ARTS The Michigan Daily Sunday, October 2, 1983 Page 5 Sudsy singing at the Ark By Deborah Robinson IT WASN'T easy to spot the teetotallers last night at the Ark's First Annual Pub sing, if there were any at all. But the event, co-sponsored by Guinness Breweries, was intended to be a depar- ture from the standard quiet folkclub fare, and that it was. The audience, which stood under the big top on the Ark's front lawn, fulfilled their role as drinkers and rowdy sing- alongers quite admirably, especially considering it was a new experience for all. Rakish Paddy, alias Gerry O'Kane, opened the show with spirit, though the crowd had not imbibed enough of the same to appreciate him as much as it did in his second set. O'Kane is a Belfast native. The rebel songs he chose to perform, as well as others from a list of standard Irish sub- jects - drinking, being pressed into the army, and illicit sex - served to promote stereotypes of his homeland without caring for artistic merit. The same songs can be played with more, aesthetic sensitivity for a different ef- fect. Cultural purity aside, O'Kane was partially successful at creating a jovial pub atmosphere. He overestimated the control he had over his audience, which cost him a few friendly hecikers' shouts. But his presentation was authentic of a pub sing in Ireland - if the pub is one that caters to tourists and drunken Dubliners who don't want to go home. O'Kane's back-up band, Tanis, livened things up significantly. O'Kane himself strums predictable chord progressions on guitar, and bangs loudly on the Irish bodhran (pronoun- ced bow-ron , a goatskin drum. Tanis's guitar player didn't do much better, but the McKinny brothers, on flute and pipes, got the crowd clapping and- dancing. Technically, Brendan McKinny on flute could be rivalled by few players, even in Ireland. Leading jugs and reels with great speed and vigor, he injected great energy into the drunkening crowd. The acknowledged pros of pub- singing, drinking songs, and off-color Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Life Boys sent. their rock 'n' roll vibrations throughout the U-Club last Thursday night in one of Soundstage's many offerings. Live from the By Barb Schiele F YOU HAPPEN to hear some odd ILnoises emanating from the Union on Thursday nights, don't be too baffled. The diverse vibrations that rock the U- Club every other Thursday night are provided by an interesting mixture of local rock 'n' roll bands. For the past several years the various groups, mostly consisting of students, attempt to make a name for themselves in the rockin' world of music. So you may ask, "Who would put time and effort into sponsoring locally unknowns?" Soundstage Productions, a company established well before the U- Club existed, has been providing cheap entertainment for the students, by the students. It was created to attract students to the Union and provide contemporary musical entertainment. Just as it did back then, Soundstage, which is run by University Activities, has been promoting local talent. Co-chairpersons Daniel Segal and Steve Sands agree that Soundstage is completely student oriented. Along with most of the bands, the sound crew is generally made up of students also. As Segal states, "We're here for the students, to expose them." Every other Thursday night from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., the U-Club offers the lowest cover charge in town. The price for this musical entertainment rarely exceeds $2., and is usually only $1. The bands that Soundstage promotes all have one thing in common - their music is meant to be danced to. There's even a dance floor, a not small hallway- like strip set two inches from the stage, or a 6-by-8 "disco" space. People come to the U-Club to dance on Thursday night and Soundstage gives them not only the music, but also the room to dance. Beginning winter term, students are welcome to dance every Thursday night. The program this year, varying a bit from last year, includes two acts each week. The first act, usually one person or a small band, is unknown to any regular bar-goer. Using primarily acoustics, the music is rather mellow. The second act, which begins about 10:30 p.m., is a full band that may be familiar to local audiences. For the first part of the season, Segal and Sands have chosen bands to play with danceable tunes and known, or semi-known names. The bands are all different from one another in order to attract all types of music listeners. "Diversity is the key word," Sands says. To provide bands for the rest of the school year and to give new bands the chance to be heard, Soundstage will be holding mass auditions on November 3rd and 5th. Anyone is welcome to play; call UAC for more information. Diversity is the middle name of the band which helped start the season of shows for Soundstage. Life Boys headlined last Thursday night at the U- Club. A variety of music, all of which the band members themselves have written, kept the not-so-crowded U-Club dancing. The songs were a combination I-Club of The Stones, The Who, and The Psychedelic Furs all rolled into one. Doug Heller, lead guitarist and vocalist, believes that what sets their band apart from others is the idea that all the songs are "home-made.'"It's not easy to get people into songs they've never heard before. That's why Life Boys like to play a little bit of everything. "We play a variety of music - all styles; it's dance music," Heller says, attempting to put a specific label on the type of music. Life Boys, which includes Kurt Vandervoort on bass, Fritz Paper on the saxophone, Phil Berman on drums, songwriter and singer Bill Papineau and Jim Gertz on special percussion, headlined at Joe Star Lounge and Rick's last year. They also competed in the Soundstage spon- sored "Battle of the Bands" under the name of Boy's Life, which they changed after a group in Boston under the same title cut an album. "Dogs and Kids and Older People," a song about growing up, is a favorite of Life Boys listeners, along with "Luck is a Matter of Timing." The crowd was kept dancing off and on throughout the two-and-a-half hours that the group performed, as a few of the tunes had quite irregular back beats. But by the end of the night, the dance floor was full. As Heller says, Life Boys plays for the people and "just to have fun." Life Boys will be opening for SLK on Oc- tober 7th and 8th at the U-Club. Symphonic pleasures at the right price By Stephen Vann IF YOU THOUGHT that enjoying Beethoven and Brahms was beyond your budget, guess again. The Ann Ar- bor Symphony Orchestra gives closet classical buffs a chance to come out in the open with a free concert today at 3:30 at the Power Center. The program consists of selections by Brahms, Beethoven, Saint-Saens, and Raymond Zupko of the Western Michigan University faculty. Though it reads a bit like a Chinese restaurant menu (one from column a, one from the classical period, one from the roman- tic, one from the neo-romantic, and one from the 20th century) it really is quite promising. Brahms' Tragic Overture (op. 81) contains a great deal more drama and pathos than is usually recognized by the critics. Its themes are masterfully in- terwoven in three somewhat deceptive sections. At the opening it is bold and vigorous, trailing off into a pensive melancholy with the introduction of new themes. At first the listener thinks Brahms has wandered just shy of the mark, when (Deus Ex Machina) all of the themes are played out contrapuntally, and lead to a powerful positive Beethovenesque conclusion. More than likely the epithet "Tragic" was coined by some glib journalist who drifted off during the middle section. For better or worse, I'm afraid it stuck. The short Eighth Symphony of Beethoven (F major op. 93) rests com-. fortably in the shadow of the leviathan Ninth, but should not be underrated. As Beethoven's composition technique developed, he became more concise. Thematic ideas work themselves out without unnecessary digressions, and always (in the Eighth with playful panache). In July of 1812, Beethoven composed a humorous canon in honor of his friend Maezel, the inventor of the metronome. The rhythmic jokes of this canon fur- nish the material for the second movement, where the horns and reeds are reminiscent of Maezel's "chronometer." Variations for Orchestra by Ramon Zupko of Western Michigan University, will have its first Ann Arbor perfor- mance. As yet this work remains (if you will forgive me) the enigma of the con- cert, with no additional information about it or its composer currently available. Poetry Reading with Tina Datsko and Dottie Jones Reading from their works Monday, October 3, 8 pm GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe humor rallied the Ark-goers with their usual professional style. John Roberts and Tony Barrand, who have played the coffeehouse since its opening, said they have wanted to participate in a pub sing here for 15 years. Barrand added, "We have been (participating in pub sings), but it is the first time for you." The presence of drink in the audience (as well as on. stage) produced a very, different performance from the pair of English singers. Though they have a vast repertoire, they opted, naturally enough, to restrict themselves to drinking songs and bawdy songs. Before Friday night, not many people would have guessed that "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot" could be an obscene spectacle. But under the big top, in an atmosphere afog with exhaled particles of Guinness Stout, it was pantomimed hilariously. Thus was folk music brought to the masses this weekend. Perhaps :new faces -will appear at the Ark on: dry nights. Probably, events such as the Pub Sing will ensure the folkclub's sur- vival. Join the Daily Arts Staff Z INDIVIDUAL THEATRES $2.00 WED. SAT. SUN, SHOWS 'TIL 6PM "EXOTIC AND EROTIC ... Gannett Newspapers JULIE CHRISTIE in... - -FA AND Set in two time spans. It tells the story of a modern young English woman and her Great Aunt's shocking love in India in the 1920's. /" FRI., MON. 7:00 9 15 (Rj SAT., SUN. 2:30, 4:45, 7:00, 9:15 ENDS THURS.! If found to be an imposter, he will hang.. GERARD DE PARDIEU THE REUR FRI., MON. 7:25, 9:30 SAT., SUN. 1:10, 3:15, 5:20, 7:25, 9:30 Law dean trys to humanize the institution (Continued from Page 2) decent, logical thing for me to do but to grant their request," she said. SHE FEELS SHE is successful in dealing with students because she can relate to many of their anxieties about finding a job or deciding where to-move after graduation because she went through the same things here. But the job has its drawbacks also. Eklund said she finds it frustrating when she is forced to assume the role of the school's executioner. "The most painful occasions are those when students don't make it for academic reasons. I usually know them very well and typically think well of them too," she said. DESPITE THE devotion Eklund brings to her job, she tries to leave it all behind her when she goes home at the end of the day. Once she trades in her business suits for jeans and a sweater, Eklund has another job to attend to - that of being mother to David, 5, and one-year-old Kate. Sometimes this double role, or "schizophrenic lifestyle" as she puts it, takes its toll on Eklund. "I think there is always a constant tug (between home and work)...I notice that women in professional positions about my age are starting to (realize) that there really are costs. We can't pretend that the inability to work past a certain time at night is without cost to our employer or client." AND EKLUND, whose husband Steve is !a professor in both the public health and dentistry schools, is quick to point out that there also are costs to the family when both parents work outside the home. "As another friend put it once, every time the husband worries a little more, spends a little more time with the kids, makes dinner a couple more times a week or whatever, the husband is looking more and more - like the ideal male - such a wonderful father, such a wonderful husband, willing to make sacrifices. So at the very time when you are feeling pressed like you may be sacrificing the well-being of your beloved child, you're faced with the perfect spouse who seemingly does more than his share." "So even having a cooperative spouse doesn't help you get over the hurdles of feeling bad about what you're doing," she said. YET EKLUND said there is "not a chance" she would give up her life with her family for her career if forced to choose between the two. When whe can, Eklund tries to tie her two "jobs" together. As a member of the board of directors of her children's daycare organization, Eklund said her duties such as designing activities and working out schedules for students are "not all that different from my duties at the University." When asked what advice she would give to an aspiring female law student thinking about balancing a career and a family, Eklund is cautious. "One message I'd give (to students) is that while there are costs, it is quite possible to join the two and look at the inevitable calamities with good humor instead of frustration. My best female support groups are those that find a lot of women sharing horror stories and then laughing about them instead of those support groups that have everyone end up -crying about how tough things are... On some days it is very tough, but not always." J urI r Y r r r .ie v I- i IMFby Richard Brinsley Sheridan Directed by Ed Stern r Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre October 5 & 6 Previews, October 7-9; Wed. -Sat. 8 P.M.; Sun.,-2 P.M. v 13-16 Tickets available at the - Professional Theatre Program Ticket Office Michigan League Building, (313) 764-0450 v v v v r _ V V V u II ..r 1T