Michael Rosenberg Roses Are Read Th7>e s,&&~ Of Ik D4 T omorrow's issue of The Michigan Daily will be the last produced by the current group of editors. With Monday's paper Omes a new staff- and for me, a new role, that of average reader. As my term as editor in chief comes to a close, I thought I would talk about the media and the Daily's place in it. When analyzing the media as a -whole, it's important to remember that you can 't analyze the media as a whole. I am continually amazed that when people talk about the media, ey group The New York Times, ard Copy," The Michigan Daily, "Larry King Live," National Public Radio, Ricki Lake and their home- town weekly - and then proceed to use an episode of Hard Copy as indicative of the group's actions. I resent being told that we in "the media" are at fault for something that somebody saw on television, as though the publisher of The New York Times joined the producer of , Current Affair" and me at Amer's st Tuesday to discuss how "we in the media" were going to handle a story. And if it annoys me, imagine how the publisher of The New York Times feels. The bottom line is that people can choose their own media outlets. If you're sick of seeing a story about O.J. Simpson on page one of The Detroit News every day, solve the oblem - stop reading The Defroit News. If you don't care about transvestite sex slaves, don't watch _"Geraldo." The number of high- quality news outlets is dwindling, but you can still pick up a copy of The Washington Post if you want to find out what is happening in the world. Still, not enough people pick up The Washington Post every day. Instead they eat what television feeds em, occasionally browse through a ewspaper and then spend their free time complaining that the media doesn't report the news honestly and fairly anymore. That's like buying a Yugo and whining that nobody makes cars that run well anymore - except that with the Yugo, at least the buyer has price as an excuse. That said, there are problems inherent in trying to find fair report- g. Almost everybody in the media as certain tendencies that detract from their effectiveness. One of the largest - and this is just an example - is that there exists more coverage of presidential campaigns than of the actual workings of government. As a result, average citizens are far more caught up in the question of who will be the next president than why they should care. But, as I said, you can choose your Own media outlet - and today, at least, you have chosen this one. This is a feat in and of itself, because since I have attended this University - and probably for much longer - it has been fashionable to dismiss the Daily's worth to its readers. But since my first year here I also have noticed that people read it. Walk into any lecture hall just before the start of lass and count the number of Dailies the hands of the students. People do read the Daily. We like to think there's a reason. Over the past year, it has been our goal to serve members of the University community by informing them on the issues that most interest them - or, in some cases, on issues that should interest them. Often, our work at this newspaper gets little recognition other than erisive comments. Few people realize that the Daily is produced entirely by their fellow students. We would never use this as an excuse for, any mistake, and we would certainly never ask that expectations of the Daily be lowered. But it is fair to ask that you respect the effort that goes into-the paper. Whatever the Daily means to those who read it, it means far more to those *ho produce it. There are numerous places on this campus where one can learn writing or computing skills, where one can train for a job or make friends for life, where one can learn to be a leader or debate ethics, where one can feel pride or become more responsible. But I doubt there is any place one can ~ixe Ā£ktibigtun3t ig The Michigan Daily - Weekend, etc. January 25, 1996 d.' i .t ti'!LS # ;. a p, ,: & a,~ 1 _ :h , & "1 n F -.. .{' Page 18 FOLK FEST1VAL %N JENNIFER 8 JCKL( NE DA1LN' WEEKEND EDITOR olk music, some misguided souls will tell you, is about as entertaining as watching the Prevue Channel at 3 a.m. It's too mellow, they say. Folk is fine - for lite-FM radio and elevator Muzak. It works when you're "Rocky Mountain High," but that's about it. If you happen to know any of these wrong-headed people, invite them to the 19th Ann Arbor Folk Festival. They'll hear folk music, all right - from gentle country ballads to fiery fingerpicking to funky, bass-driven Afro-Celt tunes to "acoustic thrash" - and the only thing it won't be is boring. For its organizers, the Folk Fest serves a dual purpose: To gather on one stage some of the country's best and most respected folk performers, and to function as the major fund-raiser for the Ark, the local club long regarded a national treasure by acoustic music fans. The latter is especially important this year as the Ark moves to its new, larger downtown location on Main Street. Headlining this year's festival is legendary guitarist Chet Atkins. An influential Nashville producer in the 1960s and '70s, Atkins helped define the pop-country hybrid sound of such artists as Willie Nelson, Dottie West and Dolly Parton. He's best known for his virtuoso acoustic fingerpicking, showcased on his 1994 record "Read My Licks," but Atkins has also made his mark in jazz/fusion, pop, bluegrass and rock. He's recorded with the likes of Doc Watson, Les Paul, and Elvis Presley (in the sessions for "Heartbreak Hotel" and "Hound Dog"). As if that list weren't impressive enough, the guitarist occasionally dips into classical music, appearing with the Boston Pops Orchestra and sympho- nies around the country. Michael Hedges doesn't look much like Atkins (no country gentleman he - Hedges wears his hair long and tousled and claims to love Pantera), but some regard him as the heir to Atkins' title as the country's finest fingerpicker. His sixth Windham Hill release, "The Road to Return," spotlights Hedges' wildly inno- vative playing style, which includes slapping the guitar'swooden sufrface, plucking strings, and hammer-ons with both hands. Hedges, who also sings and plays the flute, electronic trans trem See FESTIVAL, Page 58 The 19Th Ann Aezbon Folk FesnvaL SaTuRuay, Jan. 27 ar 6 p.m. HiLL AuoiTORium TickeTs aize $25. CalL 763-TKTS. ScbeahLeT ro appea aRe CheT ATkins, MichaeL Heaqes, Inis DeMenT, Janis Ian, Keb' Mo', Tima am) MoLLie O'Biien, DaR Witiaos, BaTT Buns, The Lawza Love Bann and bosTs TRouTFishing in AoieRica. CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: CheT ATkins, Keb' Mo', IRns DeMenT, LawRa Love, Janis Ian ad) DaR Williams. I T STEPHANIE GRACE LIM/Daily 4 ife's not fair, and nobody's perfect. No one can sit L back and say that their life - including both the things they have done and the things that have happened to them - has been all happy and good. But from the worst despair can come some of life's greatest happinesses. Just ask Laura Love; she knows firsthand. "I came from the most abject poverty imaginable," Love said. "I've been on welfare. I've been homeless. I've been in institutions. I've been in every kind of horrible situation as a child. Since I was a little kid I'd been thinking about ways to do things better 'cause I was very aware that I was beholden to others, that I was vulnerable." Love is one of a rare breed of people who continually search for the silver lining surrounding the blanket of dreary clouds which invaded her life. Perusing the con- Sweet is the melody, so hard to come by ... You lay down the hours and leave not one trace But a tune for the dancing is there in its place. - Iris DeMent, "Sweet is the Melody" The songs were always there, as far back as Iris DeMent can remember. I t just took her a little longer than most songwriters to find them. "I've always wanted to write songs," she said recently. "As I got to be a teenager, I wanted to write them even more, but for some reason I just couldn't. I would feel really intimidated by other people who were able to do it, and to do it well. I could never imagine myself being able to come anywhere near that. "I'd sit and write a line and I would compare it to somebody else's and decide it was no good. As much as I wanted to write, I never got past a line or two." And then, at 25, Iris DeMent found her songs-verses hidden in the church revivals, romances, travels and losses of her own life; choruses of laughter buried in long-forgotten childhood games. She wrote them down, moved to Nashville, taught herself to play guitar and began performing at open mike sessions. "It was kind of late to start writing, but it was the time for me," DeMent said. "I had to have some life experi- ences to help me get to that place where I realized that the right person to be was the person that I was. When I decided that, when I decided to pursue the thing I loved, was when I started being able to write." Now, 10 years later, DeMent has a major-label record- ing contract, friends like John Prine and Nanci Griffith, and a solid reputation as one of the finest singer/ 11