@I Page 6-Tuesday, January 15; 1980-The Michigan Daily Folk festival features mixed bag 0 TUESDAY, JANUARY 15 LUNCH-DISCUSSION TOPIC; "BANGLADESH AND ITS FOREIGN POLICY" SPEAKER: His excellency, MR. TOBARAK HOSSAIN, Bangladesh Embassador At the INTERNATIONAL CENTER 603 E. Madison St. Co-sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Center Lunch $1.00 For infc 2 noon ormation 662-5529 The University of Michigan Center for Japanese Studies & Department of For Eastern Languages and Literatures PUBLIC LECTURE By STEVE HOOK "The term 'folk music' has taken on an ever-increasing number of con- notations, and the absence of a univer- sally accepted definition has con- tributed to confusion in regard to its meaning." Kristin Baggelaar and Dan Milton "The Folk Music Encyclopedia," 1978 Sunday's Third Annual Ann Arbor Folk Festival seemed to epitomize the disconnected nature of contemporary folk music. By presenting a cast of wholly dissimilar performers, the festival provided the audience with a clear view of the spectrum of styles this genre entails, and in some cases provoked the question, "Is this really folk music or-not?" "Why the hell even try to define it?" Owen McBride bellowed backstage af- ter the second performance. "What's the point in giving it a little number, or placing it in some category?" Many other performers and admirers of folk music echo this sentiment, preferring to loosely describe it as "people's" or "traditional" music. AS A RESULT, we had bluesman John Hammond Jr. playing to the same audience as country-western balladeers Jim Ringer and Mary Mc- Casline, traditional revialist Hedy West, and David Bromberg, whose im- pressive instrumental abilities extend to jazz, blues and pop-rock inter- pretations. Clearly, Sunday's folk festival displayed much more than folk music, and this did not seem to bother the audiences. In fact, they seemed to sayour Leon Redbone's eccentricity and Bromberg's funk. Perhaps the most authentically "folk" performance Sunday came from Owen McBride, a traditional Irish folksinger who kicked off the festival, and served as master of ceremonies for the rest of the day. Involving the audience in an emotional string of choruses, McBride succeeded in the purest task of a folk musician: to tran- smit an unfamiliar culture to the audience through lyrical imagery and instrumental accompaniment. His nostalgic sketches of Scottish sailors and Irish rovers provided the day's brightest moments. Mary McCaslin and Jim Ringer, who were accompanied by David Brom- berg's fiddler Jay Unger, came through with the evening show's most memorable performance. Combining intriguing vocals along with the crystal- clear instrumentals, their set improved upon a similar appearance last fall at the Ark. JOHN HAMMOND'S collection of blues interpretations drew him an encore, as he wailed on his guitars and harmonica with great energy. Leon Redbone at- tracted the audience's favor more through his bizarre stage presence than through his musical, expertise. Although his flat-picking ability deser- ves some credit, he seemed more at home flashing his Polaroid at the audience and mimicking an opera singer than delivering quality music, much less quality folk music. Among the less memorable perfor- mers, the Red Cly Ramblers displayed many intriguing instrumen- tal compositions, but after two or three, they seemed to lose their appeal. On stage, string music is appealing for five or ten minutes, but becomes monotonous when the audience has no vocal stimulation to keep their wheels turning. Hedy West's performance was the non sequitor of the day, as she rolled thorugh a series of her regional (Southern, English, etc.) compositions without attempting to establish rapport 0 'TOKYO IN THE MEL/I PERIOD" EDWARD G. SEIDENSTICKER Professor of Japanese Literature Columbia University Thursday, Jenuity 17, 1980-4-5pm 200 Lne $HallWashington and State streets J-4 Daily Photo by KAREN ZORN Opening act and emcee Owen McBride provided the most, memorable! moments in Sunday's folk festival at Power Center. 4K* 4K 4( 4K 41 4( 4K 4t -k TOLEDO, OH - TUES., JAN. 29 University of Toledo Student Union ANN ARBOR, MI - WED., JAN. 30 University of Michigan Michigan Union FARMINGTON HILLS, MI THURS., JAN Holiday Inn W. Ten Mile Rd/I-96 and Grand River BOWLING GREEN, OH - FRI., FEB. 1 Bowling Green State University Student Union * A* *** * * ** ** ** * * * * * ** ** * TECHNICIANS Please send resumes by Feb. 8 Also at Cedar Point Feb. '2 & 9 AUDITIONS BEGIN AT 1 PM For other audition sites and further information contact: * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 4. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * -4. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * with the audience. For most of her ap- pearance, Hedy West strummed and sang professionally, but seemed to be merely going through the motions. DAVID BROMBERG, the festival's headliner, appeared for both shows, and delivered a formidable sample of his reporetoire, concentrating on. in- strumental arrangements with fiddler Jay Unger. Bromberg is clearly one of the country's most accomplished in- strumentalists, he displays a control of his guitar, fiddle and mandolin that serves to frustrate the legion of aspiring hacks who flock to see him perform . Bromberg has extended his style to include a mixed bag of traditional bluegrass tunes, blues and jazz interpretations, and-pop-rock numbers. 'He seems capable of suc- ceeding with whatever musical moun- tains he attempts to climb; but again-is this folk music? The sad fact is that this collection of musicians was selected, generally, on, the basis of drawing power-not on their accomplishments as folk musicians. It is a commonly held misunderstanding that folk music has very little potential for extensive mass media exposure or record sales, as it succumbs meekly to rock-pop music (which accounts for over 60-per cent of'- record sales in this country). Sunday's festival was also a benefit for the Ark, Ann Arbor's folk-music coffeehouse, which needed two Power Center shows to help subsidize its operations for the rest of the year. If Dave and Linda Siglin, the Ark's managers, booked a collection of much more traditional folk musicians (a la Owen McBride), reality would step in and cut attendance sub- stantially. L Jhis respect, ,the folk festival was a quied sccess. Before closing;Broniper issued a plea to the audience during\his second encore Sunday night. "The Ark is the finest coffee-house in this country," he said while strumming his guitar quietly, "really it is. You don't know what you have here. Please support them, take a chance on the musicians you have never heard of because they haven't been picked up by the media. We don't want it to die, we want to keep this thing alive." PUTIEM AWAY Ciarertes If you can live without your cigarettes for one day. you might find you can live without them forever. 1I JUST FORADAY._