Nebraskan kkFviFW For the weekend of Dec. 2-4 Give it a shot > Downtown Lights — The public is invited to the capitol building tonight for a free concert and a chance to see the city lights from the 14th floor of the capi tol. The Nebraska Wesleyan Women’s Chorus will perform a holiday concert at 6 p.m. and the building will remain open until 8 p.m. to allow concert goers a chance to view the lights. Folk punk band inspired by crazy stories By Joel Strauch Senior Reporter Lincoln band Clarke County will be marking its territory Sun day night with an awesome display of unique music at Duffy’s Tavern. The band has an unusual ori gin. Gregg Cosgrove, the band’s vo calist and guitarist, said, “I’ve been a songwriter for a long time, and someone was going to give me money to record a CD. “So we got together and started playing. The recording never hap pened, but we stayed together. “And now we’re recording with Dave Snider,” said Cosgrove, a University of Nebraska-Lincoln graduate. “We’re trying to finish two songs and get them out on a 7-inch. “We plan to finish the rest of the songs and shop around. Hope fully someone will put it out on CD.” Cosgrove said Clarke County was a real place. “It’s the county in Iowa that I grew up in,” he said. “All the songs are written about stories that take place there. “I heard all these crazy stories about farmers wearing dresses and people dying. They were the kinds of stories that you don’t know if they’re true, but they become fable like. “It’s really interesting to write about. It’s like Edgar Lee Masters’ ‘Spoon River Anthology,’ where he goes through the graveyard and writes a poem about each person. “But I don’t know how long it will last,” he said. “How much can Scott StolVom/Special to the Daily Nebraskan The immbars of tho band Clark# County: from left, Barry Zimmerman, percussion; Nancy Cosgrove, accordion; Ben Zimmerman, bass; and Qregg Cosgrove, guitar and vocals. Also pictured Is Harley, a Siberian husky. you milk out of one town?” Cosgrove described the band’s music as folk punk. “It’s folk music played with punk aesthetics,” he said. “Our songs are all really strong. The strong narratives direct the songs.” The band has changed appear ances in the last couple years. ’ “At first it was just Nancy, a violin and me,” Cosgrove said. “But we added the Zimmermans a year ago.” Nancy Cosgrove, a UNL gradu ate and Gregg’s wife, plays accor dion for the band. Ben Zimmerman, a junior geography major, plays bass, and Barry Zimmerman, a junior interior de sign major, is the band’s percus sionist. Gregg Cosgrove said the band tried to play about once every other month. The band now has two shows in one week. Clarke County will play Sunday night at Duffy’s Tav ern, 1412 O St., and will open for Bad Livers Dec. 9 at Le Cafe Shakes, 1418 O St. Quik Facts Show: Clarke County At: Dufly’s Tavern Time: 10 p.m. Sunday Tickets: $3 at the door Gala to include the work of CU composer From Staff Reports The University of Nebraska-Lincoln School of Music’s annual Choral Holi day Gala will take place 3 p.m. Sunday in Kimball Recital Hall. The concert will feature four of UNL’s vocal ensembles: the University Singers, the Varsity Glee Club, the Uni versity Chorale and the Freshman Acad emy Chorale. Music from many countries and time periods will be included in the perfor mance. One of the show’s highlights will be the premiere of “The Christmas Motets,” by University of Colorado com poser Richard Toensing. Admission is free. Quik Facts Show: UNL Choral Holiday Gala At: Kimball Recital Hall Time: 3 p.m. Sunday Tickets: Admission is free Artists use music to blend cultures By Jill O’Brim Staff Reporter Two cultures become one whenever Wil liam Eaton and R. Carlos Nakai merge their music. Guitarist Eaton grew up in Lincoln — the center of the universe, he called it. Flut ist Nakai grew up as a member of the Na vajo-Ute tribe. “I spent a lot of time with extended fam ily members on the Colorado River Indian Reservation, other parts of Southern Cali fornia, Washington State around Puget Sound, Hawaii and the Four Comers Area,” Nakai said. “I grew up around trees,” Eaton said, recalling climbing neighborhood trees. His occupation as a luthier, a guitar maker, is related to his love of trees, he said. His guitar making led to his co-founding the Roberto-Venn School of Lulhiery in Phoenix. It later led to the creation of his lyre-harp guitar, the 31-string O’ele’n and other multi-stringed guitars. At the time Eaton began building gui tars, Nakai began playing the flute. He picked up the traditional wooden flute in 1972, after an accident ended his ability to play brass instruments, Nakai said. The instrument had been resigned to museum collections, Nakai said. Vfery few people knew anything about the flute, other than its romantic history. Nakai said at the 'time he knew of only three men who took Quik Facts Concert: R. Carlos Nakai and William Eaton, Abendmusik Winter Series At: First Plymouth Church, 2000 D St. Time: 7:30 p.m. Sunday Tickets: Sold out, but tickets may become available. their flutes on the road in the manner he now does, he said. “They were primarily involved in tradi tional music, so 1 picked it up and began working to see if I could include it in a con temporary context of how we are as Native people today,” he said. Nakai has just finished writing a book based on his travel experiences as a Native American musician. His career with Can yon Records began in 1982 with the album “Changes.” Since then, he has has recorded 11 more albums and played on 25, he said. “Ancestoral Voices,” a collaboration with Eaton, earned a Grammy in 1994 for best traditional/folk performance. “I first met K. Carlos at the Heard Mu seum in Phoenix, Arizona,” Eaton said. “A year later, we were playing together. There’s really no other flute players who have his vocabulary or sense of timing.” Eaton said he tried to come up with ar rangements that gave Nakai’s flute playing “a carpet to ride on.” 9 That carpet is marketed in the United States as “New Age” music, Nakai said, even though his music builds on an oral tra dition from an older time. “Much of what I do is a rendition of what we’ve always been doing through time as Native people,” Nakai said. “Our composi tions deal with how we are as a people to day.” For the Abendmusik Winter Series con cert, Nakai and Eaton will perform Christ mas music and songs from their albums. They also will include a song from “Feather, Stone, and Light,” a new album in collabo ration with William Clipman that will be released in early 1995 on Canyon Records. Eaton recently recorded an album, “Where Rivers Meet” Whether he is record ing, building or performing, he is clearly infatuated with wooden instruments. “The wood grows from the seed of a tree. You see this tree grow up, goes through stages, then dies,” Eaton said. “The flutes are the same way. They’re wooden. They’re cedar. They’re related and they’re in the same clan. “I think that’s one of the reasons R. Carlos and I were attracted to each other. Even though our cultural backgrounds are different, we’re alike in the same ways. We relate as two equal beings addressing each other.”