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MARJORIE MacHATTIE
Dave Carmichael, musical director for Festival
Antigonish Summer Theatre's production of Joni
Mitchell: River, sits surrounded by 10 of the
guitars that will be used for the production.
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Tuning in to Joni
Carmichael is guitar man behind play based on works of singer-songwriter Mitchell
By ANDREA NEMETZ / Entertainment Reporter
Joni Mitchell: River, opening Friday at Bauer Theatre in Antigonish, has a cast
of three - or 13 depending on how you look at it. The Festival Antigonish production, which explores love through 29 songs by the
Canadian singing-songwriting legend, stars Raquel Duffy, Margot Sampson and
Mark Uhre. Music director Dave Carmichael will play 10 different guitars - each with its
own personality and nickname given by the stage crew. There's Hekyll and Jekyll, two Norman B18 guitars - identical except one has a
wood "birthmark" and Taka, a Takamine guitar, used in the performance of Carey
and All I Want, for instance. "This show is all acoustic," said Carmichael, who is making his Festival
Antigonish debut in River, which runs in repertory to Aug. 19. "The Takamine is usually plugged in. It has a very trebly, high sound, like a
dulcimer, so I'm using it as a pseudo dulcimer. In terms of the tunings - there
are 13 in the show - it's the hardest to wrap my head around. It's tuned
DADDAA. "Joni really messes with the equation with her tunings. She's said she'll be
outside tuning a string to the rustling of a tree, a bird singing, a dog
barking and it could be true. The tunings are weird. But once you know how to
play the songs, you find things easier to grab." Though Carmichael, who has earned three ECMA nominations is often thought of as
a singer-songwriter, he's no stranger to the stage, having graduated from
Acadia University with a theatre degree in the early '90s. He also spent two years with Windsor's Mermaid Theatre, as a puppeteer and
musician for seven shows, starred in Death the Musical at Neptune, and worked
with Barnacle Theatre in Wolfville. He's excited to play in the very intimate Bauer Theatre with "three great
singers." "They're not trying to be Joni Mitchell," he notes of the actors, who are also
joined by Juno Award-winning musician/composer Dave Christiansen, who plays
piano, flute, clarinet and percussion in the Jean Morpurgo-directed musical. Carmichael says his role is to learn the tunings. But playing so many guitars is
more of a challenge than he expected. "Every guitar has its own guitar-ality," he says coining a word to describe
sounds and feel that are unique to each instrument. "Take a 1967 Gibson J-45. It's a famous guitar that John Lennon had. You might
have an idea in your head of how it would sound, but you don't know until you
have a couple of conversations, a night together, how it will actually sound.
The more you get to know the instrument, the more it will reveal." The Gibson J-45 came from Bill Fraser, who Carmichael met by the appetizers at a
Festival Antigonish meet and greet. Carmichael's jaw dropped when he heard the
model Fraser had and he thought he'd feature it as the main guitar in the show.
"But when I got it it was in really bad shape. It had been neglected and the
bridge was lifting. But I didn't want to give up on it and sent it to a local
luthier - Campbell Calder - and he fixed it, but that time most of the guitars
had been cast. "I thought I knew where Gabby (the Gibson) would fit. I thought it would be
perfect for Magdalene Laundries, a very heavy song about the Magdalene
Laundries in Ireland (the subject of the critically acclaimed movie the
Magdalene Sisters). But the J-45 was too sweet sounding so I used it on A Case
of You." Carmichael, who has been learning Mitchell songs since February, marvels at the
number of guitars that have been donated for the show, which was created by
Allen MacInnis and Greg Lowe. "Antigonish has a fantastic community. The theatre put an ad out asking for
guitars and so many people responded with offers it was cool." The guitars include: the Gibson; a Larivee, donated by Doug Sampson of Bedford
MusicStop nicknamed Larry which is the main guitar Carmichael uses in the show;
a Fender F65 (Freddy) from Maureen Shebib; a Fender CG7 Classical (Daisy) from
Scott MacDonald; the Normans from Blue C Music, an Antigonish store owned by
Carson Roulston; a handmade guitar by Calder nicknamed Collie; Patsy Boudreau's
Mann A303 B (Mr. Mann); Ryan MacIntyre's Tanglewood (Ryan) and Carmichael's own
Taka. He has never seen the multiple Grammy-winning artist Mitchell, who was inducted
into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1997, perform live but spent the winter
immersing himself in Mitchell biographies including Shadows and Lights which he
picks as his favourite both as a book and as a movie. Carmichael's been a fan since he heard Mitchell's music on the radio growing up
in Montreal. Help Me and Coyote stick in his mind as his earliest Mitchell
memories. "She's such an innovator, musically and lyrically. Every song is like a play in
itself. I'm fascinated by how Jean handles 29 plays within a play. "And as a fan, I've always loved Joni's balls. She never, ever compromised her
artistic integrity, even when there was a backlash from her fanbase. She wasn't
trying to find her place in the market, but was intrinsically true to herself. "I find that inspiring." Carmichael found himself musing about Mitchell while he performed at the recent
Stan Rogers Folk Festival in Canso. "The first workshop I did was with (Texas singer-songwriter) Eliza Gilkyson.
I'll never be the same. She's amazing artistically. She's like a Joni, very
experimental and uses cool tunings." While he was sitting in the Green Room between acts in Canso, fellow musicians
kept coming by to ask about his new album, recorded at Common Ground (formerly
Solar Audio) in Halifax. As yet untitled, the disc, his third independently released album, is expected
to be out in September. Tickets for Joni Mitchell: River are $20. Call 1-800-563-PLAY (7529).
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