Page 6-Thursday, October 5, 1978-The Michigan Daily Ark 'home' for Blakes By LILY PRIGIONIERO and ERIC ZORN Just as William F. Buckley's Viewpoint Lecture on "The problems of Freedom" was ending on a cold, rainy Tuesday night, Norman and Nancy B13ke with Fiddler James Bryan k kied off their concert at the Ark. The dhft-picking Norman Blake led the trio teough a clean and energetic couple of which left little doubt as to why he hovers at the top of the folk music s ne. it's true, there are a lot of interesting activities scheduled at the University,, butit would be a shame for the student to mdiiss heading over to the Ark and hearing one of the consistently high quality acts which perform there. The PRESENTS MUGSY Thursday thru Saturday 327E. Michigan, Ypsilanti 482-7130 * Blakes generally play in front of much larger audiences but they love the Ark because of the intimacy and hospitality. When Norman was asked when he thought he might return, he answered, "As soon as these kind folks ask us back;. we're willing to come back anytime." PURISTS MIGHT feel threatened by the cello Nancy carries on stage to ac- company the fiddle and Norman's Mar- tin guitar. The rich tones she brings out while bowing lend the right touch of melancholy to slow numbers like "Lonesome Jenny", which Norman wrote himself. "I wrote it in the back of an old guitar shop picking on this used guitar. The song just seemed tocome out of the sound of the guitar . . ." Norman also commented that just as Ron Carter plays his picallo bass, Nan- cy's cello is used as the bass instrument when she plays it pitzicatto.- Norman's gymnastics with both flat and finger picks were astounding and as clean as you'll hear anywhere. He used the same sort of scales concept found in jazz, with fifty per cent of in- credibly intricate improvising. James Bryan, the bashful fiddler sat quietly stage right and sawed away sof- The Ann Arbor Film COOerative presents at Aud A THURSDAY,CTOBER 5 REET, PETITE AND GONE (William Forest Crouch, 1947) 8:30 only-AUD A LOUIS JORDAN must find a perfect girl to be eligible for his father's will. But Louis' jammin' steals the show. Lots of music and funky sets in this feature musical with JUNE RICHMOND, MILTON WOODS, and '.. SEA GRIFFITH. ROCK AND ROLL REVUE (Joseph Kohn, 1955) 7& 10=-AUD A An awesome star-studded jazz extravaganza featuring DUKE ELLINGTON, DINAH WASHINGTON, LARRY DARNELL, NAT "KING" COLE, COLE and ATKINS, LIONEL HAMPTON, THE CLOVERS, LITTLE BUCK, THE DELTA RHYTHM BOYS, NIPSEY RUSSEL, RUTH BROWN and MANTAN MORELAND. Plus Short: ST. LOUIS BLUES. Tomorrow: COOLEY HIGH d A PIECE OF THE ACTION tly and smoothly, even on the jumping fiddle features like "Arkansas Traveller" and "Forked Deer". James' effortless and innovative breaks were of the sort we don't hear very often up north where the new breed of fiddlers seem to want to attack their instrumen- ts. OF THE BLAKE concerts in Ann Ar- bor over the last couple of years, this was the most outstanding. Norman was relaxed and smiling in the first set, on- ce mugging at the generously sized crowd in the middle of some fancy triplets he added to the great "Black- berry Blossom." In the second set, however, he was positively ebuliient, twinkling at the people seated in front of him and shooting friendly barbs at Nancy and James. Norm dedicated an early song to Bryan Bowers, the autoharp virtuoso who visited the Ark for a concert on Friday. The exciting Bowers was to have played a Saturday concert, but ten minutes before the show he severely sliced his left hand and he'll be out of commission for six weeks. In- defatigable, Bowers watched the con- cert from the back, with one arm around a pretty woman and the other bound in a sling. "Right before the show," sighed Linda Siglin, co-operator of the Ark. "It's never happened before,"~ Norman grew up in Sulphur Springs, Georgia, in a rural community. Many of his songs are influenced by his background where he was brought up with railroads and coal mines. "FIRST OFF it takes the musician to build up his name - and all depending on how desirous he is," he said "If he keeps on honkin' and stays before the public, his name'll grow. But you can never know exactly how many people your music influences, unless of course, you're talkin' about the Beatles or Elvis Presley." Many times during the second set, Nancy and James set aside their in- struments and watched as Norman danced his pick on the strings, im- provising long runs and even a boogie woogie vamp. As an added treat Nor- man played both the mandolin and fid- dle, while Nancy kept everything together by stroking the cello evenly. The multi-talented Blake stroked a fine, long bowing style on the fiddle which contrasted with James's short yet clear, demure bowing. Putting the threestringed instruments together made a lush, woody musical harmony that could almost be considered as classical with a down-home beat. Rhythmic applause seduced the Blakes into an encore after they had retired to their upstairs dressing room. A fiddle tune called "Lafayette" ended the concert on a pleasant note. Norman Blake's ingredients for his fine music include "combining all the elements of folk music, love, and coal mining", which he baked into a luscious all-American dessert, and served warm to his guests at the Ark. NANCY AND NORMAN BLAKE and their fiddler James Bryan on the front porch of the Ark. 'LooneyFriday in stor lar -ALSO NOON LUNCHEON Soup and Sandwich-50C FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6 MARGARET RAN DALL, author "THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST SEXISM IN CUBA" A T 2PM . . H.L. MITCHELL co-founder of the Southern Tenant Farmers Union (CIO): "RADICALISM IN THE SQUTH FROM POPULISM TO SOCIALISM". By KEN PARSIGIAN It was not so many years ago that Saturday morning was the most impor- tant time of the week for the majority of us. Because Saturday was cartoon day, and any kid who could still show his or her age on his or her fingers would dutifully arise at 7:00 a.m. for a few hours of Bugs, Daffy, Foghorn Leghorn and the rest of the"Looney Tunes gang. This Friday evening we ,can relive those lighthearted days when Cinema II presents three hours of Looney Tunes from the late 40s and the 50s, by the greatest cartoon directors - Bob Clampett, Fritz Freleng, Robert McKimson and most important, Chuck Jones.. LOONEY TUNES are unique since they appeal to adults perhaps r even more than to children. Al Heindryckx, an Education School senior who is run- ning Friday's show, explains what sets Looney Tunes apart from the rest of the cartoon world: "You'have to remember that Warner Brothers' (the producers of Looney Tunes) originally made them for adults to be shown before feature-length films. They gave their directors - (Tex) Avery, (Chuck) Jones, and the rest - plenty of money, and complete artistic control over the production," he says. "Other cartoon makers, say Disney for GUILD HOUSE, 802 MONROE *11 example, kept a tight rein over the directors, which stifled their creativity, although the animation itself was ex- cellent." Like most of us, Heindryckx went through a period in his teens where he forgot about cartoons - an easy thing to do when one considers the depths to which they had sunk by the middle to late 60s. His interest was rekindled, however, when he began working in a day care center, and started watching. Looney Tune reruns with the children. "I'd have flashbacks to when I was six or seven," he says, "and it seemed I could enjoy and appreciate these car- toons even more now than I did then. Kids like them because they are so full, and the facial expressions are so real (unlike the robot-like movement of modern cartoons), but adults like them becauseF-they are satirical and just plain funny." IN RECENT YEARS there have been several cartoon festivals billed as "Looney Tunes", but some have been disappointing. Heindryckx, however, has always produced a fine show. His four earlier shows concentrated mainly on the late 30s and early 40s - cartoons most of us had never seen, but Friday's program, which is primarily a tribute to Chuck Jones, should jog a few memories. The two 90-minute shows include some classics such as "Rabbit of Seville", in which Bugs leads Elmer Fudd through a dizzying, hilarious chase, all to the strains of the familiar opera. The scene in which Bugs por- trays the barber, while Elmer is his unwitting customer is a classic. Another memorable Jones feature, "Hair-raising Hare", in which Bugs gives a monster a manicure, complete with a witty imitation of the typical manicurist will also be on hand. Hein- dryckx is also trying to obtain what is probably the most innovative as well as the funniest cartoon ever -."Duck Amuck". Daffy actually battles with the illustrator, and if you have never seen it, or even if you have, you'll fall out of your seat laughing. What makes these cartoons so ap- pealing, Heindryckx contends, is that "Warner's was basically interested in making people laugh, like W.C. Fields or the Marx Brothers. Disney was always concerned with makinlg some specific, moralistic statement, but it is the amorality of Looney Tunes that makes them so enjoyable. Each character is a caricature of human foibles; Daffy is like the id, totally devoted to fulfilling his desires." HOW TRUE. Who could resist laughing at Daffy at the end of the Tasmanian devil cartoon, in which Daf- fy has brought the vicious devil in for the reward, even though his life was endangered every step of the way. As Daffy is leaving the zoo, his avaricious eyes agog, he passes the Devil's cage, and the monster snatches some of the booty from Daffy's hand. Our favorite duck leaps into the cage, and pounds the Devil senseless while retrieving the money. "I may be a coward," Daffy says to the audience, "but I'm a ga-reeeee-dee (greedy) coward." Heindryckx explains that modern cartoons are deadening. The charac- ters aren't real, and we can't identify with them. They are mass produced for television, and it shows. But don't despair, there is still hope. The master himself, Chuck Jones, has recently signed with a film studio to make several new cartoons of the 50s ilk, and he has been given free rein. The studio plans to return them to the theater to be shown before feature movies. So, if 'we are lucky, Friday night's show will just be a preview of what is to come. Abba dee, abba dee, abba dee - ah, that's all folks! VITTORIA DE SICA'S 1971 THE GARDEN OF FINZI-CONTINIS Set in Italy in 1938, this story of a Jewish aristocratic family that refuses to recognize or accept their vulnerability to the anti-semitism of the Mussolini government stars Dominique Sanda and Helmut Berger. A beautiful and touch- ing work by the Italian master that also touches on issues of wealth and class. In color, Italian, and with subtitles. Fri: Chaplin's CITY LIGHT TONIGHT at OLD ARCH. A UD. CINEMA GU ILD 7:..a.9:05 $1.50 Is There Something You've6 Got To Say? SAY IT IN THE CLASSIFIEDS CALL 764-0557 Looking for the intellectual side of life? I I -I