ARTS Tuesday, October 9, 1 990 The Michigan Daily Page 5 *Tabor is fine folk with her own twist African film series is first for Ann Arbor by Greg Baise " June Tabor has an incredibly beautiful voice and great taste as *well. Her readings of traditional and contemporary songs, such as songs by Charlie Mingus or Lou Reed which she selects herself, certainly have won over her native British au- dience, as she consistently wins awards from the British music press. And although she is often referred to as the finest traditional folk singer performing today, Tabor's tastes are so wide that a listing of tracks from her past few albums would appear as anything but traditional (Note that both Mingus and Reed are not filed under folk). She will perform in Ann Arbor tonight as part of her second tour of North America. Tabor's latest release, Freedom and Rain, is a glisteningly produced collaboration with contemporary Bri- tish folk-rockers the Oyster Band. As *usual, Tabor draws upon great mate- rial to cover and dominate, to make her own. For instance, she and the Oyster Band transform Richard Thompson's "Night Comes In" from the spare and bare original into an almost assaultive, danceable song that is both propulsive and melan- choly. Another great track is Tabor's cover of the Velvet Underground and Nico's "All Tomorrow's Parties." Tabor's deep voice definitely recalls the late Nico's voice, although Lou Reed's composition flows smoothly from Tabor's lips, without the roughness of Nico's Teutonic inflec- tions. Accompanying Tabor's rendi- tion of the Ice Queen's majesty is some intense string and bow work from Oyster Band bassist/cellist Chopper and Oyster organist Ian Telfer, doubling on viola. The song catalogs of the Pogues, Billy Bragg and Si Kahn are also visited on Freedom and Rain, and some tradi- tional territory is covered as well. June Tabor began her vocal career as an unaccompanied singer. Soon she collaborated with Maddy Prior of Steeleye Span, who were one of the June Tabor 's folk music means blending sounds from all over. first groups, along with Fairport Convention, to fuse the musical worlds of British folk and rock 'n' roll. Since then, Tabor has built up a large following among music fans who have penchants for heartfelt, beautiful vocals singing excellent,, diverse material. And if following a Velvet Under- ground song with a traditional folk song like "Dives and Icarus" isn't, diverse enough for you, just bear in; mind that Tabor's previous record, Some Other Time, is a collection of jazz songs. On that record, Tabor collaborated with pianist Huw War- ren. Warren will accompany Tabor at tonight's performance. JUNE TABOR with HUW WARREN will perform at the Ark at 8 p.m. tonight. Tickets are $8.75 for students and members and $9.75 for others. Call the Ark at 761-1451 for more information. by Jen Bilik Tonight marks the beginning of Ann Arbor's first-ever African film series. Organized by the University's Program in Film and Video Studies under the guidance of Dr. Nwachukwu Frank Ukadike, the se- ries will span a wide range of African countries. Ukadike, probably the world's leading authority on African cinema, came this fall to teach in both the Program in Film and Video Studies and the Center for Afroamerican and African Studies. Originally from Nigeria, Ukadike has written a forthcoming book, Black African Cinema. The films in the series hail from Senegal, Ethiopia, Mali, Burkina Faso, Ghana and Cote d'Ivoire, offer- ing a privileged opportunity to see a wide variety of African films, illu- minating both the pan-African expe- rience and that of individual cultures of the African continent. "What this series is doing," ex- plains Ukadike, "Is correcting the misconception whereby critics have tended to lump every film from Africa and say this is African film. Films here reflect a plurality of works from different cultures making up what we now know as African film instead of bringing Xala [the first film in the series, by Ousmane Sembene, one of the best known African filmmakers] to a museum to show as 'African cinema.'" Filmmaking activity in Africa by Black Africans began, in each indi- vidual country, after independence from colonial rule. For the most part, one can see the beginnings of African cinema in the '60s. Unfortu- nately, most African filmmakers have not gotten support from either their governments or outside sources. African governments have tended to mistrust the- cinema, because of the extent to which the colonial powers appropriated films both, as propaganda for themselves and the ways in which blacks have been misrepresented in foreign films. Says Ukadike, "Unfortunately, African governments are not trying to make propaganda films that really explain the African issues to- the outside world." That means, for the most part, that African filmmakers have had to raise funds for their films by them- selves. Ukadike characterizes the African filmmaker as the cinematic jack-of-all-trades: script-writer, diec- tor, cinematographer, editor and fi- nally, a projectionist bringing his or her film to any facility that will have it. The roots of the colonial legacy still affect the filmmaker because )he colonialists controlled distribution and exhibition of films. The colonial powers had no interest in production because they didn't care to develop See SERIES, page 7 Was (Not Was) are you okay? Chr salis ne of a very few exotic plea- sures in popular music today is the anomalous Was (Not Was), a group that truly deserves its unanimous crowning with the dangerous acclaim of genius. In a place where some critics really do attempt to erect racial boundaries in music, Was (Not Was) don't give a damn. Many critics like to segregate the qualities of white and Black musi- cians into two attributes - the word and the groove. This multi-racial band, mostly the same, from the pre- ceding album, What up Dog? de- stroys all sorts of barriers of funk and rhythm. And credited with sar- donic gems like "The Party Broke Up," "Walk the Dinosaur" and "Shake Your Heads," the Was broth ers' lyrics remain stingingly ironic. The most notable piece is the hip hop-wary remake of the Tempta- tions' "Papa Was a Rolling Stone." Sir Harry Bowens and the eminently fashionable Sweet Pea Atkinson de- liver the tune's original theme credi- bly, while a guest rapper, G Love E, adds a contemporary anger to it. The groove, reinterpreted through' nasty rhythm guitar by Randy Jacobs and the simply brilliant tamborine-laden beat that the Stone Roses used for "Fool's Gold," smokes furiously. Between the ending wah after the verse and G Love's indignant delivery, there is an ingenious tension that very few musicians, white or Black, can touch. Classic rock and soul brown- nosers won't like "Papa," but I'm glad that these lunatics went for it. Tracks like "Earth To Doris" and "Dad I'm In Jail" from What Up Dog? have evolved into truly mania- cal jive like "I Feel Better than James Brown." In his laughably mo- ronic voice, Was streams on about a fluked relationship, "When we were in love, I pretended that you didn't exist/ That way, I loved you more." For these dancin' fools to jeer at J.B. this way is such bittersweet irony. "In K Mart Wardrobe" is a tongue-in-cheek, working-class criti- cism that will have many sneering uncomfortably: "Baby, this is love/ Discount coupons floated from above/ Broiled chickens sang us love songs from the skewer/ Have you ever been this close to going down the sewer?" The knuckleheadedness continues with tracks like "I Blew Up The United States" and "Dressed To Be Killed." Utterly notable is the out- of-control "Elvis' Rolls Royce." A cheesy saxophone blows through the white fog, while guest vocalist Leonard Cohen romanticizes in his usually droll murmur, "There they were - the gates of Graceland/ my eyes got kind of moist/ Home sweet home to rock 'n' roll! and Elvis' Rolls Royce." Iggy Pop and Down- town Julie Brown contribute backing vocals. Finally, "Look What's Back" turns outrto be a quick guitar-and- moanin' return to the timeless an- them, "Out Come The Freaks." The freaks are back, bless their misbegot- ten hearts. -Forrest Green III Save the LP. Daily Arts iU 4 READING & LEARNING SK I L L S EFFICIENT STUDY SKILLS = MORE FREE TIME! The U of M's READING AND LEARNING SKILLS CENTER is offering a Reading and Study Skills Workshop to help college students: u y x k * learn efficient reading and study strategies * organize and plan study time * read faster with greater comprehension " have more time for other interests Workshops will be held Thursdays, Oct. 18 - Nov. 8, r x +r. C E N T E R 4-5:30pm at the RLSC. Fee: $100 (U. of M. $135 non- U. of M. For more information and to register call the RLSC 998-7195 1610 Washtenaw (near Hill) students), Y -' --, /1ri I