ARTS The Michigan Daily Friday, July 24, 1987 Page 13 Art Fair stages fil the streets with music By Alan Paul BopbopRebop...whaa,whaa,whaa aaa...bumdebumbumdebum.... Position yourself just right somewhere in the Diag and you may find all these sounds crashing down on you. There are three sanc- tioned Art Fair stages, providing entertainment of all types everyday all day. The Michigan Union Stage, presented by Eclipse Jazz and WIQB focuses on, surprise, jazz. At noon today, Corinne Schat-Hillebrand and Jim Lidgett play early music for recorders, lute and other seventeenth century instruments. This is not jazz. However, at 1 p.m., Richard Work and the Strand, a contemporary jazz quartet take the stage and are fol- lowed at 2:30 by the Paul Vorn- hagen Group's Latin-tinged jazz. At 4 p.m., the modern "easy going" jazz and fusion of Fast Tracks can be heard, followed at 5:30 by Hot Club, one of Detroit's best jazz en- sembles. R&B rockers Jeanne and the Dreams close down the stage for the day at 7 p.m. The Prism Productions/Miller Beer stage located on Church street, across the street from Rick's in, front ofPizza House, returns for its eighth Art Fair featuring the town's most popular club acts; the bands that play regularly at Rick's and the Blind Pig. Today, the Blue Front Per- suaders, probably Ann Arbor's old- est and most popular party rock-R&B band, take the stage at 1 p.m. What would an Art Fair be without them? They are followed at 4 by Map Of the World, considered by many to be Ann Arbor's finest. band. They are led and fronted by the singing of Sophia Hanifi and the guitar work of brother Khalid. The Graceful Arch Stage, near West Engineering and the Dennison Building, is sponsored by the Washtenaw County Council for the Arts and features a particularly di- verse lineup of entertainment rang- ing from children's music to jazz to theatre troupes. At 1 p.m. today, Maxton Bay, an acoustic trio, performs. At 3 the Common Ground Theater Ensem- ble, a long lived group based around exploring social and political issues takes the stage to raise some con- sciousness. They are followed at 4 by the traditional jazz of the Carl Alexius Trio. At 5, the Lunar Glee Club, one the area's most diverse bands, hit the stage, playing every- thing from jazz to juju to jump blues. Peter "Madcat" Ruth closes down this stage at 8 p.m. Ruth is an Ann Arbor legend, playing har- monica that will raise your eye- brows and drop your jaw. Yes, he is that good. A couple of University Music School ivory shiners open up Saturday's festivities at the Union stage. At 10 a.m., classical pianist Christopher Keen takes the stage, followed at 11 by David Flippo, who plays a unique combination of jazz, new age, and classical music. At noon, Althea Rene, a fusion flute player who is fast gaining a reputation in Detroit clubs, per- forms with her top notch band. At 1:30 the Washtenaw Community College Jazz Orchestra, led by the charismatic Dr. Morris Lawrence, plays. The stage's Art Fair festivi- ties close down with yet another Local faves The Chenille Sisters perform Wednesday at both the Union and Graceful Arch Stages. From left, they are: Chryl Dawdy, Grace Morand, and Connie Huber. performance by the Blue Front Per- suaders. The Graceful Arch stage contin- ues its diversity Saturday as it opens up at 11 a.m. with Classical Dances of India, performed by Ma- lini Srirama and her students. Susan Baker, a local choreographer and dancer performs at 11:30, followed at noon by Chris and Bill Barton, who play traditional acoustic Irish and American music. Bill is a member of Footloose, a local blue- grass institution and wife Chris a member of the children's music duo The Song Sisters...who perform at 1 p.m. The Graceful Arch stage closes down at 3 with the Stark Raving Revue as Madcat Ruth joins Peter Stark and band in an "open ended jam session," which could well feature any and all of the stages' performers. Tracy Lee and the Leonards get the Prism stage going Saturday at 1 p.m. with their own rock and roll sound. Featuring the twin guitars and songwriting savvy of roots rocker George Bedard and folk rock- er Dick Siegel, and sharp vocals by Tracy Lee Komarmy, this band boasts a unique sound. If he gets loose Bedard is about as fine a player as you'll hear anywhere. They will be followed by popular Lansing reggae white boys (Bop) Harvey. There's plenty of hip'sounds to he heard so pull yourself away from your people watching and art browsing and wander around to the different stages. Shut your eyes, open your ears, and eniov! 'Medieval Festival offers change of scene By Brian Bonet If you're sick and tired of pushing and perspiring your way along the hot, crowded streets of the Art Fair to catch a closer glimpse of yet another exhibit, there is a creative escape for the romantic at heart that posseses an artistry all its own. A short walk to the 18th Annual Ann Arbor Medieval Festival will thrust you back hundreds of years to the times when chivalry was far from dead and bountiful feasts and mystical mysteries flourished. Drama will be at the heart of this spectacle of royal pageantry where ' jesters will be jesting, jousters jousting, and jugglers juggling. A giant, sixteen foot puppet show will keep the kids smiling as well as make the muppets look like wimps. "It's very lively entertainment," commented Medieval publicist Katie Heiser, who added that the Festival usually draws between five and ten thousand people. "It (the Medieval period) was so long ago, you can even romanticize more than say the Colonial period," she said. For the first time in the Festival's history, nighttime entertainment will be offered. A Medieval Masque, The Forest Princess , will be performed. Saturday night at 7:30 and highlights the Festival's theatrical line up. The Forest Princess has been described by some as a unique cross between A Midsummer Nights Dream and Snow White. In authenic Masque fashion, it interweaves music, song, dance, poetry, along with audience involvement. Don't be alarmed at the crashing and clanging of metal upon metal as Knights clad in full aromor engage in unchoreographed tournament combat. This Medieval excitement, brought to you by the Society of Creative Anachronisms, is combined with courtly social dances and recreated medieval artifacts. If Medieval cuisine is your fancy, or maybe your curiousity, then introduce your tastebuds to a tid bit of wild boar sausage, or if poultry is your thing, try a sample of grilled quail. Both delicacies can be washed down with a cup of cold, crisp apple cider. The festival also offers a large vegetarian menu, as well as salads, fruits and cheeses. The Medieval Festival will be held east of the Burton Tower on Saturday from I p.m. to 5 p.m. with a showing of the Princess at 7:30 . It will continue on Sunday in the Nichols Arboretum from 1P.m. to 5 p.m. INSECURE INVESTMENT U.S. Copyrights-Patents 5 state governments, MI, ILL, VA, FLA, & CA, have won legal immunity from infringe- ment. No royalties. HELP! Write! L. Patrick Mihalek, P.O. Box 776 Brighton, MI 48116