r-I Tuesday, October 8, 1974 o 1HE MICHIGAN DAILY Poge Five ..iv.. I Geremia:o Rural sI- les By JOAN BORUS Although Paul Geremia has been involved in the folk music scene for the last nine years, he has been well known only on the East coast. Consequent- ly, his appearance at the Ark last weekend provided h i m with a new following. Geremia's specialty is a kind of blues music called coun- try blues. It features the acous- tic guitar, open tunings and finger picking. In many in- stances, the bottleneck is em- ployed to give other special ef- fects. During our interview, Paul, expounded upon his interpreta- tions of the blues idiom. For him, the country blues are the rural music of the South - a music that has no racial boun- daries, Although Geremia does main- tain that much of it is black 1 oriented and contains racial f overtones, he is of the opinion I that it is of littleyimportanceI in the final analysis. Instead he feels that black and white musicians developed distinc- tive musical forms that often overlap each other. "A lot of the attitudes that 1 people have about the music now were formulated by the re- cord companies," he explained. ' "For instance when you think of string band music you don't think of it as black music, but there were a lot of black string{ bands . . . the record compa- nies didn't want to have a mar- ket that was competing with1 itself." "The outcome of that was that string bands are white and blues are black," he continued. Throwing musical purism aside, however, one has to ac- knowledge' Geremia's crafts- manship. His travels have brought him in contact with many of the old blues musicians and the results are clearly in evidence. Much of his repetoire is devoted to those traditionalj blues numbers by such people as Robert Johnson, Big Bill Broonzy and Bukka White. The outstanding features are his clear phrasing on acoustic gui- tar (he plays a mean bottle- neck twelve - string) and his deep resonant harmonica. However, what is perhaps the most appealing dimension of Geremia's repetoire is that segment apart from the blues playing - his songwriting. The word "plaintive" rather than "blues" would best describe the mood for most of these songs: they have a poignant quality that isn't present in the more traditional numbers. In the final anlysis it is his' own compositions that keep learned from his apprenticeship to the old masters and has 'a clear technical and intellectual understanding of his idiom is obvious; to hear his renditions of the blues is to hear them played, in all probability, in the exact style and manner that he heard them played. Paradoxically, this is where his musicianship falls short, and it points up the familiar dilem- ma of how to evaluate the type of musician who is uot normal- ly associated with the concep- tions surrounding the music he plays. In such cases, one has to look to see what such a mu- sician does with this idiom dancing in the street to protest their oppression on WE WILL BE MARCHING IN SUPPORT OF SOVIET JEWRY "if not now when" Speakers * Singi'ng *Dancing HAKAFOT at 7:15 at Hillel March from Hillel to People's Plaza 8:15 RALLY at Peoples Plaza 8:30 HILLEL-1429 Hill I: Gerernia from being merely whether ne uses it as a spring- craftsnlike A recent review board for a new and different of his new record album that appeared in a Cambridge news- paper referred to his as a "jour- neyman apprentice" and his concerts at the Ark would seem to support that appellation. For like the journeyman he has served his apprenticeship and paid his dues and is now a a interpretation or strives to en- rich its original integrity by a thorough understanding of its technical and its emotional as- pects. This is particularly true with the blues, a music based on intense feeling. Listening to Geremia's interpretation leaves the listener with a flawless, but somehow hollow semblance. Photo by SUE SHEINER Paid Geremia master craftsman. That he has Puppets provide exol By BRIAN SUTTON puppets themselves, or tie pup- easy to tell whether thec The National Shadow Theatre peteer. er speaking was old or of Malaysia performed at Rack- Ahmad's puppets, when seen good or evil, serious or ham Auditorium Sunday after- up close, are beautiful, syized Several times, during noon, as part of the University creations, painted in great de- sations between the s Musical Society's Asian Series. tail - right down t> the vil- who are comic charact The shadow play, an ancient lain's fangs. The human charac- mad drew laughter fr art form in Southeast Asia, is; ters all possess an arm which audience - even though performed by a dalang, or pup- is joined at the shoulder and few audience members, peteer - in this case, Hamzah- the elbow, and a hinged jaw, so knew his language. bin Awang Ahmad. His puppets that the mouth moves and the Accompanying the ac are made from buffalo-hide or arm gestures with remarkable an eight-piece orchesti ox-hide which is scraped thin accuracy during dialogue. hidden behind the scre for transparency, then cut, en- The dalang provides the dia- orchestra consisted of graved and painted. logue, giving each character a drums, cymbals, gongs,c The puppets enact their different voice. Thus, he must: like woodwind. drama before a lamp, which not only be an expert puppeteer, The players perform casts their' image onto a screen. but an accomplished actor. Al- first episode from thel The audience sees only these though the dialogue was spoken ana, a two thousand y images on the screen, not the in Malaysian, it was always work which is the basisc Jessye Norman receives a warm homecomingat Hill iC h u morUNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN cha !r yw. con erva ers, om on at m lion ra, en. var or o ed Ra year of m U :act- shadow play repertory. In plot, ung, the piece was surprisingly sim- :nic. ilar to European and Mideast- ever- ern mythology. A number of ants,| rajahs compete for the hand of Ah- a beautiful princess, as in both the the Arabian Nights and Arthur- y a ian legends. The hero wins her, ost, by performing superhuman feats and battling various monsters, was in the best traditions of Greco- also Roman mythology and The Sons The of Hercules movies. ious The puppets were expertly' )boe- handled, the story and music in- t h e teresting, the entire art form ! unique and exotic. However, this nay- very exotic quality wasa draw- oldI back at times. Being unfamiliar Huch with the shadow play's conven- tions, I rarely knew what to look for. When such a piece is per- formed in Malaysia, the l e s s sophisticated in the audience are kept amused by local jokes and dialect humor, but the lang- uage barrier made this impos- sible. the hese However, as a cultural exper- ience, the performer was excel-; ras, lent, teaching the audience ach about Malaysian theatre, folk-! dif- lore, music and visual art. age The combination of enterain- :cel- ment and education is refresh- own ing, and for those of us who tend to spend our Sunday af- an ternoons watching the epic pen- struggles of pro football play- the ers, the Musical Society's Asian of Series provides a welcome ust, change of pace. with PROFESSIONAL "" * THEATRE **M* PROGRAMS presents oeiree Sisters by Anton Chekhov directed by Boris Tumarin OCTOBER 17 THROUGH 20 Love's Labour~s Lostor by William Shakespeare directed by Gerald Freedman OCTOBER 24 ThROUGH 27 by Christopher Marlowe directed by Ellis Rabb OCTOBER 31 THROUGH NOVEMBER 3 Tihe Time (C YcurLife by William Saroyan directed by Jack O'Brien NOVLMBE R 7 TH ROUGH -1U NENTHELSSOHN THEATRE--TICKET INFORMATION - (313) 764-04-50 SUSCRIPTIONS ONLY UNTIL OCTOBER 12TH. 2 -40"/oSAVINGS By TONY CECERE Saturday evening was home- coming for Jessye Norman. A graduate of the School of Music, Norman returned to her alma mater in a blaze of good singing and found a warm, receptive audience here to applaud her vocalizing. Unfortunately, Norman sang too much of a good thing: Hugo Wolf. Wolf's songs are very dark and philosophical and, taken in this large a dose, very pedantic and boring. There were! in total, 13 Wolf songs on a re- cital that also included five of Mahler's "Wunderhorn" songs.1 The evening opened with Wolf's "Morike-Lieder." Norm- an was well assisted from the outset by the extremely sensi-E tive accompaniment abilities of Irwin Gage. Gage varied his approach to the keyboard, pay- ing particular attention to de- tails in the text of these songs. Another Wolf piece, "Spanis- ches Liedurbuch," was next. Once again, Norman created the proper aura for these songs with a serious approach and a flawless execution.' In the Mahler, Norman added some dramatic hand gestures to her interpretation with great success. Here at last there{ were some lighter textures in the music, giving Norman anf opportunity to display some change in tone quality. Perhaps the salvation of the entire evening was Eric Satie's witty and simplistically beauti- ful Melodies. The audience, re- vived by this much needed dose of comic relief, delighted in whimsical nature of tf songs. Egged on by Norm well-timed humorous gestu the audience laughed after e song. Simple music is often ficult to interpret, and G must be credited with an ex lent performance in hisc right in the Melodies. The evening closed with approximate rerun of the o ing of the concert with "Italienisches Liederbuch" (ahem) Hugo Wolf. I m once again, credit Norman v an excellent job - her v is a powerful and marvelous strument. But, to be blur honest, by this point it re didn't matter: I had reac my saturation level. Jessye Norman is a young tist who has earned all critical acclaim given her. I my hope that she learns how oice in- ntly ally hed a r- the t is v to FREE BEER WITH Phil Hart AND John Reuther FRIDAY, OCT. 11 8 P.M. at REUTHER H.Q. HILL at FOREST -Paid Political Advertisement balance her, programs to show off the many facets of her in- credible voice, leaving Mr. Wolf in the drawer in the process. Jessye Norman i ED"\CNO gQSTk\D6 ?OWR cflTR Adv ance. Sales ' P PicketOffic, M1endelssoh n Lobbv ~7414-04.0 Power Center Box'Office After 6 P.M. 763-3333 The Canon F-I. mages are what it's all about. THE WILD CHILD One of Francois Truffaut's finest films based on a true story. In 1798 a 12 year-old boy is found running wild in a French forest. Are the efforts of Dr. Itard (played by Truffaut himself) to civilize him humane or, ultimately cruel? --with a short, THE EXISTENIALIST-- TONIGHT! - Tves., Oct. 8th - ONLY! - 7 & 9 p.m. AUD. 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