E terto onion! Folk, rock and poetry, Israel, Spain and America: David Broza melds his music. SUZANNE CHESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS avid Broza visits Ann Arbor for two reasons — to enter- tain and to conduct seminars. Tomorrow, the singer-gui- tarist will be part of the 17th annual Ann Arbor Folk Fes- tival, which starts at 6 p.m. at Hill Auditorium. Only a couple of months ago, he was in town to work with writing students, giving them his perspective as a folk rock composer who seeks out poetry to set to music. "Ann Arbor audiences re- ally give themselves to the at- mosphere I create," said the Israeli-born entertainer, who spends about 10 days each month performing in his na- tive country. "They make it all the easier for me to want to give more." This weekend's perfor- mance will give audiences a sampling from his latest al- bum, "Time of Trains", his second English-language pro- ject. Among the poets repre- sented are Bette Sussman, Terry Cox, Elizabeth Bishop, Tessa Marquis and Dan McKenzie. "The album is definitely re- flective of travel, movement and hellos and goodbyes," said Mr. Broza, whose Israeli album The Woman by My Side, one of five recorded there, remains the most suc- cessful album in the history of the Israeli music industry. "All of my albums are per- sonal albums as far as the subjects I pick. They don't necessarily follow a theme. They are anything my emo- tions and mind get attached to." Mr. Broza, who moved to the United States nine years ago to be closer to the centers of his favorite music, was in- troduced to rock 'n' roll in Is- rael and Spain, where he grew up. In those countries, it is very common to turn to poetry as a lyrical stimulant for a song. "What I look for in a lyric I'm going to compose music for is a short vignette," re- vealed Mr. Broza, whose first two albums included his own lyrics. "I go by what captures my eye and captures me per- sonally. "It has to have a story and a great opening line for me to go on reading it. I direct my songs toward audiences that have an acquired taste for storytelling." Mr. Broza's unique ap- proach to writing folk-rock songs, which he intends strictly for his own stage work and recordings, has made him a seminar leader at several colleges. "I've gotten to know a lot of the poets whose poetry I've been setting to music over the years," he explained. "Some of them teach at universities, and I've been invited to give workshops there. "A lot of rock 'n' roll is the move, the vibes and the feel, but I like to look for a little bit more depth." Mr. Broza, 37, often finds himself sharing a program with discussion leaders who cover other aspects of writing and using poetry, such as translating from one lan- guage to another. "I'm the odd one in this whole bag because I'm the only one who's really concen- trated on this in a pop sense and not an esoteric sense," said the performer, who started playing guitar at age 13 and made his first record- ing at age 21. "I get invited to talk about how I approach a poem, be- ing that I'm from another art form, and how I merge my art into an existing poem with- out taking away from it, per- haps changing it somewhat so it can become a song and then taking it to the next step where the masses might get exposed to it. "I give the writers another way of looking into the tech- niques of writing and what a reader might look for when he reads or what he might get exposed to when he reads. I'm really much more of a professional reader than a writer." Mr. Broza enjoys reading historical literature when he is not reading poetry. Read- ing, however, comes after He's appearing Saturday at the Ann Arbor Folk Festival. time he spends with his fam- ily — his wife Ruth, who is his business manager, and his three children: Moran, 13; Ramon, 12, and Adam, 4. Mr. Broza is very pleased with the sound of his latest album because he has used a new approach to his record- ing. "I finally came to the point where I realize I should be more in control of my own musical direction with regard to production and arrange- ments," he said. "Before, I used big-name producers to deliver the prod- uct and music, which I wrote as state-of-the-art pop. It was overproduced a lot of the time compared to my performance, which is a very intimate, di- rect, focused, almost one-man show. "In the studios, it was al- ways bigger, and I decided to record live in the studio in a romantic setting. I think this has made Time of Trains very warm, intimate and one of the most romantic of the al- bums I have done." The Ann Arbor Folk Festi- val begins at 6 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 29, at Hill Auditorium. For ticket information, call 645-6666. ❑