Touring musical comes to Southern Adventist

Sunday, January 1, 1905

IF YOU GOWhat: "The Rock & the Rabbi."When: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.Where: Iles Physical Education Center, Southern Adventist University, CollegedaleAdmission: $10 adults, $20 families.Phone: 236-2814.

Peter and Jesus? They have a little history between them.

There was that whole fishing thing to start with, the "rock" discussion, that walking on water bit, and, oh, that little denial episode.

So there's a good bit to tell, and Peter will be in Collegedale to do it when the musical drama "The Rock & the Rabbi" is presented Tuesday at Southern Adventist University.

The drama, in its 14th year of touring the country, combines acoustic songs with dramatic storytelling.

Peter is Gary Richardson, one half of the creative team, along with Danny Hamilton, who put the musical together when they were on the staff of a Florida church 15 years ago.

The production, sometimes funny and sometimes emotional, Richardson said, is akin to "Garrison Keillor meets MTV Unplugged," a cousin to "The Cotton Patch Gospel" or as if "James Taylor brought his big band."

"The Rock & the Rabbi," a 90-minute show performed without an intermission, will have musicians on several instruments, such as acoustic guitars, violin, cello, African and Irish drums, and bagpipes.

The songs, with titles such as "Big Fish/Little Fish," "7 x 70," "Wash Over All of Me" and "Didn't You Love Him?," feature influences from pop and ballad to Celtic and bluegrass.

Richardson said "The Rock & the Rabbi" is not performed in period costume or with the words of the King James Bible.

"It has a very New York feel to it, like a big concert in New York," he said. "It's as if it happened today. It's told in very plain language."

The musical has appeal for those who are intimately familiar with the biblical story of Jesus and his Apostle and those who aren't, Richardson said.

"If a person has no biblical background," he said, "they're going to hear a great story. Folks who grew up in a church don't ever get to hear the story all in one sitting.

"When you hear it from the storyteller's mouth, talking about what he experienced, that's better than studying one particular verse [or] one particular book."