THE MICHIGAN [DAILY Tuesday, February 9, 1971 * 'Music Tinfoil oblong things swing from a string and reflect differ- ent colors. Brightness. Oil mixed with water and projected on the sheet screen on the main wall-kaleidoscopic. Fluid. Breaking into new shapes, bursting 'into new creations. Pictures projected on the wall. The wall is caked with squares of pictures. The pictures are sunk into the wall. The wall looks eatern, decayed with colors. The people whimsydance. They take big skips, they hold onto each other's waists and dance in a long coiled line. Guthard gyrations. Spread-eagle frolic dancing. Sweeping slow motion dancing. Arresting dancers, weaving in and out. Colors red-white- blue-dancing. The walls, the floor are dancing with the dancers and weaving with the music. Cohen: A th E i By LUKE BALDWIN mu~sic man h e and sings After hosting overflow crowds for the last two weeks, Friday and Saturday nights the Ark was filled with old time music and the subtley vibrant and unassuming presence of John Cohen of the New Lost City Ramblers Many people from this area may remember the Ramblers playing at Canterbury House, when the lines wound down to the shoe repair, and the folk boom was flourishing. Things have changed since then. The popularity of folk music has subsided, or at least changed in character, and for the Ramblers, long road trips and one night stands are a thing of the past. But Cohen is much mere than a performer. He is a component of his art, a scholar of folklore. Though Cohen is in one uense an innovator, capable of playing a banjo lick with a dozen different accents, he prefers to be ju ,t one of the people singing. He has a great sense of historicity, and a respect for the traditions and life styles of the people from whom he has collected his songs. Combining his interests in filn and music, Cohen began the eve- ning Friday by showing a movie he made in the mountains of Kenticky. The film served as an expression of his attitudes to- ward his work, reflecting both the music and the culture of the people who brave the drudgery of Appalachia by picking banjo, or playing fiddle tunes they have picked up over the years. After establishingrhis format through the photographic me- dium, Cohen shifted the ele- ments. The music was essential- ly the same, but the earth be- came the waxed, hardwood floors of a coffee house, and the cool- ness of the film was exchanged for warm, direct contact with a small group of people. When Cohen sang, one was not drawn into a dazing stupor, or seduced by the sirenic sound of a sweet baby folk hero. Instead, one heard a very average, some- what nasal voice, sometimes straining, but nearly always con- sistent with the sense of the song. Though all of the songs bore some similarity, the music cov- ered a wide range. "Shady Grove" was one of the first num- bers. It was probably not imme- diately familiar to everyone, but the audience soon joined in tiie singing. Cohen also worked nls way through several very well known songs such as "Railroad Bill" and "Worried Man Blues." But the songs I enjoyed most were the ones Cohen collected himself. Cohen beamed as he de- scribed one old man: "He lived in a shack up in the mountains . . . just a small place with a wood stove. And he was wearing a coat just like they wear al tie Ivy League colleges. You know, a nice heavy brown tweed. But it was all worn and had patches all over. He even had tobacco stains on his chin. It was really unbe- lievable. He was just too much of what he was 'supposed to be.' But that's the way he was. And he didn't care. He was just try- ing to survive." In the Saturday afternoon workshop, Cohen spent most of the time picking banjo (and a little guitar) with those who brought their instruments. By the time the afternoon picking session was over, Cohen was tired, and there wasn't much time left to talk. I would have interviewed him, otherwise. Still, we had time to talk (bout a couple of things. One of those topics related to more "popular forms of nusic. Cohen had made the comment, "I like the new music, but I love the old music," Friday night. I was also interested in an article he published in SING OUT! about Nashville, and the country music scene. The magazine article (Cohen, to my mind, is Sing Out's most articulate writer) seemed to re- flect a tone of resentment to- ward the commercialism of the country music scene. Though neither of us remembered enough specifics of the article to deal with it directly, we did at least talk around the topic. Cohen alluded to one scene in his second film (shown at the end of the evening) which showed an old man singing his blues away at the local bar. The juke box comes on, and his voice is muddled by the sound of a Merle Haggard record: "You see the juke box seems to take the song away from the man. But after a whil-, the two songs seem to comple- ment each other in some strvnge way." Indeed, Cohen doesn't resent the new music; he just holds a great love for the old. As he sat on the stairs playing the rock hit "The Cuckoo" (an old traditional song), Cohen said "If there is anything I would really like to say, it would be that the current revival in folk music relates very much. to rock. The direction of the music is toward the people. At least I think it's headed that way. If it's not, we might as well forget it." MARTIN MARTY 4 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 9 RACK H AM AUDITORI'UM - 3Q0sma LAST TIMES TONITE "Oowl and Pussycat" 7:15 & 9:00 STARTS TOMORROW John Marley &Ray Milland ~ ~'6 ( IN COLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE 603 E. Liberty COMING FRIDAY ... Kaleidoscopic By MARCIA ZOSLAW The Retinal Circus took over the Union Ballroom Sunday night, and brought a kind- of multi-media extravaganza that Ann Arbor has fever seen the likes of. It was movies. From on alle- gorical stories of pigs to the moredown to earth 'Dracula' and then on the the more satirical "Why man creates." Lights flashed on and off al- ternating the media of the film and the circus enters. Not a normal circus in the Toby Ty- ler frame of reference but a circus of the mind. And the mind was already beginning to Photos by Tom Gottlieb At State & Liberty Sts IL662-" 6264 1 6. OL ..WI~fRI .. 88SPuJ, r- JACK NICHOLSON "YEAR'S BEST" -N.Y. Film Critics OPEN 1 P.M. SHOWS: 1:20, 3:10, 6 P.M., 7 P.M., 9 P.M. go as a result of the several media already presented. People danced with not-de- feaning bands playing s o m e - where in the not too distant ex- tremity. And a dog barked . . . yip, yippp ... bringing an un- expected media to tha fore and applause. The Circus did what it in- tended to do ... at least super- ficially. It brought people to- gether. A crowd of about 25 had swelled to over 250, and they all watched, and danced and en- joyed together. r' 11 I v- T The movies that are shown on the wall run the gamut from pigs to "Dracula." The pigs on the screen yawn. I yawn. The farmer in the movies strokes the hairy pigs with his wrinkled hand. Pigging it: sticking their snouts in the food, grunting obnoxiously, greedily, their dialated snouts sometimes look like human mouths pursed for a kiss. O.K. pigs, a mirror image? Instead" of clowns, we're entertained with this new caricature. Another movie "Why Man Creates." Looks like this audience isn't going to participate as I'd feared, just listen and watch in- stead. Easy does it for a Sunday night. My favorite part of the movie is when a man opens up a boring lady's head as one would take the lid off a carton and shouts, "Hello down there." Wednesday & Thursday-February 10th & 11th Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre presents THE TWO EXECUTIONERS by FERNANDO ARRABAL AND TIE WAX MUSEUM by JOHN HAWKES Promptly at 4:10 P.M. or earlier if theatre is filled ARENA THEATRE-Frieze Building ADMISSION FREE 1 'I Litter doesn't throw itself away; litter doesn't just happen. People cause it-and that denim look has come a long way for Miss J. . .it's showing up now in cotton/polyester knit separates where every tine leads to action. In a tittle jacket, a matching pant and a print shirt with denimy background to pair with solid pants. SiZes 5-13. A. Zipped jacket, $12. Jeans, $15. B. Shirt in blue/white. S-M-L, $9. Solid pull-on pant, $10. . : Ul ~ A* 11 Subscribe To __._ i THE MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 764-0558 only people can prevent: it "People" means you. Keep America Beautiful. -'advertising contributed jor the public good 1 I1 the ann arbor film cooperative presents: elvira madig +,^r~rikf riv 1 fan I I I U ~