The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 16, 1977-Page Troup By PAULA HUNTER The Soviet Georgian Dancers with the Tbilisi Polyphonic choir gave a stunning performance Friday evening at Hill Auditorium. With precision and vitality they welcomed the audience to a celebration of Soviet Georgian folk music and dance. This was not a presentation of au- thentic folk art but of spectacle. Since the essence of folk art is the communi- cation of shared values and ideas through a commonly shared idiom, the degree of authenticity became a moot point once these Georgian dancers stepped onto a stage in Ann Arbor. Seeming to understand this, the Georgians bridged the cuLtural gap with a spectacular display of precision a and raw energy. The Tbilisi Polyphonic was hauntingly beautiful in its rendition " of folk songs and as accompaniment to the dances. This 'all male choir was masterful, never faltering through complex rhythms and harmonies. The audience was' continually re- minded that this was not an even of conservation. This was most pro- nounced as the evening progressed to a two thousand year old pagan Georgian 'Kille n _s By WENDY GOODMAN and MIKE TAYLOR "Songs are like old friends when you've lived with them for a long time; sometimes they leave and then come back, and it's like a new relationship," Lou Killen remarked Friday night at the Ark. He estimates he has a reper- toire of at least 300 old friends, leaving plenty to choose from. Playing some Northumbrian favorites, as well as a few of the English ballads he's noted for, Killen used his sensitive concertina playing, charming singing, and sharp story-telling to delight the small Ark crowd. His contact with the audience was so strong that it sometimes seemed the room was filled with hundreds of en- thusiastic people. Killen spent a great deal of time ex- plaining his Northumbrian dialect and the words used in his material. Without this information, many songs would have been hard to understand; with it, they were fully comprehensible, yet strikingly unusual sounding. In ad- dition, he wouldn't let the crowd get away with being silent. Before each number he taught the chorus, and if the singing wasn't loud enough, he'd say things like, "most of you missed your chance to sing the chorus. You've only got two more chances." Sometimes his instruction had woun- drous -results. Towards the end of a sheep shearing song and harvest home song put together, Killen stopped singing to concentrate on the sounds his concertina was making. The audience carried on the chorus magnificently. He burst into a grin and said softly, "good on va." Down by Black Waters, an Irish air, was a short stunning concertina piece. Killen also demonstrated the tuneful- ness of Pleasant and Delightful, a won- derful song to soar with. Tommy Arm- strong's Trenden Grange Explosion provided an emotional change of pace. While the first set had many songs t about sheperds and fox hunts, like The Cotswell Sheperd and The College Valley Hunt, the second set featured a variety of mining and war songs. One mining tune was called, "a fine Ameri- can air that we plagerized." Another e hops folk song, Kviriya, sung in flawless five-part harmony. A folklorist could easily find fault i the "sugar coating" and showmanship characteristic of nearly every selec- tion. But again, folk artists as touring performers must find ways to com- municate with people who could not possibly understand the idiom in its pure form. The Soviet Georgian performers gave much of the spirit of their culture Soviet Georgian Dancers and Tbilisi Polyphonic Choir HillAuditorium October 14, 1977 Guran Bakradze, Artistic Director GeorgiiDarakhvelidze, Principal Choreographer at Hill tween the seemingly tireless dancers. Although the troupe used dazzling feats and wondrous harmonies to ex- press the high-spiritedness and nobility of the Georgian people, they also de- scribed honesty and a lack of pretdn- sion through the use of beautiful but simple lines and geometric formations. The dancers unabashedly wiped sweat off their faces and grinned broad- ly at the executionof jumps and spins. With a bold "heel first" swagger, dan- cers and singers exchanged places on the stage and seemed ever eager to give more of themselves to the audience... The final selection was a dazzling combination of music and dance, "a stirring climax befitting the Georgian spirit of music, song, and dance." Through their high energy perform- ance, marked by awesome feats of strength, agility, and sheer talent, the Georgian performers completely broke the barrier to their audience. The spec- tator became participant by exuberant- ly clapping rhythms for the dancers and the performers openly acknowl- edged their presence widely. grinning and waving through this "stirring cli- max." through such bravura. A Georgian folk war dance, Parikaoba featured a dis- play of swordmanship which literally made sparks fly. The program notes that it is "all in the spirit of a mountain tournament," and the Georgian per- formers' total involvement in the dance transformed Hill Auditorium into an arena for the breathtaking contest be- Dgily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER Steve Miller Miller flies like . n n a . r r rrrrrrirrrri . r r.r r r r rirr .rrrrrr Tommy Armstrong song, a "border la- ment," was a sad anti-war number. Kil- len chose not to sing the words.to Flow- ers of the Forest, but he seemed so deeply involved in the song that though there were no words, the anti-war mes- sage was clear. These songs would have given the second set an overly somber tone had Killen not taken the time to tell a few jokes and tales. "It's almost what - 60 shopping days 'til Christmas?" he queries as he retold, in utterly irrev- erent fashion, the story of the first Christmas. Killen's brand of dialect humor was most evident as he describ- ed this absurd tale. He then said, "we should follow it with a hymn." Instead of breaking into song, however, Killen began another story. This part of the evening was oddly reminiscent of Ramblin' Jack Elliot's recent perform- ance at the Ark. "I don't learn songs like other sing- ers," Killen commented. With so many songs to pick and choose from, its that surprising that he doesn't feel a real need to be learning new ones. "Twenty years ago, I was soaking them up," he said. "Now a song has to really hit me to learn it." If you count the albums he's appear- ed on along with his own, Killen has over thirty albums. His next Front Hall record will be called Louis Killen - Old Songs, Old Friends. It should be out by the end of November, but he warned that due to the great demand for "get- rich-quick Elvis albums, it is hard to get other albums pressed," so it might i charm, be out later. Killen spent four out of the fifteen months between September of 1975 and December of 1976 at home in Barnard Maine on Mount Desert Island. That's unusual for him, but since he sold his house recently, it's easier for him to just travel. "We'll finish with a couple of drinking songs," Killen said towards the end of the evening. He sang a good song about New Castle Brown Ale, and then broke into a jaunty version of John Barley- corn, one of Killen's old friends who re- cently returned to him. On songs like this, his feet didn't just tap, they dan- ced. "The night is officially over," he an- nouned nn bhhlf nf "hnc ef t hi Il O P By TIM YAGLE Basic, ,unadorned, All-American rock 'n roll has become Steve Miller's formula for mass popularity. This formula is apparently work- ing because his two most recent albums Fly Like an Eagle and Book of Dreams, each have become double platinum. Miller and his band gave Ann Arbor a taste of his success Friday night at Crisler Arena. Former Miller band member Nor- Buffolo and his band The Stampede opened the show with a good mixture of country-rock and blue-grass mu- sic. An energetic, percussive climax got -the crowd ready for Miller. Steve "Guitar" and his six man band glided through jubilant versions of Space Cowboy, Take the Money and Run, The Joker and the dreamy utopian called Wild Mountain Honey where the audience reaches the euphoric feeling of being in a tranquil rainforest. What surprised everyone was the way the feature act started. The lights dimmed and a tape of The Victors roared through the PA system which got the crowd standing and clapping as if they were at a football game. Miller then dedicated the concert to Elvis Presley and played Swing- town. Next Stevie donned the har- monica with Buffalo and traded solos and harmonies for a song. Livin' in the USA and Jungle Love followed, charging the crowd up again with an abundance of on-stage energy. The lights slowly went out and Miller. and his gang left the stage with Stevie 'saying "Have a nice trip." The keyboard wizard took the audience on a synthesized, magical trip accompanied by a sparkling, eagle,,, laser show. The Stake, Rockin' Me, Jet Airliner, and Fly Like an Eagle got the crowd rowdy again with each player taking the spotlight in an extended version. The band left the stage only to be summoned back for two bluesy encores followed by a fifteen minute jam. Stevie "guitar" Miller was flying high Friday night and he may never come down. He is producing hit after hit and his next album promises to be as good as his last two. But he still knows how to entertain an audience and I don't think anyone left discour- aged when the stage was emptied for the last time. Hilberry gives Shaw a delightful reading **4*5L.U MI a J* osI4 oPi yUn u Y w a wish to go home after the official songs are done.'' Almost everybody decidedn.a1 to stay, making a wise decision. After Jo n the Daily's FEM doing a traditional broadside, he sang two songs about sea wrecks. KillenAeive 3free lessons onPur 9I 430 seemed to have the energy to do A rts Denartm entP ndoor Ski Deck. Plus o s e another complete set, but it was late, rge a at.orstopbyThePeak and people were getting tired, so Killen 76"A!'-D552There's no obigation. 31 decided to call it quits. It had been a PhOne / 4 Uisours.onus. ainn wonderful evening, professional to the very end. ~t' -I 0,, TheMura.LoisDaceRoman 4 TWO PERFORMANCES IN T HE POWER CENTER AT 8:00 e"The Louis Company offered mar- velous theatre, absorbing choreography, M onday, ctober17"and an immediately gripping show".. M This is a splendid company with a Tuesday, uctober 18 Schubert (1977) superb creator at its helm"... Chicago Porcelain Dialogues (1974) Deja Vu (1977) Deja Vu (1977) "Louis himself is a brilliant dancer, G(one of the best in modern dance . . . an exceptional beauty of line and a crystal bright imagination". . . New York By MARK LLOYD Without question George Bernard Shaw would have strongly protested the opening production of the Hil- berry Theatre's 1977-78 . repertory this past Friday. He would have protested because the problems of a "progressive" matron pressed to tell her children the identity of their father can hardly stretch the umbrel- la of relevance over the dark and dread which haunts the city of - Detroit. And without question he would have applauded the quality of the performance. Under the direction of. Robert Emmett McGill, the cast of You Never Can Teil. gave a crisp, well-paced performance, true in accent and manner. When a "pro-' gressive" matron returns from a successful writing career in Spain to England, her children become curi- ous about the identity of,their father. A Mr. Valentine, appropriately named, enters the scene and woos the eldest daughter and unknowingly be- comes the dentist of her father. Everyone eventually meets and are alternately soothed and provoked by a waiter whose son happens to be an overwhelming lawyer. These meetings and leavings give Shaw the- nerfet nnnnrtunity ti You Never Can Tell By G. B. Shaw THiberry Theater Detroit, Mich. Dolly Clandon................Mary Ottmann Mr. valentine..... ...........Richard Gustin Parlor Maid..................Rhonda Smith Philip Clandon .................... John L. Beem Mrs. Clandon...................... Joyce Ramsay Gloria Clandon..................... Barbara Acker Fergus Crampton ...............Jim Birdsall Robert Emmett McGill,;Director Repertory Company blended with such ease that no player over- shadowed another, they were all excellent, from the parlor maid to Mr. Valentine. The play was begun in 1895, first arriving in London in the late autumn of 1899. It has been performed by England's best: Richard Burton, Peter O'Toole, Sir Laurence Olivier, and a family of Redgraves. But to sit immersed in a turn of the century England setting with charac- ters scoffing lightly over the prob- lems of money and unemployment; to immerse oneself in what is largely fantasy and to the citizens of that city and then to come out of the theatre and face the undeniable realities of Detroit would appall the social sensi- tivities of one G. B. Shaw, not to mention this reviewer