w w w w w -W -1w -qw- lqvp T T G e r1....ss.Is b e . tp ..y .. "" " ".:45:,+f:i S. _:L vh'3tk nGe o r g e W n s t o n , Mi s s i o n : I mp o s s i b l e t op lyA Although he's considerd New Age, inston can sure swing By D. Mara Lowenstein The lights are low, the air is rich with the scent of bodily-worn patchouli, and couples in Birken- stocks, Rockports, crystal pendants wrapped in leather thongs, and natural fibers stroll with swaying hips and yoga-relaxed joints down the aisles of the concert hall. This atmosphere is accentuated by a New Age crowd with Shirley Maclaine on the brain and a complete set of "Environmental" music in their meditation room album collection. Despite the somewhat unbelievable sincerity of the listeners and the sickeningly commercial "let's help the yuppies unwind" promo, Wind- ham Hill has actually managed (only God knows how) to enlist a few talented musicians: Michael Hedges, Shadow Fax, William Ackerman, Liz Story, and George Winston to name a few. Sunday night, at Hill Auditorium, Winston is coming to blush the walls and vaulted ceilings with his sensu- ously melodic piano. Born in Michigan, Winston grew up in Montana, Mississippi, Florida, New Orleans, and Califor- nia. Influenced by pop instrumental during his early years, he moved to blues, jazz, and R&B after graduat- The three faces of George Winston. ing from high school. His greatest influences by far are Roy Byrd a.k.a. Professor Longhair and Fats Waller. This is all incredibly mun- dane, but the final result is a musi- cian who truly cannot be catego- rized. Winston's recordings, on both Windham Hill and his own Dancing Cat Records are mostly "New Age-y," slow, mood-trans- forming melodies. But in concert, this innocuous-looking man of serenity turns into one of the dirti- est boogie woogie blues-rockers around. His repetoire ranges from Vince Guraldi's "Linus and Lucy" to Amos Milburn's "Chicken Shack Boogie". The startling variety of music Winston performs during his con- certs throws a curve ball at the premise that Windham Hill and other New Age labels are built upon. The premise that creating music with the sole purpose of re- laxing the stressed yuppies of the '80s and satisfying the '60s hang- ers-on (both of whom are too afraid to try some alternative or progres- sive jazz) is a valuable enough cause to warrant the creation of a label. If musicians such as Winston can play such a variety of music, all with the same aplomb, then why, perchance is only their mushy-mood-making music recor- ded? Is it that commercialism has finally caught a toe hold in the "New Age" spiritual movement or was commercialism part of the game from the start? I guess if crystals, supposedly possessing magical powers, can be sold in su- permarkets for five dollars a bunch (yeah, my brother bought some and, if you can believe it, he wears them), then why, I am forced to wonder, shouldn't jazz be subjected to this cheap and obviously mar- ketable "made-for-a-purpose" scene. Before writing this article I sat down, turned down the lights, put on An Evening with Windham Hill , lit some incense... Okay, okay, I didn't go that far, but I did pretend to smell the jasmine and tried to immerse myself in a self-created aura of relaxation. It worked, until I See WINSTON, Page 6 Your mission: find a band that's sustained more changes ByMark Swartz - Ever since "party" became a verb some time earlier this decade, it has accumulated a battallion of mean- ings - some harmless, some un- printable. For the moment, limit your definition to all forms of "celebration" that can be acted out in public. If you want to party, you're going to need tunes - preferably loud and maybe not to- tally in control. Mission: Impossi- ble is your band. Like a lot of bands, Mission: Impossible was a joke at its incep- tion. The two original remaining members, Rob Carr and Chris Gor- don, once bussed tables at Alpha Delta Pi sorority and passed the time singing in the kitchen. After a summer of housepainting, they found themselves with a $2400 surplus and a burning desire to play rock 'n' roll. But there was one hitch - neither of them could play. Gordon knew something about the violin and Carr had no background whatsoever. "We walked into the music store and said, 'I'll take one of those, one of those... and don't we need one of those amplifier things?"' recalled Gordon, who has since become an ace axeslinger. They played their first gig two weeks later with a backlog of material consisting of hardly-recognizable takes of "Louie, Louie," "Wooly Bully," and "Wild Thing." "We didn't think we'd be able to pull it off," Carr recalled, "That's Mission: Impossible." The band has progressed miles since then and has expanded its repertoire and refined its technique, but not without a few face-lifts. There have been 27 personnel changes since 1985. The current line-up includes Carr on guitar and vocals; Gordon on guitar; Andy Calder on bass; Megan Fitzpatrick on vocals and hats; Suzinne Pak on keyboards (she joined the band when she responded to an ad for a room to rent and the classically- trained pianist played her first gig a INTERVIEW Continued from Page 10 ment of an advanced and civilized society here, leaving out the brutality.with which Columbus treated the Indians, his enslavement of them, his murder of them to get gold, to get trophies, to be able to show things and bring things back to his financiers and sponsors in Spain. Now when you tell the story of Columbus as a committer of what his biographer, Samuel Elliot Morrison, called genocide; when you do that, you are shaking peo- ple's belief in the benevolence of Western civilization, and you cast doubt on its origins - you're throwing some sand at the purity of this belief that white Western civi- lization brought noble things to a "savage" world, leaving out the history of what we did to those "savages," and in the course of that, what we did to ourselves. W: Since U.S. academics are free to teach alternative versions of his- tory and face no threat of physical sanction if they deviate from ap- proved doctrine, have we seen - judging from the uniformity in U.S. historical accounts - aca- demic self-censorship? Z: Well it is self-censorship. It is in the sense that you're not going to be imprisoned for what you write, but it's not totally self-cen- sorship. That is, it's self-censorship in reaction to an unspoken view and kind of tacit understanding that cer- tain ways in which you describe the world are not tolerable. If you write about the growth of the American industrial machine in the late 19th and early 20th century, you're ex- pected to write about it as a wonderful thing. This was the era of the Carnegies and the Rocke- fellers and the Mellons and the great giants of ingenuity and enterprise who made America the rich country that it is. And if you wrote about the conditions of the workers in the mines and mills, if you emphasized not so much what Rockefeller did to to build up the oil industry - to increase the GNP of the country - but if you emphasized the Colorado coal strike in 1913-14 where Rock- efeller used the national guard and used a private detective force to beat and kill miners, well, that might lead to suspicion that you're a radi- cal, a socialist, a communist, a trouble-maker. And all you have to do is read a new book out called That Noble Dream, by Peter Novick, a historian at the Univer- sity of Chicago. It's a kind of sur- vey of how historians have thought [about] objectivity and subjectivity in the 20th-century, and what is " Inside Rick's 611 Church y r * Take out/catering 665-1055 quite clear is how many, many in- stances there were in which histori- ans who told uncomfortable truths got into trouble with the estab- lishment, lost their jobs, didn't get tenure, were ridden out of the pro- fession. Charles Beard was an ex- ample of a great historian who, when he began to say things that were unpopular, starting with his treatment of the constitution and his skeptical look at the founding fathers, ending with his skepticism about Roosevelt and WW 11, well, Beard became kind of persona non grata. But of course worse things happen to other people. I think more recently of Lvnd who left the profession of history and became a lawyer because he couldn't get a teaching job after he had partici- pated in a number of radical activi- ties like going to Hanoi. So histo- rians and scholars in general are careful. No, they're not going to be put in jail, not going to be beaten and killed, but their professional reputations will suffer; they will be called subjective; they will be ac- See INTERVIEW, Page 16 El L HOUSE OF WINGS " "Best Wings in Ann Arbor." -Steve ARAA HAIR AND NAIL SAL 515 E. LIBERTY ANr 747-7710 " Open until 1AM. I I -- C - O--U--P -O-N--- I I t ! r r r r/ //f/r i l t !! !/ r r~ BUY 1 BURGER, GET 1 FREE' I (present before ordering, offer expires 1/31/89) I k I Precision Photographics rhe Full-Service Photo Lab Main Lab 830 Phoenix Dr. 971-9100 At Great Copy 110 E. Washington 668-0200 Levi's button-fly 501 jeans. Specially m, personal fit that no ordinary j MARY DIBBLE S. 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