The Michigan DpIly-Tuesday, May 16, 1978-Page 7 A nightat the Bluegrass Opera By R. J. SMITH It was Taylorville, Kentucky, but it was the same story all over the South. It was post-Civil War, and the time of the New South was just beginning. In countless towns, young men were swept up in the migration that took them off the farms and into mines or textile mills. For those who escaped that fate, there was uncertainty; many fled to the North, hoping to find work in more humane factories. Promising to return once they had enough money to insure their never having to work in the mines, they got caught in a bind of paying for- that new car and paying off on the home. They never returned. It is an old story, and one with a rich history. In different forms, it is told in the work songs of slaves taken to America, and it rings out in the urban blues, as blacks moved north to industrialized cities like Chicago and Detroit. The Band's song "King Harvest" also speaks of this migration. It is a story that has been related for a long time - and it is one that deserves to be heard. THE ORIGINAL Bluegrass Opera Company of Detroit tells it well. In chronicling this northern transit from the city of Taylorville, they related to the people at the Ark F# iday night a refres ing concept of Detroit, if not a novel one, and a musical feeling that was often quite xhilarating. Entitled Stuck in Detroit, the show can hardly be called an opera - it is more a. strung-together series of vignettes. Written by a Detroit journalist named McKirgin, the show nonetheless was neither drawn out or disconnected; it remained simple enough to tell many small stories satisfyingly. For instance, there is the story of Reggie Taylor, who's family "treats him like tome hillbilly." Reggie took some ideas and opened a tool and die shop, and now he's got a Grosse Point home, "a fine Detroit wife," three kids, and six cars. But Reggie finds he has a life that doesn't provide the essentials - his wife won't fix him biscuits and gravy, and the kids don't like bluegrass. ANOTHER CHARACTER we follow is Tim Buskirk, working throughout the opera to send his wife Inez enough money to come to Detroit with him. By the end, we are told he never will. The song that follows is austere and plaintive, and very touching: . Where,.is the-gireft behind? and where are the dreams that I cannot find? he plans crumble and fade. asradedmy lifefor a hadufrus Another song, titled "Snow on the Ridges, Blood on the Coal," about those who did not escape the coal mines, is similarly affecting. The opera, which includes performers David Cahn, Steve Whalen, Herschel Freeman, Lee Kauffman, and Bob Wakeman, was paced well, blending several slow tunes bordering on straight country with plenty of traditional "rave-em-up" bluegrass picking. Two criticisms: the harmonies, when their attempts were audible at all, were often ragged. Also, the faster songs just didn't seem to go fast enough. Perhaps this had something to do with the fact that a last-minute stand-in bass player was used. THE SHOW ended with a very up-beat pro-Detroit theme, one which rings true even if it should be latched onto by Coleman Young as p.r. for the town. One character says at the end of the show: "I still hear people complain about how they want to go home - that's just a bunch of hogwash, there's nothing for them back there . . . I've lived in Detroit for 25 years, and besides, all my friends are up here now." In the end, the idea of modest satisfaction is at the root of being happy with life in Detroit. And the band, several of whom are struggling to find work as bluegrass musicians in Motown, firmly believe their message. Black or white, the men who moved north into towns like Detroit sought com- munity in their life, be it from friendships or the friendly union. It was a necessary thing, for they were stone-cold in facing a whole new way of life. Bluegrass is a music of community, where no one musician is the leader. At the Ark, the Original Bluegrass Opera Company play with a great deal of frien- dship, trading off solos and vocals with warmth. Their story and their music are captivating, and always a lot of fun. Jazz marathons fill the airwaves . By MATTHEW KLETTER While the gusty winds blew and the rain sprinkled on Ann Arbor last Satur- day, many people were privileged enough to experience a day of non-stop jazz music. The WUOM-WVGR Jazz Revisited Colloquium and the WCBN Miles Davis Marathon filled the air, bringing a spectrum of pre- and post- atomic bomb jazz. At 10:00 P.M. Friday night, WCBN D.JRoger Cramer started the festivities with the Miles Davis Marathon by presenting a program entitled "Miles Electric Move" (1968-75). Cramer, the originator of the marathon, played the most recent Miles material, featuring musicians such as Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock, Wayne -Shorter, Tony Williams, George Benson, Chich Corea, Dave Holland, Josef Zawinul, John McLaughlin, Jack DeJohnette and Keith Jarrett. The morning hours featured many of these musicians in Floyd Miller's interpretation of "Miles of the Sixties" (1961-68). At 9:00, it was five hours of "Miles & Coltrane," in- cluding Elvin Jones, Milt Jackson and Gil Evans and Cannonball Adderly. THE EIGHTH annual Jazz Revisited Colloquium got underway by 9:30 as papers on Duke Ellington were read by Dave Jones, Edda Schmidt and Dave Crippen. The scholarly papers initiated and welcomed what was to be thirteen hours of pre-atomic bomb jazz (1917- 45). Held in the Michigan Union, the colloquium featured a live broadcast from the University Club, the Washtenaw Community College Jazz Band, Jim Tapogny and friends, as well as taped music arranged by Hazen Schumacher. As I arrived at the Uni- versity Club Terrace I could hear the Ellington classic "Don't get around much any more" being performed by the Washtenaw Community College Jazz Band. This was followed by "Take the 'A' Train". Hazen Schumacher directed the af- ternoon, balancing it between live per- formances and a tape he arranged from the 9000 78's Jazz Revisited proudly carries in its library. After the live per- formance the tape played "Never Know Lament," a Spike Jones classic recen- tly put out on the New World record label. The Community Jazz Band per- OmichiganDAILY formed "Willow Weep for Me" which was followed by "Life Goes to a Party" on tape, followed by the Charlie Parker .classic "Scrapple from the Apple." THE LIVE sets were fantastic and carried the old-time spirit of jazi far beyond the Union. The b-and kicked out riff after riff of straightforward purist jazz. The tape continued with Cole Por- ter, Count Basie, Lester Young, Joan Morris and many others. Schumach- er explained that Jazz Revisited started ten years ago on WUOM and today is carried by 180 PBS stations at 5:30 on Saturdays. Schumacher sees jazz gaining popularity on campus. This trend is exemplified by the American Studies course which was offered this year as "History of Jazz." Meanwhile, as 2:00 approached, WC- BN put Miles' "From Bird to Cool" (1945-55) through the air waves as DJ Stan Freeman narrated the Bebop and Cool jazz stages of Miles Davis on prime time.- The marathon was due in part to the recent return of Miles to the recording studio, after a three-year absence due to illness. It lasted 29 hours, and in- cluded a "Survey of Styles" by Charlie Wolfson and a highly articulate presen- tation of "Orchestral music of Miles Davis" by John Sinclair. Returning to the University Club, I found the crowd enjoying "Jazz Me Blues," a number which took off where Ragtime and March music left off. The live part of the colloquium ended on a comical note with the "Original Dixieland One-Step" by the New Orleans Rhythm Kings and a live per- formance by Percy Danforth playing Bones. Danforth, 77 years old, played - as if he were 20, followed by a recording of "Things ain't what they used to be." SPRING ARTS STAFF ARTS EDITOR Owen Gleiberman ARTS STAFF: Michael Baadke, Bill Barbour, Susan Barry, Karen Bornstein, Patrieia Fabrizin, Donugas Helter, Paula Hunter. Matthew Kletter, Peter Manis, Joshua Peck, Stephen Pickover, Christopher Potter, Jeffrey Selbst, AnneSharp, Eric Smith, R. J. Smith, Kerry Thompson, Tim Yagle Man., Tues., Thurs., Fri., 7-9 Sat., Sun., Wed., 1-3-5-7-9 hell worship - your golden body Long before there's summer sun youll be a golden goddess with Tan-A-Mat. NASA-discovery, miracle Mylar keeps you warm in 500, yet won't get hot. Tans richer, deeper, faster -- without burn. Light but rugged . .. soft & comfortable . .. and unconditionally guaranteed. Tan-A-Ma. 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