California Screamin' I tell ya, there ain't nothing better for your constitution than a mad dose of sunshine, especially in the cold, evil heart of wintertime in Ann Arbor. Sick of being up to my 8-hole Doc's in yellow snow and Pepsi-colored slush, your humble hack broke wide to the left. As far left as you can go inAmerica, actually. Yup, you called it. The land of palm trees, N.W.A. and celebrity mudslides, California. Under the guise of a business trip,, my boyz and I made tracks to San Diego, determined to start our world domination of streetwear. Look out Stussy, here comes elephanthaus! (shameless plug!). The old, the new & the AZ Folk Fest by Andrew J Cahn But alas, no matter how beautiful the scenery, Cali's still located in the police state calledAmerica, wherethose of us blessed with sexy dark pigment must be reminded of our 'negritude' on a daily basis. Here's the scenario: The posse's (2 Black, 2 White - How p.c. of us!) cruising downtown San Diego (during broad daylight, mind you), checkin' out the hip cafes and shops. As the other brother and myself come out of some store, we were suddenly con- fronted with two of S.D.'s (far from) finest, aka the 5-0, aka the p-lice. As the Pharcyde would say, "oh shit." Let's call cop #1 "UndeTom" (cuz that's what he was), and cop #2 "Smug White Guy." 01' unc kicks right into bullshit mode, laying down some fic- tion about how we saw them, called them motherfuckers" andducked into said store. As anyone who knows me can tell you, I have no love for police officers (too many reasons to men- tion). But these same folks will also tell that the last thing in the world I'd ever do is provoke these powermad idiots. Smug White Guy just stood behind Tommy the whole time, obviously get- ting off on this blind brother giving us the 3rd degree. And as so many Black people know how to do, Ijustcalled up 'okeydokemode' andtalkedourselves out of any trouble. And people have the nerve to ask why I break into a cold sweat when apig trough (cop car) rolls by... Praise Allah, the rest of the week was lots o' fun in the sun. And best of all, I learned a really dope secret. Did you know that's there's actu- ally a whole underground industry that's run by and for kids? And that there are 20-yearold CEO's with blonde dreads andpierced navels making mil- lions? At the sportswear show we bumrushed, there were over 15,000 people, all somehow connected to the clothing/skateboard industry. I met a surfer that makes over one million duckets a year. Surfing. I saw compa- nies run by teens that manufacture T- shirts or skateboard wheels or tennies, raking loot in stacks and rolls. Some of these kids have got their shit set up betterthan IBM. Kids, man.That spent their nights screening shirts instead of doing homework, that studied Donald Trump's "The Art of the Deal," and made it work for them. I gotta give up big props to these youths of the so-called "Generation X," that have quietly rejected the line we're all fed about falling in line and becoming another productive cog in the killing machine. Instead of a blue suit and red tie, they sport Fuctwoolies and old skool Pumas to the office. And best of all, they're doing something they love. Gettin' paid (The economy, stupid). Take my man Vinny, a 17-year old cime T met nn the nlan roe Snnn olk / bluegrass legend Peter Rowan once sang, "Ain't no doubt about it / I'm going to sing and shout about it now / We're gonna have a revival." That is the spirit of the new album by Nanci Griffith, who will headline the Ann Arbor Folk Festival. "Other Rooms, Other Voices" is a collection of songs written by her favorite folk writers, but you would only know that if you read the liner notes - each song sounds as if she is the only person who could sing it. Though many other artists have been successful in the last few years with'collections of covers, most notably Natalie Cole, Rickie Lee Jones and Michael Bolton, Griffith's decision to make this record had nothing to do with the popularity of other records. "The whole point of this record was that folk music had been unheard by the masses for a long period of time, and there had not been a folk revival in twenty five years," Griffith said. "The reason for me to do this record was to pay tribute to the writers from the folk era, because without their influences I would never have become a songwriter. I haven't seen a record done like this, I certainly didn't get the idea from anyone else, and it had nothing to do with what is faddish or going on with music because folk music has not been what's going on." There actually have been a few tribute albums designed to renew interest in folk music's past. Michele Shocked's "Arkansas Traveler" is an out- standing effort which included a few traditional tunes from various points around the world, though with updated lyrics and subtexts. Bob Dylan's "Good as I Been to You" was at least an effort to pay tribute to his influences, though the songs are all too old to have royalties paid to anyone, and his voice is just too withered to make any of the tunes sound at all fresh. The difference between these records and Griffith's is that Griffith's mainly covers music originally written and recorded since the '60s. That was when America was going through the first folk revival, or, as Martin Mull said, "The great folk scare of the '50s and '60s." Though she does sing Woody Guthrie's "Do Re Mi," the other tracks were composed by many of folk music's major forces from the last thirty years, including Dylan, Townes Van Zandt, John Prine and Jerry Jeff Walker. Interestingly, only one track was written solely by a woman, Kate Wolf's "Across the Great Di- vide," and two others were co-written by females. Though Joan Baez, Judy Collins andJoni Mitchell were important to folk music in the '60s and '70s, the major figures were those men, along with Arlo Guthrie and Guy Clark, who appear on the record as accompanists. The difference between then and now is that whatever folk revival is happening features many female performers. Ranging from the idiosyn- See FOLK, Page 8 Crossland's return Many U-M students have attended the Folk Festival throughout the years and thoughtof what it would be like to on the bill. On Saturday, that dream will become a reality for Dave Crossland, who graduated from the University in 1987. His professional career began while he was still a sophomore, when he was a regular per- former at the Ark's weekly open stage. His first paid gig was that year when he opened for Tom Paxton, and eventually, he had his own headlin- ing shows. He continued to play at the Ark periodically until he graduated, and he even won UAC's Starbound competition his senior year. He is now based near Boston, but he has returned here to perform at least once each year. This past year has been exciting for Crossland, for his first real disc, "Here's to the Ride," is attractimg attention around the folk community. "I released an LP when I was a student," he said, "but it is really dated, and it is by no means representative of what I'm doing now." Now Crossland is preparing to play at Hill before the largest crowd he has seen up to this point. "It will be really good from a career stand- point," he said, "because it will help my regional recognition, but the folk festival is something I've always dreamed about." Though he graduated five years ago, he has not been asked to perform at the festival until now for strategic reasons. He said that he was consid- ered to play a few times earlier, but "Dave (Siglin, the event's organizer) wanted to wait until my career was ready for it." He is currently in the midst of his second national tour. Let's hope that the festival will do for him what it did for the careers of Nanci Griffith, John Gorka and Christine Lavin. Crossland said, "I don't want the size of the audience to be my peak." - Andrew J Cahn Griffith I? . . ' - m