Music series
showcases new talent for Auburn crowds
The Auburn
Plainsman Thursday July
16,1998
By Steven
Jackson
Staff Writer
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The historic hand hewn church house that is now
the Auburn Unitarian Universalist Fellowship building has no pulpit, pews or
preachers tonight.
Absent is the drone of a church organ and hymns
sung in unison.
But there is music.
Tonight, the worshiping congregation has been
replaced by about 50 spirited folk fans in folding chairs, and a traveling
troubadour from Massachusetts is carrying on a tradition that runs as deep as
the red Alabama clay that has cradled the white building for more than 125
years.
Singer/songwriter Cliff Eberhardt is the modern
day version of a medieval bard, making a living traveling from state to state,
bringing his songs, the news of the day and his own take on life.
Until two years ago, however, there was no venue in
Alabama dedicated to supporting original acoustic music and this kind of grass
roots approach to making a living in music.
Auburn residents Katie Smith, Jay Lamar and Mary
Littleton were folk music fans and were tired of having to do their own
traveling just to see performers play the music they had fallen in love with.
"We found out there wasn't much involved in
starting a concert series. We were the first folk venue in Alabama,"
Littleton said.
"We didn't do it to become music promoters. We
just wanted the music in town," Smith said.
The Sundilla Acoustic Concert Series was started in
March of 1996 and has since served as a one night only performance hall for
names like Ellis Paul, Lucy Kaplansky, Kate Campbell and Bill Morrissey.
"These people are famous in places like Boston
or New York," Littleton said. "But they don't get played on the radio,
and nobody around here has ever heard of them. I can't tell you how many artists
have come down here and said, "I have never been in Alabama before
today.'"
Sundilla concerts are held about twice a month in a
quiet, smokeless atmosphere where an audience of 50 to 100 people is close
enough to see the performer's shoelaces.
More importantly, the audience can hear the words
and see the lines on the faces that are as unique as each performer's stories
and style of expression.
Lamar described the setting as "an intimate
place where performers really engage with the audience." She said, "I
think that makes it a whole different experience than going to a bar, because
there aren't any distractions. You're there to listen to the music, and they're
there to share their work with you."
The not for profit volunteer series has been
called "a mecca in a desert."
Mike Green of Fleming, Tamulevich and Associates
handles the booking in this region for artists like Eberhardt and Greg Brown. He
said, "There are tons of places like this in the Northeast and on the west
coast. In the Southeast, they are few and far between."
The name of the series, itself, is embedded in the
history and heritage of Auburn. Lamar said Sundilla was named after a Creek
Indian who owned land in east Auburn. She said, "We wanted to be in touch
with the roots of this area, and music is an expression of our humanity, really
- the experiences that we all share in being rooted in a place and time,"
she said.
The effort to bring this kind of music to Auburn
began with a phone call to Smith. She got a call from songwriter Steve Young who
wrote the Eagles' song, "Seven Bridges Road." She had interviewed him
a few months earlier. He asked her to suggest a place to play in Auburn.
Smith said she took his tape around to area bars
and wound up at Bottcher's where, "they were very nice, but they said,
"This guy needs a place where people will listen.'" So Smith and her
sister, Lamar, decided to hold an outdoor concert at the University's Center for
Arts and Humanities at Pebble Hill.
"A hundred and fifty people showed up with
kids and blankets," Smith said. "At that point, we realized that there
really was an audience for that kind of music."
The three women set out to find a reliable place to
hold additional concerts. Smith explained the series was modeled after house
concerts. People invite musicians into their homes and charge admission to their
friends.
"None of us had houses we could pull that off
in," Smith said. "But we were all members of the Unitarian Church ...
We already knew the room was great and had nice acoustics. Mary went to the
board and asked if we could use it for concerts and they said, "sure'"
"It really wouldn't have happened without the
Unitarian Church backing it up, " she said. "We wouldn't have a place
to do it, especially not that nice of a place."
Some of the performers who take to the red
carpeted, foot high stage perform regularly in much larger theatres and at
festivals, but Smith said there has been a huge demand from performers wanting
to play the smaller venue.
Green said, "Those are the kind of gigs that
the performers love even though they don't tend to make a lot of money doing it.
Apparently it is a really special series. People love doing it."
In fact, Smith said the performers are taking a
chance on making money at the door.
"We don't guarantee them anything because it
would come out of our pockets. The only thing we do guarantee them is that the
people who show up will be appreciative. That just seems to be enough," she
said.
Smith said, "(Texas songwriter) Emily Kaitz
sat at my dining room table and started crying and said, "We're not used to
being treated this way. We're not used to people sitting and paying
attention.'"
The artists do receive some guaranteed perks for
their trek into the heat of the South.
The Sundilla volunteers make sure the performers
are fed and have a place to sleep - usually in their homes.
Smith said, "Because they're on the road and
in sterile hotel rooms, a lot of them like to be at somebody's house and have a
home cooked meal."
Since the artists stay in the volunteers' houses,
the women have gotten to know the performers well. "We've made friends with
these people," Smith said. "When they come back through, it's like
having family come back through."
Littleton added, "Every one of them has a
fascinating story."
The audiences at Sundilla shows seem to be growing,
but they tend to be mostly non students or people familiar with the artists.
Smith said she would love for more students to attend. "I think part of it
is they may not be aware of it. We may not have done a good enough job getting
the word out."
Green has his own explanation. "People who
aren't familiar with the music can have a stereotypical impression of what folk
music is. They think it's sitting around and singing "Michael Row the Boat
Ashore.' They don't realize that there's incredibly exciting and sophisticated
music happening in this circuit," he said.
Littleton said, "There is so much out there.
We want to have a little more classical, some stuff that's a little more
country, some that's a little more folk ... to get a taste for all the kinds of
music going on out there that most people in Auburn would never get to hear -
especially not live."
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