rpr-ynjiT The Daily Tar HeelThursday, September 14, 19895 1! V looks forward! improvements in new season By BETH MECKLEY "One character is sort of a redneck character," he said. "One is a shy, so cially inept nerd. Another is an activist. And the last one is just kind of a prep pie. It's just all about the crazy things that happen to them." STV recently got a new camera, and next week the station expects a new character generator to arrive. The new machine will allow them to do more with the use of words on the screen, said station manager Tena Williamson. Other equipment that will soon be available for STV is a computer graph ics system and other machinery that will make the finished footage look more professional. STV will go on the air on Oct. 2, and can be seen Monday through Thursday from 5:30 p.m. until 11:30 p.m. Three other shows will air this sea son, including "General College," a student-oriented soap opera produced by Jason Lyon. "Off the Cuff is a comedy show similar to "Saturday Night Live," produced by Philip Brown, and "Campus Profile" is a news pro gram produced by Alex Burnett. Because of the station's affiliation with the National College Television Network, "General College" will be nationally syndicated and broadcast to other college stations. Other programs shown on STV will come from the NCTV broadcast, Wil liamson said. "We get the rest of the shows from NCTV, and they're produced by differ ent college campuses all over the coun try," Kelly said. The station also plans to work with The Critic and the Campus Y later this year, and will cover the Student Con gress budget meeting, Williamson said. STV is holding an organizational meeting today at 7 p.m. in Dey 303 for students interested in working with the station. "What we need is people who want to get involved and who are will ing to do some work. It's good experi ence and it looks very good on a res ume," Williamson said. Staff Writer New equipment and new program ming will be a part of Student Television's new season. "Those Crazy College Kids," based on student life at UNC, "is about four roommates going to Chapel Hill, and they each sort of represent a stereotype here at Carolina," said Chris Kelly, one of the new show's producers. ' "ii"11 r" Arts and Featares Windham Hill release signals folk Folk music. It's been around since music began, but most people think of folk music as the sound of the '60s, Bob Dylan and Joan Baez being the he roes of the time. Folk is also often synonymous with "protest song," but it is as widely varied as the category of "rock V roll." It includes everything from protest songs to love songs, with a simplicity indicative of its hand-me-down roots. The 1970s saw much less empha sis on folk music in the mainstream. But today, folk is back stronger than ever. Some of the most popular musicians of the '80s are Bruce Springsteen and John Mellencamp. And of course Melissa Etheridge and Michelle Shocked have their own loyal followings. For the first time since the '60s, it's chic to have a folk sound. Now Windham Hill, the label best known for its so-called New Age releases, has compiled Legacy, A Collection of New Folk Music. In the liner notes, Windham Hill attributes the album's release to the recent success of Suzanne Vega and Tracy Chapman. Each of the IS artists on Legacy is less of a folk singer in the traditional sense, and more of a singer-song- World-famous African musician to perform tonight By VICKI HYMAN Staff Writer Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, called "Africa's most famous contemporary musician" by The New York Times, will play in Memorial Hall today at 8 p.m. The conceit is sponsored by the Black Cultural Center (BCC) and the UNC African Student Association (ASA). "He is, I'm told, the legendary king of African music in the world today," said Margo Crawford, director of the BCC. "It will be a total experience, reflective of the totality of traditional African culture. Fela has a 35-piece band, dancers, singers. It will be, for all of us, a trip to Africa, led by the mag nificent Fela Anikulapo-Kuti." Crawford described Fela as "inter PlayMakers By HASIE SIRISENA Staff Writer Appropriately enough, PlayMakers Repertory Company opens their fall season with a play about the renewal of life, Anton Chekhov's "The Cherry Orchard." Set in Russia around the turn of the century, the play focuses on the lives of several characters as they struggle to keep up with a rapidly transforming society. "I think Chekhov is lamenting the loss of the old way of life, and at the same time fully acknowledging that there is no way it could be preserved," said guest artist Earle Edgerton. The play centers on the lives of two characters, Lyubov and Lopakhin. Lyubov is a member of the landed gentry and owner of the estate where the play takes place. Her land and her status are slowly decreasing, but she cannot seem to do what is necessary to save them. Lopakhin is part of the new, rising class of businessmen who are slowly usurping the wealth and position of the aristocrats. He must deal with the guilt rm com, eirago gmm) (f rillllllf'llll m mm -mr -- W Women's Soccer vs. Radford 4:00 PM Finley Field Julia Coon Album writer today's defmition of choice for the genre. They have each worked to establish their place as musicians, and many of them have released mate rial previously. Some have worked with big names such as Vega, Chapman and 10,000 Maniacs. Legacy appropriately begins with the title cut, performed by Pierce Pettis. The song gives an overview for the album and tries to loosely define folk music. It sounds the most like tradi tional folk, in the vein of Woodie Guthrie. With lyrics like "It is a legacy Passed down to you and me What we're taught to believe We never question these things," the song tries to show what folk music and the album are all about. Folk music tries to do more than just entertain; it tells stories, and it often brings a social problem to the forefront. Many songs on Legacy do just that. "My Name Joe" by David Massen gill tells the story of all illegal aliens through the story of Joe. He captures the fear and frustration of trying to survive in the United States illegally. The song is wistful and sorrowful, with nationally renowned and ... a tremen dous political figure in Nigeria. Ufo Okeke, president of the ASA, secured Fela for the concert. "We've been working for quite some time to get an African group to perform," Okeke said. "Fela has been playing around the country at a much higher price. The reason we set tickets so low is to en courage American students to go out and sample a different music." According to Fela, "The music of Africa is big sound: it's the sound of a community. It's music of togetherness. The tonalities, the rhythms of the songs, it's all African. We have 43 people on tour, and a full show uses 35 of them. People tell me my band is too big, that I can't go on tour. They try to use economics to destroy the culture of my to open year with Chekhov play and the fear that he does not reallv deserve his new wealth. "The Cherry Orchard" was first produced as a heavy, ponderous tear jerker. Chekhov, however, never in tended for the play to be a tragedy. He originally planned to call the play "The Cherry Orchard, a Comedy in Four Acts." Under the direction of David Hammond, PlayMakers' production, unlike many previous productions, takes the approach that the play should be treated as a humorous and sensitive portrayal of tragic events. "There is a very fresh feeling about this production," said guest artist Ray Dooley, who plays Lopakhin. "It's a human comedy. We laugh and cry with these people because they're recogniz able characters behaving in familiar ways." Guest artist Sheriden Thomas, who plays the character Lyubov, described her character as very human. "Forced to come home, she doesn't fit there. It (home) no longer is there even ... She has to deal with this and it all comes to ahead." The play focuses on relationships, Field Hockey vs. Radford 7:00 PM Astroturf Field a poignancy that shows an understand ing of the problem that is becoming ever more prominent in this country. Lillie Palmer's "Insanity Street" is a simple song with a lot to say. Based on a poem by Eunice Anttalainen, the song is a quiet plea for an end to the arms race. But its lyrics speak loudly: "... we make and we store All the weapons of war 'causeiWt live on Insanity Street." Even Central America gets a men tion with Sara Hickman's "Salvador." This song evokes an image of a lone singer, sitting center stage while spotlit from above just a woman and her guitar. One of the most interesting songs on Legacy is "When You Were Mine," performed by the Blue Rubies. Many listeners would recognize this as one of Prince's early songs, but it is an unex pected arrangement. It begins with a lute rendition of the hymn tune most recognizable as the Doxology and ends with an Irish-sounding lilt. The song laments a lost love, simply enough, but it is Susan Maunu's strange, airy, al most nasal voice that makes it stand out. The artists on Legacy have musical backgrounds as varied as the songs themselves. Practically every style from classical to country to pseudo-punk is represented, as well as every energy people. Why should money get in the way when I m promoting greatness?" Known as the king of Afrobeat, Fela created his style from a mixture of traditional Nigerian and James Brown music and late 1960s jazz. His songs are a blend of percussion from ances tral hand drums, riffs from the nine member horn section, backup vocals from five women, and Fela's own deep, dry baritone, with lyrics in a mixture of pidgin English and Nigerian languages. Fela also promotes his politics through his music. As one of Nigeria's most outspoken left-wing dissidents, Fela, 5 1 , has spent most of the last two decades challenging the many regimes both democratic and military that have controlled his country. And it has cost him. Thomas said. The actors and characters in relationships with each other give the play depth, she said. "This , is the most truly ensemble play I've been in," Thomas said. "David (Hammond) has tied stuff together and has given everybody a reason to speak ... Playing Chekhov is the richest of anything that I have done so far." Though the play is at times difficult, the challenge is well worth it, she said. What is wonderful about it, she said, is "the size, the basic humanity ... the need to be as big as you can be. This isn't a toilet roll commercial. This isn't doing a bit part in a movie." Edgerton, who plays Gayev, de scribed the play as very challenging and difficult to act. He called it a mix of very "curious physical comedy" and "rich, deep writing." He found a lot of potential in his character for humor and pathos. "My character ... is a charming, loving 51- ' year-old man who is totally inept. He is not equipped to deal with the raoidlv changing society that he finds himself in. This role has the potential to be funnier than I ever thought possible," r tr v courantJ 1989-90 Concert Series Season Tickets now at Special Student Rate Orchestral and Concerto music of the Baroque by Handel, TelemannJS Bach. Also Handel's Messiah. Distinguished soloists, augmented Baroque orchestra. Subscription (4 Concerts).....$16 1st concert Sat., Oct. 7. Single tickets $5 ea. TICKETS ROOM 105C MUSIC DEPT. HILL HALL v vvy i .""v'wv"v"v.jwwj jjijjjuuv ijiiiiihi iij y p-ffrffW f y'p?Qyp'-'-y-wwMM'-'rj-y'-,-'-'-ift '------'- L if Ir Ih'" L;,Ui feiyo!Ki &ttWott3oc?e SwraTOW,i5JiJ w-JL " , - J I J rl Pv- c -;?.! I , v f Cofi&cUatv, : . " kWJ 'L X y&M of New :-fS t7UL - if LFoik, Music; Vf : ' 7 ,h i aV- 3 c lH H - I '- i-v-;? V ifa - 'i4 i $ ? y" "'' v ' i i ?J ' ' - 'I I I in r n i in r 1 1 1 1 f, i .-.v.-.-.v , iVr. r, ..v.v.-, .'.Vi ,v, 'Legacy Windham Hill's level from slow and mellow to quick and urgent. In this day and age of the "I've been beaten nearly to death," Fela said. "The government put me in prison. I went through 20 years of suf fering, so it's not pleasant to do what I am doing. "We're very backward. The African continent is degenerating into what I call 'the era of second slavery, and it's caused by a conspiracy of western governments on one side and illegal African governments on the other side operating without a constitution. My government is like that: a military government that runs the country by decree." Fela explained his view of the situ- issues," he said. "It makes sense cultiv ation in Africa: "Privatization in Nige- ally as well. In Africa, we don't sing ria is selling the government to indi- really about love. We sing about hap viduals, and with the debt equity swap, penings. That's the tradition: there are the World Bank is ruining my country no love songs like 'Darling, Kiss Me." he said. Director David Hammond expressed a similar enthusiasm for the play and the production. "It's true that 'The Cherry Orchard' captures brilliantly the restless world of pre-revolutionary Russia. But I think that the real theme of the play is that change is the essence of life itself. It's sometimes painful, and sometimes welcome, but it's going to happen, and all of us must find ways to live with it." PlayMakers Repertory Company will present Anton Chekhov's "The Cherry Orchard" through Oct. 8. Perform ances are held in the Paul Green The atre at 8 p.m. Tuesday through Satur day and 2 p.m. on Sundays. Tickets can be bought at the box office. For more information, call 962-1121. Legal Problems ? call Orrin Robbins Attorney at Law 968-1825 The Society for Performance on Original Instruments AT UNC CHAPEL HILL reviva new folk music compilation folk renaissance, there is something for everyone on Legacy. with what it owns. It means my country is on the market. "It's happening in Nigeria, Ghana. These leaders accept this arrangement, which makes me feel that they are agents for the Western system they do everything they have the guns to per secute, and people are becoming poorer and poorer, which is making life diffi cult for Africans." Music is one way to paint a political picture for a wider audience, Fela said. "That's the only way a wider audience will get acquainted with the imoortant Tickets for the 8 p.m. show can be purchased at the BCC, located in the Student Union. Tickets are $6 for stu dents and $7 for the general public. For more information, call at 962-9001. spools odd liUJKfflMM mm. mmmmmm "area's bsst selection" "guaanteid lowepnces" He Diamond Bade' - .8'. Cannbndale ' MoiintaihSi!i:ex7dIlayiwheels ' Cr;M6. Ftam 15 Speed: ' 4tegwariyS299- SOT Great economical student transportation! Buy a bike from us and take advantage of 6 months free adjustment1 Next day service on most repairs! 104 W. Main Street, Across from Wendy's on C Bus Line Carrboro Board members By KATHERINE HOUSTON Staff Writer ' '. The Carolina Union Activities Board (CUAB) is accepting applications ' through Monday for students interested in developing the cultural, educational and social opportunities available at unc. ; ; Students can choose from 1 2 CUAB I committees that organize student pro- ' gramming such as movies, Cabaret ' performances, Union Gallery spaces, ' speakers and concerts. ' ' Applications are available at the" ' Union desk. Applications will be avails able until Friday and are due Monday.- v Most committees will interview appli-- . cants. Billy Pizer, CUAB president, em- '' phasized that the organization is en-, ' tirely student-run. "All ideas and all executions are done by the students. Throughout all- committees there is space to get in- volved in different levels of responsi- bility and time commitment." Mark Ricker, film committee chair-, man, said his committee is looking for ' students with a working knowledge of the film industry as well as students " with a general interest in films. The film committee chooses and obtains . films to be shown in the Union to stu- dents for free or for a low admission ' price. Another CUAB committee is the gallery committee, which is respon sible for planning, promoting and in stalling exhibits in the Union gallery and lobby. Luke Powell's "The Afghan Folio" is now in the gallery. - The social committee is looking for students to represent the campus in choosing and planning social events. Jill Balloun, publicity committee chairman, recommends this committee for advertising, art and marketing ma jors. The group provides advertising for Union events. "Many students find that by working on this committee, they are able to build a portfolio of their works that might be useful in their future." The Cabaret committee brings vari ous performers to the Cabaret, UNC's night club. The Cabaret provides enter tainment four nights a week and during lunch on weekdays. Music, plays and local talent are featured every week. suraupiinsl CIUEAK Since 1971 V" 967-5104