The Daily Tar Heel Tuesday, Number 11, 19865
Excellence is the key to Padlock and Raitt
Men's soccer year over
Dy GREG COOK
Staff Writer
The UNC men's soccer team
closed its season with a disappoint
ing 1-0 loss Sunday against archrival
Duke. The loss evaporated all
chances for the Tar Heels to continue
post-season play in the NCAA
tournament.
UNC soccer coach Anson Dor
rance said the season for the Tar
Heels was a very ironic one.
"I would have to rate this season
in two different ways, Dorrance
said. "First, I would have to say that
we performed great. The team just
made a great effort and they had a
great deal of self-respect.
"I feel that this team was one of
the best teams ever at UNC,"
Dorrance said.
The irony of it all, Dorrance said,
was that the results (13-6-1) simply
did not reflect the performance of
the players.
"It seems something is just not
right," Dorrance said. "The chances
we created for ourselves in all of the
close matches were outstanding. I
feel really bad for the players because
they put out so much effort.
However, all is not lost for Dor
rance and the 1986 men's soccer
team. The memories of that effort
will indeed remain.
"I remember Frank Gilhooly
holding the defense together against
South Carolina," Dorrance said.
Jhat win (a 1-0 UNC victory)
turned out to be our biggest win of
the season.
Dorrance said he also had to single
out junior David Smyth for a
memorable season.
"Smyth had a great year," Dor
rance said. "His performance in the
latter part of the season was even
more incredible because he changed
positions (from midfielder to
sweeper)."
Injuries also played a key role in
the 1986 season. Junior forward
Tommy Nicholson went down with
an injury after the Maryland match
and senior Frank Gilhooly was
hobbled by an ankle injury.
"Nicholsons greatest match was
at Maryland and then he got injured
in practice right after that match,"
Dorrance said. "We had some key
injuries near the end of the season
but I don't want to take anything
away from the people who came in
and filled some of those postions.
They played great as well."
Although the 1986 season has just
ended, Dorrance is already looking
forward to the 1987 season.
"WeVe finished this season but I
feel good in that most of the players
are returning for next season,"
Dorrance said.
Included in the group of players
returning for 1987 are midfielder
Chad Ashton, John Cocking, Marc
Buffin, Donald Cogsville, Steve
Dragisics as well as Nicholson and
Smyth.
Singer-guitarist Bonnie Raitt gave
an extremely impressive perfor
mance in Memorial Hall Sunday
night. With diverse material includ
ing contemporary rock and tradi
tional blues, Raitt and her band
performed skillfully and
emotionally. v
Raitt's singing accounted for
much of the success of Sunday's
show. Raitt has one of the best voices
in contemporary popular music, and
her singing sounds as good live as
it does on her records. Her interpre
tations of her songs were often
imaginative and interesting.
The quality of Raitts voice was
most evident when she sang some
of the blues numbers she recorded
early in her career. Accompanied
only by a guitar and bass, she
performed excellent versions of such
blues and folk standards as "Been
Too Long at the Fair" and "Good
night Louise." Raitts limited accom
paniment on these songs made her
exceptional phrasing and vocal
range stand out.
Raitt also sang well during the
rock and folk numbers she per
formed with the entire band. She
gave a strong version of her current
single "That Ain't No Way To Treat
A Lady," and she also gave a good,
soulful delivery of "Runaway."
Raitt's bluesy guitar solos were very
fine. Her performance was greatly
enhanced by her band, Padlock.
Padlock's five musicians were
given ample opportunity to display
their talents. Each performed many
solos and displayed an exceptional
command of his instrument. The
band was more like a true group than
a backup band; each member had
lue-White
askefball Tickets
Student tickets are available for the Blue-White basketball
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a representative to the Ticket Office with the groups'
athletic passes for block seating.
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Concert
many chances to share the spotlight
with Raitt. The musicians played
well together and had a very tight
and cohesive sound.
Although the musical aspects of
the concert were uniformly excellent,
the concert suffered from some
technical difficulties. Lighting prob
lems plagued the performers
throughout the show. Spotlights
were often placed on the wrong
performers, and the musicians some
times had to play their solos in the
dark. Raitt was reasonably good
natured about the technical prob
lems, and at one point she shined
a flashlight on the bass player when
he had to play one of his solos in
darkness. Although the lighting
problems were annoying, they did
not detract from the effectiveness of
the music.
Raitt took time out from her
musical performance to talk to the
audience about her opposition to the
opening of the Shearon Harris
nuclear power plant. She held up an
anti-Shearon Harris bumper sticker
while speaking to the audience, and
she told the opponents of the plant
not to give up. Raitt, who has often
worked for the anti-nuclear move
ment in the. past, dedicated one of
the songs in Sunday's concert to the
anti-Shearon Harris activists.
Lyle Lovett opened the concert
with a solo acoustic performance of
some of his songs. Lovett has a fine
baritone voice, and he is also an
accomplished guitar player. Lovett's
songs combined elements of country
and blues music, and many of his
songs displayed his sense of humor.
The crowd obviously enjoyed
Raitt's performance, and she was
ended her second ncQK
rousing renditon ol M
The Boys," and she M e And
left the stage after tceivinn
standing ovation from holleng
, crowd.
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