Focus On Folk The Ann Arbor Folk Festival promises to be an extravaganza of major traditional and contemporary artists, as well as notable up-and-comers. whom Grisman calls "the greatest living exponent of Jewish music in America." It was Statman's work in klezmer music that got Grisman interested in Jewish music. "[Andy] made a lifelong pilgrimage into Jewish music and mastered the mandolin and the clarinet. He studied with [master klezmer clarinetist] Dave Tarras. "I was never what you would call an observant Jew,'' recalls Grisman, who celebrated his bar mitz- vah. "I've always felt strong cultural roots. I always wanted. to do something with Jewish music and Statman was my entrance into Jewish music. "I feel like there's always been an influence of Hebraic melodies in my music that I write. I write a lot in minor keys," he observes. Then he jokes, "I blame my Jewish background for that." `Boo!' • Left to right: David Grisman: An influence of Hebraic melodies. The Austin Lounge Lizards, featuring Oak Park native Boo Resnick, top. (Don't make fun of his name. The Oak Park native holds a history degree from the University of Michigan.) Lucy Kaplansky: Psychologist/singer. AUDREY BECKER Special to the Jewish News IIE aking its 25th appearance on Saturday, Jan. 26, at Hill Auditorium, the Ann Arbor Folk Festival, a fund- raiser for the nonprofit acoustic music venue the Ark, this year features headliners includ- ing Nanci Griffith, Doc Watson and David Grisman, Greg Brown, Lucy Kaplansky and the Austin Lounge Lizards. The returning co-emcees of this year's festival are folk performer Matt Watroba, producer and host of Folks Like Us on WDET, and blues instrumentalist Robert Jones, host of WDET's Blues From the Lowlands. Planning the festival's 25th anniversary has made her nostalgic, says Linda Siglin, co-founder, with her husband Dave Siglin, of the Ark. "It obviously gets you thinking about how time passes. It's like a good marriage; it sort of creeps up on you." The Siglins, intending this year's festival to be special, are bringing to the stage a long list of favorite performers, including Jewish artists David Grisman, Lucy Kaplansky and Boo Resnick of the Austin Lounge Lizards. The spirit of the festival itself is special, notes Siglin. • "The interaction, that's what I look forward to. The performers watch the other performers, so you get a heightened performance from [each of] the artists. People tend to give brilliant performanc- es, stunning performances." This year, Siglin points to headliner Nanci Griffith as a special treat. "[Griffith] can knock a song dead," she exclaims. Newer artists always show up on the bill. Says Siglin, "The wonderment of it is that you can still discover brand-new people and get re-energized, maybe even get excited about something you never even liked before." 1/18 2002 64 And local performers are represented, too, empha- sizing the importance of the local community. In addition to her excitement about the perform- ers, Siglin really glows when talking about the audi- ences who have come out to support the Ark, one of the country's top venues for folk music. "We wanted this year's festival to be special for the fans that have been coming over the years," she says. "The camaraderie the audience shares with the event has always been gratifying to the Ark. Without it, the Ark simply wouldn't be here." Dawg Music David Grisman, mandolin virtuoso and musical inno- vator, has been a crucial element in the development of acoustic music over the past several decades. His- famous nickname, "Dawg," given to Grisman by long- time friend the late Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead, is now the moniker of Grisman's innovative music style, "Dawg Music" — a blend of various influences from swing, bluegrass, Jewish music and Latin jazz. The musician will perform with the legendary Doc Watson, who virtually invented the idea of playing traditional mountain fiddle tunes on flattop guitar, and brought Appalachian folk music to the nation's concert halls. Grisman — whose friendship with Jerry Garcia was the subject of last year's intimate film documen- tary Grateful Dawg — continues to bring acoustic music to audiences with Acoustic Disc, a label he launched in 1990. Among the nearly 50 . release5 from Acoustic Disc over the past 10 years is a project called "Songs of our Fathers," which features Jewish traditional music. "Songs of our Fathers" developed from a partner- ship between Gr.fs`man and protege Andy Statman, The Austin Lounge Lizards' current release, Never an Adult Moment, is the latest in their series of idiosyn- cratic "bluegrass-intellectual-ironic-redneck-philo- sophical" tunes. Songs on their latest release include "Forty Years Old and I'm Livin' in My My Mom's Garage," "Rasputin's HMO" and "Asheville/Crashville." With literate lyrics that scrutinize and satirize politics, love, religion, and culture, the Li7nrds include Conrad Deisler, lawyer, on acoustic lead guitar, Richard Bowden on mandolin and fiddle; Tom Pittman on banjo and pedal steel guitar; and Boo Resnick on bass. "I've found that Jewish melody and harmony are similar to the blues in a lot of ways — minor modes, bent notes, soulful interpretation," explains Resnick, who also sings. The musician, who grew up in Oak Park and attended the University of Michigan from 1968- _ 1972, joined the Lizards in 1995. His father— whom Resnick credits with a "marvelous baritone' — has been a cantor for about 50 years, singing at many area synagogues, including Temple Israel in Detroit and, most recently, Beth Israel in Windsor. His Jewish background has definitely affected the way Resnick approaches music, he says. "I just love klezmer music. "We do a song by Emily Kaitz called `Suzie Rosen's Nose,' which is about a Jewish princess who gets a nose job. It's a very funny song, and of course, I'm the only one in the band who could pull it off. "I promise, it's not offensive." Resnick jokes, "... unless you listen to the lyrics." In a previous group — an oldies rock band — Rsenick was called upon to lead "Hava Nagila" at an occasional bar mitzvah or Jewish wedding. "I'm the Jewish ambassador for my bands," he says. Because of his Ann Arbor past, the folk festival is special to Resnick. "Every time we play the Ark, I'm just flooded with all kinds of memories," he says. "I love to walk around campus whenever I get the chance, and get all sentimental about my college days. Believe it or not, I still have some brain cells left that can remember what it was like back then." Dr. Lucy Lucy Kaplansky, who grew up in a Reform Jewish home, began her career in the early '80s Greenwich