Page 6-Tuesday, September 20, 1977-The Michigan Daily Internationale at the Ark style, is one of his many strong points. With banjo in hand, he turned the ever popular song about a most unpopular bug, the "Boll Weevil," into an exciting concert opener. The instrumentation was as important as the words. Vanaver was attracted to folk music during the fifties. "Everybody was get- ting into international music and folk dancing," he noted. Through his in- volvement in folk dancing, Vanaver dis- covered the music of Greece, the Bal- kins, Yugoslavia, and Bulgaria. Several years ago, Vanaver stopped touring the folk coffee house circuit. Along with Livia, whom he recently married, he founded the Vanaver Cara- van, a New Paltz, New York based dan- ce troupe. "Everything I've done in the past few years has been geared towards the company," commented Vanaver. He composes, arranges, and along with three other musicians, performs the music, while Livia choreographs the work of four dancers. "The show includes anything from folklore to modern dance. It's kind of a festival," Vanaver explained. The company has toured India and Europe with the United StatesDepartment of State. In addition, the Vanavers are writing and choreographing "A Thou- sand Nights and a Night," a variation on The Arabian Nights, in connection with the Manhattan Project, a New York City theater group. Twice Vanaver performed songs by Uncle Dave Macon, a wagon-maker who didn't like automobiles. He often re-wrote old gospel tunes, adding his own political commentary in the pro- cess. "From Earth to Heaven" had the chorus, "I'll becha hundred dollars to half a ginger cake, I'll be here when the trucks are gone." Vanaver's composing and arranging ability often added to the beauty of his performance. He did Elizabeth Cotton's rolling "Freight Train" and Woody Guthrie's "Pastures of Plenty" with un- usual, lilting arrangements. Although Vanaver performed a num- ber of tunes in their native languages, including Green and French, he also played "The Immigrant," the only Greek song he's ever translated into English. It is a powerful, melodic song. Much of his material is closely rela- ted to' the art of story-telling. "Quelle Dommage Martin" is about a wood- cutter whose nose freezes and falls off. Three nuns discover it and decide to use it to snuff out candles back in the con- vent. "Some earlier versions have the nuns deciding to use it as a candle. Some people believe in the original story it was something other than the man's nose that fell off," explained Vana ver. Vanaver closed the evening with a re- turn to Georgia Sea Island hand-clap- ping. This time he got the crowd to clap in four-part harmony. This clapping led naturally into a well-deserved, hearty round of applause for an artist who had given a evening of unique entertain- ment. 'Lightworks' : Visual arts on printed page By SUSAN BARRY A few years ago, Eric Keller, ab- ssorbed in his self-styled Concentra- Ition labeled "art perception" in the Residential College, suddenly con- fronted an unsettling reality. Visual art, as a modern aesthetic form, had disappeared from the streets and show windows of Ann Arbor's cultur- al haven. In their place appeared popular crafts, marketable goods pedaled as souvenirs of a town that had once stood as a vanguard of crea- tive thought and expression. These crafts were mass produced and sold as hand crafted to those patrons who were willing to pay a little something extra to capture the popular spirit of "naturalism" that pervaded the area. In response to overwhelming de- mand, art fairs cropped up through- out the city, offering ceramics and other appealing coffee table articles that Keller described as "the art of Birmingham and Southfield, not' of Ann Arbor." However, while this marketable art thrived in the core of the art community, new fringe groups were developing alternative techniques. Using technology to create a new. NEWS FROM THE MAJOR EVENTS OFFICE When Steve Miller comes into town for his October 14 concert, he's bringing with him an opening act you'll find to a pleasant surprise compared to most opening acts groups take on tour with them; THE NOR- TON BUFFALO STAMPEDE. A recent "Rolling Stone" article on Norton Buffalo (no kid- ding, that's his name) quoted Mike Bloom- field as saying: "He's the best harp player I've ever heard. One night he ran through a medley of fiddle tunes so fast that my harp player ran out from the dressing room from to watch. He couldn't believe one hu- man being could possibly play what he was hearing." Commander Cody said, "He's the best cat blowing harp today . . . We ended up taking him on our European tour." A recent Detroit Free Press review said, "Buffalo is eccentric and eclectic . . . he gives you a taste of jazz, rock, blues, pop, country, honky tonk, and roller rink. But the overriding feel is of a crazy, laid- back country/western Boz Scaggs." Tickets are on sale at the Box Office in the lobby of the Michigan Union (763-2071). Probably the most unique series of con- certs ever presented was George Benson's four day stint in New York City last May. Entitled, "Benson x 4," the concept pre- sented the brilliant guitarist in four differ- ent halls ranging from the Museum of Modern Art to Avery Fisher Hall and each performance was a distinct performance, one with the Dance Theater of Harlem, one with Earl Klugh/Les Paul/Gabor Zabor one with Minnie Ripperton ... Eria Keller genre, local artists began to experi- ment with photography, typography, and xerography, and an unexploited frontier in graphics extended a beckoning invjttion to explore its, imagery. That this fringe never yielded to its potential was largely due to the fact, in Keller's opinion, that competi- tion among artists was driving exper- imental art further underground. Students refused to purchase or even acknowledge the work of their com- petitors. Several arty magazines sprang up but inevitably reverted to becoming a showcase for a few narcissistic souls who were eager to see their own work in circulation. In response to this, Keller collected a group of artists of varying me- diums together to'publish what they termed "a unique image-based mag- azine of ideas, events, and informa- tion. . . an arts magazine not con- tent to stay on the horizon of one art form." Thus, in the middle of 1975 Light- works was born, only to expire two is- sues later when everyone connected with the enterprise left town. Disillu- sioned and dispirited by the lack of support from the community, Keller kicked around several ideas for rear- ranging the format of the publica- tion. Eventually Keller met up with Charlton Burch, who became co- designer and editor. Burch and' Keller decided to drop the literary emphasis of the magazine and con- centrate on pursuing a completely visual approach. Working with the idea that readily accessible mediums of creativity, such as video, should abandon an elit- ist approach, Burch and Keller deter- mined that their publication should be a free vehicle for the exercise of, visual expression. They solicited art from the community and abandoned any restraints on the method of communication. Although Keller acknowledged that most of the copy represented "a sort' of Marxist attitude toward art and' society that sets us apart from other art magazines," Burch added that the accent was on "challenge and exploration rather than any heavy- handed dogma." "Art as a concept must never rest," declared an introduction to one of the early issues. "To impose a definition is to limit the meaning and opportunity for redefinition." The magazine aims to "destroy a lot of social pretentions about artists." Distribution is also on a national scale. And though Lightworks is a