ENTERTAINMENT • Steve Sklar, center, with wife Johanna Morrow and Little Green Men. SUSAN SALTER Special to The Jewish News S teve Sklar's music is not the type you'd hum to your- self on the way to work. You'll pro- bably never hear it translated into elevator Muzak. But Mr. Sklar's music, an arresting amalgam of the high-tech and the down-to- earth — he calls it "space jazz" — is catching the ears of an in- creasing number of listeners. Mr. Sklar, 34, who grew up in Oak Park and now lives in Minneapolis, is the founder of Little Green Men, a group that Omni magazine recently lauded as a "superb jazz ensemble." Along with his wife, Johanna Morrow, and members Jason Orbit, Alden Ikeda, and Marting Stovall, Mr. Sklar has played gigs everywhere from the Min- neapolis' Walker Art Center to that city's First Avenue club, better known as the club An Oak Park native puts a jazz group's focus on outer space. where rocker Prince got his start. Not bad for a guy whose first guitar was a bar mitzvah Present from his parents. Though he professes a lifelong love of music, Mr. Sklar admits that formal study of it has usually taken a backseat to practical ex- perience. He had enrolled as a music major at Wayne State University, but became disillusioned "when I found I'd be spending three years memorizing Bach chorales before getting to what I wanted to do. I was into jazz and fusion!' So Mr. Sklar hit the road in 1975, "backpacking around the country, traveling three months on foot and by car!' Eventually, he settled in Minneapolis, where he prac- ticed guitar and worked at a - series of dues-paying jobs (cab driving, etc.) Mr. Sklar also learned to construct stringed instruments and joined a musician's and craftsmen's co- op for a while, building and repairing guitars and bases. Still looking for his musical style, Mr. Sklar went through "periods of studying certain types of music. For two years I played mostly classical guitar, then slide guitar." When the co-op foundered, Mr. Sklar took classes in music theory at Minneapolis Com- munity College and joined the school's jazz band. A turning point came when "I meta man who played sitar," he recalls. "Ever since I was 11 or 12, I'd been in- trigued by Indian music, like the kind George Harrison played on Beatles records. As I got into jazz fusion, I used a lot of Indian influences!' As he learned more about music, Mr. Sklar taught himself audio engineering and ended up producing records. By 1988 he had the makings of his own group, one that would combine traditional jazz forms with state-of-the-art audio techniques and unique sound effects that suggest a walk along the astral plane. Joining him was Johanna Morrow, whom he had met when he spotted "an ad on a wall" looking for musicians. Johnna, says her husband, is more classically trained, a songwriter who plays flute and piccolo. She also provides almost all of the group's vocals. The ensemble now known as Little Green Men — the name reflects both Mr. Sklar's sense of humor and his fascination with astronomy and other worldly ideas — began perfor- ming in 1988 and "rocketed to obscurity," as Mr. Sklar relates. Personnel changes and stylistic shifts resulted in the ethereal sound Little Green Men produces today. Critic Richard Broderick in Omni called their work "flawless" as reproduced on tape. Mr. Sklar can take par- ticular pride in that accolade, since he produces the group's recordings through his LGM Productions. Their first album, Jazz from Mars, came out in 1988; the collec- tion Out of This World follow- ed in 1989. As his own publicity direc- tor, Mr. Sklar "sends out tapes everywhere," and his tenacity has paid off. Little Green Men has made itself known on col- lege radio stations, according to Mr. Sklar, and has aired on National Public Radio. No opportunity for advance- ment escapes his attention. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 67