The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 7, 1978-Page 45 Folk, friends aboard the Ark (Continued from Page 43) special series of concerts featuring Michigan folk artists, many of whom had never played before a paying audience. Where else could you hear an Ozark Mountain flat-picker,,a British concer- tina master, a storyteller from Maine, or a nationally known harmonica wiz- zard from Ann Arbor? At the Ark, everybody strives for a closeness, A rapport exists between the musician and his audience, a relationship that is becoming a rarity in this time of mass- entertainment. "IF YOU PRESENT a singer who has a completely presentational style, and in that style they cannot break out and sit back or stand back and look at the audience and say 'there you are and here I am', they wouldn't go over very well at the Ark," says Dave.. "They might go over very well at other coffeehouses with a stage, because you would have that barrier," he adds. At the Ark coffeehouse, the big- name recording artists are few and far between. There are countless places ,in town with better acoustics. And if you want to relax and have a drink while some big band jams away, you'd best go elsewhere. FROM THE TIME you step up the bug-ridden, peeling porch steps, it is ob- vious that you will not be seeing another musical extravaganza. The light show is basically bare light bulbs shielded by coffee cans covered with tinted gels. And there ain't no dance floor-what unoccupied floor space there ifs stAlked by Chumly the cah; as he poss his nose from coffeeep.lWocffeecup. The obligatory singalor g uually, a hollow concert gesture, is much more at the Ark. Oftimes, the audience will sing out whether the singer asked them to or not. And there are countless gestures, from the performer who buys pizza for his entire audience to the singer who promises to stay all night that make the Ark what it is. But as one of the most famous cof- feehouses around the country, the Ark offers an experience in communication, friendliness and heritage that is becoming harder and harder to find. OKAY SO H5EE I ORIENTATION 7IE AT SCHOOL KIDS' RA -THE MoST COMPLETE SELECTION OF £ Azz., RoCK, FO L. "ClRECT -UDSC< AZZ) RoCK IMPORTS, ELUES IN MILJ41CAN. -\\ -LoWEVERYDAvPRicE;7.~3.9L5sT~r..m~* 1--INDEPENDET, LOCALLY ONNED AND t,' 1 l' D OP R E f AJA ' --rrts .. T /S, AGAIN ECORDS . -s'; r The RFD Boys strike a pose out in the country wilderness. Of bands, bluegrass and the RFD Boys 1: 4. F t 1 ' a ,,i :' F By DONNA DEBRODT There's no obvious reason for an M.D., an economist working on his PH.D., a medical student, and the owner of a fledgling recording studio to spend their precious weekend evenings playing bluegrass, with comedy routines between numbers, for over eight years. Perhaps it's lunacy. But it's also a deep loyalty to the music and the people who visit Ann Arbor's Pretzel Bell to hear the band play. LIKE COUNTLESS other musicians in the area, the RFD Boys spend their weekends hauling equipment, driving into town and putting up with oc- casional drunks in an effort to share their music with Ann Arbor audiences in bars, restaurants and coffee houses. Witness Dick Dieterle, fiddler and practicing pathologist. Dieterle is the founder of the RFD Boys and has wat- ched the band's bluegrass following grow since their first performance at Ann Arbor's Mr. Flood's party back in 1969. Dieterle's bond to the music and the band is so strong that while stationed in Dayton, Ohio with the Air Force he went AWOL every weekend to come up to Ann Arbor and play. "I WOULD quietly fade away from Dayton at six and get to Ann Arbor just in time to play at ten," Dieterle says. "In those two years I drove over 30,000 miles back and forth." Dieterle claims it is relaxing to per- form every weekend. But his fiddling hardly seems a relaxing activity; his bow just dances across the instrument, which in the best Hillbilly tradition, contains a rattlesnake's rattles to "drive out the evil spirits." The RFD Boys represent a unique mix of. personalities. In addition to Dieterle, there's recording engineer and onstage clown Willard Spencer, outgoing songwriter and lead singer Charlie Roehrig who is working on his Econ. doctorate, and Paul Shapiro, bass player and M.D. candidate. AND LIKE ALL musical groups, whether punk rock or classical string ensembles, the RFD Boys share a deep commitment to their music-bluegrass -A sound which is becoming more and more popular in town. "Bluegrass has become a legitimate art form here. Ann-Arbor is a great town for introducing something like this because of all the different kinds of people here," says Dieterle. Bluegrassis a fairly new arrival in music, at least officially. Bill Monroe and his Bluegrass Band are generally credited with having "invented" bluegrass in 1945, but its origins go back to Scottish and Irish folk songs and the gospel and church hymns of the Ap- palacian mountain people. Bluegrass tunes vary from ballads with complex harmonies to wild instrumentals with improvisational solos for each of the five traditional instruments-the fid- dle, banjo, string bass, guitar and man- dolin. But in any form, bluegrass is toe- tapping, hand-clapping, sing-along music. AND THE RFD Boys are a serious bluegrass band. Pretzel Bell Manager Max Balden says, "If they all didn't have other commitments, they could go nation-wide and be one of the top bluegrass bands around." But their serious attitude toward bluegrass doesn't stop them from lap- sing into numbers such as Teenager in Love, complete with "doo, wops," or the doper's lament, Seeds and Stems Blues. Since they have been together, the RFD Boys have played to a strange assortment of audiences, among them the Flint Classical Music Society and the American Quarterhorse Association. "In the beginning we were just trying for exposure, to have people listen to us," says Dieterle. THE BAND NO longer has that problem. They have appeared by in- vitation at bluegrass festivals throughout the country and on radio shows in Detroit, Toronto and Washington. Although it's doubtful the RFD Boys will ever become a nation-wide craze they certainly serve their purpose. Like most of the other local bands, they make our free time a little more en- joyable and have a good time doing it. 1 I v. A D IGvry AN E( EN"T Rte . Srt ESTSELECTON OF CUTOUTS ' P UDE T L.s 1 71[ 7 ' _ C U TOU 1J.i . FOLK) ROCK, BLUESA.2 RO # : ::";::" ":.c::% STkt-L E BL.UES "% Q ST .. :.:..' ROC.A ............ " :; ":" , W ERNATIONAL. :.. :...ROCKCATU-:- - ... IPMMRPORTRN EW-IORS LNS - -A4A lN5 5 ROL ?'" SA L SA "::::::::". ":".. 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