The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, March 21, 1979-Page 5 arts &entertainment Fisk Singers hold a jubilee By MATTHEW KOPKA The Fisk University Jubilee Singers appeared at Rackham Auditorium Saturday night in the second event of the Ypsi-Arbor Black Arts Festival. They delivered seventeen songs in a style that their director Matthew Ken- nedy said is unique, "slave songs in origin," but in "a kind of classical ren- dition." Fisk University, a school in Nash- ville, Tennessee, had been open for five years and was near bankruptcy in 1871 when the Reverend George White, "a New England gentleman" according to Mr. Kennedy, took a group of singers with beautiful voices on a tour of the North that garnered enough money to save the school. WHJTE AND successive directors of the singers took "traditional songs in the public domain," and adapted them to the classical choral idiom to produce a music that complemented the style of the proper school, the "Black Harvard of the South," as singer Bernard Mc- Cree told me the school is called. The music had an ethereal quality that would not be out of place in some of Europe's Gothic and Baroque chur- ches. Its likeness to traditional European church music was made ap- parent by the inclusion of J. S. Bach's All Breathing Life, Sing and Praise Ye ARTS STAFF' ARTS EDITORS R. J. SMITH ERIC ZORN THEATER EDITOR JOSH PECK STAFF WRITERS bill barbour, mary bacarella, tony bloenk, mark coleman, anthony chen, mark dighton, el:eanora dilisciajim eckert, scott eyerly, pat fabrizio, owen gleiberman, kurt- grosman,sdiane haithman, katie herzfeld, steve hook, mark johanm- son, matt kopka, mark kowalsky,. marty levine, lee levine, rich loringer, peter manis, anna nissen, gerard pape, lily prigionero, kim potter, alan rubenfeld, anne sharp, nina shishkoff, mike taylor, keith tosolt, peter wallach, dan weiss, carol wierzbicki, tim yagle. the Lord in the program. Though the Bach work differed ir the greater num- ber of sung syllables per bar it had, it was quite similar to the classical black music of most of the rest of the concert. Melodically and rhythmically simple music was re-introduced to European churchgoers by Martin Luther, who saw a need to involve people more fully in the religious service than did the Catholic church. He wrote hymns that could be easily learned and sung. Often as Bach was to do some 200 years later, folk melodies were given inspirational lyrics, which later also-happened with American black music. THOUGH RACKHAM'S acoustics have a muffling effect on sound, the holy music, the beautiful harmonies and the extremely garish comfort of the hall gave one a sense of deep-muscle relaxation throughout the performan- ce. Some of the highlights included a stirring solo by Kimberly Flynne in a multi-tempoed version of "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands," and a powerful version of the well-known spiritual "This Little Light of Mine." There was a fugue-like "I Belong to That Band," another standard of the spiritual repertoire, arranged by Eva Jessye, the choral conducter, composer and poet who had a long residence here. For this one, the tenors came down off the risers to show their strong voices and carry the theme. AFTER A brief pause in the show during which the group left the stage, the men returned for "Po' 01' Lazarus," a song that tells the biblical story of how Jesus, brought his friend Lazarus back to life after he had lain three days in a cave amid the weeping of his sisters, Mary and Martha. This version was a kind of worksong with short "hups" in its chorus and the calling question-and-answering charac- teristic of such songs. The women rejoined the men for "Sweet Home," a liltingly melodic tune in which ,the collectively humming vibrato was so strong that one could not help thinking it would make a grgnd denouement for a tear-jerking film. Soloist Iris Jones hit a tremulous and uncanny high note at the end. "House In Baltimore" painted a pic- ture of abiding spirit despite hard times in that city. Igot a house in Baltimore Streetcar running by the door Sugar babe Got no money but I'm gonna have some Just you wait till payday comes Sugar babe The Ann Arbor Film Cooperatve presentsaA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21 THE EXORCIST (William Freidkir , 1973) 3 7 &9--AUD A A demon takes up residence in a split-level California ranch-style little girl, despite the combined efforts of mother love, modern medicine, and trendy psychiatry. Setting new film standards for scares and chills, THE EXORCIST overwhelmed audiences with its special ettects, tsothic trignts, and things that go "Regan" in the night. With ELLEN BURSTYN, MAX VON SYDOW, and LINDA BLAIR. Tomorrow: BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI Michelangelo Antonioni's 1967 BLOW UP Starring DAVID HEMMINGS as a mod London fashion photographer who witnesses a murder-or does he?-that somehow involves an unwilling subject in the form of Vanessa Redgrave. THE EYES OF LAURA MARS is only the latest offering in a seemingly never ending stream of copies of this notorious film. Antonioni went to the point of painting the grass green for the electrifying effect of it. THE influential film of the past decade. With music by Herbie Hancock and footage of the early yardbirds. In color. Thurs: HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. CINEMA GUILD 7:00& 9:05 $1.50 TON IGHT An Original Musical Play THE ANITABRYANT FOUlIES by TOM SIMONDS Wednesday through Saturday March 21 to 24-8 p.m. CANTERBURYLOF0332 S. State St. Tickets $2 at the door-All Welcome Daily Photo by LISA UDELSON Director Matthew Kennedy leads the Fisk University Jubilee Singers through one of many songs during their performance last Saturday evening, in the Rackham Auditorium. Dello Joio's contemporary A Jubilant Song was the musical highlight of the evening. Mr. Kennedy's wife Anne, a fine concert pianist and the group's ac- companist played the leapingly dissonant melody and counterpoint with relish while Mr. Kennedy's graceful hands urged the surging voices through a complicated piece of music, "a universal song awakening in the hearts of men." The audience reac- ted with the evening's most sustained and enthusiastic applause. The encore, "Wheel,",concerned the prophetic revelation of Ezekiel, the biblical four-headed creatures who were "a wheel in the middle of the wheel," and above whom a manifestation of God stood, directing the prophet to go and speak to the rebellious Israelites. I don't know whether the song was an authentic round, but it had that quality and suited its subject. AFTER THE performance I spoke with some members of the group and was told that they put in long, hard hours both in rehearsal and on the road. Mrs. Kennedy, who has played at state dinners in both Jamaica and Haiti, told me that there was "a lot of discipline involved" in singing and in organizing the group. When Kennedy was asked about the somewhat surprising nature of the music, he said that audiences are sometimes surprised by its quality and restraint, do' not "find themselves hearing what they expected to hear," but that, as he said, the "generally win them over." Co ncerning his role as director of the singers, Mr. Kennedy made apparent his view of the role he plays. "I am an interpreter," he said, of the "rich storehouse of traditional music," and added that he works to maintain "a style and simplicity of style" in the music. Proceeds from the event went to Fisk University. TV 1I ichannels community innovation Original gay musical opens tonight at Loft BY JOSHUA PECK During the late sixties and early seventies, minority theater was all the rage in the U.S. on Broadway, dozens of black musicals (Raisin, The Me Nobody Knows, Your° Arms Too Short To Box With God) were staged and warmly greeted. Puerto Ricans had input with Manuel Pinero's Short Eyes, among others. Women's and ethnic theater had surges as well, and the very vocal idiotic minority was pleased by the rash of Neil Simon offerings. One minority whose advent in the theater was a little trickier than that of the rest was the homosexual con- tingent. Only one play, The Boys in the Band, has won any national notice and much of it has been ardent opposition from gays themselves, who found its picture of gay life depressing. The filmed version of Boys was barred from exhibition in Ann Arbor by a horde of shouting and furious local gays. Which brings us to what gays (and straights with liberal tendencies) will regard as good news: the opening of an original, show in Ann Arbor which not only has the support of the homosexual community but the participation of several of its members as well. Tom Simonds' The Anita Bryant Follies opens tonight at the Canterbury Loft on State Street, and runs through Saturday. The show is a satirical revue, and looks at many sides of gay life in the United States, from Anita's. suc- cessful rampage against gay rights in Dade County, to psychiatric attitudes towards the minority, to the mad fears many heterosexuals have of their little ticular relationship. The effects of homophobia (heterosexuals' hatred of gays) is drawn in as well. Simonds is an Eastern Michigan University student, and has authored a few other shows around the University campus in the past. Simonds, and several friends authored Nutcracker Revue last December, a half-amusing little production at the Halfway Inn. That show moved skittishly from scene to scene, but by virtue of its format really needed no continuity. Anita Bryant, on first reading of its script, has much the same feel, but perhaps its ideological drive will hold the many bits and pieces together. In view of the rarity of original theater in the area, one is certainly moved to hope so. By KAROLYN WALLACE Until October of 1978, media producers on campus had no place to display their productions on campus. Because of cable Channel 11, a gift from Ann Arbor Cablevision, the University now has yet another opportunity to provide an educational and professional experience to its students as well as the Ann Arbor community. There is a wide diversity in the con- tent of the channel's programs, which are required to be original, in agreement with copyright laws, and produced at the University. The various media producers on campus share a common desire to deliver useful information to the com- munity. The Journalism Department produces a weekly magazine about Ann Arbor news. The production work provides a practice ground for future professional work. THE'CHANNEL has multiple uses. The Center for Continuing Legal Education uses Channel 11 to explain laws pertaining to laypersons. Procedures for taxes and divorces are 1 lt CAN ERYl4:45 among the topics covered by the cen- I b llNERi7:30 ter's programs. 10:00 Students as well as faculty members are encouraged to submit programs. Presently, the channel airs Professor 10:15 Tom Sawyer's engineering students 1:00 who have prepared lectures as final 3:30 projects in Humanities 499. 7:00 In this sense, Channel 11 strives to be 9:30 part of the community by sharing the See TV, Page 7 r - Become Uac $ ( C Committee Charp erson MUST BE - - - C REATIVET energetic A LEADER tro' I0 applications C60 due: *00 MARCH .21 S E A a fr arnrr~f lfinE! Robert A. Goldston Presents J MU DAY THRU Ct nrrigxDa'T f '.DtrED TT T TZR iA iEMA nV THURSDAY