Go with The Flow... Funky grooves, Latin rhythms, hot jams - it can only be East Lansing's The Flow. 10 p.m. on Saturday at the Blind Pig. $5. mx~w#0mjuiI michigandaily.com /arts ANN ARBOR'S HAD THE BLUES FOR DECADES e By John Uhl ed by an impos Daily Music Editor ity of police) an affluent music Although the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival blues festival,c first appeared thirty-one years ago as simply the Ann event. Any mon Arbor Blues Festival, the event has only taken place donated to Afi twelve times in Ann Arbor. South, the birth The original Ann Arbor Blues Festival ran for three Moreover, th evenings and two afternoons in early August of 1969, would help ofte with a dazzling lineup of blues legends that included festival chairma Muddy Waters, B.B. King, Lightnin' Hopkins, Junior will play two nig Wells, Howlin' Wolf, Otis Rush, T-Bone Walker, ing and only get Luther Allison, Magic Sam and Son House. Anyone to make a recor with even an offhand conception of the blues is sure to Neverthelesst recognize some, if not most, of these names. The fes- than 200,000 pe tival drew approximately 20,000 spectators and was festival's audien g lauded by Down Beat magazine as "without a doubt cionados appre the festival of the year, if not the decade." ited to the most It was the first major blues festival held in North about 8,000 per America, and really one of the earliest attempts to House to lose S3 bring the blues to a wider audience. Peter Andrew: Michael Erlewine was a member of a prominent University in 1 local blues band and worked interviewing artists for gram that he wa their festival bios, aided in artist hospitality and is now down a studen the festival's historical archivist. "There was a small hold another blu country blues festival down in Memphis led by Robert '71. But Andr Palmer, but it was very tiny," Erlewine explained in a continuing the recent interview. "This (the Ann Arbor festival) was 1972, writing the first modern, electric, no-holds-barred attempt to ested student or bring out this kind of black music. This wasn't old within the blues, this was stuffthat was happening in the clubs of declined to ri Chicago and everywhere that white people just ment, I was weren't privy to." approach my A comparable roster of performers was organized friend John for the second annual festival in 1970, as a fair amount Sinclair to of musicians returned in addition to many who had not see if there appeared the year before, like John Lee Hooker, Bobby "Blue" Bland and Buddy Guy. Both the '69 and '70 festivals were organized by University students and sponsored by the University Activities Center and Canterbury House. Unfortunately, The Goose Lake International Music Festival, a large rock festival, was held outside Jackson, MI on the same weekend as the blues festival. A Daily editorial urged stu- dents to attend the blues festi- val rather than the rock festi- Photos courtesy of The Michiganensan val, citing Goose Lake's bad klison at the 1972 festival, and at 1969's innaugural event. vibes (attendees were surround- CHOOSE DAILY ARTS. IT'S THE ONLY CHOICE WORTH MAKING. ing barbed wire fence and a multiplic- id its general capitalist nature (making promoters and rock stars richer). The on the other hand, was a non-profit ey that may have been made was to be rican American communities in the place of the blues. e purchase of a blues festival ticket en hard up artists. The column quoted an John Fishel as saying "these guys ghts a week from 8 until 5 in the morn- t 30. And even if they do get a chance d, they usually get screwed." the Goose Lake shows attracted more ople, drawing away much of the blues nce pool. Although some blues afi- ciated the fact that the crowd was lim- t die-hard fans, the low attendance of day caused the UAC and Canterbury 30,000. vs, who was Events Director for the 971, wrote in the festival's 1973 pro- as forced to turn t proposal to ues festival in . ews puisued festival in** when inter- rganizations university sk involve- inspired to v Top: Luther A Junior Wellsa f . Depleted by tragedy, this* By Christian Hoard turous may opt for the indoor events Daily Arts Writer scheduled at the Michigan Theater Just like football games and over- crowded house parties, the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival is a back-to-school staple, and with Ann Arbor once again a buzz with hordes of students, this year's Festival is all set to serve up plenty of hot fun in the (late) summertime. Despite the last minute cancella- tions of recent stroke victims Ruth Brown and Stanley Turrentine, the Festival's lineup is one of the most eclectic in its history, with a diverse cast of blues, jazz, funk and soul artists performing at three different locations between tonight and Sunday. At Gallup Park, concert-goers will be treated to open seating and plenty of grilled eats as they check out per- formers ranging from local groove masters Funktelligence to more tra- ditional blues and soul acts like the Robert Cray Band. The less adven- m