vt» Page 0 Portland Observer Novem ber 29. 1979 ENTERTAINM ENT HAPPENINGS E N TE R TAIN M EN T ‘A The World’s Finest Jan Singer * * # - B p • CARTER OAJARTET I Thursday. Dec 13 Cathn G abel School Borom Rood Tickets $7 00 V F Avastac ** »trim * ‘A ; V 4 / A y.omarv S A o c e Music Millennium St 4 NW LongrxxSW ------- CALL 2 92 9 8 2 9 "DAYTIME ONLY" jaz<_ de opus Miss Wells is appearing at the S how place Lounge from Novem ber 29th through Saturday, D ecem ber 8th. Mary Wells discovered at age 16 B.B. King going to China Blues great B.B. King is the current favorite goodwill ambassador o f the U.S. State Department. They are negotiating with the Peoples Republic o f China to send King on a goodwill tour o f the Chinese mainland. This would make the Mississippi born artist the first American performer to tour China since the Communist takeover more than three decades ago. King recently returned from a tour o f Russia, again on behalf o f the State Department. In Russia King played to audiences as large as 100,000 people and was invited to visit a collective farm. "The fa rm ," says King, "was actually like the plantation which I grew up on in Mississippi. We had a chance to meet some o f the workers there and learned quite a bit from them because they are a very proud people -- proud o f what they are doing.” King said he saw only thirteen Blacks in all o f the U.S.SR. but the all-white audiences proved an easy chore. "L ik e Louis Armstrong said, ‘ Music is an universal language’ Blues is the past, present and future with people who have problems. The Soviets ha\e had thier share . . . they know the feeling o f hap­ piness and they know pain." It was one o f those golden eras in pop music -- a period that would establish the pace that would be followed for years to come. They called it the "M otow n Sound and its influence can still be detected, even though the Motown boom faded almost as quickly as it began back in the early 1960s. Motown shattered the color line in pop music. The music was soul that found vast acceptance in the white market. Motown s roster was filled with many o f the great names - The Supremes, Diana Ross, M arvin Gaye, Tam m y T errell, Smokey Robinson and the theS pm nen' Tcmptat,ons- S,cvie Wonder- Mar,ha Reeves and the Vandellas, Right at the top o f that list has to be Mary W ells, the tirst artist to appear on Berry Gordy s Mowtown label. Gordy discovered her when she was a 16-year- old student at D etroit’s Northwestern High School. She had been singing, mostly in church choirs, since the age o f 3. G ordy was so impressed with her voice that he decided to sign her as the first artist for the new label he was planning. The label was Motown. Mary Wells kicked it o ff in grand style with two quick hit records, “ Bye Bye Baby” and “ I Don’ t Wanna Take a Chance” , A hit album, "Bve Bye Baby” , quickly followed. A t this point, her third single, "The One Who Really Loves Y o u", was released and it sold more than a m illion copies — a staggering number for the late ’50s and early ’60s. A string ot m illion -seller records followed. Then came the hottest o f all Miss Wells records. My G u y ", which sold 2'/: m illion copies and pushed the Beatles out o f the top pop position. After leaving Motown in 1966, Miss Wells signed with Atlantic Records and Jubilee Records. With Jubilee she began writing and producing with her husband, Cecil Womack. Among the results were "T h e D octor” , "T w o Lovers" and "D ig the Way I Feel". PRESENTS SONNY STITT 6 RED HOLLOWAY ^¿ 0 > * \ - vjw ,r. * i * -, SUNDAY, DEC. 1 6 fh 5:00 P.M. - $6.50 9:00 P.M. Advance Tickers now being sold or- JAZZ DE OPUS 30 " * 2nd O*» FREDERICK G NELSON 5 nexn place MUSIC MILLENNIUM •se e ,..-iOe f Personalized & Custom Made Jewelry Jewelry/Watches/Diamonds Diamond Setting PATON JEWELERS PICTURED Crystal Blake of M o to w n R ecord's and Reggie Thomas prom oter of Superdisco. Crystal w ill M.C along w ith J.W Friday Look out Portland Hilton Hotel Flash Superdisco 1980 will arrive Flash- funk along with Captain Boogie, currently featured in the movie Skatemwn U .Y A and the upcoming disco roller film Captain Boogte. w,H appear alone with Superdisco to make the last disco o f the 1970‘ s, the most unione disco- entertainment event Portland has ever seen. Be there Saturday, December 22, from 8:00 P.M. to 2:30 A M Flashfunk Superdisco 1980 comes to Portland... Portland's own Disc Jockey J.W. Friday will M.C the show alone with a Disco rollerskating disc jockey. Tickets go on sale December I st, at Meier & Frank ticket office. Community Calendar Black ide ntity in Portland will be the topic o f a presentation by the Black Cultural Affairs Board o f PSL. Ron Herndon will speak on "Negativism of Portland Toward Blacks". Jawanza Kunjufu o f the Institute o f Positive Education will discuss "Black Identity: Today and T om orrow " December 6th, 1:00-3:00 p.m. Romeo \illanueva, who is on tour for the Campaign fo r a Nuclear-Free Philippines will speak Monday, December 3rd at 7:30 p.m. at 4312 S.E. Stark Childcare will be provided and refreshments served. Villanueva is a former worker on the reactor which was sold to the Philippines by Westmghouse and funded by the I S. Export-Import Bank. The event is sponsored by the Trojan Decommissioning Alliance and the American Friends Service Committee The Portland CETA Advisory Council will meet on Dec. 6th at 3:00 p m Room 106, City Hall, to review trainee enrollment numbers and progress ,n the * acker training program, and to review overall CETA enrollment levels Daycara w orkshop to learn how to be certified to care for children in vour home. Sponsored by 4-C and Ockley Green Community School. (283-8269) M , K* riP Ca?uri” C h ri,,m M Christmas Advent Festival. Hilton Hotel, Dec 9th. noon until 8:00 p.m. No admission charge C rM tiy . writing classes will be held at the Western Forestry Center for students grades4 through 9 Saturdays. 10:00a m until noon. (228-1367) N orth P ortland Concerned Cltlaans will discuss Phase I o i Hnr S = r’ ,,C S,fee' ,m provmen’ » 5th. 7:30 p.m.. Portsmouth An extra night at the pops! It’ s A ‘ ‘ J o y fu l and Ja zz-F u ll” Christmas season at Portland State U niversity as jazz artists Jeannie H o ffm a n on piano and David Friesen on bass join the PL'S Chorus and Sinfonietta for another annual holiday event on December 6th and 7th at 8:00 p.m. in Lincoln Hall Auditorium . The event has become a Portland tradition with the music and dance presentations varying from standard carols to the not-so-standard H o ff­ m an'Friesen arrangements o f old favorites. The University Choir will be direc­ ted by Bruce Browne and the Sin­ fonietta by John Trudeau. Hoffman has been a jazz pianist and vocalist for more than twenty years in the San Francisco and Portland areas Her work with bassist Friesen has earned them a wide circle o f fans. "A man can he dextroyed but not d e fe a te d ." «*,>**«** 281-8801 MARY WELLS PSU presents jazz concert Erna« Hemingway «■ 4616 N.E. Sandy Blvd. Pops P otpourri” - an evening w ith Irving Berlin, Rodgers b Hart, Jerom e Kern, Duke Ellington, Norm an Leydon, Richard Hurst and Ar- dyth S hapiro -- w ill b e n e fit the W ash in g to n Park Zoo. The O regon Symphony Orchestra w ill perform at the Portland Civic A uditorium on Decem ber 5th at 8 30 p.m . 2^1 S .£ 2 “ i|M A rV ' * IIS; ,M »5' m " ,n n * rvcording Vs’ lk'r, vsvtcd No., r show do, ng M y G u y , T W o L o w rs , ‘S w r c tc s t Boy? e tc It's the bcM of the okl A n e w M a r y WA-lls. Q on t m is s " l ■«.V iz* 9 days only! Thurs. Nov. 2 9 thru S a t. Dec .8 2 shows 3 dance sets nightly U.’ ."q V.V.. iyh. Shows T«»e.s XV M " 9 3, 1 V ? I , , SPECIAL PRE SHOW dinners SHOWPLACE LO JN&E Phone Orders W elcom e from charge card customers. 224 0058 S lM ‘r , l l l H » - A i l | M M | H