The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 19, 1981-Page 7 Koko Taylor commands ** driving Blues Machine - "Gimme a D Gimme an A Gimme anl ...L . ..Y Give the MICHIGAN DAILY *-that old college try CALL 764-0558 to order your subscription f AllĀ£375N MAPLE Daily Discount Matinees $2.00 for shows before 6:00 & for shows before 2:00. No Discount Prices for "RAIDERS" EXCALIBUR 7 1:30-4:15-7:15-9:40 Koko Taylor (right) relaxes with her band, the Blues Machine, after another exhilarating and draiuing performance at Rick's American Cafe. By KEN FELDMAN Daily Arts Writer Rick's American Cafe has become a bastion of the electric blues in Ann Ar- bor. Not only are blues artists regularly booked at Rick's, but they are almost always of high quality. Most of the people who frequent the place come to dance and be entertained, and they are usually satisfied on both counts. In- variably, the bands are incredibly tight and prone to stage patter that would reek of Hollywood in any other context. (For example, every band without ex- ception insists that it's backing the one and only "King" or "Queen of the blues" depending on the bandleader's gender.) While these bands are hardly breaking any new ground, they con- stitute a sure thing when it comes to musicianship, taste, and danceability. So it was no surprise that Koko Taylor's Wednesday night performance at Rick's with her backup band, The Blues Machine, was a no-nonsense blues party. The instrumentals were impeccable and emotional, with biting solos from Emmett Sanders on lead guitar. Sanders is one of the few blues guitarists who can get away with being somewhat flashy in his playing thanks to his sure grasp of the traditional guitar figures. Rhythm guitarist Carlo Johnson was similarly formidable; his playing was atmospheric and soulful. And Koko was as fine a blues shouter and frontwoman as you will find, at least in the purist vein. THE SONGS were a combination of originals and covers from Koko's album, From the Heart of a Woman, and the usual array of blues standards. ' The material ranged from merely good to great. "Hey, Bartender" and "You Can Have my Husband" were the stan- douts, but everything was delivered with energy and feeling. But as good as Koko's band is, the qualities that separate her band from the other blues artists that have played Rick's are dwarfed by those qualities that they have in common. Though I applaud the fact that anti-emotional disco is no longer the only music speaking to our feet, the blues has a strong tendency to become academic if its forms aren't expanded in some way. I mean how many times can one hear "How Blue Can You Get" done vir- See ANOTHER, Page 11 Indiana Jones- the new7 hero from the creators _.:: of JAWS : and STAR WARS. PG stANUGST SM + i c LMANO BES TALF.' .u .; r- v i T T 1:10-1:45-3:30-4:15-5:50-7:00-8:15-9:45 FRI & SAT NIGHT 10:30 & 12:00 ~'Nr 'r m ' A l T,-,A (An-r N T.G.I 3-8 WITH 2 FOR 1 DRINKS: BEGINNING AT 9 TILL CLOSE EMERALD CITY 2251 5:15 7:40 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Presents A CHARLES H. SCHNEER Producron 10:00 "CLASH OF THE TITANS ' FRI.& SANIGHT Starringw-ri TTN1:1 HARRY HAMLIN asPrseus JUDI BOWKER asoAndromeda BURGESS MEREDITH MAGGIE SMITH URSULA ANDRESS CLAIRE BLOOM SIAN PHILLIPS FLORA ROBSON and LAURENCE OLIVIER asZeus Creator of Special Visual Effects RAY HARRYHAUSEN Music by LAURENCE ROSENTHAL Written by BEVERLEY CROSS Produced by CHARLES H. SCHNEER and RAY HARRYHAUSEN Directed by DESMOND DAVIS PG PANTEALGbE LOANCSGGET CD0 READ THE WARNERBOOK LSOUNDTRATE