Yo Momma ... ' Michigan Theater screens Pedro Almodovar's "All About my Mother." 7 & 9:15 r.m. michigandaily,.com/arts LRTS MONDAY FEBRUARY 7, 2000 5A Iincoln Center Jazz Sextet gives 'historic performance By John Uhi Daily Music Editor I propose amending the title of tr peter Wynton Marsalis' recent rd ding "Marsalis Plays Monk" to "Marsalis Plays Duke Playing Monk." The album consists of sup- posedly updated arrangements of Monk tunes, but never amounts to Lncoln Center much more than Jazz Sextet an interesting Michigan Theater hypothesis about how the pianist's compositions may have sound- ed had Duke E I l i n g t o n (Monk's prede- cessor) ever taken his pen to yearlong 1999 focus on musically celebrating Ellington's 100th birth- day. Perhaps it was an experiment, conjecturing the ramifications of how one of jazz's innovators would interpret some of the modifications to the music that took place after his prime. Maybe Wynton's on to some- thing here.... Marsalis is champion of an atti- tude towards jazz known to some as neo-classicism that suggests that, in order to move the music forward, musicians must understand and apply the lessons of their elder statesmen. The movement is noted for its nearly exclusive focus on musical trends established before 1960. In addition to his playing and composing, Marsalis has used his status as artistic director of Jazz at Lincoln Center to promote the music's history through projects like the institution's The Ellington Centennial and various education' them. Perhaps Marsalis was influenced by his Jazz Orchestra's Lincoln Center Sextet, an ensemble of musicians/educators who spent last week presenting an educational residency in Ann Arbor and Detroit. The residency included lectures, demonstrations and workshops for high school and college students, luncheons, casual discussions and two concerts. I was able to spend some time discussing the program and the group's music with the sex- tet's trombone player, Wycliffe Gordon, who suggested that the impetus for their sort of functional education experience is its ability to impart "an understanding from someone that deals with it on-hand, rather than just going by a textbook." A practical idea for music that derives its vitality from the active interaction of its creators. As I sat in on several of the resi- dency's workshops, I noticed one recommendation in particular that all of the musicians seemed to espouse. "You gotta develop your own sound." I kept hearing it. But as the sextet performed on Friday evening, I won- dered if its members weren't taking their own advice seriously enough. Though the ensemble is immensely talented, presenting an historic and enlightening portrait of the first six decades of jazz, none of the musi- cians was a truly singular soloist. Gordon came the closest. Often tak- ing a moment to find his bearing as he fumbled with mutes or returned to the mic from stage-side, Gordon transferred this dishevelment to his solos through an array of honks, squawks, growls and groans that squeaked themselves into a style with surprising finesse. Indeed, the validity of Lincoln Center's strict traditional ideology is widely debated. In the January issue of "Downbeat" magazine, saxophon- ist David Murray, who has been one of jazz's most significant developers SAM HOLLENSHEAD/Daily Trombonist Wycliffe Gordon gives a cheeky performance with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Sextet at the Michigan Theater on Friday. subconsciously Lincoln Center programs. One such program is the Jazz at since the seventies, said, "The retro thing is really a problem for me. It almost sounds like some museum musicians up there playing .> it's very difficult to tell people what's happening when your head is stuck in the past. You send people the wrong message of what their lives are supposed to be. In a way you make a mockery of the present. What happens is you kind of forfeit your right to be there. Perhaps you should be making bread or working on an assembly line instead of being on a bandstand playing that bullshit." Murray's comments seemed to ring true Friday, as the sextet was most suc- cessful recreating pieces from the earlier days of jazz history (New Orleans music and standards) and exploring non-jazz musical influences on the genre. For instance, a gospel duet featuring pianist Farid Barron and Gordon's plunger work neared rapture and, along with an inter- pretation of St. Louis Blues that cleverly probed African, Caribbean and New Orleans influences, was the evening's high point. But on a version of "I've Got Rhythm" by tenor saxophonist Victor Goines and bassist Rodney Whitaker, the tandem was hardly a shadow of the astonishing 1945 recording by Don Byas and Slam Stewart to which they referred. And the band sounded flat when it tried to play more contemporary music like compositions by Wayne Shorter and John Lewis. There is great irony in the fact that this sextet was least effective in rendering its most modern material. In describing his work with Marsalis' septet, Gordon said "we studied all the periods of jazz. We dealt with New Orleans music, we dealt with bebop, we dealt with big band ... we tried to incorporate all that into our playing, truly being modern." Yet Gordon does not mention studying the music of Ornette Coleman, Albert Ayler, or The Art Ensemble of Chicago and, in doing so, ignores much of the last forty years of jazz history. When I asked Gordon what he thought of Murray's comment, he said, "You're not moving backwards by play- ing Louis Armstrong. When you do that, you learn something." And he's right. It is impossible to understand the work of Coleman or the AEC without appreciat- ing Satchmo, Sidney Bechet and Ellington first. Gordon also said, "I know most of these cats that do that (play avant-garde). They can play. They choose to do that, which really baffles me." But Gordon and Lincoln Center's similarly conscious rejection of nearly half of the century's jazz evolution is just as baffling. And for an organization that poses itself as blazing jazz's legacy into the American consciousness, it seems irresponsible. Nevertheless, when music students from Ann Arbor's Community High, School took the stage Friday as a sur- prise opening act, still green as solo.ists but extremely confident and well-rehearsed, Jazz at Lincoln Center's educational philosophy did its best to fill its holes. SAM HOLLENSHEAD/Dady B ist and former University Music Prof Rodney Whitaker tears it up. 'Gun Shy' proves less than stellar gangster pic I 0 By Leslie Boxer For The Daily Gangsters in need of therapy seem to be -a Hollywood favorite -- "The S~anos" ruled at the Golden Globes and last year's "Analyze This" scored big at the box office Gun Shy Grade: C- At Quality 16 and Showcase . Now "Gun Shy" is trying to join the same genre with a slight twist - this time a good guy is on the couch searching for his inner self. The film centers on Charlie Mayough (Liam Neeson), an undercover DEA agent who is overwrought with anxiety because his last undercover gig because Fulvio is known as violent and unstable - we're first introduced to Fulvio as he is about to cut off his neigh- bor's hand because of a missing news- paper. So, like all other leading men in the same situation, Charlie heads for psy- choanalysis. Charlie ends up joining group therapy and tells the DEA's secrets to other whiny 40-something men who have mundane complaints about their white collar jobs. Unfortunately for "Gun Shy,' the group therapy scenes are lacking in the comedic element that they so desperate- ly desire. One area in which the film finds redeeming moments of comedy is in its own depreciation. Many of the characters are based on self-proclaimed "Miami Vice" cliches and win occasion- al laughs from the audience. An addition to the "I'm involved with crime and I need a shrink" theme involves Charlie's gastroentrological problems and an overabundance of scat- ological humor. This is how the audi- ence is introduced to the romantic angle in the film. "Enema queen" Nurse Judy (Sandra Bullock) is a holistic healer that falls for Charlie and makes his gas and his stress more bearable. This part of the film is thoroughly underdeveloped - there is not enough of a romantic angle to qualify it as a romantic comedy and there is too little to warrant its addition to the script. Bullock did, however, pro- duce the film and perhaps she wanted to play a small part so as to have her name more outwardly associated with the pro- ject (lucky girl). Regardless, there is no chemistry between Neeson and Bullock and the entire nurse Judy character is superfluous. But, what can you expect from a relationship that began over a barium enema? It seems that first-time writer/director Eric Blakeney drew from his previous experience as a writer for television's "Wise Guy" and "Moonlighting." This may account for the fact that, taken in small doses, many of the scenes had the potential to be funny yet often came up short. Although the film is not devoid of pure entertainment value, it's a cut-and- paste version of many other better films that have come out in the recent past. There are those who shy away from challenges. And then there are those who travel 9,000 miles looking for them. Selecting now for spring and summer 2000 departures! 0 Information Meeting . '". 0 lB 4 Tuesday, February 8 " . t " 7:00 PM International Center,Room 9 For more information, call Nancy Parachini at (734) 647-2182 or Peace.Corps@umich.edu. (" www.peacecorps.gov 800-424-8580 t . i C717 was a bust - it left him with a dead partner and traumatic visions of water- melon. To add to Charlie's stress, he has bi reassigned to another gangsters- with-guns money laundering scheme as the undercover cop figure. Charlie plays friend to both the Colombian drug deal- er, Fidel (Jose Zuniga), and the Italian Mafioso, Fulvio Nesstra (Oliver Platt). Much of Charlie's anxiety is built up ch rd 32413 usecom 15404 front beat panama city, fi 850.234.6644 www.hoiiowayhou 1.800.346.4709 VJ1U'J'.. III3 111 L, ' . Iiuvwl~