Sunday, April 7, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Fivd Sunday, April 7, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PagePiv PROFILE 1 STRINGS AND THINGS Herb David: Making music out of wood By HOWARD BRICK T HERE IS a clay sculpture of Herb David at the end of the s,'les counter of his guitar studio on South State Street. The bust shxvs his deep, sunken eyes, his thiY b u s h y, protruding eye- brow , and his strong cheek- boes. A powerful, extra-large hand emerges from the base of the sculpture and drapes itself over the sound hole of a clay guitar. 'His chin rests on the guitar box, his head bent down in a contemplative pose. The whole figure s e e m s wrapped around the instrument, holding it with warmth and affecti.' The sculpture, made by a friend in 1964, expresses an im- portant aspect of the man, for Herb David, amateur musician a n d professional instrument builder, feels a special sort of affinity for both his craft and his product. For the past twelve years he has been building wood instruments - everything from guitars to recorders - with the belief that he is carrying on a venerated, age-old tradition. It is a tradition tinged with spir- ituality, combining a respect for his tools and his materials and a conviction that they, like him- self, "have a life of their own." The beginnings of David's in- terest in instrument building are complex, but they can best be narrowed down to the influences of environment and a very lucky chance encounter. The years of 1962-1964, when the guitar studio was first open- ed, were the big folk music lays in Ann Arbor. "Music was really poppin' then," David remembers. People used to stroll through the streets playing their instruments, and coffeehouses were first open- ing up. "We had some killer hootenannies in those days." By THAT TIME, David, a graduate student in psychol- ogy, had. played guitar for sev- eral years. His main interest was classical guitar, and after performing one night at the Player Club in Detroit, a mem- ber of the audience told him of an old man who built instru- ments by hand in the city. With- in a few dpys, he had arranged to meet the 70-year-old Armen- ian shoemaker who spoke virtu- ally no E n g l i s h. Instrument building' had been in his family for seven or eight hundred years, and he needed someone to carry on the tradition. Herb became his student,, and soon after drop- ped out of the University, at a time when he was only twelve credits away from completing his doctoral studies. Today, in one of the music lesson rooms at the studio, Herb leans back, pushing his chair off its two front legs, and con- siders t h a t critical decision. "I've thought many times about why I quit. But I'm sure it was the right thing to have done. It just seemed right at the time." It is clear that the old man meant a lot to him, and his bushy brows arch far up his forehead as he tries to make a point. "It was so amazing to find someone who was really wrapped up in what he was do- ing. He looked forward to every day, and each day was as ex- citing as the rest." That definition of a committed craftsman applies to David as well. In the twelve years he has been building instruments - on personal order only-he has con- tinued to learn new skills and new secrets of the trade. He has built lutes, mandolins, guitars, dulcimers, harps, and recorders. DAVID WALKS to the shop in in the back of the studio. Now in his early forties, he is a man of small stature with a develop- ing paunch and coarse, thinning hair. He wears clean, unfaded blue jeans and a button-down shirt. His arms appear muscular, probably due to his continuing interest in gymnastics, and they stand out from his sides some- what as he walks. He gently takes a half-finished lute off its hook in a drying room, and runs;his fingers over the smooth round surface of the in New color from Line Cinema "One of the artistically important films of the year." --William Wolf, CUE MAGAZINE "Charged with an intensity and a complex vitality . not equaled in recent cinema." -Roger Greenspun, NEW YORK TIMES CINEMA GUILD s$ 7&"9:05 Arch. Aud. =now Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK Herb David with a recently completed lute instrument's body. It is made of sycamore wood, he explains. His fingers run up the anck as he points out a part made o wal- nut and maple strips. At the very end of the neck, he has carved the face of a smiling old man with bulbous, shiny cheeks. For David, wood is a very special material. Though he has built a French coronette, a wooden trumpet-like instrument, he says he could never make a brass trumpet. "Brass is not spiritually satisfying," he says. "Metal is cold, but wood is like holding someone's hand. It's warm. You know, I think you can tell whether something has lived before." And just as he feels a special attraction for his material, David believes that the completed in- strument must hold a similar at- traction for its owner and player. That is why he will only build instruments on order or for him- self. An instrument has to "look friendly, feel friendly, and souna friendly." "I HAVE TO have somebody in mind-when I make an instru- ment," he says. "Instrument making is a special art, and you need a musician for an instru- ment."' Of course, besides his cus- tomer, there is always one other person that Herb keeps in mind, and that is the old Armenian. When the man died in 1968, Herb inherited all his tools, some of which date back 400 years. "Like there's an old saw, and it doesn't look right," he says. He is now back in the front of the studio, standing next to the bust. "Its blade is curved and the teeth are worn. But you take that into your hands"-and at this point he reaches his hands out to grasp an imaginary tool -"and it works! It has a job to do. These tools have a life of- their own." HE KEEPS a lot of the old man's things around him simply for their spiritual value, he says, and he even has the Armenian's glasses sitting some- where in the shop. "I know it's crazy," he concedes, "but people do all sorts of crazy things. Some people turn around three times before they'll do anything. This is what I happen to do." Howie Brick, Contributing Editor of the Magazine, has been carefully groomed for the Maga- zine editorship next year. despite his inexplicable interest in wood- work, architecture, and a gen- erally eclectic though low-key lifestyle. 603 E. Liberty r TP r 7 BILLY JACK Woody Allen's "SLEEPER" a rtHCINEMA James Bond "Thunderball" and "You Only Live Twice" -WED.-"Jesus Christ Superstar" MM 1 Nt ,lt.. ....x.i t//1 N A r' , l II; SHOW TIMES Mon.-Sat., 7:15 & 9:00 Sun., 5:30, 7:15, 9:00 t;l1ri11F1i1T. 'I1111it1i, .$I N. WASHINGTON*YPSILANT ,OPEN . MON. TURU.SAT. 6:45 P.M SUN. & HOLIDA Y$ 2.45 P.M.. LATE SHOW rRi_ 'SA r_ tt T1 t «.:.... . .-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .'^,.....«....... .....,..!{:..;.4,v""'6;.r. .,. The amnesty dilemma rages through lives ( continued from Page 3) is among them. He Is a high school graduate who arrived in Toronto in 1971. After a year and a half without working papers, Leo was finally granted immi- grant status. With no college training and a minor criminal of- fense on his record, Leo found that Canada was not as recep- tive to him as to some other war resisters.1 To complicate matters, the 23- year-old enjoys and earns his living by painting and renovat- ing the exteriors of houses. Cold Toronto winters kept him from that work for too long, and now Leo says he'd like to come back to the States where California, New Mexico or Arizona could offer him year-round employ- ment. He says he'd even come back under a conditional amnesty -, to work and to see his friends whenever he wanted to. ARMY DESERTER Jack Col- houn, a former student of the University of Wisconsin, also plans to return to the U. S. But his decision comes after living through a tragic experience in exile. "I'd been here for two months when my mother was taken to the hospital with what was di- agnosed as terminal cancer. She supported me in being here, and accepted fully that I wasn't go- ing to be at her funeral. Lucikly, she was able to visit me twice be- fore she died. But it's still a heavy thing. I have to admit that I felt a lot of anxiety at not be- ing there for the funeral." Although traumatic, this event was not the key to Jack's desire to return. "I want to go back be- cause I'm an American, and that's where I want to work for changes," he explains. Besides, amnesty or no am- nesty, he has discovered that in Canada there are very few jobs for people like himself, who are getting Ph.D's in American His- tory. Until Jack finishes his degree at York University, he will con- tinue the part-time work of co- ordinating activities of war re- sisters in Toronto. He currently helps to edit a magazine called AMEX (from American Exiles) and counsels other American re- sisters and deserters. What is perhaps most disturb- ing about the question of amnes- ty for these people is not so much the fact that there is none, but rather the fact that the is- sue remains unsettled. 'THE POSSIBILITY of going back to one's own country disrupts the exile's adjustment to life in a new country," according to one Toronto psychiatrist who has studied the cases of many draft dodgers. Dr. Saul Levine found, for ex- ample, that a colleague of his who was a deserter seemed com- pletely assimilated into Cana- dian life. He had married a Ca- nadian woman and expressed no desire to go back to the U.S. When amnesty became a big issue last January, it looked like he might be able to goback. His family and friends put a lot of pressure on him; he began think- ing that there were some inter- esting professional programs for him in the U.S.--programs which were more innovative than those in Canada. All of a sudden, his whole sense of the future was up- rooted. But, as the issue of amnesty lost prominence in the States, he was able to resolve his personal conflicts and again settled into life in Canada. It's impossible to know when or how many times this man's life will again be disrupted. But one thing seems sure - the end of the amnesty debate is not yet in sight. The Washington hearings have ended, Watergate headlines still dominate the front pages of American newspapers, and many resisters who would like to come back to the U. S. and re- sume normal lives here remain in limbo. Sandy Hausman is a graduate student in Journalism. RENE CLEMENT'S 1951 FORBIDDEN GAMES 4 Two young French children become playmates during the German occupation in 1940; they imitate the cruel adult life that surrounds them by collecting dead ani- mals for their private cemetery. Few films have matched this poignant , outcry against war. Brigitte Fossey, George Poujouly. Next Weekend: (Fri. and Sat.) CABARET (Sun.) RIO BRAVO CATONIGHT at Aud. A, Angell Hail CINEMA I 7 and 9 adm. $1 DIAL 665-6290 PG OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. JON VOIGHT as DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WANTED: Pre-1949 copies of the Michiganension Box No. 4 Sunday, April 7 Day' Calendar School of Music: Trumpet Student Recital, Recital Hall, 2:30 p.m. Univ. Dancers: Concert, Power Ctr., 3 & 8 p.m. School of Music: Heidi Harvey, piano, Recital Mll, 4:30 p.m. School of Music: Joint Faculty-Stu- dent Concert. Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. School of Music: James Forger, alto saxophone, Recital Hall, 8 p.m. School of Music: Early Pianos in European Museums, an illustrated lec- ture, Cady Music Rm., Stearns Bldg., 8 p.m. Monday, April 8 University Senate: Rackham Amph., 4 p.m. Physics: M. LeBellac, Univ. of Nice, Praanee, "Clustering Effects in Multi- particle Production," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 p.m. ' chool of Music: DMA Piano Series, Leslie Wright, Recital Hall, 8 p.m. School of Music: Opera workshop, Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. General Notices May '74 Teacher's Certificate Candi- dates: All requirements for teacher's certificate must be completed by April 10. Teacher's oath should be taken as soon as possible in rm. 1225 Sch. of Ed. Placement material can be ob- tained from that office in the SAB. Summer Placement 3200 SAB, 763-4117 City of Flint, Mi. Summre Mgt. In.- tern Prog. for graduate students ma- joring in bus. public admin., public policy, urban aAirs/mgt. Appls. and details available. BASF Wyandotte Corp., wyandotte, MI. Will interview Tues., Apr. 9, 9:30 to 5. Juniors in chemical and mechanical engr. Work in Engrs. Dept. at Plant/ Maintenance Services. Call and Regis- ter. Jelnn Deere Insurance Co., Moline, Ill. Opening for student majoring in Insurance. Must be in Junior Year. Come check. I I a -1 r. JO ANN ALBER/JULIA ANDREWS/MARGARET BAUM/NANCY BERG/BARBARA CERVENKA/ MIGNONETTE CHENG/SUSAN CROWELL/RITA MESSENGER-DIBERT/EDWINA DROBNY/CAROL FURTADO/GEMMA GATTI/ADRIENNE KAPLAN/ CHARLA KHANA/LEE KURTIN/FRAN LATTANZIO/ JOAN MATHEWS/DALEENE MENNING/ MARY ELLEN PORTER/JACKIE RICE/SUE STEPHENSON' DOROTHY SMITH/SUE THOMPSON/ ELLEN WILT/GEORGETTE ZIRBES/ WOMANSPACE APRIL 2-27 OPENS: APRIL 7 4-6 P.M. UNION GALLERY 0 MICHIGAN UNION " ANN ARBOR I I t - _ - -, - m I ACADEMY AWARD WINNER ---BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY INGMAR BERGMAN'S "CRIES & WHISPERS" Sat., Sun., Wed. at 1.3,5,7,9 Mon. & Tues. 7 &9 only ~ ,.: : j Yearbook Mass Meeting Those people interested in working on the 1975 Michiganensian are asked to meet Wed., April 1O---7:30 p.m. 1st floor Student Publications Building I I THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GILBERT AND SULLIVAN SOCIETY presents: IOLANTHE April .10th--13th /" 1 1 9 eta MUSKET 74-75 Now Accepting Applications 1r fo r ianaln uicaArls *tohPi Areas of Interest WINNER OF i EDITORIAL STAFF, PHOTOGRAPHY, ARTWORK, LAYOUT . . 11