Preview: COLIN HAY @ THE ARK

Colin Hay will be performing at the downtown Ann Arbor venue, The Ark, on Sunday, November 8th at 7:30 pm.

Formerly the lead singer of the band ‘Man at Work’, the Scottish Australian musician has been touring solo as a singer songwriter since the 1990’s. The combination of beautiful guitar accompaniment and a kind, soulful voice allows Hay’s songs to connect with the listener on a highly personal level. His lyrics are honest and introspective, and he has contributed to a number of well known soundtracks, such as his song “I Just Don’t Think I’ll Ever Get Over You” for Garden State (2004).

Some of the Hay’s other well known songs include Overkill and Waiting For My Real Life To Begin. The Ark will likely be highly conducive to an intimate listening experience with Hay. The small, friendly upstairs venue brings every audience member close to the performer – ideal for sitting back and letting Hay’s tasteful acoustics and vocals to settle peacefully.

Though the show is currently sold out, those interested can likely find tickets as the doors open at 7:00 at The Ark, as a guests typically sell their extra tickets in line prior to each show.

Scottish Australian singer songwriter, Colin Hay.
Scottish Australian singer songwriter, Colin Hay.

* * *

Eva Roos is a senior at the University of Michigan, receiving a Major in Art & Design with Minors in Environment and Music.

 

PREVIEW: David Mitchell Reading & Signing

David Mitchell, author of Cloud Atlas and The Bone Clocks and many more, is coming to Ann Arbor. In an event brought to you by Literati and the Helen Zell Writers’ Program, David Mitchell will be reading (and signing) at the First United Methodist Church this Saturday. This eventis part of his book tour for his latest novel, Slade House.

You must purchase tickets prior to the event (sale ends 11/6 at midnight!) and at the price $30 for one or $15 each for two, the ticket prices seem quite high–but included with your ticket purchase is a copy of Slade House ($26), and given David Mitchell’s track record for writing interesting, out-there literary novels, this book will almost certainly be worth the money.

The event will be this Saturday at 6 PM (doors open at 5:15 PM, get there early) at the First United Methodist Church (120 South State St.).

For more information (and to purchase tickets): http://www.literatibookstore.com/event/david-mitchell-reading-signing

PREVIEW: The Avett Brothers at Hill Auditorium

The Avett Brothers are coming to Hill Auditorium tomorrow night.  They’ve been my favorite band since I was a kid, so I’m very excited!  As follows is an excerpt from their website which I feel accurately defines The Avett Brothers in a couple of words: “…all that’s left behind is the unwavering beauty of the songs. That’s the commotion, that’s the celebration, and wherever The Avett Brothers are tonight, that’s what you’ll find.”

The Band:
Scott Avett – Vocals, Banjo, Kick Drum
Seth Avett – Vocals, Guitar, High-Hat
Bob Crawford – Vocals, Bass
Paul Defiglia – Keyboard, Organ
Tania Elizabeth – Violin
Joe Kwon – Cello
Mike Marsh – Drums

You can watch some of their music videos on their website.  I especially like “Murder in the City.”  There are more videos (and interviews and the like!) on their YouTube account.

Their music is a delightful combination of folk rock, indie rock, ragtime, country, and quite a few other genres.

The band has a reputation for awesome live shows (I speak from experience – I’ve seen them five times).  Tickets are still on sale, and you can buy them here.  Hope you enjoy the concert!

PREVIEW: A Northern Refuge: Cherish, Protect

The opening reception for A Northern Refuge: Cherish, Protect will take place tomorrow evening at the Work Gallery. Stamps lecturer Cathy Van Voorhis curated the exhibition.

A Northern Refuge: Cherish, Protect spotlights the natural environment. The natural environment has been a well-established source of inspiration for artists for centuries and I’m interested in the ways in which it continues to inspire contemporary artists. The exhibition’s theme is timely with the ongoing discoveries of pollution in nearby Lake Erie.

Admission is free! Click here for more event information.

REVIEW: Fiction @ Literati: Marlon James

Photo Credit: Literati

Wearing a tight Naked Lunch shirt and sporting shoulder-length dreadlocks, Marlon James seemed younger than his 45 years. This matched the way he behaved. He jested. He threw shade. He smiled and laughed with us in a way that felt whole, like the words weren’t perfectly pre-planned, like there wasn’t a stage. Marlon James does not act like a college professor, at least, not like the ones I’ve had. Nor does he act like a writer who just won the Booker.

When he read, he read as if he were his characters, as if they were temporal beings making use of his body. There were two passages that stood out most (to me, at least)–possibly because they had the audience howling, but probably because they were raunchy and had there been children in the audience, it would have been best to cover their ears. The first of these passages was when one of his Jamaican characters described the various kinds and qualities of sexual relations she had with European men of various countries. They all had their positives and drawbacks and while no singular country rose above the rest, the French were definitely painted in the worst light. After Marlon finished reading this scene, one particularly interested member of the audience asked him how he knew all these things about having sex with European men. According to Marlon James, some parts of an author’s novel are autobiographical, some are not. “Parts.”

The second striking passage where when that same character (now a home-care worker in New York) was exchanging racist jokes with an old white man she was supposed to be taking care of. This being Ann Arbor, of course, the mostly-white audience only felt comfortable laughing at the jokes making fun of white people. But still, the scene was funny and most of us cackled with enthusiasm.

These–these sexual escapades, these racist jokes–were the words of Booker-Prize winning novel. These were the words, out of the hundreds of thousands of other words, that were chosen to win the prize. They might not be the words you expected. Even going in knowing what this book was about, they were not the words I expected. That is probably a good thing.

It is easy to get an idea in your head about what it means to be literary. It is easy to imagine a literary author as some pale shut-in hunched over his type-writer, clanking away at his latest masterpiece, surrounded by emptied, tea-stained mugs and pages and pages blotted with ink. When that shut-in finally emerges, it is easy to visualize him standing up to that podium, dressed in some sort of brown suit–maybe meekly smiling, maybe too haughty even for that–lowering his glasses and reading his words softly and solemnly as if reciting them at his mother’s funeral. It is very easy to fall into this trap, this idea of what a writer is.

Perhaps your own exact vision of a writer differs from mine here and there, but it probably exists and if it exists, Marlon James probably does not greatly resemble that image. Nor does his book resemble an easy definition of literary (although it is the lengthy tome favored by judges of literature), but despite not being Booker-bait, it still won. And it’s very good thing that a book like A Brief History of Seven Killings written by a man like Marlon James can win an award like the Booker, because ultimately the concept of “literary” and what is and what isn’t worthy is all arbitrary and always either expanding or shrinking, encompassing or excluding, and when the same award goes to the same people who write the same kind of books, it is easy to forget about the authors on the edge of literary, the authors with something else to say as they push and shove and scrape at that boundary, the authors we will remember fifty years from now because their book was different. It is important and exciting to see these different voices win these awards, to remember what else is out there.

I, for one, am greatly looking forward to reading (with Marlon’s voice in my head) A Brief History of Seven Killings.

IMAG0517

PREVIEW: Julian Schnabel (Stamps Speaker Series)

Artist Julian Schnabel will speak tomorrow evening at the historic Michigan Theater! The event was initially scheduled for mid-September to coincide with the Julian Schnabel exhibition yet was rescheduled to tomorrow due to unforeseen circumstances.

Admission is free! The artist is well-known internationally. Be sure to get there early!

Tomorrow there will also be a free screening of the Schnabel-directed film, Miral.

Click here to see the trailer and click here for more event information.