THE MICHIGAN DAILY k )ffee Houses Give Start to Folk Trio By BEATRICE TEODORO "We started out playing in someb local coffee houses," said the three young men from California, "and then we played some not-so-L local ones."t The Cumberland Three, Johnc Stewart, John Montgomery and Gil Robbins, first got togetherr early this year when Robbinsa found the other two working as as folk singing duo in coffee housest near Mt. San Antonio College inI Pomona, Calif.' In the past six months, theys have put out an album and willw soon release two more, and ares now part of the touring Shelley Berman program that will be pre- sented tonight at Ann Arbor High School. Own Arrangementst Stewart and Montgomery met, through their mutual interest in the Kingston Trio, and Stewart has even written and arranged several of his compositions, among them, "Molly Dee" and "GreenI Grasses," for the Trio. However, now that the Cum- berlands have established them-I selves as a nationally known folkI singing group, they hope toI throw off any identity with the Kingston Trio.I "We even through out songsa that we think they might sing," the Cumberlands added. "But there will never be a dearth of material. A man in New York did{ research for three months and came up with 5,000 folk songs." Not Temporary Folk singing is not riding on a temporary surge of popularity, the three said. According to Stew- art, there has never been a per- UCF Announces Annual Gathering The University Christian Fed- eration, together with the Prot- estant Foundation for Internation- al Students, is having an annual dinner at 5:30'p.m. Thursday at the First Presbyterian Church. The United Church Women of Ann Arbor will bring individual dishes, many with an interna- tional element. Some 300 students: are expected to attend. The program will include an address by V. M. Chacko of the Philosophy department at Christ Church College. Oxford. Chacko is from Kanpus, India, and is studying Economics here.' iod in which folk music hasn't been in the top ten. "Folk music is very meaty," Robbins said. "There's a lot to be understood, a lot of lyrics to listen to. We're trying to teach Ameri- can history through folk music." The modern folk singing groups have generally fallen into three areas, the trio explained. Certain singers have kept more rigidly to the original versions while others have become very commercial. The Cumberland Three try to stay somewhere between, modifying the source rather than a modern ver- sion. Continual Modification "Folk music is offensive when it is artificial," Stewart maintain- ed. "Therefore, it must be con- tinually modified because a song written 200 years ago sounds ar- tificial now." "Folk music must grow or re- main just an historical collec- tion," Robbins said, "The melo- dies are all right but the lan- guage is impossible to understand, except for the elite esthetes." The three have played in some of the most sophisticated night- clubs in the country, but definitely prefer college audiences. "We have to simplify our for- mats for the so-called sophisti- cated clubs," they said. More Aware Student audiences are more alert and aware, the young trio continued. "They understand our language and fit easily into our frame of reference." After the tour with Berman, the three may go to the "Hungry I" in San Francisco. "It's the best club we've ever played," they said. "The atmosphere generates excitement before the show goes on, and the audience is always enthusiastic." The extracurricular musical tastes of the Cumberland Three are not confined to folk music. Stewart prefers Broadway shows and Odetta; Robbins, who taught music in a high school, likes classical and progressive jazz, and Montgomery listens to modern jazz in addition to folk songs. Stowe Continues. Talks on Africa Prof. Leland Stowe, of the de- partment of journalism, will talk on "Regional Problems in the Middle East and North Africa" at 4:10 this afternoon in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Cinema j presents "CAM ILLE" Thursday and Friday "AMERICAN IN PARIS" Saturday and Sunday I 11 Camille, one of the greatest love stories of all time, had its genesis in the career of Marie Duplessis, a Normandy peasant girl who became the toast ofa Paris, a courtesan in the grand' mold, abandoned her career for love, and died of tuberculosis at the age of 23. Thousands at- tended her funeral in 1847; she had the contemporary appeal of a movie star. Alexander Dumas, fils wrote a barely disguised novel about her, which he sub- sequently dramatized. They were both succes de scandale. However, the most enduring form of the story was the oper- atic version of Verdi, La Travi- ata, which still causes copious floods of tears today. Lest the Ann Arbor audiences of 1960 condemn this as mere senti- mental indulgence, it is worth- while to quote the words of Francis Toye, Verdi's biogra- pher: "The opera was consid- ered even more objectionable, because more insidious than the play . . . A deliberate attack on the institution of marriage, a defense of free love, a plea for easier divorce . . . . Lovers, es- pecially lovers whose love was illicit, attended it in very much the same spirit as they after- wards attended performances of Tristan and Isolde. In short, La Traviata became the symbol of revolt against current sexual conventions." The grand-scale film that MGM made of Camille in the mid 1930's was intended as a vehicle for their most popular star, Greta Garbo. It has quite triumphantly survived the pit- falls of temporary commercial success. George Cukor, often dismissed as a nonentity with more technical abilities, direct- ed with a firm and able hand. Camille, while her lover beats unavailingly on the door; Laura Hope Crews is equally unforget- table as the greedy, aging demi- mondaine, a "friend" in the gay world of the Paris 1840's. But it is Garbo's radiant performance that dominates the film and de- serves the tribute of Otis Fer- guson's statement that it is the most beautiful thing we will see in our generation. The short subject on the pro- gram, Myra Hess, gives audi- ences the opportunity of hear- ing the celebrated pianist's per- formance of the first movement of Beethoven's Appassionata Sonata. If there is one genre in which Hollywood excells, it is the mu- sical. Europeans just do not have the knack, that certain something which gets the action off the ground and up into that world of semi-realistic fantasy where musicals come alive, and where they must remain to stay alive. For that matter, there are very few Hollywood musicals that have successfully accom- plished this difficult feat. Only American in Paris, 7 Brides for 7 Brothers, and The King and I come immediately to mind. Brigadoon and Damn Yankees have their moments, but too frequently find themselves grounded. Little need be said about our feature for Saturday and Sun- day-Academy Award winning American in Paris. Whenever it has been presented by Cinema Guild, it has been greeted with enthusiasm. The story, for those who have not seen it, or may have forgotten, concerns an artist and recently discharged G.I. (Gene Kelly) who falls in love with Paris and a lovely Parisian Miss (Leslie Caron). 11 n I 11