-1 20 - The Michigan Daily -- Monday, June 29, 1998 Frog Island Fest gives cool music in the hot su By Michael Galloway 'tDaily Arts Editor Imagine a giant, blue and white striped tent with people sitting underneath and around it in lawn chairs or on beach towels, listening to the swing grooves of Blues, Jazz, Zydeco, Cajun, R & B or Roots Rock, depending on the live band. Anywhere from 10 to 50 people are in front of the band, danc- ing individually or with a partner, infected by the same need to react to the music that the improvisa- tionalists display onstage. Now add some vendors some frisbee-throwing kids, some infectious music and a certain funkified "je ne sais quois," and you've got the 1998 Frog Island Festival. Although the scene may have been quite literally a smelly "I-don't-know-what" to some, the laid- back atmosphere and sweet pendulum off-beat music could be very cool. Produced by The Ark, the Festival is a regular occurrence each year in Ypsilanti's Depot Town. This year's show began Friday night at 5 p.m. with the Motor City Street Band, a parading jazz ensemble. "Friday night was crowded and everyone was partying,"said Dave Siglin, owner/manager of The Ark. "Today (Saturday) was a little more mellow, and tomorrow should be even more mellow. "We had a lot of people swinging earlier today for The Johnny Favourite Orchestra - Standing in the front area there and dancing," Siglin said, motioning to the area in front of the band free of lawn chairs and blankets. Even as he pointed this out, there were people getting an up-close- and-personal look while $ swayin' and boppin' to the beat of the gravelly voiced Sam Meyers, accompanied Frog Island 'by Anson Funderberg & the Festival Rockets. Frog Island Park Meyers was the paradig Ja 262 of a cool blues musician - an older African-American man in a purple suit and dark glasses. In between songs, he would ask the audience to clap for Funderberg & the Rockets or various other per- formers in the festival. "Let's show them some love," Meyers said. He asked the audience to clap for themselves as well, since they "were the real stars here. I don't mean of tomorrow; I mean of today." Meyers and Funderberg & the Rockets were great, but many in the audience on Saturday came to see the final artist of the evening, Keb' Mo', who has played some rather uncommon venues, such as a Boulder, Co., post office when the Robert Johnson commemorative stamp was issued. Nik Thompson, Kandy Styrk and Josh Scheys had come together to the festival and were anxiously awaiting Keb' Mo'. "This is the first time I've come to the festival, but I hear about it every year on WEMU, Styrk said. Scheys had come with his two friends to hear Keb' Mo' first hand. "I never heard about him before. They (Styrk and Thompson) told me about him. I like the blues, and it sounded like Chubby Carrier, "The World's Premiere Zydeco Showman," showed that accordions aren't just good for slow polkas as he and the Bayou Swamp Band performed at Ypsi's Frog Island Festival on Friday. fun." Amy Adamec and Pat Kirkwood also had never been to the festival and were looking forward to Kep' Mo'. They had heard about the festival "through friends who were supposed to be here," Adamec said. "But we can't find them. They must be here somewhere." Adamec and Kirkwood decid- ed to just chill and listen. "The music is awesome," Kirkwood said. Adamec added, "And interesting. The sound is great. The bands are great." And truly, the bands displayed quality through and through. How many concert festivals occur where that can be said with sincerity? Sure, the festival wasn't the most happening scene for college students. In fact, high schoolers and college students were noticeably absent, but the people who were there enjoyed being there. There was none of the pretension or the pretending that accompanies the headliners and fans of more popu- lar concerts. If someone wanted to dance, he or she could dance. If someone wanted to play cards throw a frisbee or just relax in a lawn chair, it wa all good. Bailey Walsh and Kathy Cramer were glad the) finally went to the festival. "I've been in Ann Arbo a couple of years and meaning to go to the festival, Bailey Walsh said. "I heard about it from friends4 this year I went" Kathy Cramer said she enjoyed watching all the people as well as the bands. "I've had a great tim watching all the families. There's a great famil) atmosphere here." Even with kids playing off to the sides of the ten on the Frog Island field and the Fourth-of-July-fam ily-reunion feel (attested to by the signs on the ten poles that read "Lawn chairs this side only," whici were ignored entirely by the patrons), the Festiva could be a great place to spend the day. As the say ing goes, "If you don't have fun, it's your own da fault," and the Frog Island Festival provided plent) of opportunity for fun. Erma Thomas was one of a trio of Jazz and Blues divas who finished off Friday night's festivities. Tortoise grows Wings of its own By Steve Gertz For the Daily Last Tuesday at The Magic Stick, while 99.9% of Detroit was paying exclusive attention to what was to become the winning game for the Red Wings in the Stanley Cup finals, neo- prog rock instrumental sensationalist Tortoise gave dedicated fans a stunning live performance. Having earned the title of the hardest band to categorize in the current indie- music scene, Tortoise weaves languid aural tapestries by applying traditional jazz structures to a cornucopia of stylis- tic elements. Its songs are liquidous streams of subtle hip-hop beats, fuzzy vibraphones, well-calculated and under- stated samples and blurbs of noise, pre- historic synthesizers from outer space and mysterious yet groovy bass lines. Tortoise is simultaneously giving new life to the horrendous corpse of "art rock" (once inhabited by the likes of Yes -and ELO), exploring the more nebulous areas of jazz and funk (see 1970s Miles Davis and Herbie Hancock) and keeping up - despite its lack of digital produc- tion and sequencing -- with the psyche- delic wanderings of trip-hop, jungle and drum and bass. The resulting formula, ultimately, is startlingly original and, despite its genre-bending tendencies, avoids appearing bloated or pasted together Greeting the crowd (which had most- ly ignored opening acts and watched the Wings game on a nearby television monitor) with its f. signature "Djed", the opening track TortoiSe from the band's breakthrough 1995 album The Magic Stick "Millions Now June 16 Living Will Never Die", Tortoise prepared its audience for a night of hypnotic brilliance.. The song, which on the album exceeds rhe 20-minute mark, started with a creeping and elusive bass line and escalated into a labyrinth of winding rhythms and melodies. The live performance of "Ojed" almost reached the half-hour point and ranged from pit- ter-pattering synth drones to pulsating acid-jazz blasts and harmonious inter- ludes so catchy that they could easily pass for a TV show theme song. The band then proceeded to apply that same eccentric pastiche to the rest of its songs and, rather than dividing them into distinguishable entities, allowed them to overlap one another, turning the show into a grandiose symphony. Interestingly, the members of the band- displayed their well-rounded talent by playing musical chairs with their instru- ments, changing, sometimes mid-song, between xylophones, guitars, keyboards and drums. Leader John Mcyntire in particular displayed well-rounded prowess on keys, sticks and bells alike. After 60-plus minutes of continuous music, Tortoise rewarded its fans with two encores, during one of which it reprised the majestic "Djed." Upon the show's conclusion, atten- dees were greeted outside the venue with an explosion of celebratory cheer. Detroit had just won the Stanley Cup and was up in arms over it. Although the screaming hockey fans were oblivious to the hidden wonder of what the Tortoise audience had so recently experienced, their fervor seemed oddly appropriate for the denouement of such an extraordi- nary show. SIEVE GERTZ/Dail Memrbes of Tortoise doubled-up on xylophones and even alternated instruments, but most people tuned into the Red Wings game and mised the magnificent show