October 2 7, 1969 The N. C. Essay Page 6 What's seen with the eye Can be missed by the ear, So listen my children And you will hear How, because of some provocation Robert Ward required convocation. Twas on peaceful Wednesday In the year '69 when Thoughts of assembly had been left far behind Then suddenly - a voice broke through the muck. "Everyvon going to assembly get into za truck I" So they loaded us in like so many sheep. "Please, no one to talkl" (There wasn’t a peep.) They settled us down in hard creaky chairs To center stage we fixed all our stares. _ _ (coKt. -rronn PH€'FLVT€ There's an LP out now that's relevant to this rap. It's called Preflyte (Together ST - T 1001), by the five original Byrds. Strange, here new the end of 1969, to hear an album made by five musicians who stopped making music together as early as 1966. But no matter, the record here, possessing a sad and distant beauty. I'm glad someone finally realized how important the contribution of the original Byrds was/is. The songs on the album were recorded before the group "made it" nationally. The performances are primitive and the porduction shoddy, but there is a haunting charm con tained in the music, a spirit which lurks around the edges of the al most, but not quite, crystalized concepts. The songs were made before the Byrds themselves knew what it meant to be a Byrd, before the soaring harmonies and the rich gui tar patterns were created. These songs came before hippies, psyche delic, and long before the group experienced the long, painful series of splits and returns which was to destroy them. It was back when McGuinn and Clark dreamed of an electric, folk-oriented rock and roll band. It was when we were all a little younger. Most of the songs were written by Clarke, in his typical Midwestern/ Missouri homespun fashion; songs that concern honest feelings and con vey real moods. The group isn't always musically together, but you can feel them getting closer. Eeve Without You, You Won't Have To Cry, I Knew I'd Want You^ and Tamboux>ine Man all appear in their embryonic stages. Other songs point to the distinctive style that was later to reach maturity and characterize the group: You Movin', You Showed Me^ She Has A Way3 and Fon> Me Again. A crash of the cymbals. A roll of the drums. ("Hail To The Chief", the faculty hums). President, Chief, Kemosabe, Boss, Lord The Man, El Grando, Senior, Robert Ward I No Barrymore profile. No moustache he twirls Just one simple greeting: "Hello boys and girls!" It could have been minutes, maybe a week (I lost track of time when he started to speak.) "Many years ago, it's safe to say, Certain measureswere taken to find some safe way to reach out to the masses, to direct concentration, to assemble to learn, to create medi tation on ideas that mean much to this generation,all of these measures without provocation. This is the reason for this approbation. I hope we can do it without alienation. If we can then we will, if we can't, well, damnation! If we do, we can shine like the great ^ constellations Oh! Joyous to see this nice convo cation! So what do you think, girls and boys - He stopped, and he listened. What was that noise? He glared through the footlights And what did he see Every boy - every girl ZZZZZZZZZZZZ ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ JUt 6E THC FIRST TO V0\SVi YOU Pveftyte is an LP that shows a young band experiencing the growing pains necessary for greatness to be achieved. It makes little sense to criticize the loose ends; you can't do that when something larger is happening, when spirits are being born. The Byrds are timeless, it seems as if they've always been here and I can't imagine a world without them. Today, Roger McGuinn continues to be a Byrd, while others lend that spirit elsewhere. The group has changed, but to Roger's credit, the quality of the music has not. Being a Byrd is McGuinn's trip and while others may come and go, the Byrds roll on. And in the end, that young lady may prove right. Tl I'; In reporting the results of the Third Van Clibum International Piano Competition in last week's Essay, omission was made of the fact that Irwin Freundlich, member of the NCSA Piano Department, had a student who won two prizes in that competition. Diane Walsh, the youngest of the seventeen contest ants who were prepared to meet the mammouth requirements of the com- peition (She has just turned nineteen), not only finished among the six prize-winning finalists but also won the special Van Cliburn Award(given by Van himself) for the best perform ance of a chamber music work. Her chamber music offering was the Trio in D Major^ op. 70^ No. I (The Ghost) by Beethoven. She also per formed the Prokofieff Concerto No. 2 in G Minor with the Ft. Worth Sym phony in the final round. Miss Walsh has studied with Mr. Freundlich for the past eight years and is pre sently in his class at Juilliard. Her family originally comes from Lenoir, North Carolina. rffCflfiTnev^Htwpi, Gibb also revealed that Mc Cartney had been replaced in the group by the never declared winner of a "Paul McCartney Look-Alike" contest held two years ago. Thus, the DJ assumed that the winner was quickly and quietly ushered into the role of a Beatle. Gibb also implied that this was one reason the group stopped concert tours. Officials at Apple (the Beaties' recording company) stated that the reports were not true, adding that while McCartney had not been seen at Apple for several days they were cer tain he was still alive. Beatle John Lennon called the whole business "pure nonsense". Finally, the man in question arrived in London to pro claim his existance. McCartney ex plained that he and his wife, Linda Eastman, had taken a few days to go motoring in the country. Paul stated that the reports concerning his death had been greatly exaggerated. He added that were he to die, he would probably be the last to know. But despite the rumors and the denials, one must wonder what is actually going on. Is Gibb just a quack vying for attention, as it seems, or does he have valid infor mation? Is the whole incident a publicity stunt? If that is the case, just how much, if at all, did the Beatles have to do with its being pulled off? In any case, it would seem that such a situation is foolish and childish, whoever is responsible. The Beatles do not need that kind of publicity to insure their popluarity. And we don't need shucks of this nature.