ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, January 18, 1983 Page 5 Folk Festival: Good Vibrations and music flow By Isabel Bradburn and Jennifer Gamson HIGH-ENERGY level and en- If thusiastic audience participation marked Saturday's Sixth Annual Ann Arbor Folk Festival at the Michigan Theatre. Despite the wintery tem- peratures, the afternoon show was full and the evening show completely sold out. Jim Post, as MC and first performer of the festival, established an energetic tone from the outset, by creating what he coined a "real get-down" at- mosphere. "If you're inhibited (about singing)" Post advised, "pretend like you're in the shower. Or your car. Now I've seen you all in your cars." He con- torted his face in high octave strain. The audience responded warmly to, Post's zany humor and flippant style, a continuity he maintained throughout both shows. First of the official performers in the day long line-up was Ann Arbor's Ann Doyle. As Doyle herself revealed, this was her first large audience, but she performed her songs with relative ease and poise. Added accompaniment provided by Madcat Ruth on har- monica, Stephanie Ozer on keyboards and Randy Pettit on bass enhanced her performance. Though her between- song talking was a bit awkward and her solo selections could have been more varied, Doyle's talent as a songwriter and her vocal delivery were clear strengths. Following Doyle were two North Carolinians who performed another type of "folk" - though not in the musical tradition. Connie Regan and Barbara Freeman, known as The Folktellers, alternately frightened and amused the audience with animated recitations of collected stories and anecdotes from the American South and West. These yarns ranged from a ghost story to a piece about two argumen- tative wives deciding whose husband is a bigger fool. Their performance was a lively and engaging illustration of an American cultural tradition, included in the annual festival for the first time. Although David Bromberg was billed as the main attraction, John Hartford became the afternoon's surprise favorite. A virtuoso fiddler, guitarist, and banjo player, he also acccom- panied himself with untraditional "in- struments," most notably by main- taining a running "clog-a-logue" in Adidas sneakers on an electronically- sensitized floor board. A gamester of sight and sound, Har- tford personifies the role of "musical entertainer." As he impeccably fiddled and twanged his way through such melodies as "Take Me Back to that Mississippi River Home," he further delighted the audience by drumming his cheeks, twirling his banjo baton- style and strumming it with his snappy bowler hat. He seemed to revel in sound experimentation, exemplified - particularly in his encore, "That Old Cabin Home on the Hill," which he sang as if he were under water. He asked the audience to repeat after him until the set finally ended in laughter. David Bromberg and his band were not particularly outstanding in the first show. They had only had, Bromberg explained, two hours of sleep the previous night, and this, coming at the end of an already long show, combined to make the final act drag. The band played a characteristic smorgasbord of fast bluegrass tunes mixed with more mournful songs such as "Dark Hollow," and the inevitable blues num- bers. Despite their exhaustion, which made the set seem unfocused, the band was tight, with perfectly balanced harmonies and smooth spotlighting of solo instruments. Particularly notewor- thy features included mandolin player Gene Johnson and the band's heartfelt rendition of David Massengill's "Fair- David Bromberg (left) and his band play all genres of music at the festival. fax County," popularized by the Roches. The evening show opened with guitarist Dan Crary, who performed a mixture of old style folk ballads, classical-jazz instruments and fiddle tunes that he had adapted for guitar. Crary's clean, technical expertise and ease in avariety of styles confirmed his reputation as a master flatpicker. His rapport with the audience was subdued, yet his subtle humor main- tained attention between songs. In in- troducing "Little Sadie," for example, he said the song is a murder ballad about an innocent young thing, "pure as the driven snow . . . who goes adrift." The set ended with Hartford joining Crary in two impromptu pieces on fid- dle and guitar. John Roberts and Tony Barrand gave a fun flavor to the festival, singing a potpourri of traditional ditties largely from the British Isles. Dressed in Tidy- Bowl whites, their particular appeal was their easy banter with each other. and the audience. Highlights from their selections included Barrand's cockney schoolboy recitation of "Young Albert (Eaten by a Lion at the Zoo)", and their parody of the American "Cowpun- cher," in which the audience supplied the predictable final rhyme to each verse. Claudia Schmidt, as the final act before intermission, revitalized the audience with her love of music and language and the radiant energy that flowed through her every sound and gesture. Her outstanding versatility, which has become a trademark, enabled her to range between music and narration, between intimate disclosures and socially-concerned poetry without a trace of awkwardness. She opened with the satiric "We Hate People Who Hate People Like Us," which the audience sang with her, and then moved to her more introspective pianolin piece, "W interludes." Although the instrument had its squeaky moments, the piece recalled the loneliness and poignancy of a snowy winter. Next, urging us to celebrate our "ab- normalities" in 1983, Schmidt sang, "I'm a Little Cookie . . . ," written by a father to his handicapped child followed by a poem by Carl Sandburg about people and their work. Her best piece was "Fuzzy," a joyous song writ- ten during her year in Ann Arbor, which demonstrated her talent as singer, songwriter, and dulcimer player. Recalling her happy childhood playing with the crazy man "Fuzzy," she called for the audience to sing with her, to "let out the kid in you!" Despite an encore, Schmidt left the audience wanting more. Ann Arbor is Bromberg's town, as he proclaimed, and the Ark is his favorite place to play. This affection clearly showed as the band kicked off the last part of the evening with high energy which they maintained throughout the hour long set. Despite missing one cue, fiddler Jeff Wisor shone, as did Brom- berg and, again, Johnson, while Butch Amiot played bass. The band's well-oiled closeness was particularly apparent in "Travelin' Man," which included second-long pauses between verses. The band dove into the mood of every piece, whether it was an upbeat bluegrass extravaganza or the more soulful pieces "Julia," and "Dark as a Dungeon." Bromberg played his solo songs, such as "Statesboro Blues," fludily and with in- tensity. Crary and Hartford joined the band for the final tunes as well as the energetic encore, which finished the festival on an upswing. As the audience streamed out of the theatre, someone summed up the day: "Man, we just heard a lot of music." T HE DA ILY CLASSIFIEDS FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 CONTACT LENS Replacements and Spares AS LOW AS $14.95 EACH Call For.Details 1 800 255-2020 TOLLFREE EYE CONTACT P.O. Box 7770 Shawnee Mission KS 66207 4 I INDIVIDUAL THEATRES , 5h Avea lberty 761-"700 i- l TUESDAY AIl Shows HURRY! ENDS THURSDAY! He is afraid. Heis tfo'oy etT aone. THE EXTRA-.(PG) TERRESTRIAL TUES 5:00, 7:10, 9:20 WED 12:30, 2:40, 5:00, 7:10, 9:20 "A MAGICAL BLEND OF MYTHOLOGY AND SCIENCE FICTION" -REX REED DOLBY STEREO TUES 4:00, 5:50, 7:50, 9:40 WED 12:20, 2:10, 4:00, 5:50, 7:50, 9:40 Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER John Hartford delights the afternoon audience with his banjo at Friday's Sixth Ann Arbor Folk Festival. Pigs Wi By Joe Hoppe TF PIGS HAD Wings they'd get a whole bunch of people and have them read poetry and prose, perform folk, classical and jazz music, and do a couple of songs from a locally written musical in East Quad's Halfway Inn tonight. If Pigs Had Wings they'd lend their name to self-described "Cabaret Voltaire" type programs. Pigs With- Wings is a company-organization- .promotion service specializing in "diverse entertainment." Diversions. Jay Frost is the president of the cor- poration. "Our main thrust," he says, "is to build a diverse audience-to ap- peal to anyone from the football jock to the library-bound intellectual. And have them sit together." , Tonight's show is the first of their th Wing productions in a year. Last year they had a couple of "happenings," and ac- cording to Frost, the current Half Way poetry readings are a continuation of what he started. This year's Pigs With Wings series is supposed to be more professional and 'organized than the poetry readings of late. Genres will be mixed throughout the night. Tonight there won't be a section of music, then poetry, then whatever. It will be an entertaining jumble; something totally different with each performer. Single performers will get S fly in 10 minutes on stage, groups 15. Pigs With Wings is fast-paced. Tonight's show will be primarily readings and music. Performers primarily local. Pigs With Wings is always open for acts. Anyone with a talent they'd like to exhibit can get in touch with Frost at 995- 2023. He says he'll audition almost anything. Pigs is expecially eager to showcase solo performers. Pigs With Wings shows are free. They happen every second Tuesday from now until April 5th, at 10 p.m. Taft Attractlons THE LARGEST PRODUCER OF LIVE SHOW FOR THEME PARKS KINGS ISLAND 1 INGS DOMINION CAROWINDS ,,CANADA'S WONDERLANDTM University of Michigan Michigan Union, Kuenzel Room Wednesday, January 26 Singers: 2:00-4:30 PM; Dancers: 4:30-6:00 PM Instrumentalists & Specialty Acts: 2:00-6:00 PM Kings Island I ® EDUCATIONAL CENTER TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Visit Any Center And See For Yourself .tt._tt A-.- T1-n:a. - ---