Page 12 -The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 30, 1989 IN Keelaghan awes Ark Indian summer stirs physical ela- tion with its warmth and bright col- ors, and recalls bone-aching memo- ries of colder days soon to return. James Keelaghan invoked a similar spirit in performance Saturday at the Ark. His songs combined stirring lyrics with expressive music much to the satisfaction of a foot-stop- ping, near-capacity crowd whose members were evidently fans from his previous Ann Arbor perfor- mances. Accompanied by electric bass and dobro, Keelaghan took command with the rousing "Hillcrest Mine," which evoked a mining catastrophe in Alberta. He sang in a clear, en- gaging baritone: "And in that mine young man you'll find/ A wealth of broken dreams/ As long and as dark and as black and as wide/ As the coal in the Hillcrest seam." The uptempo tune and driving rhythm belied the somber refrain and chorus. "Red River Rising" featured a ringing dobro slide solo by Gary Bird, creating the sense of shimmer- ing expanses above Keelaghan's 12- string rhythm and Bill Eaglesham's plumbed fretless bass. Keelaghan pushed for vocal power on "Misty Mountain," a somber anthem with driving bass, exclamatory singing, and chilling chorus harmony. He covered a range of songs, some romantic, some protesting, others reminiscent of traditional bal- lads. In between, he mixed it up with the audience, throwing off droll puns and repartee, leading Bird to in- struct the audience, "Don't encourage him." Many of the new songs have a prairie feel, contrasting with a more maritime tone on Timelines, his de- but album. This was intentional in part, he explained. The fine guitarist Kathy Cook was not available for touring, and so Keelaghan high- lighted Bird's playing on dobro and pedal steel. Keelaghan is inspired by local and obscure histories, and he ac- knowledges traditional forms while following his own intuition. "Small Rebellion," the title song from his new album, is written in ballad form and was delivered in steady, measured singing until bursting out in refrain. The song evokes the Bienfait mas- sacre of 1931, when miners tried to organize in coal fields of Western Canada: "Peace may be signed be- tween two nations/ But for protec- tion of your rights/ My friend it's always battle stations." He brought in the duo Bell and Shore for four songs prior to his own set, featuring the vocals and strumming of Susan Shore and the ringing guitar lines of Nathan Bell. Hailing from Southeastern Iowa, their music derives from traditional American folk sources but, like Kee- laghan, they bring humor and mod- ern insight to their stories. Shore's singing covered the full musical range, gaining strength and beauty rising from her natural contralto voice. They will be playing later this year at The Ark and were a won- derful complement to Keelaghan' s trio. After the show, Keelaghan said that, as a child, "Folk musicswas the music of the house." The inspiration to merge traditional folk music with his own research of history "came naturally," he said. "Folk music has always been historically based." The music comes from a Celtic connec- tion, to Appalachia and west to his native Alberta. A fan of Yeats, Pierce, Joyce and other Irish poets, Keelaghan follows their narrative in- fuences. His craftsmanship has helped to reach audiences outside of Canada. He said, "They seem to pick up the stories even though they aren't fa- miliar with the history." His new songs have brought the States, where Keelaghan has spent much of his time recently, into his songs. "The background is mainly different, but they are similar stories. The his- tories are quite the same," he said. He shares a sense of kinship with other Western Canadian folk artists. "Stephen Fearing, Spirit of the Canadian folk musician James Keelaghan returned for yet another Ann Arbor show (actually two of them) on atrda'' Fol' fan "m' rememher him frnm Iet ver's FoIk Fetivii atHill Auditorium JOL.UI dfl47.U IIR 1IA11,J 1110Y IU tUI~tlIUC.U UfII IIII ~UUM JL yDUAI JS.U SJUSI SJLUYt& al 111 "Dia the French Revolution Make a Difference?" The Sixteeth Annual Hayward Keniston Lecture West, we run in a pack. There is strength in numbers." Keelaghan introduced "Small Re- bellion" by saying, "While writing the liner notes I was thinking about the small rebellions that go on in-. side us. And then flickering on my TV screen I saw the rebellion taking place in Beijing. I realized that Kent State, Northern Ireland, Basque Spain, South Africa are all similar... the song has come to mean to me all those little acts of defiance that pro- tect our freedom." -Mark Webster Drood: Not goo-d If you were unfortunate enough to stumble into the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre this weekend, you caught the Ann Arbor Civic Thea- tre's shriveled offering, Drood. They were perhaps lucky that the show itself is a play of a melodrama done at a Victorian music hall. How convenient that all that bad acting could be justified as intentionally wretched - nothing could be this unentertaining and off-key on pur- pose. Michigan Law School's own Beverley Pooley was the Chairman who guided us through the show, in- troducing us to the various actors and their characters and covering for the technical mistakes. The audience warmed to his bawdy humor though I was not impressed. I enjoyed him last year in the Music School's Gianni Schicchi much more. The two main characters, Jasper (played by an unappealing Joe Diederich who looked at least 20 years too old for the young choir master) and Jasper's nephew Edwin Drood (played with no charisma by Wendy Gartner Bloom) had admirable sing- ing voices. But with the orchestra sounding like a dreadful high school recital and the tempos all laboriously slow, their unmiked voices could not help. And since neither of them could act, each was stranded on stage floundering. Edwin's fiancee, Rosa (played by Sue Booth), had the curi- ous habit of standing perfectly still while she was trying to sing. She had a rich tone, but I heard the same performance on the original cast recording. The scant plot was made even more undecipherable by Jim Posante's worthless directing and inept choreography. A simple tale of Jasper's jealous love for Rosa and Drood's murder (which the audience gets to solve in Act II) was stretched into a three hour torture-athon. Hqw or why the audience sat through the whole thing I will never know. They must have just wanted something for the outrageous ticket price. The cardboard-box sets with framed pic- tures hanging on them were ap- palling. And the few rented back- drops looked ironically out of place. Whatever possessed the Civic to be- lieve they could do justice to the challenging Drood, which requires only a mild level of performing competence, is beyond comprehen- sion. There was nothing to suggest that this was anything but a theatri- cal mishap filled with ridiculous ac- tors who yearned to be on the stage but who had no facility to make the stage shimmer with life. Sadly, The Mystery of Edwin Drood does not have one murderer but several: the director, the design- ers, the orchestra, and the actors. I suppose this corpse of a show is per- fect for Halloween, but even the dead couldn't stay awake through the whole thing. ,-Jay Pekala overcast performance by Zukerman In a sea of flashy, passionate young instrumental divas, Pinchas Zukerman is an island of refinement and carefully sculpted musical im- ages. But the island was under clouds for the first half of his concert last Friday at Hill Auditorium. Zukerman experienced the plague that afflicts many older, established musicians in the first half of his program with pianist Marc Neikrug. He let the music go on without him. Stravinsky's Pulcinella Suite was there, and Beethoven's Sonata in E- flat major was there, but Zukerman's heart was not. Phrasing and intonation were exact, but the pieces were lifeless, particularly the Beethoven - like a freshly cut rose without fragrance. 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