Sunday, September 14, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 14, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ... s Page Five PROFILE Bromberg: Ann Arbor's dear down -home singer is By STEPHEN HERSH DAVID BROMBERG, t h e bearded and bespectacled I kid from New York, is Ann Ar- bor's favorite folk singer. He's as comfortable shouting down- on-the-farm country tunes as: urban blues, and he's especial- ly happy to do his singing in this city. "I have a special affection for Ann Arbor," Bromberg said last week, "backstage" in the kitchen of the local Ark Coffee1 House. "For quite a few years I've been in love with a girl who lives here, and I can't lure her away. So I like to come here because then I get to see, her." But his motives for frequent- ing Ann Arbor aren't solely prurient. "The audiences here1 are really special," Brom- berg observed. "In most places, when I sing old songs people think I wrote them. But at the top of the instrument's neck. Bromberg first taught himself some guitar chords when he was 13. on his brother's blond hand-made Mexican guitar. a band together and play for a salary in higher class places. And I used to back people up in clubs, people like Ramblin' Jack Elliot." "I was listening to the Weav- Pleading sweatiness, the ers, Josh White, Big Bill Broon- singer unsnapped his d e n i m zy, the Reverend Gary Davis, western shirt, then took off the music like that. In high school, brown embroidered shirt be- I organized a folk music quar- neath it. Down to a grey t-shirt. tet, just before the big Peter, he polished off the last bite of Paul and Mary craze." bagel and reached toward the Bromberg went off to Colum- nearby table for a piece of bia at the end of his stint in fried chicken. the New York Public Schools, and spent a year and a half as "I started playing session a music major. with people like Chubby Check- "I used to go out to the quad er and Jay and the Americans." every night" he remembered, he went on. "At the same time, "and sing at the top of my I was doing an act in folk lungs." clubs. After I did that for some "When I was 19," he con- time I went on the road with tinued, "I started wandering Jerry Jeff Walker for a couple around Greenwich Village. I of years. Then I started writ- began playing there in "pass ing my own songs." the basket' joints, and I took He lives now in New York a leave of absence from City's East 80's, and likes to school." listen to old blues and rock 'n' back the little nuances in his tone- like putting a mocking edge on his pleading blues demanding better treatment from a wo- man. He might start a num- ber with a long stretch of coun- try picking in the vein of "Tur- key in the Straw," using short, then long phrases, raising his eyebrows at decisive moments, gradually shift to a groove of strumming chords, and finally sing a few verses of some phrase like "Oh, flop-eared, flop-eared, flop-eared me," a verse of "Oh me, oh me," get tongue-tied, and laugh. It's his tone and 'presence that are captivating on stage, not purity of voice or guitar technique. Like so many folk singers, his voice breaks once in a while and he has trouble reaching high notes.hBromberg~~ sounds more conversational than pure and resonant. What's attractive is the neat way he sings a lyric like: I wish she'd call me up just one more time TN CONCERT, he relies on a vast mental library of old I'd rip out the receiver and folk, blues and country tunes, let her waste her goddamn avoiding for the most part his dime. own compositions which ap-j pear on his albums. At the Ark Lines like that are sung with lastrweek, playing his first un- such rhythmic vehemence that accompanied concert in years, Bromberg can draw a laugh he chose such blues standards with the precision of a stand-up as "Key to the Highway," "No- comedian body Knows You when You'rej "oed"n ' :.,_ i i 3 i Ark people know the songs roll records, especially, at the and what tradition they come IJE PUT THE guitar down to moment, records by "an old from. They're familiar with pick up a bagel covered blues shouter from the 40's and lots of different folk traditions, with Colby cheese. Taking the 50's named Wynonie Harris. they catch nuances other audi- instrument from his lap re- ences don't catch."' vealed a brown leather belt ,O(NSTAGE, THE subtlest tooled with the slogan "Demon touches in Bromberg's per- t OOKING DOWN AT his in Disguise". formances are the little smirks Martin guitar, he began to "So I was playing these pass and wrinklings of his forehead tune the strings methodically, the basket joints," he said. as his guitar solos shift into turning the gold knobs at the "Every now and then I'd put a minor key for a moment, or Blue Front: Unbowed before the dictates of changing times make you crazy. You don't eat or sleep at regular hours, so your body gets disoriented, and your mind tends to follow suit. "The most destructive thing atbout it, though," he added, "is what they call the 'ongoing present': there's always some- thing that must be done, and you can't look ahead or be- hind. That's what really makes you crazy." (NE OF THE Ark's manag- ers shouted to Bromberg from across the kitchen, "I'm gonna go make the announcements now, David. You ready?" Bromberg answered, "Yup," and picked his guitar up by the neck. UM VOLLEYBALL CLUB GENERAL MEETING Monday-Sept. 75, 7:30 Kuenzel Rm., Mich. Union All undergrads and grads, men and women, interested in playing competitive D o w e r volleyball on the intercollegiate, evel are-welcome. For more info call Andy, 764-4850 Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS i i (Continnod from Pag )1 folded. "We wanted to expand our product line at one point, but I guess we never got around to it" he says in a tone of voicet that is partially regretful, but mostly resigned. He lowers his eyes and as- sumes a troubled tone when the matter of security is broached. He's wary of placing a dollar1 'value on his annual losses andN thus encouraging thosershort of cash and reading material. Dur-l ing the active seasons of the boom years, Collins retained as many as six employes at once.a Today, though, he is aided by only one person, Jill, the coun-3 terwoman who has worked the; cash register for five years. 1 EACH WEEK, the 73-year-old; Collins must tie and stack av mountain of dated reading ma-, terial to be sent out and prepare the shelves for new editions. When not attending to a problem at the counter or straightening the shelves, he stations himself at the combination work-area lookout point next to the Front's Arbor-Packard street entrance.:' Two other doors punctuate the storefront, but both were board- ed up years ago, lest the extra exits provide too easy an escape route for prospective shoplifters.' The half-century evolution of retail security systems - rang- ing from barred doors to mir- rors to magnetic window alarms -have, like so many evolving trends, totally passed by theI Blue Front. Has Collins ever, over the years, considered installing a security system? The question produces a concerned frown and inspires a quick, protective glance down the magazine aisle than a growing cc now flanked by a handful of Collins, though, iti browsers. His eyes wearily draw life, and he planst back, then avert to the floor. it and put up with "Well, you know that mirrors days and seven-da3 business sounds pretty good,", as long as he is abl he sighs. "But I guess I never five more years" really got around to it." an offhand manne He's asked if the job has be- knows that Collins come a strain after fifty years. I ceive of life witho His eyes wander to a distant Front. wall. No, not really, he says. ;Jill, his counterv Once you get into the newspa- the answer for t per business, it kind of getsth anwrfrt into your blood. customers who w Collins has had several of- could possibly ke fers to sell the place over the man coming back years, but never found one he "Does he like it? could accept. "Partly because here for fifty years. they weren't good enough, part- like it." ly because I wasn't ready to get out." tncern. For is a way of to stay with the 14-hour y weeks for I le. "Four or) he says ini er, but one can't con- ut the Blue woman, has hose casual onder what ep the old every day; He's been He'd better Is GUITAR PICKING isn't1 any purer than his voice. While strumming complicated chord patterns or picking diffi- cult runs, he often hits muted strings, or loses control of his dynamics. But though he can't play like a Norman Blake, he's competent when he's not trying} anything ambitious, and he can play funny sometimes, the way Chico Marx played the pianoj funny. He does a good job on the old blues joke of placing a few slithery notes in the mid- dle of a lyric in place of a word describing the sexual act; he plays unexpected notes which, for some reason, just sound amusing, and he invari- ably underscores the point with his facial expression. - - - - - - Down and Out," and Sittin' on Top of the World;" a few country farm tunes; and a num- ber about being assaulted by roaches and bedbugs, which he introduced Monday by saying, "This is a song about New York that I wrote. The funny thing about it is that it was recorded by Furry Lewis in 1927." "I'm on the road more than I used to be," he complained, "and it's getting harder to handle. In subtle ways it can I Stephen Hersh is a tributing Editor to the day Magazine. Con- Sun- 1 U-M SYNCHRONIZED SWIMMING CLUB Mi.AI..,IIFI i- CLINICS and TRYOUTS a WED., SEPT. 17-24-OCT.1 * 7-9 P.M. 9 MARGARET BELL PQOL - - - HE BLUE den spot. FRONT is no gar-: Paul Haskins is the Daily's; It's more a relic Editorial Director. ----f9 Dr. Paul C. Uslan OPTOMETRIST Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 CHURCH ST. 663-2476 ANN ARBOR CIVIC BALLET AUDITIONS For Junior and Major Corps II4, ii 44 ) 066 Israeli Dancing Tuesday, Sept. 16 YOM KIPPUR SERVICES SEPT. 14 SEPT. 15 Orthodox 7:15 p.m. 9:00 a.m. Conservative 7:15 p.m. 9:00 a.m. Reform 7:15 p.m. 9:00 a.m. ORTHODOX and REFORM services at HILLEL, 1429 Hill CONSERVATIVE at LYDIA MENDELSSOHN (in the Michigan League) On the occasion of the Jewish New Year the B'noi B'rith Hillel Foundation at the University of Michigan wishes Happy New Year and Welcome to Campus to: Hebrew House, AEPi, Israeli Student Organization, Association of Jewish Grad. Students, Habad, the Israeli Union, Habonim, and Shomer Hatzair. Wednesday, Sept. 17 8 p.M. 7:00 P.M. SYLVIA HAMER DANCE STUDIO at HILLEL 1429 HILL STREET 663-3336 525 E. LIBERTY Telephone 668-8 II 1 m Subscribe to The Michigan Daily I is' I, Says STOP, LOOK and LISTEN MONDAY, SEPT. 15th at 10:30 p.m. JETHRO TULL ON W-103's NEW WEEKLY ROCK BIOGRAPHY SERIES "INNER-VIEW" Join us for 90 minutes of talk and music BROUGHT TO YOU BY ALI\I ADD D MIIIt" RA DT Repeat of a Sellout Superex Stereo HEADPHONES * COILED CORD " PRO STYLING " MODEL NO. PRO B VI REG. $65.00 NOW $31.88 TECHNICS Model RS-610 Economy Stereo Cassette Deck " FERRITE HEADS * AUTO SHUT-OFF " DIGITAL FRAME COUNTER " TOP LOADING FRAME REG. $259.95 NOW $199.88 BACK-TO-SCHOOL CASSETTE RECORDER Brought to you by SUPERSCOPE. REG. NOW $".88 $59.95 MODEL C-101 " AUTO SHUT-OFF " BATTERY OR A.C. " 6V POWER ABILITY THEY ARE FINALLY HEAR Hartley Zodiac Speakers ZODIAC MODEL NO. 1 . 10" WOOFER " 1" DOME PHILLIPS TWEETER * FOAM GRILLS " WOOD CABINET " 5 YEAR WARRANTY REG. $125.00 NOW $74.88 ea. INTRODUCTORY OFFER QUANTITIES LIMITED 1 IN DOWN TOWN ANN ARBOR PICK YOUR NIGHT " Sunday-Tuesday OLD TIME MOVIES No Cover-No Minimum " Wednesday & Thursday HOT COUNTRY MUSIC with the GREVIOUS ANGELS No Cover-No Minimum . Friday & Saturday SING ALONG with THE GASLIGHTERS only 50c cover BEER-WINE-COCKTAILS FINE FOOD AVAILABLE 114 E. WASH INGTON a rdiqiot art5 grie of oriqinat cura cvents from variol riuaL compntrtitic5 THE TREES GROUP PRESENTS A Musical Meditation With Instruments from Around the Earth. Seeking to Make a Fragment of Christ's Love Visible Through Music, Sounds, Silences, and Move- ments Inscribed Upon the Air. Michigan League Ballroom Sunday, Sept. 14 8:00 p.m. THE TREES GROUP is a Christian, monastic-styled community based at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York. They 'compose original music emplovina over 50 instruments from around the world to interpret musically the texts of Scripture and ioy- ously proclaim the Christian faith. 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