4B - Thursday, January 27, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.eom Al 4B - Thursday, January 27, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom ~ V THE HILL' (2000), OVERCOAT Still not over 'Hill ' a decade. later By EMMA GASE Daily Music Editor While today's breed of folksy, envi- ro-friendly poetry lover is blindly wor- shiping the bearded ilk of iron & Wine, the Avett Brothers and Bon Iver to sup- ply that dose of acoustic singer-song- writer music, it's unfortunate that nine out of 10 of these flannel-clad follow- ers have unwittingly missed one of the greatest things ever to happen to the genres of Americana and folk in the last few decades. For shame, artsy people of America. In 2000, small-time musician Rich- ard Buckner made a decision that would quietly outshine even the most revered of Americana musicians. He put Bon Iver's Justin Vernon in his rightful place as Mr. Whimper of the aughts, and reminded us that Monsters of Folk is merely a vehicle in which four huge egos perpetually stroke each other. That year, Buckner set Edgar Lee Masters's 1915 volume of poetry "Spoon River Anthology" to music. Named after one of the poems in the volume, The Hill was originally released as a staggeringly perfect 34-minute, sewn- together single track (later, iTunes made the songs available individually). More like a campfire tale or a Larry. McMurtry novel in musical form than an album, The Hill is one of those radi- ant works of art that is oblivious to the notion of time. Though the lyrics might not be his own, Buckner could not have more skill- fullyrendered asettingon which to place them. Each one- to two-minute track is named after a person from Spoon River, Ind. and focuses on the nature of his or her death. Whatever the morbidity may sacri- fice in lightheartedness, it makes up for in sheer power of emotion as Buckner channels the victim's voices: a woman dying in childbirth or an old man wast- ing away from illness. On opening track "Tom Merritt," Buckner details a mur- der between two lovers that could raise goosebumps from the hardest of hearts: "I meant to kill him on sight / But that day / Walking near Fourth Bridge / Without a stick or a stone at hand / All of a sudden / I saw him standing / Scared to death / Holding his rabbits / And all I could say was / 'Don't, don't, don't' / As he aimed and fired at my heart." Perhaps, more than anything, Buck- ner's voice is the most valuable asset The Hill has in its arsenal. Inherently intimate, melancholic, weird, guttural and purely American, his trademark lilting warble at the end of each vocal run adds the rare X-factor that makes the other 99 percent of folk singers sound positively vanilla in comparison. Remember the year 2000? "Rock" was being reborn with The Strokes, The Vines and The Hives; Destiny's Child wanted us to say their name; Christina Aguilera and Britney Spears were duk- ing it out on the charts. Fads, people, only fads. What about longevity? What about creating Art? Richard Buckner's follow-up explored Spork Creek. The Hill is a grounding and endur- ing stamp on the dateless, the classic, the ambiguous. This album could have been recorded in 1915 (sans the electric guitars) or last month. It's the simplicitythat does it. It's the acoustic guitars that sound like they are being played in your living room, the warm electric ones that trace the songs CONDUCTORS From Page 3B you have the right to lead it." It takes more than mere musical details or theory to be successful in both the rehearsal and the concert. "A lot of conductors stop at pitch and rhythm of the song," Khaefi said. "That's the very basic mechanics of a piece - it's not even music at that point, it's just mathematical proportions." While Khaefi is in front of an ensem- ble, he has a million thoughts running through his head. "When I'm conducting, I'm thinking about tone, diction, unity, the ensemble and balance," he said. "I'm thinking of interesting ways to teach a passage, innovative ways to get the choir to bond on a sound, the rehearsals coming up" Since the University conducting pro- gram is small and allows the students to have plenty of conducting practice, stu- dents like Khaefi get the experience and feedback necessary to continue improv- ing and learning to balance the aspects of leading a group. Khaefi said the University's pro- gram is the ideal place for his dream to become a reality because of its comfort- able atmosphere and positivity. "There's no negativity or mean-spir- itedness that you might find at other music schools," he said. "I've seen departments around the country that don't have that camaraderie. This one is fantastic." Ultimately, the type of person who is inclined to pursue the challenging yet highly rewarding profession that is con- ducting need to truly love all aspects of music and the desire to unify and lead a group to its greatest potential. "Are you a person that's in tune with the people you are working with?" Khaefi asked. "Are you able to be com- manding and inspiring? Can you inspire people to perform the music they are performing better than if you weren't standing in front of them?" It's these qualities and more that allow aspiring conductors to paint music across theater halls and into the hearts of listeners. COURTESY OF OVERCOAT Get off of my hill. like fine embroidery on a cozy quilt, the mandolins and tambourine that garnish the record with their jubilant underlying presence. Simple instru- ments, simple lyrics, simple production. We seem to have forgotten one of the most rewarding qualities of truly great art - the virtue of subtlety. We live in a world of singles with flashy hooks, booming beats and raging techno anthems - all of which constantly pile on top of each other in an exhausting (and raunchy) rat race to be declared The Next Big Thing. In 2000, Richard Buckner was not The Next Big Thing. In fact, he has probably never even been described (or besmirched) by a phrase as stupid and meaningless as The Next Big anything, and if he were, he's most likely Above It. The Hill stands - no, towers - above its peers. Trendy alt-country bands can't touch this record with a 10-foot pole; no folksy troubadour could sound more authentic if he roamed the Appa- lachian Mountains hunting deer with a harmonica dangling from his neck. Edgar Lee Masters laid the foundation with his poetry, and Buckner's emotive voice cements "Spoon River Anthol- ogy" into true timelessness - almost a century after the poems were written. When the first moments of the album dissolve from instrumental feedback and swirl into the opening chords and underlying strings of the first two- minute segment, the effect can only be described as revelatory. Why can't all music sound like this? Shouldn't all music sound like this? So thank you, Tom Merritt and other tragically deceased citizens - though you don't survive in Spoon River, you will live forever on The Hill. NONFICTION From Page 1B It takes a mediator, someone to coax that hidden ego out of its protective shell, to break it down into its component parts only to build it back up again. That some- one is John Rubadeau. Rubadeau began teaching sections of English 325 (Art of the Essay) and Eng- lish 425 (Advanced Essay Writing) at the University 24 years ago after a brief stint as a writing instructor at Purdue. "I wish I could say it was by design, but it was more by accident," Rubadeau said of becoming a professor. "I had been a social worker in Europe as a field worker for the Red Cross, and then I got into teaching by accident, and I just fell in love with it." To facilitate the labor that goes into producing these miniature memoirs, Rubadeau said the first three weeks of his classes are devoted to personal intro- ductions. A considerable amount of time is spent on classroom bonding - the stu- dents chat freely during class periods, finding out about each other's lives and their professor. "The pedagogic reason behind this is to develop a sense of community before we discuss essays that are often extraor- dinarily personal and intimate," he said. As he likes to call it, it's a process of "making the public private." This camaraderie is further facilitat- ed by an unexpected visitor: Rubadeau's facial hair. On Halloween, he dyes his fully grown beard orange to resemble a grinning jack-o-lantern. During Christ- mas, he comes into class bedecked with twinkling Christmas lights and a few spinning dreidels. On the rest of the days, he has been known to wiggle the whiskers in question in front of unas- suming girls' faces. "I've gotten a couple good beard rubs from John Rubadeau," Hlebasko said of her time as his student. The beard is only one example of what Rubadeau considers to be the secret to being a good teacher: enthusiasm. "If you aren't enthusiastic, feign enthusiasm," he said. "But here's the thing: I've never had to feign enthusi- asm. I'm always so enthusiastic because I'm teaching kids what they need to know, what they need to know for the real world. "It sounds so strange, but I look forward every day to going to class," he added. "If I could design my life, I couldn't design a better life. I'm never going to retire. I want to die when I'm about 100 writing on the chalkboard, talking about dangling participles." Tell the truth, but tell it slant Once the community and level of comforthave been established, how does one begin the essay? "First you start out with a statement," Rubadeau said. "How do you integrate it into the story that you're trying to tell? And then you give details - I mean, it's so simple. The writer who writes doesn't even know his intention, he just writes because it's a therapeutic process." Then comes the main argument, the thing the essay will signify. "Pursue the answer to a question that you genuinely want to know the answer to," Pollack said. This is a guiding principle in Pollack's book "Creative Nonfiction," which was published two years ago for classroom use. Through she currently presides over graduate-level work, Pollack sustains an interest in the field of personal mem- oir, and instated the creative nonfiction writing program at the undergraduate level several years ago. "Scratch your itch," Rubadeau explained. "What interests you? What bothers you? What do you have ques- tions about? Write about that, but dis- passionately." But issues will start to arise a few paragraphs into the essay. For instance, how much faith can a writer put in his own hazy memories of an event long past? How much creative liberty to take in describing a scene that one barely has a memory of? There's a certain ambigu- ity associated with the work of a non- fiction writer, a struggle with fitting a messy, fractured life neatly into a con- fines of a few blank pages. Pollack puts it in simpler terms: If you feel instinctively that whatever you are saying is dishonest, you shouldn't write it down. "There are some people that say, 'Oh, memory is faulty' or 'We're always mak- ing things up' - they see nonfiction as just as much an act of memory and imag- ination as fiction," Pollack said. "I don't really buy that. I think that we all know when we're telling the truth to the best of our abilities and we know when we're not quite sure of something." Pollack went on to mention the extent of the truthfulness that readers expect from a writer. "If you said, 'I climbed Mt. Everest' and you didn't, they would feel cheated," Pollack said. "If you said that you were breaking up with your girlfriend in a bar one night and Linda Ronstadt was sing- ing 'Blue Bayou' on whatever goes for a jukebox today, and we found it really was Lucinda Williams singing 'Car Wheels on a Gravel Road,' nobody's going to feel cheated, right?" Entering into conversation But the writing doesn't stop after the first draft is handed in. "I have a whole big lecture - I say, you know, your brothers and sisters said I was a good teacher and all that shit, but it's because I have high expectations," Rubadeau said. Each session after the first three weeks of his courses is devoted to cri- tiquing and praising all of the 20 essays produced by the 20 students in the class - one student and one essay per day. To prepare, every student is expected to write at least five to six pages about that session's essay, leading to an individual collection of papers that often surpass- es the 200-page mark by the end of the semester. "Oh, man, every Mondayand Wednes- day night I would be on my laptop all night long," said Engineering junior Jacob Flood. "Your grade is dependent mostly on what you write about other people's papers. (Rubadeau) says, the more you critique somebody else, the more you'll learn about your own writ- ing." "I know that sounds like an ungodly amount of work, but you definitely knock those out way quicker than a traditional analytical English paper," Hlesbasko added. "It's just kind of you in dialogue with the paper and this person that cre- ated it." After all, you never write in a vacu- um - a large part of crafting a personal essay is sharing it with others. In writ- ing peer critiques, the writer creates the discourse space needed to discuss remarkably intimate subjects in a more objective manner. "Revising your essay wasn't just about mechanics you worked on," Flood said. "It had more to do with substance - what you wanted to know more about." By extension, this collaboration leads to greater classroom bonding. "We were incredibly close," Flood said. "I feel like more so than comma splices and misplaced modifiers, we were in a class to articulate and express profound things that we had in ourlives. And that would connect us as friends more so than in any other class. "The one class period that really stood out for me when this guy talked about this abusive relationship he had with his father, and it was just so ... it. just seemed to transcend any normal classroom experience," he added. "And we weren't talking about trite mechan- ics at that point, we were talking about something that was clearly still affect- ing him, it was something he was look- ing for and in that class I think he finally found it." In having students pen these evoca- tive, raw experiences, the ultimate objective of English 325 and 425 is to bring light to these encounters, to reiter- ate themes about the world that fiction writers couldn't have articulated any better - just by nature of the essayists' proximity to real life. Rubadeau distilled the goals that he wanted to leave in his students in a few brief sentences. "I want them to fall in love with the language and the etymology of words, make them aware that the things I'm trying to teach them can't be put to memory," he said. "I want to them to get at the human condition." Poets perform to hometown crowd By LUCY PERKINS Daily Arts Writer Poetry is timeless. It fills volumes upon volumes with sonnets, iam- bic pentameter, odes and couplets. It provides insight to the unexplainable, Horn r commenting on the ew smallest aspects of Tonight at humanity. It can be 7 p.m. typed, scrawled or sung - but tonight, Lydia Mendelssohn it's spoken. Theatre "I think a lot of Tickets from $5 people - not myself personally - think of boring old white men reading and writing poems back in the olden days and get turned off by that," said Peggy Burrows, a 2010 University alum and a member of Ann Arbor Wordworks, a local poetry group. The concept of poetry is completely different for Burrows. "It's spoken word," she said. "Really beautiful things that you wouldn't have thought of are brought to the table." Wordworks was formed by a group of students who had been involved with the Volume Youth Poetry Project, an after-school program that works with high school students to write poetry and learn poetic technique. Today, Wordworks is composed of 15 members who attend a variety of uni- versities throughout the state and pro- mote poetry through performance and speech. This Thursday, the group will per- form poetry in its biggest event of the year, entitled Homegrown. "Every year we find a new vein to run through the whole show. This year, it's sort of the evolution of our writ- ing," said Ben Alfaro, a junior at Wayne State University. "Some of that will entail poems we wrote when we were really young. "There are so many strong voices in Ann Arbor Wordworks that in a span of 15 minutes, you're going to get a set of voices that are powerful on their own," Alfaro added. "It sort of builds this chord of sound." According to Burrows, the perfor- mance won't be what many would expect of a poetry reading. "You don't quietly snap when you hear something you like - it's a very interactive, high-energy per- formance," Burrows said. "We try to engage the audience - we have fun pieces, serious pieces and group pieces so you can see we're a unit, not just individual people." Burrows, who started writing when she was a kid, always knew she liked poetry. "I always wanted to write and be creative ... and I sort of latched onto this form," she said. At first, it was difficult for Burrows to write her poems without worrying about how the audience would inter- pret them. She would try to mold her writing to what she thought the audi- ence would like best, but that didn't work out well. "I stopped thinking about other people readingit and for me, that made it a lot easier," Burrows said. Now she writes for herself, which also has benefits when she performs. "The audience feels more con- nected to it when it's honest and real - it's very obvious that you feel this and you're not just saying this to have something to say," she said. Homegrown is Wordworks's largest event of the year. 0 As the audience will see in Home- grown, Alfaro's style has evolved as well. "I used to write more about fam- ily and relationship stuff," Alfaro said. "But now my writing is sort of turning this corner. I'm talking about bigger issues going on around me ... I'm sort of trying to give my poems social con- text." He added, "I think it personally grounds it more." Apart from school and Wordworks, Alfaro holds a weekly poetry workshop in Detroit for high school students. Based on what he's observed, Alfaro noted that poetry is changing. "It's starting to make this shift towards more of a hip-hop platform or a performance platform," he said. "That aspect is what more young peo- ple want to do. "Poetry is going to be hard-hitting and powerful - that you have to hear* out loud. That's where it's going."