Page 8 -The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 16, 1990 Geri Allen stri es a jazzy key by Peter Shapiro Blending styles from all over the Diaspora, Geri Allen creates jazz that cuts across all artificial distinctions between African-derived music. Striking a frictional balance between the earthy pursuits of the blues and the intellectual discourses of the jazz avant-garde, Allen's music seems to be a struggle for self-definiton not only within a world of stereotypes, but within a pre-ordained canon of jazz classics. Like much of the new vanguard of jazz that has emerged in the '80s, Allen makes a conscious attempt to find an equilibrium between roots and experimentation. People like John Carter, David Murray, Oliver Lake, George Adams, Don Pullen and Muhal Richard Abrams wear their musical ancestry on their sleeves while seeking to push the '60s innovations into an era of digi- tally-clean modal adventures instead of honks, squeaks, blurts and squeals. Geri Allen has found a com- fortable place within this relatively new idiom, particularly within her CLASSIFIEDASI ANOUNCEMENit GIANT FLEA MARKET Household goods, new/used vintage clothing, jewelry 6-10 Fri. eve., loam-6pm Sat. S Sun. 214E. Michigan ParkDowntown Ypsilanti 487-5890 or 971-7676 Just what the doctor ordered uy aen tquino T his Saturday evening at Hill Auditorium, ambassador of good will, selfless educator, and virtuoso jazz pianist Dr. Billy Taylor comes to town. He will be accompanied by Victor Gaskin on the bass and by Bobby Thomas on the drums. Taylor has been largely responsi- ble for bringing jazz extensive recognition and popularity, espe- cially among younger people. He is a fervent supporter for the National Endowment for the Arts, and has pressured the current government's administration not to cut back funding for the organization. Taylor has also been especially active on college campuses. Two; years ago, Dr. Taylor came to this university for several days, coming1 as a King/Chavez/Parks visiting scholar, giving lectures and playing his piano for music students and fac- ulty, as well as general audiences. Taylor has won respect and ac- claim for his work in jazz by people outside the jazz world, but he has re- ceived the accolades of hi; peers as well. Several years ago, he was the recipient of Downbeat magazine's prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award, given to p'ople who have made outstanding contributions to the field of jazz. In the midst of all the work that Dr. Billy Taylor has done for jazz, it is all too easy to forget one very, very important fact: he is a phe- nomenal musician. In 1988, he was able to take time out from his busy schedule to record his first solo al- bum, as well as the first in a series of trio recordings titled White Nights and Jazz in Leningrad. Last year,'he also appeared on the Jazzmobile Allstars album. ' Tomorrow night, when the Bil Taylor Trio takes the stage, expect-- set consisting mainly of standards, with a few of Taylor's original eom- positions thrown in. Dr. Billy Taylor, whose contagious enthusi- asm for jazz has taken him all over the globe, will be here in Ann Arbor, and no jazz fan should iiss the opportunity to see him perform It is not everyday that one gets tA chance to see a living legend. BILLY TAYLOR TRIO plays Saturday at Hill Auditorium at 8 p.m. Tickets range in cost from $10- 20 and are available 'it TicketMaster. Etheridge's audience will never be the same Dozens of names can be mentioned when describing Geri Allen's piano- playing style, but this jazz artist has a flourish all her own. brilliant trio which also includes Charlie Haden and Paul Motian. The Allen/Haden/Motian trio has produced incredibly vital music within the last couple of years. Con- tinuing in the tradition of their 1989 effort Etudes, the recently released In the Year of the Dragon, unfortu- nately available only as a Japanese import, contains music ranging from sublime ballads to fiery free-jazz romps. Allen's piano style is com- pendium of the vast resources avail- able in African American music. Using Thelonious Monk's off- beat polytonal reading of the riotous stride style of Pete Johnson and Meade Lux Lewis as a starting point, she bounces subsequent pro- gressions of this style off each other to form a truly individual sound. By sublimating the revolutionary, metronome-breaking cascade of six- teenth notes of Cecil Taylor to the subtle grace of McCoy Tyner's right hand, Allen's piano style combines the horn-like sound of block chords by the left hand with elegant, sing- ing flourishes by the right. The rhythm work of Haden and Motian accentuate the tension be- tween "high" and "low" by subvert- ing the typical blues underpinnings of the bass and drums. Haden injects jerks and skips into the walking bass line which he plays with frightening speed, while Motian's variations on the accents on the second and fourth beats threaten to wreck havoc on the music's structure with his collapsing cymbal work and polyrhythmic comping. This same blend of African "folk" music with its first cousin, the blues, and its second cousin, avant-garde jazz, will con- tinue tonight as Allen performs with similar-minded Tracy Wormworth and Pheeroan AkLaff rounding out her new touring trio. The GERI ALLEN TRIO with TRACEY WORMWORTH and PHEEROAN AKLAFF perform at the Ark tonight at 8 and 10 p.m. Tickets are $12.50 or $10 with student i.d., available at all TicketMaster outlets, PJ's Used Records and Schoolkids' Records. by Kim Yaged Melissa Etheridge Hill Auditoium Nov. 14, 1990 [ elissa Etheridge set a playful tone Wednesday night at Hill Audi- torium as she sang "Hello, hello" the first two words of "No Sou- venirs," but strummed into "The Angels." An unlikely tease, with hair as free flowing as she is, in her torn jeans that surely must be one of her favorite pairs, Etheridge proceeded to provide an audio-visual orgy. The seduction began with "You Used To Love To Dance" and be- came physical when Etheridge turned her twelve-string over and, in her now -trademark style, banged out the beat that comprises "Occasionally." She paused to hug her guitar before exploding into a solo that included drummer Fritz Lewack using his sticks on the back of Etheridge's guitar and concluded with an episode of Lewack playing the strings with his sticks until one of the "long cool steel strings" broke. Etheridge melodically fingered the guitar as she flirted with the audi- ence, telling us, "It's not heartache and sadness. It's about experience," and screeched into "Precious Pain." She toyed with bassist Kevin Mc- Cormick during "Brave and Crazy," daring the audience to have as much fun as she was having, sighing into the microphone, as she did during most of the songs, to entice the audience members. At times Etheridge danced seduc- tively around the mic. She passed her hand across her cheek as she belted out "Skin Deep," driving the lust out of everyone in the room. With her guitar pointing erectly from between her legs, Etheridge used her phallic symbol to mainaO power over everyone. During "Let's Get It On," the cover song Etheridgf has grown fond of performing, sl declared, "I'm the best you ever had" signalling that foreplay was over. - The climax came during thefiift encore in the form of "Let Me Oii' Etheridge, staring seductively into the eyes of guitarist Bernie Larson, played her way over to Larson's sid of the stage. Swinging her guitar oW to her side, she slipped her hands around Larson and the pair played together, lasciviously, on his guitar The concert closed with the only new song of the night, "I Will Never Be The Same." In typical Melissa Etheridge form, she stood on tI~e stage alone, except for her a- pendage-like twelve-string, and de- livered in soliloquy-type fashion grabbing her chest and extending h arm to offer her heart. Because, after all, this is more. It's love. SPECIAL Student & Faculty PRICING AutoCAD Software Release 10 or Release 11 Devtron, Russell, Inc. 585-6676 I E:Lily y $;Al f HE DOESN'T WRITE FOR ARTS. You can. Call 763-0379. I Big Daddy Kane Taste of Chocolate Cold Chillin' FG: Well Nabeel my man, I was headed to the barber shop to get my top faded, but then I listened to Big Daddy's new one and realized what a dumb move that would be. So I got my head conked. I gotta be a cold- chillin' mack-daddy like Kane to get all my props, ya know. NZ: Well, Forrest my youthful one, you can go get your head done any dilly-fuckin'-tanty way you want, but I'm losing all the hair on my head and I've still got more funk in one follicle than your entire sorry, kinky afro had. FG: Why you limey twerp, "Ticket to Ride" Disco Duck. With your forty-inch bell-bottoms, fly- away collar and '70s "Bengali in Platforms" crapola, you're about as funky as my dead grandpappy's ele- vator shoes, or that ignorant, de- crepit muthafucka Rudy Ray Moore on "Big Daddy vs. Dolomite." To quote Kane himself, "That shit you talkin' years ago, I can see/ buCit s the '90s now, and rap is all about me." But actually, King Tracheat c is about as Black to the future' Uncle Tom on this album. ti probably like this doo-doo. NZ: Too right, you long, lanky mofo. CitizenKane is sharper than an Armani pant crease. He cuts it rough and he cuts it smooth. He .cn do that hip-hop shit, but he can move that slow-long-comfortable- screw-against-the-wall R&B slinky soul when he grooves along with Barry White on "All of Me."-S@ don't scrunch his scrotum, you"* of cum. 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LibertyL 761-4539- 1220 S. University 747-9070 Open 7 Days Michigan Union 662-1222 I ONLY 7.95 Open 11:30 a.m. - 2:00 a.m. 338 S. STATE The University of Michigan SCHOOL OF MUSIC Sun. Nov. 18 Mon. Nov. 19 Tues. Nov. 20 French Classical Music Series Michele Johns, organ; Vita Brevis Choir Music of Bach, Homilius, Charpentier, Goudimel Blanche Anderson Moore Hall, School of Music, 4 p.m. Michigan Youth Organizations Michigan Youth Band, Dennis Glocke, conductor; Michigan Youth Symphony, Donald Schleicher, conductor; Michigan Youth Chamber Singers, Jerry Blackstone, conductor Music of Mozart, Bart6k, Dvorik, Sweelinck Hill Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. University Symphony and Philharmonia Orchestras Stenhen Shinns and Markand Thakar, Service Every 30 Minutes From Central AND METRO North Campus RETURN: November 10am-12 midnight 7am-llpm CAMPUS to Detroit LEAVE: November 22&21 12 noon m Sam-llp Order your college ring NOW. 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