amateur contest at the Paradise The- atre and soon began sitting in with jazz luminaries gigging in Detroit. She took the stage with Dizzy Gillespie, Max Roach, Miles Davis, and Charlie Parker. She joined the Lionel Hampton Orchestra in 1948. It was an ideal situation for an exciting and ex- citable youngster. Hampton's Or- chestra was educational in that the group was always trying something new: new material, new arrange- ments, new themes for old tunes. Betty Carter learned to think on her feet. A Washington, D.C. gig with Miles Davis eventually led to a meeting and recording session with Ray Charles. This was a tremendous boost for Carter's career. Over the years she has worked with every "name" musician and has performed at every major festival in the U.S. and abroad. In 1969, faced with waning inter- est in jazz among record companies, Carter formed her own record com- pany, Bet-Car Productions. Now for the first time major distributors are vying for the privilege of marketing the Bet-Car catalog. Her tenacity in promoting her own material is just one aspect of Carter's personality that has contributed to a reputation as a strong-willed, outspoken artist. Betty Carter has strong ties to the traditional roots of jazz and works strictly with acoustic instruments. She's the youngest of a generation that brought us Sarah Vaughn, Ella Fitzgerald, and Carmen McRae. For her jazz should be educational as well as uplifting. She sings in a beautiful contralto, and has developed an alarming range. She swings from a whisper to a growl and hits notes so low they can make you shiver. Swings! There are no words to fully express the veloc- ity Carter achieves. Tie yourself to your seat or look out! You are caught in a tornado! A few years ago at Montreux-De- troit Carter was due to give a free performance outdoors on Hart Plaza. It was overcast and had started rain- ing. But there was an audience will- ing to listen, hence Betty Carter was ready to sing. She growled at the clouds and told us she'd make the rain go away. By the third song the sun was shining as brightly as the faces in the audience. When Betty Carter sings, heaven turns to listen. Now I can't guarantee that Betty Carter will make the sun shine in the midnight blue of the Bird of Paradise... but she will be the hottest thing in town this winter's weekend. Showtime for the BETTY CARTER TRIO is 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. all three nights, with 11:30 p.m. shows Friday and Saturday. Tickets are $10 at the door. i; Feeling talented? pp, x .--/ Legendary jazz singer Betty Carter sings from a whisper to a growl and hits notes so low they can make you shiver. The Michigan native promises to be the hottest thing in town this winter's evening and this weekend at the Bird of Paradise. staprboud W Campus-Wide Talent Compel SIGN UP NOW FOR AUDITIONS before 5pm' Friday, Jan. 15 Records The Rainmakers Tornado PolyGram Imagine a band with the testi- mony of U2, the witty genius of XTC, and the raucous, scruffin' licks and humor of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers all at once. It'll give you just an idea of what a remark- able rock 'n' roll feat Bob Walken- horst pulls off here. The song- writer/singer/keyboardist/guitarist leader of Minneapolis band The Rainmakers, Walkenhorst reconciles the unlikeliest attractions -an infectious, heartland stomp and wild, funny storytelling, poetic social in- sight and serious Christian fervor - into a surprisingly thoughtful carni- val of rock delights. 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