TheMichigan Daily-Saturday, July 19, 198-Page 9 Newport features. A2 favorites By JERRY BRABENEC July 4th weekend in New York - it seems strange to me now that I remember the Jerseyites at Seaside Park, the veal at Benito's, and the late night fireworks at Washington Square more than the Newport Jazz Festival. For an upper Michigan jazz fan raised on records like Miles and Monk at Newport and Ellington at Newport, the crowds seemed uninvolved and the concerts uninspired. We saw Ann Arbor favorites McCoy Tyner and Dexton Gordon, and passed up a very hot Latin show with Tito Puente and Dizzy Gillespie to catch one of my personal favorites, Carla Bley. Dexter Gordon's set at the '79 Eclipse festival was far stronger than the one we saw at Carnegie. Bassist Rufus Reid and pianist George Cables were absent and sorely missed, so it was your basic clownish-sentimen- tal-melodic Dexter set; "It's You or No-One", "As Time Goes By", "LTD", "Blues Up and Down", etc. Stan Getz was worse-his group is a bunch North Texas State types playing their originals, and Stan looks and acts like a cross between Lloyd Bridges and Frank Sutton. The highlight was an unsolicited encore performance of "Desafinado", which was light, airy, and concise, but merely pleasant 60's pop. TENOR MONSTER George Adams didn't appear with McCoy Tyner, (another disappointment), leaving longtime Tyned sideman Ron Ford the only saxophonist. Tyner's violinist John Blake is an excellent soloist and writer, though, and Guilhermo Franco is aurally and visually fascinating on per- cussion. Tyner for me is a great writer, bandleader, and arranger, but his solo playing, is overly serious and repetitious. But they comprised a very exciting and enjoyable band, overall. Max Roach's quartet played the most masterful set we were to see at the festival. The group plays jazz as true Black classical music-a blend of art, religion, and ethnic pride with just a touch of Ellingtonia. Cecil Bridgewater plays very aggressive, intellectual trumpet, and tenor player Odean Pope uses a lot of harmonics and circular breathing, often playing dense, chordal textures rather than single lines a la bebop. Max builds his solos in senten- ce-like phrases punctuated by silences that allow the listener to hear resonan- ce rather than pure attack, and he played a solo feature on unaccom- panied highhat that he picked up from Duke Ellington drummer Jo Jones. veteran bassist Calvin Hill fills out the group more than adequately. Carnegie Hall, by the way, is so clean sounding you tend not to notice the great acoustics. The sound is crisp but not tinny, and carries well without booming. A quartet is dwarfed by the high stage, narrow proscenium, and overall size of the place, though Hill Auditorium, with its low rounded stage, is more intimate. TOWN HALL is darker, smaller, and more fun for jazz. Robert Kraft and the Ivory Coast opened for Carla Bley on a program of "New Music". Kraft's group plays Manhattan cabaret music-witty lyrics set in a variety of light jazz and pop styles, with a lot of scat singing, whistling, and violin solos. Carla Bley's set was stronger than her interesting but tentative January performance in Ann Arbor. Alto, tenor, trumpet, trombone, euphonium (in stead of horn), tuba, electric organ, and rhythm, make an ensemble very similar to Miles' "Birth of the Cool" band, well suited to the needs of an imaginative arranger. Carla started with a hilarious monologue, casting herself as a rowdy eccentric pledging against her will to doa straight, formal concert. She mentioned that she hadn't played Newport for 15 years due to "philosophical differences" with festival producer George Wein, and that last time it was on New Music Night, too." Vocal tunes were important: The crowd pleasing "Boo to You Too", the rocking "Car Won't Start", and a num- ber featuring drummer Dee Sharp on vocals, titled something like "You Hate Me". The set ended in the self destruc- ting chaos of "Drinking Music". Some of Carla's notable sidemen included bassist Steve Swallow (a long-time Gary Burton associate) and trumpeter Michael Mantler, both important com- posers in their own right, and jazz veteran Joe Daley, who contributed some scorching euphonium solos. Based on the shows we saw, it sems that concert jazz is more lively in Ann Arbor than New York.-The real jazz in New York is thriving in the bars and lofts while the. grand old days of Newport survive only on record. The tasteless production, from the Leroy Neimann posters to the automaton-like emcees dulled the whole mood of this years' concerts. For a festival setting, Eclipse's programming and the college town atmosphere and audiences of Ann Arbor are hard to beat. w An adult tole of murder & mystery 8 Eyed Spy This critically acclaimed New York band will be-making arare local ap- pearance this Sunday (that's tomorrow) at Rick's American Cafe. Featuring the unique vocal stylings of chanteuse Lydia Lunch, 8 Eyed Spy combines the talents of guitarist-saxophonist Pat Irwin and bassist George Scott in a decidedly different blend of punk, funk and jazz. Opening for these out-of-towners will be The Same Band, perhaps the most talented and cer- tainly the most original band to emerge from Ann Arbor. Tickets are $4 in advance and $5 at the door. 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