4 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily, Thursday, October 30, 1986 Ferron, Bim, Caldor to warm Power Center By V.J. Beauchamp There's nothing like looking forward to a show with a performer you know is going to be great. Here we have one of those evenings to really look forward to: three great performers on one bill. Tonight at 7:30, Ferron, Bim, and Connie Caldor will perform at the Power Center. Canadians all, they are. And they are no strangers to Ann Arbor's flourishing folk scene. They have all appeared at the Ann Arbor Folk Festival: Bim in 1985, and Connie Caldor and Ferron were both in 1984. And they are all familar faces at the Ark(637 1/2 S. Main), as well. Connie Caldor, tonight's opener, is a singer/songwriter with a versatile range. Equally adept at piano, guitar, and singing acapella, Caldor is a real charmer. The majority of her songs are story songs, performed with a dramatic flare, mixed with a generous amount of patter. For awhile, Caldor was a regular facet in the Mr. Floods' Party/Ark circuit, while she was making Ann Arbor her home. Her aim is to make her audience feel at home, and she usually suceeds. Bim is a great Canadian hero. He has , a strong following in homeland. Bim is the sort of person you can't be lukewarm about; you either love him or hate him. His appearance at the 1985 Folk Festival inspired bursts of swooning admiration by one half of the audience, and a mass emigration by the other half. The rumour goes that Bim began his career as a gospel singer. His present non- gospel style of performing is a bluesy rock shuffle, and he hides his quite nice voice in the raspy tones of "bluessingers." His voice sounds much worse than it really is. But don't be deceived. Bim is a great guitarist, a great songwriter, and a great performer. For just a taste of his live performance, check out Anything You Want, his live1982 solo acoustic LP put out by the CBC. Yep, them Canadians sure like Bim. Then there's Ferron. She's a bit of an acquired taste. Her songwriting and performing style has been compared to Bob Dylan (though she claims her Vancouver childhood was so sheltered from pop culture that she didn't hear him until she was 23. And then she wondered why he couldn't carry a tune). Ferron has received some of the most glowing reviews as of late of all the up and coming folk artistes, and her live performances demonstrate these raves are entirely deserved. She has a clear, rough alto and a simple, evocative guitar style, and her songs are filled with emotional landscapes and natural imagery. Ferron's musical style is rooted in traditional Canadian folksinging, and while she is well known in N.Y.C. 'among the Folk City crowd, she still lives in Vancouver. Already, I know, there are some of you who are saying "ooh, yuck, sensitive girl folksinger." That's your loss. While Ferron is often put in the "Women's Music" category because her love songs deal with women, she is by no means a "women's musician." She's the first such performer to win over mainstream audiences. In a review of her last album, Shadows on a Dime, Rolling Stone critic Don Shewey lavished great praise upon her and confessed learning her songs by heart. Her concerts usually have both sexes represented in close to equal numbers. As well, she doesn't fall into that women's music hole of self-righteous, windblown, overworked lyrics about idealized relationships that keep women's music separate and overlooked. She sings to regular people trying to make sense of their lives, with a spontaneous, unembellished voice, and clear concise songwriting. She is frank and disarming, funning, perceptive and weather-worn. Arti- culate, compelling, and unresolved. It's unfortunate that Ferron's recorings don't capture this sense of immediacy, nor are they as compelling. Testimony, her first U.S. release was obscured with rippling guitars and prettypretty I I Canadian singer/songwriter Ferron will be performing at the Power Cen- ter tonight with Bim and Connie Caldor. back-up vocals. While Shadows manages to cut through this ugly wax build-up, it doesn't reach out and grab ya like she does in concert. Her singular name translates to "iron" and "rust." This is not wimpy potatoes, friends, even if you are scared that a person might talk about emotions. Her voice rasps and cracks and is sometimes harsh, and her sincerity is already written in her words. So, what we'll be seeing tonight will be somewhat varied an I somewhat representative of the different directions of Canadia folkmusic. Connie Caldor, who wins the audience with stories and sheer charm. Bim, who wins the audience with stories and sheer bluesy guts. And Ferron, who win$ the audience with sheer strength. Tonight at the Power Center, 7:30pm. Brecht Co. presents By Karin Edelson .2 In a society that is filled with expanding options for a woman, should she still be forced to make a distinct choice between a career and mothehood? Caryl Churchill's * enlightening 1982 play, Top Girls t hmi explores this issue and tries to answer this improtant question. The Brecht Company's production of Top Girls features seven women, some playing dual roles, each depicting the various functions that women play in the workplace, the home, and in Sdutl S 8history. Characters of the present mix with characters from the past in illusionary scenes to show how women are presented through the ages. Top Girls" main character, Marlene, is the woman who LIVEENTERT AINMENT EVERY T HURSDAY NIGHT! chooses a career over motherhood and, as a result, becomes 'Top Girls' women have become 'Top Girls' by allowing themselves to look at make ideals as top," Thorne says. Men can also identify with some of the same feelings that women have about struggling to reach the top, of a corporation. In spite of its serious premise., Top Girls is an extremely humorous play. It provides entertainment as well as an important message and allows us to take a fresh look at our lives andl our choices. Thorne explains that the best way to make a point is to amuse the audience, and Top GirlsE is sure to make us laugh while also teaching an important lesson. Top Girls will be'performed at the Residential College Auditorium at East Quad for three consecutive weeks. Showtimes for ekend explores Thursday, Friday, and Saturday performances will be at 8:00 p.m. and Sundays, November 2 and 9 at s of women and 2:00p.m. Tickets for Thursday and ople in relation Sunday performances are $4. Friday and Saturday performances are $6. A special preview price for ay seems to be Thursday, October 30 is $3. irector, Barbara Tickets are available at the nen will like it Michigan Theatre Box Office. For amused at how more information, call 995-0532. The Brecht Company's presentation of 'Top Girls' this wee the struggle of modern women. completely authoritarian in her job. As the head of an employment agency, Marlene becomes systemized in her "slotting" of women into their various positions. This systemization eventually encompasses all of the facets of her life. She becomes carried away with the class differences over-categorizes pe to her job. Although the ph devoutly feminist, d Thorne feels that m too. "Men will bea The English Composition Board's ACADEMIC WRITING SERIES Presents "EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW 2 ABOUT GRAMMAR, PUNCTUATION AND MECHANICS* *BUT DIDN'T KNOW WHOM TO ASK" Proper grammar, punctuation and spelling facilitate the presenta- tion of a writer's ideas. But how can you clarify your writing if you are uncertain when to use or whether to use "there," "their" or "they're"? The third lecture-workshop in the ECB Academic Writing Series will answer such questions. ECB Lecturer Michael Marx will moderate a forum on grammar, punctuation and spelling ECB Lecturer Robert Carlisle discusses pronoun use in "Problems with the Use of One"; ECB Lecturer Ele McKenna explains how to use commas in 'Using the Comma Purposely"; and ECB Lecturer Barb Morris offers some guidelines for spelling in "What Every Writer Knows: Nobody Speaks Spelled English." A question and answer session will follow the presentations to answer individual queries. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30 4:00 - 5:15 229 ANGELL HALL 4 chloav -fnro k nnt onnuwh 1 AOf LLGy 19, vV LN ivy By Todd Levin Robert Ashley will be "returning" to the Ann Arbor campus for two performances on Sunday, taking on the role of composer/performer with both Gerard Pape's Sinewive Ensemble and the Ann Arbor Chamber Orchestra. This homecoming is long overdue; since Ashley was a student here in the early '60s as an undergraduate and graduate in the School of Music. His avant garde 'operas' have garnered recognition all over the world, and he has single-handedly formed the oeuvre now known as "performance art." Ashley, along with three other University students, formed the contemporary music group known as ONCE during the early '60s. This group was the first of its kind to specialize in performances of contemporary music in the United States. In its five years of music, ONCE invited such legendary names as John Cage, Robert Rauschenberg, Luciano Berio, and the Domain Musicale as guests, well before these people reached their current height of fame. Ashley also formed the Sonic Arts Union in conjunction with his association with ONCE, and begun working on his multi-media 'operas.' Two of these such pieces will be performed Sunday at the Michigan Theatre. The Wolfman (1964) is probably the best known feedback piece ever composed. Ashley says that the main prerequisite of this composition is "The use of volume levels that are unattainable except through electronic amplification." He stresses the need for the right type of equipment and for the correct placing of loudspeakers so that very high levels of amplification are possible without feedback occurring, but 'leaving volume in reserve so that feedback can be produced when required. Against a background of a tape collage the composer improvises on four components of vocal sound. Each phrase lasts one breath and divides into three Darts. Between each phrase the amplifier level is turned up to produce feedback. Ashley says of the nature of this feedback, "the particular kind of vocal cavity allows a certian amount of acoustical feedback to be present within the sounds produced by the voice." The frightening sounds produced by the high amplification and feedback is accentuated by a visual presentation which pushes The considered Ashley's "Magnum~ Opus" anddattains the highest level of artistic thrust of his many 'operas' (Perfect Lives, No Eleanor's Idea, That Morning Thing). The word 'opera' must 1e construed rather loosely here, as its application pertains to the overall staging and not to the formal piaI or plot development usually attributed to opera. Atalan ta contains three large episodes, based loosely around the characters of Max' Ernst (surrealist painter , Willard Reynolds (shamai storyteller), and Bud Powetl (composer, pianist). Ashley views these acts as dream sequences, slightly out of focus- as if you just woke up from an afternoop nap, and can only fuzzily recover1 fractions of the dreams you had while asleep. The ancient Greek myth of Atalanta is central to this 'opera' Ashley's point of departure for the 'opera' catches up with the story centuries later. It dramatizes the type of man a great woman might choose as a companion by recounting three aspects of extra=- ordinary men of our times (Ernst, Reynolds, and Powell). Not coin- cidentally, since the 'opera' iy devoted to her story- it is kit 'opera'- the genious of these threk men can be taken to represent three aspects of the 'opera' itself: image, narrative, and music. Ashley will be speaking tonight at Eyemediae'(214 n. 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