4 + AIL Alik 48 - The Michigan Daily - Weekend, etc. Magazine - Thursday, October 7, 1999 0. 0 9 The Michigan Daily - Weekend, Profs implement Internet, changing classroom dynamic Loyal musicians take refuge from mafstr By Sarah Blitz For the Daily In the wake of the current techno- logical tornado, it seems we can do everything except keep up with the intensely rapid revamping of the world. Heads are spinning in the unending frenzy to get ahead, but it's already too late. Now is the time to aim for merely catching up: The vir- tual world of the Internet is technol- ogy's most timely and accessible solution to the mystery of living at warp speed. University students already can't imagine, nor scarcely remember, a world without e-mail and the World Wide Web. URLs are expanding into the most common language spo- ken around campus. Every class in the course guie now has, at the very least, an e-mail group if not its own specialized web page. The newest addition to these learning resources on the Internet include COW (con- ferencing on the Web) and e-note- book, both of which allow students to participate in an online forum by discussing pertinent classroom top- ics. Such formats encourage stu- dents to express their opinions, fos- ter a continual camaraderie of shared ideas, and provide an atmos- phere less intimidating than some lecture halls. Incorporated into many English and political science classes, as well as throughout the University, these new online formats have generated approval among many students and teachers alike. LSA graduate student instructor Emily Chan said the Internet is "certainly positive. It has significantly facilitated communica- tion between me and my students." As it increases communication between teachers and students, the internet has an innate tendency to eliminate face-to-face interaction, an activity that is frightening for some students when dealing with authoritative figures. LSA graduate student instructor Sam Sommers claimed assertively, "Students who would otherwise have been too shy i or intimidated to approach their instructors can do so over e-mail now." This raises one of the most preva- lent concerns about virtual commu- nication. Does the comfort, security and anonymity of one's PC interfere with the development of students' capacities for live interaction? This question elicited a divergent mix of reactions. "I don't care what anyone says," Engineering senior Pete Musgrave said, "an e-mail relationship is no substitute (for human contact) between a student and a.teacher, and when you have an emergency at crunch time, you find that out." Similarly, some teachers worry that the value and quality of a good old-fashioned handshake will be lost. Based on current trends, though, dissenters run the risk of being left behind. Large numbers of students and teachers alike declare they are willing and eager to shower their excitement upon technology's revolutions. Despite fundamental drawbacks to Internet communica- tion, e-mail has won the hearts of many wolverines from all corners of the world. By John Uhl Daily Arts Writer When asked recently what type of music audience members could expect from his group at this year's Edgefest, multi-reedist and festival performer Vinny Golia answered sheepishly, "Well, it's called Edgefest, so we decided it would be a little edgy." The recurring monosyllabic root "edge" complacently refers to the notion that Kerrytown Concert House's third annual jazz and creative music festival stands" on the cutting gef '9 edge of the Kerrytown, improvisational Various venues music world. And with a ros- October 7-9 ter of perform- ers willing to push the bound- aries of their music sonically, philosophically and education- ally, the festival earns its title's implications. This fact is apparent with even a quick glance at the festival's roster, which will divide its performers among four local venues. Golia diverges from the standard saxo- phone sound by employing an array of 20 different woodwind instru- way to approach music and named it "Po Music." The University of Michigan Creative Arts Orchestra juxtaposes traditional symphonic instruments and standard jazz orchestration in an improvising milieu that provides the University's music program with an eclectic alternative to the standard big band. Also set to perform are the acclaimed saxophone/bass duo of Tim Berne and Michael Formanek and Bobby Previte's Latin for Travelers, a raucous band whose classification might lie somewhere in the neighborhood of inebriated rock. Of course, for experimenting artists to exist at all, there must be both an audience that anticipates the unexpected and a performing envi- ronment that tolerates this unpre- dictability. And this association between artist, venue and audience seems to be an important factor in the decision for performers to par- ticipate in Edgefest. "I like the area of the country," Golia said of Ann Arbor and Kerrytown. "Every time I've been there, the people are very, very nice to me." Melford's feelings are much the same. "I've played at Kerrytown before," she said, "and I had such a great time. It's a wonderful space (the concert house) and I like the The sax/bass duo of Formanek(teft) and Berne(right) perform this w TELLING THE TRUTH AND RAISING THE ROOF. DAILY ARTS, RAH. c London...........$472 Paris ....... 96 New York.......$270 Amsterdam... .$583 (734) 668-8550 1103 S. University, Suite 1 (734) 769-2335 Michigan Union, Ground Floor cert house as part of his third ensem- ble configuration since May.. Kerrytown's amenable musical setting has been a boon for local artists as well. Tonight, this year's festival opens with performances by three groups who spent their forma- tive years in Ann Arbor: Transmission, Block and Explosion: Cerebral. Appropriately enough, the 1999 edition of Edgefest 'is headlined by Dutch saxophonist/composer Willem Breuker, an artist who, per- haps more than any other living per- former, bases his conception of music on the interrelationships between artist, audience and per- forming environment. Breuker's lII-piece Kollektief can assemble the influences of Duke Ellington, free jazz, marching band, circus and European classical musics into a homogeneous mish- mash so smoothly that some may miss the dramatic breadth of their palette. Yet the band's theatrical flair certainly won't be missed when members cavort with the audience or perform vaudeville-like pranks on stage - while the rest of the band continues to play. "I hate to sit in a row (at con- certs)," Breuker said emphatically in a recent interview from his home in Amsterdam. Confine him to formal speculation by the usual concert hall settings, and he will quickly lose interest in the stage and start pon- dering "people sitting in their frocks, or if their shoes are well pol- ished or how is their hair or if they have bellies." The playwright Bertolt Brecht also understood the audience's limit- ed attention span. Unsatisfied to let his plays become mere entertain- ment, he devised a new technique extolled by some admirers as "epic theater." By scattering unsentimen- tal compositions int song-induced action emphasize Brecht's m; hold interest without emotional histrionics. The Kollektief's sprightly stage antics functionality whe acknowledges his de Breuker's symbiosis is theater" in reverse, dr ater to enhance the auc ciation of his music. Courtesy Pieter Boersma Willem Breuker's11-member Kollektief perform at the Edgefest. ments. Likewise, pianist Myra Melford is interested in expanding the textural scope of her piano trio, Crush, in which Stomu Takeishi's fretless electric bass is occasionally attended by the dabbles of drummer Kenny Wollesen and Melford, when those two branch out into sampler and harmonium (a small, hand-oper- ated organ), respectively. Saxophonist Joe McPhee, impressed by Dr. Edward de Bono's concept of lateral thinking (provoca- tive, even outlandish, ideas inspire accidental but welcome discoveries), turned this thought process into a people who run that festival." These sentiments have not saturat- ed the jazz world, and Kerrytown's snug converted town house has posi- tioned itself as an ideal stop for a small community of musicians who collaborate outside the mainstream. "Their audiences are selective, but not large," according to festival coordinator Dave Lynch. Thus the names of certain appreciative musi- cians may appear on the Kerrytown events calendar frequently. In November, for instance, the interna- tionally heralded drummer Gerry Hemingway will appear at the con- Ai tares are round-tinp. Tax not included. Some resU-rictions apply. I TRAVEL I I I We've BenTre Joe McPhee weaves his