REVIEW: Ann Arbor Folk Festival Ryan Adams

Friday, January 27th was the first night of the 35th annual Ann Arbor Folk Festival. The Hill Auditorium was sold out, but many people didn’t arrive until about half-way through the night, as there were 7 performers total, not including Heywood Banks, the MC who entertained the crowd in-between bands with comical songs and cheesy jokes. My favorite was the “Toast” song, where he banged on a toaster like a drum and sang about how great toast it! Sometimes really silly humor is fun and refreshing.

The first performer to take the stage was Sunny War, a beautiful African American woman with incredible skills in her clawhammer, banjo playing style of playing the guitar. Her sound was delicate and airy, with a bluesy tone. Her voice was very girly and pretty, with an element of old-hollywood simplicity and elegance. Her songs were very calming, and I really enjoyed listening to her.

Second to perform was the band Elephant Revival, who reminded me a bit of the contemporary bluegrass group Nickel Creek. They had a very full-sounding band, and often sounded very rustic and traditional. I loved the strings, and that their songs often built in intensity over time. The vocals were beautiful and breathy, a nice contrast to the full-sounding band. They performed an a capella song as the last in their set, about a raven, that was absolutely beautiful and breath-taking.

The David Wax Museum was next to perform. The band members wore much more modern dress than Elephant Revival, and had a much tinnier, less full sound. The band has a Mexican-folk sound, and they used a unique addition, a saxophone, in some of their songs, unusual in my conception of folk music. I felt that some of their songs were a bit too loud–not one of my favorite bands being showcased that night. But one of the great benefits of attending the folk festival is having the opportunity to be exposed to artists that you are unfamiliar with, so nonetheless I enjoyed experiencing their music for the first time.

Next to take the stage was a band called Carbon Leaf, a group of older men who reminded me a bit of a folk barbershop quartet, as they all stood in a tight circle throughout their performance, beginning their set with an a capella piece, in which their voices were beautifully in unison. Aside from the beautiful opening piece, however, I can’t say their music was my cup of tea.

A band called Dawes was next to perform, the last band to perform before the intermission. They were a bit too rock n’ roll for the folk fest, in my opinion. They had a full band with electric guitars, drums, and a piano. Their songs were quite repetitive and the droning drum beat made me sleepy!

After the intermission, Devotchka took the stage, a Denver band with a Russian name. This band was very unique, with each song having a much different sound. At times it reminded me of Fiddler on the Roof, others I felt like I was being serenaded by a Mexican band–I also wrote down that their sound sometimes reminded me of a Jewish wedding, that song, The Devil Went Down to Georgia, and sometimes even of bands like The Boxer Rebellion or Coldplay. Despite the variety that caused a bit of confusion for me, their sound really began to grow on me and I found myself looking up their music online after the concert. The band did seem to play for a bit too long, however. The other bands that were not headlining only played for about 30 minutes each, while Devotchka played for over an hour, which seemed to be a bit unfair. By the time RyanAdams, the headliner for the evening, took the stage, I was pretty worn out.

Finally, Ryan Adams ended the evening with an incredible acoustic performance. He was not what I expected–his songs are so beautiful and sensitive, but in person he dressed like a rocker with medium-length dark hair that falls in front of his face, hiding his face throughout the performance, and skinny jeans with Converse shoes… Not what I expected. His humor was also a bit different and weird at times–he joked about dinosaurs and smoking weed. But his music was beautiful! He played a lot of his hits, switching between acoustic guitar and piano on several occasions. He sounds just perfect live–I was very impressed. His performance was far too short–it seemed that most of the crowd was there to see him, but we all had to sit through four hours of other bands’ sets in anticipation. By the time Ryan Adams took the stage, unfortunately I felt quite restless and tired from sitting for so long.

This was my first folk festival experience, and I have to admit I’m not sure that I would go again… I would certainly recommend that you go and experience it once, because it really is a unique opportunity to see a lot of great bands in one night, and it is the biggest music event of the year here in Ann Arbor. But the Hill Auditorium was not the most conducive setting for something like a folk festival. I imagined the festival being a very laid-back event where you come and go as you please, and it’s loud, and exciting, and people get up and dance and enjoy the music, take pictures and sing along. But none of this happened. The Hill imposed a lot of rules on the event, like no getting up to come or go during a song, no photography, no standing in the aisles… We were forced to sit in our incredibly cramped seats for five hours. No one took pictures, (except quickly and secretly so no one notices!) no one sang along or got up to dance the entire time. And in the end, the audience clapped and cheered for an encore to no avail. Then we all went home. It really was much too quiet and boring, really stuffy for a music festival. I would love to see the folk festival move to a different location that is freer, possibly even outdoors during the summer. I think the atmosphere would have made a big difference in improving my overall experience of the festival.

REVIEW: Comic Potential

Thursday night, January 26th, the small black-box theatre in Studio 1 of the Walgreen Drama Center filled with students and families who came to watch a handful of talented student-actors perform the romantic sci-fi play, Comic Potential, written by Alan Ayckbourn, which first premiered in the late 1990’s. The show began with a once-famous director, now a has-been and an alcoholic, working on the set of the cheesy soap opera he now works on with his crew of three “actoids” (actor androids–the new robotic invention that has replaced real human actors in the movie and television industry) and two lesbian lovers who film the episodes. The set was very simple, consisting of a bed, a table and chairs, and a video camera, yet very versatile, as the bed used in the hospital scene of the soap opera was converted to be used as the hotel room the two main characters stayed in later in the play.

The main plot of the play concerned the relationship between a young aspiring writer, the nephew of the man who owns the production company, who wants to learn from the once-famous director whom he adores, and the female actoid, known as JC, with a sense of humor that defies the rules and mechanisms of her robotic composition. The young writer discovers her unique sense of humor and decides that he wants to work with her on an old-fashioned comedy sitcom, and asked the director to let him use JC in a comedy show that he will write and pitch to the producers to be shown on the network. The director reluctantly agrees, but when the idea is pitched to the bratty accountant who wanted to date the young writer and was hurt and offended that he chose JC over her, she turns down the idea and decides that the actoid should be “melted down”, her memory erased and system re-booted, so that her “faulty” sense of humor would be no more.

The young writer, having fallen in love with the funny actoid, convinces her to run away with him, to rescue her from being melted down. They go to a clothing store, to get her some normal-looking clothes so she can get rid of the nurse-outfit she was wearing from the soap opera hospital scene, and they then go in hiding at a hotel, where they are discovered at the hotel restaurant, and are forced to flee to a dingy motel in a bad neighborhood, where JC has a run-in with a prostitute who suggests to her that the young writer is only using her, like all men use women. JC then gets upset and fights with the young writer, when the pimp in charge of the working-girls in the hotel barges into the room and threatens them, thinking JC was one of his girls. The young writer defends JC and he gets stabbed, lying on the floor in a pool of blood.

JC returns to the television studio, thinking the young writer was dead, and decides to allow herself to be melted down, in order to forget all of the pain, feeling guilty that she allowed so much trouble to come to the young writer who she loved. But she changes her mind, and when she comes back the young writer is there, and they lovingly reunite. In the end, the bratty accountant loses her job and JC is offered the prestigious position instead. The young writer gets his chance at filming his sitcom, and all is well again in the lives of all the characters on set.

The play had an underlying satirical message concerning the entertainment industry, suggesting that the individuals who have money and manage money are truly in charge of what is created and presented to the public for entertainment, cheapening what should be artistic and meaningful to mere money-making, cookie-cutter productions. The actoids, man-made and purchased, suggest that actors are no more than blank canvases, bringing no personal creative input to their craft. The artist must sell-out, as the director did, in order to remain in the business, working on superficial projects, like the cheesy soap-opera, that will be profitable to the individuals and companies funding the project. Looking at most of the films that are being made and released to the movie theatres today, I can’t say I disagree with this premise.

I enjoyed the premise of the story, and the actors did a wonderful job, especially in such an un-real, futuristic script. The actress who played the role of JC did an especially incredible job. She did really well at convincing you she was a robot, while still being humanly real and accessible, relate-able. She was very impressive in switching between dialects and characters in the many scenes where she recalled the characters she had previously played in her history as an actoid. She was very funny.

Personally, I think the play started out strong, and then the story fell off at the end. This is no fault of the actors, but the script itself. I disagree that the love story was a necessary part of the play. I think it would have possibly been more interesting without it. It almost made the play into the very cookie-cutter love story that is profitable and prominent in entertainment media that the play advises against. The happy ending also didn’t seem fitting, and I was left wondering if it would have been more interesting to have the actoid melted down, to bring back the original point of the current state of the entertainment industry, leaving the audience with that premise in mind, bringing the story full-circle. If I were to re-write the story, there are definitely some things I would have done differently.

Overall, I enjoyed going to see a free play on Thursday night, and I would highly recommend going to check out other plays put on by Basement Arts some time this semester. The actors are very talented, and the script was interesting and unique. It was a very laid-back atmosphere, and an enjoyable way to spend a Thursday evening. For more information on Comic Potential, as well as a schedule of upcoming productions being put on by Basement Arts, check out their website: http://basement.studentorgs.umich.edu.

REVIEW: WCBN Radio live broadcast: Naomi Shihab Nye

Naomi Shihab Nye speaks live with WCBN Radio!

Self proclaimed “wandering poet,” Naomi Shihab Nye, wandered into Ann Arbor and landed at The Work Gallery on Wednesday night. A comfortable audience gathered in the space to hear the recently published writer dish it out with WCBN Radio talk show host T. Hetzel. T. Hetzel’s regular spot is a literary commentary called “Living Writers,” where she chats with exactly that: living artists of the literary world. Naomi Shihab Nye is the year’s Zell Distinguished Poet in Residence and has been in Ann Arbor all week, beginning with a packed reading on Monday night at the UMMA. In the broadcast, the poet discussed her writing process, her inspirations, and her vision as well as sharing snippets from her most recently published work “Transfer.

Never having read her work before, I perused the merchandise at the front of the gallery during the broadcast, dipping into Shihab Nye’s collection of poetry and other writings. With one ear on the conversation and one eye on the page, I got a crash course in this woman’s work. The detail of her characters jumped to life  while the author made real time commentary for her interview. The immigrant story of her father moving to Texas (because it’s in the middle of the two coasts, must be close to both right? Wrong) and the way he connected her to their Palestinian roots, was a colorful influence on her work. Also, she wrote of taking flight–birds and bird watching. My favorite poem, the title of which now escapes me, was one of these. It was short; three lines only, arranged artfully on the page. In a few succinct words, it pointedly conveyed the feeling of lying in the grass and cloud gazing with friends, but failing to see the bird everyone else spots and yet pretending to be able so as not to feel estranged.

Of all the pieces of advice that Shihab Nye dispensed in her interview (to writers—and non writers alike), the two I found most pronounced  were these: Find a time of day that allows for the most creativity for you. For Shahib Nye, it is morning, because of the solitude and “privacy” of the still-sleeping world. And, it is nearly criminal to not carry around a notebook. Always carry around a notebook! You never know when you’ll meet a stroke of genius. Always be prepared to capture it.

I highly recommend getting a hold of a piece of Shihab Nye’s poetry. It is accessible yet complex, familiar and yet unique.

These live WCBN performances are very worthwhile events! (the evening was complete with a jazzy interlude by School of Music students Kirsten Crey and Pat Booth). My friend, Bennett Stein, has been spearheading these live radio broadcasts at The Work Gallery, so if you missed this one, keep your eyes open for the next. The events are In the mean time, tune into T. Hetzel’s Living Writers series: every Wednesday at 4:15, WCBN FM Ann Arbor 88.3 FM. Now she has got a radio voice.

REVIEW: Coretta Scott King

One would assume that any woman who was married to such an inspirational man as Martin Luther King Jr. would automatically be amazing, and this is true; however, “amazing” does not even begin to encompass Coretta Scott King. At the lecture I attended Thursday night, I learned so much about her life and what a truly astounding lady she was. Professor Beverly Guy-Sheftall of Spellman University’s lecture entitled “Revisioning the Life of Coretta Scott King” was an event I’m so glad I attended.

There was so much about Coretta that I learned and hadn’t known before, but the most surprising aspect of her life I was unaware of was her role as an activist on behalf of the LGBTQ community. She stressed the idea of “sisterhood and brotherhood of all people,” and her intention was never to quit after speaking out on civil rights for African Americans. She boldly declared that homophobia is no different than racism in its ugly shade of hateful believers. At a time when fighting on behalf of African Americans was considered “out there,” to support that in addition to LGBTQ rights was largely unheard of. Her courage to assert her beliefs is truly remarkable, and I fear that I would not have the courage as she had to speak out during such a time of turmoil in the U.S.

After the death of her husband, Coretta continued to give speeches and work as both an outspoken protester and activist. She passed away January 30th, 2006 (Wikipedia.org).

This event was part of the MLK Symposium this year, honoring the memory of Martin Luther King Jr. and highlighting the issues he stood for. So often in middle school and high school, we’d spend the days leading up to MLK day watching cheesy videos that came across as fictional and insincere. I think the way MLK day is celebrated at our university here is a great way to truly honor such a memorable man and his aspirations for a better world, defeating the hatred that still exists even today. Going to this lecture was a great way to stay aware of the legacy that was left behind by those bolder than me, and I’m really glad I attended.

PREVIEW: Folk Fest

The biggest live music event of the year is almost here! The 35th Annual Ann Arbor Folk Festival is this weekend. Tickets are sold out, so I hope you got your tickets early! I’ll be there Friday night, January 27, to see Ryan Adams headline, performing along with DeVotchKa, Dawes, Carbon Leaf, Elephant Revival, Sunny War, David Wax Museum, and Heywood Banks, MC. For more information check out The Ark website: http://theark.org/ann_arbor_folk_festival.html

PREVIEW: Comic Potential

This weekend Basement Arts, a student-run organization that provides a creative outlet for students interested in theatre, as well as FREE performances put on for students and Ann Arbor community members, will be performing “Comic Potential”, about a future where robots are performers, and one robot discovers that she can be funny. A writer discovers her and writes a comedy for her to perform. The show is not only described as being a comedy, but also includes elements of romance, and a unique perspective on the realm of entertainment and the human condition. Venture out to North Campus this weekend for some unique, free entertainment!

Who: Basement Arts

What: Comic Potential

Where: Walgreen Drama Center (1226 Murfin), North Campus

Studio 1

When: January 26-27, Thursday and Friday at 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. (doors open at 6:45)

How much? FREE! 🙂