The Michigan Daily - Friday, November 22, 1991 - Page 9 The night of the living 'spread Widespread Panic brings Southern-fried rock back to the forefront My Andrew J. Cahn The only way to really find out how tall I am, as Widespread Panic's frontman John Bell sings on "Proving Ground," is "by jumping in the middle of the river." I guess the Huron doesn't have the same measuring capacity as the Chattahoochee waters that flow down in Georgia, because, like Bell, * only found out how dry I am. Nevertheless, I did not lose faith in the band. By forging together the Southern virtuosity of the Dixie Dregs and the communal spirit of Austin's Poi Dog Pondering, along with a bit of blues, Widespread Panic has created something truly original, much more than just an- other Athens, Georgia band. Widespread's multi-themed im- provisations, such as "Barstools and Dreamers" and "Pigeons," might imply a Grateful Dead or Allman Bros. influence, but according to drummer Todd Nance, that is not so. "We used to do a lot of Talking Head covers and some obscure J. J. Cale and Van Morrison tunes (such as the album Widespread Panic's opener, "Send Your Mind")," former home of the Allman Brothers and the Dixie Dregs shut down about 15 years ago, but now, as a subsidiary of Warner Brothers, Widespread Panic's multi-themed im- provisations, such as 'Barstools and Dreamers' and 'Pigeons,' might imply a Grateful Dead or Allman Bros. influence, but according to drummer Todd Nance, that is not so. 'We used to do a lot of Talking Head covers and some obscure J. J. Cale and Van Morrison tunes' Nance says, 'but perhaps the band we covered the most per capita of what they recorded was Blind Faith' Nance says, "but perhaps the band we covered the most per capita of what they recorded was Blind Faith." While many artists struggle to be signed onto a major label, Widespread was chosen to be the flagship band for the newly re- formed Capricorn Records. The the label wants to kindle new inter- est in Southern rock bands who are not necessarily country acts. For its debut album, Widespread got help from a few Capricorn folks. One is producer Johnny Sand- lin, who worked on the Allman classic Brothers and Sisters. The other is former Dixie Dregs key- boardist T Lavitz. The members of Widespread were paid the ultimate compliment when Lavitz decided to stay with the band on the road. "You decided to keep him?" I ask, and Nance replies, "It's more like he let us keep him." Lavitz's fans will be treated to plenty in a few months, when the reunited Dregs will tour with Widespread as a double-bill show. Widespread Panic is currently on tour with Blues Traveler. After playing shows in upstate New York this past summer with bands such as Phish, Spin Doctors and Max Creek, Widespread has easily established itself among the mellow, North- east, retro-'70s-music crowd. "We weren't going to play if we could only play to the standard opener's 45-minute set. In order for us to say what we want to say, we would have to be out there for at least an hour and fifteen minutes," Nance says. The audience at St. Andrew's Hall a few weeks ago, who were mainly there to see Blues Traveler, heard Widespread's mes- sage loud and clear. One unsuspect- ing concert-goer, after listening to the intense jam "Space Wrangler," said, "I had to feel my arms to make sure I was still alive." Surely he was exaggerating, but not by much. Nance says Widespread will gain a great deal of exposure on this tour, but the band is in no rush. The grad- ual, R.E.M.-like progression is much more appealing, than the, explode- and fade method of fame, which has been exemplified well by bands such as Winger. "I'm too embar- rassed to ask why Rod (Mor- genstien, formerly of the Dixie Dregs) is even playing with them," Nance says. But he won't have to feel sorry for his hero any longer, once Widespread hits the road with the Dregs, along with another Capricorn act, Bruce Hampton and the Aquarium Rescue Unit. "On the nights when we close the show after Bruce and the Dregs," says Nance, "there will have been so much heavy playing, the people are going to be begging for three-chord tunes." ... Ferron gazes soulfully into the left side of the frame. Ferrons sharin'her> soul throughmusic ," by Philip Cohen D ylan, according to the Ferron legend, was one day to be named the Ferron of the '60s. Fortunately for all concerned, history does not repeat, itself (as far as we know). One Dylan is, and was, enough. Ferron took six years off between her last album, Shadows on a Dime, and the current Phantom Center. She needed to get away from touring and writing, the story goes, because she was beginning to write songs about be- ing on the road, and losing touch with real life. While she was away something happened: the '80s. Now Ferron brings to Phantom and her current tour a new militancy in her personal-as-political songwriting, as well as a new sentimentality and spirituality. Her present efforts show she's been paying attention over' these six years. ' There's more on the line than her own experience when Ferron sings in "White Wing Mercy": "I left my father as only daughters can/ I chose to see him as a monster of a man/ I left my mother in her frameless cage/ But never could I shake her rage." And beneath the new poppy-produced sound (no more basement recordings here) her voice is weightier and raspier. The various collapses of the '80s led a lot of people to write both bit- terly fatalistic and naively fantastical escapism. The two are expected to go together: "While human hearts and ozone shatter/ Galactic juries inter-f vene." The (secular) spiritual healing approach to human destruction risks ro- manticizing crisis and fleeing human reality - a pitfall which Ferron oc-- casionally visits - but her music is too well-grounded in experience to,, wisp up and fly away like that in the end. Since her expressions of crisis are more than romantic, her ritualist incantations emerge upon a base of rele- vancy which anchors them to real life - exactly where they belong. FERRON plays tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. are $13.75 in advance at TicketMaster (p.e.s.c.). at the Ark. Tickets- Widespread Panic is a only a sightly cheesy system. Meet the Doyz: (left to rignt) Todd Nance, Uomingo Urtiz, David Schools, John Bell, and Michael Houser. Those Georgia dudes are looking good. Mm-mm. 76 trombones and some heinous uniforms by Heidi Hedstrom @5,356 fans filled up Crisler Arena last Sunday to hear the Michigan Marching Band. There was a circus- like atmosphere in which young and old joined together to support the Band with claps, cheers and screams. Maize and blue were the dominant colors in attire for both the fans and the Band. The dynamic opening of the concert was led by the percussion section, with the rest of the Band, including musicians and the flag corps, all marching out in the usual high step fashion. The concert opened with a celebratory round of "The Victors" to pay homage to the Maize and Blue. Four-year Band member Jennifer Dorset says, "You love this concert because you can play to your heart's content, and you love the kids com- ing down to dance. It's just the Marching Band. At the football games, football is the main attrac- tion, which is the way it should be. (The Band concert's) for Band fans who come to appreciate the musical ability." Even so, Dorset's favorite aspect of the Band is playing before the game. She says, "Pre-games, cheers of the fans - it's an incredible ex- perience. A hundred thousand people screaming. You can hardly hear yourself play." Throughout the concert, the Band displayed its talent as it performed various songs, ranging from Mo- town to Aaron Copland to Mi- chigan's alma mater, "Yellow and Blue." In a sneak preview for this Saturday's Michigan vs. Ohio State game performance, the members played popular songs from Billy Joel such as "Tell Her About It" and "Only the Good Die Young." Pleasing to both eye and ear, the Band teamed up with baton twirlers to perform selections from the group Chicago. Baton twirlers awed fans as they threw as many as three batons at once into the air and caught them while simultaneously turning cartwheels and doing leaps. Different sections of the Band displayed distinct musical abilities throughout the performance. In a se- ries of peppy high notes and trills which resembled chirping birds, the piccolo section shined in John Phillip Sousa's "Stars and Stripes Forever." The percussion section had the spotlight at the end, as they showed rhythmic mastery with both music and dance in the "Ha- waiian War Chant." It was obvious from the success of the concert that the Band has put in a lot of work over the past season. Dorset says that the Band has "one and a half hours of practice five days a week, in addition to practices right before the games." Dorset says she feels the hard work is worth it. "I chose Marching Band because I like the athletic component in addition to the music," she explains. Asked what is most challenging about the marching Band, sopho- more Lisa Mainieri says, "The most challenging thing is the physical re- quirements - for example, the high step in marching. The time aspect isn't so bad because you enjoy being there." Both Dorset and Mainieri agree that this season is more difficult than last year's. "Sectionals have been intense," explains Dorset. "The music has been challenging." "There is a lot of movement in- volved," Mainieri adds. "There is a lot of pressure to get the drills per- fected. Drills are technically harder, challenging and intricate. See BAND, Page 11 who what where wh~e Rod "the Mod" Stewart, the super stud of the '70s who wrote . z;. such hits as "Do Ya Think I'mb Sexy" and "Tonight's the Night," comes into the Palace of Auburn Hills tomorrow through Monday. Stewart is on his Vagabond Tour . '91, backing up his latest album, Vagabond Heart. Tickets are still available at TicketMaster (p.e.s.c.) for all three nights, at only $22.50 a, show. The show starts at 8 p.m. It don't get much better than this: FREE LIVE MUSIC, at the Michigan Theater's 5:01 Concert, today in the lobby of the Mich at 5:01 p.m. Jazz guitarist Mark Whitfield will be performing. sta wa VtV VYWI % ; ;r fr .. -i J MITCHELL PHOTOGRAPHY Holiday 6pecial ___._._ 1 i- -