ARTS Wednesday, November 7, 1990 The Michigan Daily Yhe Page 7 Cray helps the blues survive world accordion 4o Zydeco by Andrew J. Cahn "WX hen I first played this accor- dion, the younger generation thought [it] was for the older generation; I say it's not so, and to prove it, what I did was mix my musical back- ground with my father's. It's alright ;e"be traditional, but I wouldn't be pliying it if I couldn't share it with all generations." - That is the basic philosophy be- hind Buckwheat Zydeco's career. If hd strictly played traditional zydeco, thb only people he would appeal to ark the older residents of Southwest Louisiana and a few Yankee enthusiasts who would have trouble convincing their peers that this *&ould good stuff. Instead, B13ckwheat adds a semi-mainstream robk feel to many of his songs, and does not perform many in French, as his musical ancestors did. By mixing his musical back- ground with that of his father's gen- erotion, he has created a sound which he hopes will appeal to the greatest number of listeners. The presence of e accordion and the scrubboard still lace Buckwheat on the fringe of popular music, but in terms of zydeco, he is an enormous success. One reason for his success is a New Orleans culture revival which has been taking place since the early '80s. This revival has also helped the careers of the Neville Brothers, the Radiators and the Dirty Dozen Brass Band. Another factor in *3uckwheat's success is the cover tunes he has performed over the last few years, including Bob Dylan's "On a Night Like This," Eric Clapton's "Why Does Love Have to Be So Sad" and, on the latest release, by Brian Jarvinen Last August, as I'm sure most of you know,legendary guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughn was killed in a heli- copter crash. Since then I've heard countless sentiments such as "the blues will never be the same," or "will the blues ever recover from this?" While Vaughn was one of the best in the field and will be missed by all, he didn't carry the blues through the '80s alone. One of the worst aspects of the tragedy was that it occurred immediately after a con- cert featuring the combined talents of Vaughn, Eric Clapton (who is also but one guitarist in a vast field of talent) and Robert Cray, who is ap- pearing in Ann Arbor tonight after a long absence from local stages. While we'll never get to see that combintion of hot players again, Cray is fortunately still with us. Robert Cray began playing music on the west coast, appearing constantly in small clubs. His bass player from this period, Richard Cousins, still plays with him today. During this time Cray somehow ended up on film, as a member of Otis Day and the Knights in the film every college student has seen, Ani- mal House. Cray's reputation as a player spread by word of mouth, and by his wowing crowds at blues fes- tivals. His first album, Who's Been Talkin', featured Cray's versions of many blues standards, including "Too Many Cooks (Are Gonna Spoil the Stew)." What really got Cray's career going was his second record, Bad Influence, which included two songs, "Phone Booth," and the title track, which have since been covered by all kinds of artists, including Clapton. "Phone Booth" revealed a new blues artist with the requisite guitar skills; but the song was no- ticeable because of the wrenchingly desperate way Cray sang, "I'm in a phone booth baby/ and I just spent There's no one else in the band name fortunate one," Buckwheat says. the Rolling Stones' "Beast of Burden." Buckwheat says he feels that, instead of riding on the coat- tails of another act's success, he should add what he learrns from them to his own style. "...I don't agree with any artist [who takes] a song that's very much prepared and good and misuses the song or takes away from [it]," Buckwheat explains. "If you can't put anything into that song, don't do it. It's better left alone." In addition, he says, "You put on the radio, you hear all types of mu- sic, but you don't hear zydeco. So what I'm doin' is to take these cover tunes that people have heard and went crazy about, and I say 'here's for you; here's fifty percent' That's the only way it can be done because that's the only way it can be played on the radio." A zydeco purist may say that Buckwheat is selling out, but what must be taken into consideration is that he has not always been an ac- cordion player. "I did a lot of Funkadelic and other things like+ that," he says. "As a matter of fact, I played or- gan from the age of nine until 1979 when I started [in the Ils Sont Partis Band] I had never played accordion before in my life." ad Spanky or Alfalfa. "I'm the only As of right now, he is the most popular Creole performer, but he feels that zydeco will continue to grow even if he were not part of the scene. He says this is because "it's gettin' out there now and more people have heard the music than just the people down in Southwest Louisiana. Once the music was kept [there] for family entertainment, but now accordion players are going national and international." Because of his new success, Buckwheat can no longer stick to playing the small dance halls down on the bayou. Those who have ever seen a show at Hill know that there is really not much room to really get down. Due to the nature of Buckwheat's music, it is a surprise that the change in atmosphere does not bother him. "I like being closer to the audience, where I can reach off-stage, shake somebody's hand and say 'hey man, you havin' fun?"' he says. "But I'm happy performing any- where - where there's two people or two thousand. As long as you're happy and got a smile on your face, I'm ready to roll." BUCKWHEAT ZYDECO is opening for THE ROBERT CRAY BAND tonight at Hill Auditorium. my last dime." Cray has said in countless interviews, including one in Guitar Player, "We've always played the blues, and rhythm and blues tunes." Cray's smooth, soulful voice allows him to do this. He has admitted that he is as much influenced by Clapton and the Chicago blues artists who recorded for Chess, as artists like Otis Redding, Al Green and Aretha Franklin who recorded for Stax/Volt in Memphis and Muscle Shoals, Al- abama. And his latest interview re- veals that the first record he ever pur- chased was Jimi Hendrix's Are You Experienced? Since Cray's beginnings on the club circuit he has become an in- ternational star, playing with many of his heroes, including John Lee Hooker, who Cray played with on a new single. His new album, Mid- night Stroll, includes the two mem- bers of the Memphis Horns, who will play with Cray tonight, and may well feature the best keyboard sounds on any of his records to date, thanks to some tasteful Hammond B-3 organ playing by Jimmy Pugh. Robert Cray is probably the most soulful blues player alive today. Clapton is technically brilliant, but he can't touch the emotion that is conveyed by the combination of Cray's singing and playing. But no one person is the blues. The popularity of blues music may wax and wane on the charts, but as long as humans have sex and they understand the capabilities of a vi- brating string, this musical forin will survive. ROBERT CRAY is playing tonight at Hill Auditorium with BUCK- WHEAT ZYDECO opening. The show starts at 8 p.m. Tickets are available at all Ticketmaster out- lets for $18.S0. Robert Cray and the members of his band may be smiling here but they have proven countless times that they know the meaning of the blues. An eggstatic experience in dramatic dance ..g~pp . %(j: :": :;::%'t#; jv~j. eeaafk jp4 e4 j(e[[ k: :;X , t. .":. is_______________________ by Elizabeth Lenhard 'Hello? New-Age hip spirituality hotline." "Hi. I need some help. I've tried yoga, burning incense, crystals, I even tried tofu. But I just can't seem to reach that high level of con- sciousness I've been hearing about. Is there anything you can do to help an ecologically-aware and spiritually- am bitious guy like me? Please?" * "Well sir, depending on how you feel about large eggs, we may have something for you." "As long as it doesn't taste like bean curd, I'll try anything once. What have you got?" "Well, it's the latest rage for con- tenporary art connoisseurs. It takes years to master, but doesn't look like it, and if you can stick with it, od may be able to overcome the oistance between yourself and the material world. It's called Butoh and you can see a demonstration of this mysterious art form at the Michigan Theater tonight and Thursday when Sankai Juku performs Unetsu." "Hmm, sounds challenging." "It certainly is. Any intense and introspective display of grotesque and convulsive body language in the f earch of the primordial symbolism 'n the subconscious would be. Espe- cially when you market it as enter- tainment and travel all over the wprld performing it." "Can you tell me what's re- quiord?"e "F or this group, the requirements are quite interesting. All you have to do is shave your head, put on a loin- cloth, and cover your entire body with rice powder. This will trans- form your physicality into a sym- bolic blank page through which your movements are the words you com- municate. At times, you may drape your body in a skeletal woven gar- ment and crouch under a shower of sand. At other times you may bal- ance a large egg upon your red- stained fingertips as a waterfall cas- cades over you." "I'm not sure if I really under- stand the meaning of this Butoh." "Well, Sankai Juku's symbolic movements may not easy to under- stand because they represent artistic director Ushio Amagatsu's interpre- tation of ancient Japanese mytholog- ical culture. While the crouched po- sitions, pained facial expressions and chaotic movements characterized by Unetsu (and don't forget that egg, which, along with the shallow pond that the five men dance in, domi- nates the performance) is far removed from Western culture. But the movements, which are a combina- tion of eerie theatricality and modern See EGG, Page 8 NEW CC coloI )FFEE HOUSE ,j F1NQ0 6 ESP RESSO CAPPUCC!IN O 1214 S. University- IN THE BACK OF THE "GALLERIA" Caffe Latte Cappuccino Mocha Regular 1.15 1.00 1.50 Large 1.65 1.65 1.95 1.00 .95 Espresso HOME BAKED MUFFINS, CROISSANTS .75 OPEN 7:30 AM-MIDNITE Buy your 14K gold Balfour ring now and get 1 0" Wfk-W" w A "W II