THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Genuine By JOAN BORUS Anyone who was privileged enough to hear Norman Blake last weekend at the Ark Coffee- house knows that it more than compensated for missing Bob Dylan at Crisler. "Surprised you all ain't at the Bob Dylan con- cert," Blake told a packed house last Saturday night, wryly add- ing, "I'm him after taxes." Indeed, as one talks to him this desire to be recognized indepen- dently of Dylan becomes even more pronounced. This is reflect- ed not only in a very fine spoof of the former's "Mr. Tambour- ine Man" that he did for me dur- ing my interview, but also in his comments to the audience. "People are always asking me what Bob Dylan's like," he said. "I don't know the man outside of one or two phonograph records I've done for him. I think he was trying to figure out what was happening to him and now I think he's found out," Blake said, referring to Dylan at the time when Nashville Skyline was being recorded. It is only in recent years that Norman has begun to actively tour, record, and write songs, achieving the recognition he so AP Photo richly deserves. Most of his mu- sic reflects images and memo- ries of his past; of a background that is deeply rooted in the blue- grass idiom. Much of the ma- terial he performed on Saturday comes from his album entitled Norman Blake; Home in Sulphur Springs, Georgia on the Rounder Records label and is to a great extent autobiographical in na- ture. Blake was very willing to talk about his background, thus giv- Bluegi he said grinning. "We did have a radio, though, that ran on big bulb batteries. They burned up so fast that my father rigged up an old Packard automobile bat- tery and ran the radio off of that ... that's where I got interested in music because I heard music from the radio when I was a little-bitty kid and at that time there was really a lot of live string music back in the early rass at theArk "I want to play music like I would play it on the stage." ing more insight into the nature of his music. He was born in 1938 in Chattanooga, Tennessee, where his father had a public works job in a boiler factory. When Norman was a year old, the family bought a tract of land with their small savings in Sul- phur Springs, Georgia, which happened to be the next adjoin- ing land site to his grandfather's homestead. His father continued to work in Tennessee and did some farming on the side. "It was just real quiet we didn't have no telephones: we didn't have any electricity - it was a pretty quiet existence," forties," he said, namiag some of them that are no longer in ex- istence. The home was back in the woods, right at the foot of Look- out Mountain, and overlooked the Southern Railway. Many of the Blakes worked for the railway, which is the source of many of Norman's songs. "They were telegraphers basically, my grandmother and her brother and all her people - they were all railroad people," he said. Ac- cording to Norman, the railroad had a definite style to it at that time, a pattern that was disrupt- ed in the early fifties when me- chanization replaced human la- bor, such as the telegrapher. Various members of the Blake family played musical instru- ments, so Norman grew up sur- rounded by musical figures. Of particular influence was his grandmother, who taught him to play his first guitar piece, The Spanish Fandango at age eleven. Norman has emerged with very definite ideas about his music and now he wants to play it. Shunning, larger commercial companies for smaller compa- nies like Rounder Records, "a collective of freaks" to use his phrase, Blake places a high priority on recording, but in his own style. "I want to play music like I would play it on the stage, rang- ing from by myself to six or seven people. I just don't want to put something on record that I couldn't perform alone or do with the same people that re- corded with me - if you sound a certain way, that's what your records are supposed to sound like. I would like to have an opportunity sometime, though, because of the fact that I do play a lot of instruments and have a lot of sounds, and have a lot of musical lines in my head to use extensive overdubbing just to see what I could do with it." A new record on Rounder, as well as tentative plans for a record on the Takoma label are his latest plans. As he mentioned, Norman plays all sorts of instruments. Although he is best known for his guitar playing, he is espe- cially interested in the man- dolin-"I'm a mandolin player at heart," he said, "and the dobro. I made a living on the dobro at times when I couldn't seem to make a living on any- thing else. Norman is also very critical of the direction country and bluegrass music is taking as a whole and stresses that there is indeed a distinction between the various types. "Oh good God yes," he said. "Bluegrass covers a wide area, but it certainly in any sense is removed from country. The line over to country crosses with cer- Norman Blake own bag or create a new one for you. It just gives you a little novelty aspect to your music - the rock band who can play a bluegrass tune." He sees the movement in this direction as falling short in the long run adding, "the only way the form can be ungraded in its natural way is to take new ma- terial or rearrange old mater- ial that is already in the form. Music in the long run has to say something valid to me - my idea is to play original mater- ial that people should write- they should try to write original instrumental and vocal mater- ial in the bluegrass tradition and they should take some of the old songs that are not worn out - not just old blue grass songs, but old country ones; rock and roll isn't in a related field to bluegrass." Norman is an interviewer's de- light, willing to talk about him- self and his music in great depth. It is easy to see why other musi- cians feel comfortable with him -his easy rapport, honesty and sincerity are instantly felt. He is also a deeply sensitive and in- telligent man - one to whom times have not always been kind. Shunning to go out, while in Ann Arbor, he preferred to stay at the Ark, absorbed in his music and treated me to a pri- vate concert of requests. Those who missed to chance to see him this time around should make every attempt to catch him at the next available opportunity. DIAL 668-6416 1214 S. UNIVERSITY Sot., Sun., & Wed. Promptly at 1, 3, 5, 7, & 9 p.m. Mon. & Tues. of 7 & 9 only John Prine tain groups that appeal more to the listening audience of blue- grass, but have chosen to elec- trify and commercialize their' sound, whereas bluegrass is basically composed, of acoustic instruments. He is expecially critical of what is termed "New- grass," - "where they do a lot of top forty and rock and roll songs taken into the bluegrass thing. I tend to disagree with this faction - I just don't see where that borrowing songs out of another idiom, borrowing licks out of another idiom and bringing them over into your own is going to do anything for your John Prine: Shining up those, old rainy-day blues" [ Y w b NASHVILLE W) - At a time when songwi'iters are almost as abundant as guitar cases, John Prine has fashioned a fan club which insists he's the best song- writer in the country - by far. The industry shares these mu- sic lovers' respect for the 27- year-old former mailman, who was nominated last year for a Grammy as best new artist.. Kris Kristofferson recently called Prine "the greatest song- writer in the country right now." He may be right. Prine can turn a phrase or shake loose an emotion with his imagistic lyr- ics, such as: "Ain't it funny how an old broken bottle looks just like a diamond ring." His greatest ability is a pen- chant for writing two songs in one. One story conveys a gener- al theme, but the impact is re- alzdthrough a detailed ac- counting of some personal ex- perience. Critics have labeled his style s- e . f - estrangement." But Prine's own explanation indi- cates otherwise. "It's a conscious thing," he says. "It's like setting two stand- ards at the beginning of a song. I sometimes do a side thing for myself, even if nobody relates. to it. "With one, it's reasonable to expect people to catch on. The other part I'm doing for my- self. But I'm trying to fuse the two together . Two examples are "Sam Stone" and "The Great Compro- mise," which , was conceived from the Chicago Seven con- spiracy trial. "I was writing about empti- ness in 'Sam Stone,"' said Prine. "It wasn't an effort to cast soldiers, the war, drugs or anything. There were vehicles for getting to emptiness." Prine says he has no formula, but speed helps him produce. "Some of the best songs come out faster than you can write," he said. "You're just writing it down so you don't forget it." Prine's writing shows a natur- al grasp: of the tools of poetry. But the artist scoffs at the idea. "I really know nothing about poetry," he said. "Writing came real easy to me in school. When- ever anything came up that in- volved fiction, I could knock it out with ease." Idle time compelled him to be- gin writing at age 14, he said. Prine has three albums, John Prine, Diamonds in the Rough, and his -latest Sweet Revenge. He's planning a fourth. The third album marked a de- parture from his style of simple, heavy songs geared to acoustic picking. It's more electric and humorous. "My earlier songs were some- times down numbers and could be depressive. One is all right, 'but four or five in a row could be too much. I wanted to write as much stuff as I could." His fourth album will mark a change - not in lyrics but mu- sically. "It'll be pretty differ- ent," he said. "I want to write parts for the band. Use the music more. 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