Brubeck
for
young
and
old
What can be said about Dave Brubeck that hasn’t already been
said0
Not a whole lot.
But when the 53-year-old jazz pianist and his sons (alias Two
Generations of Brubecks > performed at Portland’s Paramount North
west Saturday, people still talked Repeated words, yes. but honest
words used in search of different ways to say what people have been
saying for years—that Dave Brubeck can really play. And play he can
and did Some 1500 people heard him and called him back for five
encores And 1500 people saw that it was good and they called it music
and they could have and would have' listened to it all night.
Saturday night, the Brubecks had their thing together. No two
ways about it: their music cooked The crowd liked theirs well done
and they got nothing but prime cut. The music provided a bridge
between the two generations listening and their playing created a
unity within themselves that carried them through the evening
Brubeck and his sons began the set with ‘Three to Get Ready,
Four to Go" and it was a fitting start. While the older folks let their
reveries take them back in the nostalgic familiarity of the tune, the
younger ones sat wondering how that kind of music could be
emanating from the gray-haired old man on center stage. You’re only
as old as you feel. and. from the sounds of Mr. B's music, he feels fine
THINK SPAGETTI
the
/pogetti
ujQrehou/e
(725 W. 1 st Ave., Eugene)
Open Mon.-Thur. 5:30
Fri. Sat. & Sun. 5:00
menu
DINNERS INCLUDE
Crisp Green Salad
(choice of bleu cheese, Italian or 7 000 island dressing)
Individual Loaves of
Sour Dough French Bread and Garlic Butter
Ice Cream
SPAGETTI with Tomato Sauce.
(One to Remember)
SPAGETTI with flavorsome Meat Sauce.
(Our most popular; it will be yours, tool)
SPAGETTI with Clam Sauce.
(for all Clam Lovers)
SPAGETTI with Mushroom Sauce.
(Sauteed mushrooms in our delicious tomato sauce)
SPAGETTI with Chicken Liver Sauce .....
(Plump fresh chicken livers cooked in butter)
SPAGETTI with Browned Butter and Warehouse Cheese..
(Hot baked spaghetti, bedded down with a sauce for all Cheese Lovers)
SPAGETTI Warehouse Favorite.
(Spaghetti with choice of any two of the above sauces)
SPAGETTI and Meat Balls .
(Meat Sauce)
SPAGETTI with Meat Sauce and Italian Sausage.
(Delectable)
SPAGETTI Medley Potpourri.
(A generous share of clam, mushroom, chicken liver and meat sauces)
SPAGETTI Child's Spaghetti Dinner .
(Meat Sauce) (Under 10)
245
24S
235
1 35
Your favorite beverages including an
excellent wine list/
THINK SPAGETTI
After “Un-Square Dance" and a few other numbers, one whicn in
cluded a solo by Danny Brubeck that would put all previous Brubeck
drummers to shame, the kids came out alone to prove a point.
Never let it be said that the Brubeck boys made it because of their
old man’s reputation. It sure as hell helped, but they all possess a
plethora of talent and they use it well. Darius, 26, on Fender Rhodes
organ is just a few steps behind dad: Chris, 21, proved to be the most
versatile musician switching from bass to trombone to rhythm guitar
throughout the show, and Danny, 18. played the drums to death.
Led by the writing skills of Darius, the steady drumming of Danny
iwhich probably held the band together more than anything) and the
help of a few friends, the Darius Brubeck Ensemble came out and did
what the elder Brubeck had done earlier: captivated. Their set was
long and drawTi out, studded with dissonance and actually quite un
professional but the music overshadowed this. The musicians rudely
stalked the stage when not playing and jumped around like kids when
their friends were playing well. Chris even neglected to plug his
Fender Telecaster guitar into his amp until the set was half over
However, their music was good enough to pull them through. A band of
any lesser talent wouldn’t have had it so easy'. But, of course, they
were out to prove that they could make it on their own. The 1500 people
sat convinced.
Mr. B's sons were good, but not as—and when Brubeck came back
it was evident that he hadn’t been forgotten. “Take Five" was one of
the more popular numbers of the evening It hadn’t been forgotten
either
The concert provided a chance for the older generation to marvel
at the wonders of Dave Brubeck, their rich attainment, while the
younger generation sat praising their rather belated discovery. In
either case, no one came out the loser. There was enough of Dave
Brubeck for everyone
Dick Baltus
music
Not many people noticed it, but rock and roll died Friday night. It
was not a sudden massive coronary, but a slow, methodic, and very
unnatural death. The beginning of the end was observed at ap
proximately this time last year November. 1972, marked the arrival
of the television concerts. Since then we have been bombarded with
“In Concert.'’ “Midnight Special.” and the newly spawned “Rock
Concert.” These three shows represent mediocrity. What is truly
unfortunate is that they have attracted the most outstanding rock acts
and subjugated them and the viewers to all the horrors of television,
complete with deliriously howling pre-pubescent audiences, zit
commercials and Wolfman Jack The appeal is geared toward the 12 to
15 year-old set exclusively.
This was painfully obvious last Friday when David Bowie
“hosted” the most repugnant of the post-Carson spectacles, the
Midnight Special. Simply put, it was a debacle. The show consisted of
Bowie's 1984 Floor Show (He gave up live performances for this?)
which featured a gaudy and totally superfluous dance troupe, a vapid
Marianne Faithful, Carmen, a lackluster Latin group, the archaic
Troggs. and of course David and the Spiders From Mars There was
nothing bizarre about the act. It was ostentatious, vulgar TV hype.
Bowie was made not to look like the farcical prankster that he is-was,
but appeared to be a mutant fiend, a diseased villain robbing innocent
adolescents of their decency as well as their parents’ money.
But what was much more despicable was Bowie’s performance
He was just awful. Never once did we see evidence of his rock and roll
genius Doing songs from his latest “Pin-Ups” and the less than
triumphant “Aladdin Sane" LPs, there was none of the glory that is
David Bowie. Apparently he has embarked on new, more apocalyptic
paths, shucking the superlative music of his masterpiece “Hunky
Dory ,” and the epic “Ziggy Stardust ” But even if Bowie still
possesses greatness, it was virtually destroyed by his TV image. To
make matters unbearable, we were insulted by the nonsensical antics
of a certain Voorshenka who introduced the all-important and om
nipresent commercials. ^Who is she9) Other than singing his songs
and looking glamorous (he wore at least half a dozen outfits), Bowie
did not say a word Some ho6t.
Dave Braff
XZ&r'FM 96
An Evening With
THOMAS PAYZANT
Superintendent,
Diet. 4-J Schools
on Grattan Kerans &
the american arcus
7-8 pm. Wednesday November 21
4
V.