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November 15, 1985 - Image 16

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1985-11-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

16 Friday, November 15, 1985 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

11- "Kaaitia irT all ISS umU lm Em

1

175 count

2 ply
reg. $1.09

now 890
limit 3

WALDRAKE
I I PHARMACY

:

1
exp. 11-30-85
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lowsaar.................. I
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In III MI MI NM OM—
= NM MI Me IIII

Family Run Pharmacy
.1T
1

KEN JACOBS, R.Ph.

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FREE DELIVERY
• SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT



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OFF

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Note-able Families

Continued from preceding page

her mother and sister, Cindi is a
music therapist at Mt. Carmel
1
1
5548
Drake
Rd.
Hospital
and teaches private
1 HUGGIES DIAPERS

1
lessons. Younger sister Kim (a
West Bloomfield
(corner of Walnut Lake &
Michigan State telecommunica-
'
I
I
I
1 mile north of J.C.C.)
tions graduate), teaches private
1 I
1
Large Size
111
lessons
and often performs solo
1
AOC I
and with other groups at wed-
reg. 63c now •grio
1
Regular Price $9.49
I
I
dings, parties, b'nai mitzvah and
I Limit 3 - exp. 11-30-85
Mom-Sat. 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
I
music clubs. Collette also gives
II
limit
exp.
11-30-85
an
an en en mom inwilisim!olar_44..tmaiumerampnwenumpaimw
a
StInday 11 a.m. -5
in. en gm mum ow gip am un im
solo piano performances at local
weddings and parties, along
UNBEATABLE
UNBEATABLE
UNBEATABLE
with the private piano lessons
UNBEATABLE
she teaches at her home in Or-
chard Lake.
_ Not surprisingly, getting to-
C gether for concert rehearsals
also presents a problem for the
co
three busy-musicians.
4
"Cindi works during the day,"
says Collette. "So, that's im-
4
possible. Then, at night, Kim
co
late — and Cinci also
co teaches
teaches at night."
Collette teaches piano on
Saturday mornings and, also,
BRAND NEW
BRAND NEW
Sunday school at Temple Beth
El.
CHEVETTE CS
CAVALIER
"Sometimes, we manage to
C
FINAL
meet on Saturdays — maybe
DAYS
co around 4 o'clock," explains Kim.
m "Or, on Sundays at the same
OF
time. Or, during the week, late
4
at night. Or, early in the morn-
ings, around 8 o'clock."
in 122 tr., h.b. cps.. black, sport mirror, P155/80
2 dr. cpe., front & ff. carpet mate. rear wind.
"We usually try to rehearse
tires, cloth seats plus MI factory equip. Manual
defrost, 4 spd. manual trans., p.a.. tinted glass,
trans.
r- our individual parts first," says
cloth bucket seats, AM radio.
3
m Cindi, who lives in Bloomfield
Financing
Hills. "We hope when we get to-
gether, that everything will
FROM
come together perfectly. Some-
OVER 73 CHEVETT1S AVAILABLE
OVER 100 CAVALIERS AVAILABLE C
times it does. Sometimes it
AT SIMILAR SAVINGS
AT SIMILAR SAVINGS
doesn't."
"My mom and I have our days
BRAND NEW
BRAND NEW
BRAND NEW
free usually, so we sometimes
CAMARO
S10 BLAZER
S10 PICKUP
practice our parts together, even
if Cindi can't be with us. So, at
least we have some idea of
r what's happening," says Kim.
She adds that the three are also
on the phone a lot, going back
and forth about schedules and
T. 01s. mile. sots. M. wipers. rssr *slog.. slt
ails. V8 ps sal.. 4 44. sits Iran. w/Ii. 70 pl. hot
what will be played for the next
1000 lb. payload, Fleeteido .ody, gas Isuzu
task. tilt. pvtr. stesrIag, W/t. slot belt lira. AM FM
AM•FM stereo, cloth buckets, rear gel., V6, 5
concert.
eng., 4 spd. manual trans., steel belt radial tires,
• stow sticsu.. sad & sass. clod. tsp. wrist% test*
spd. trans., tilt whl., P215/85R15 SEIRIttires.
AM redlo, painted rear step bumper, full size
/swim Taboo splposst. 2-lass plat ousts. cast alum.
Performances last from 45
spare, vinyl bench.
Oats. heaps laps. Initial,' 1081. fall aka spire.
minutes to an hour and are
co
co played usually for area organ-
4
;- FROM
izations and music clubs. Most
FROM
4 OVER 73 CAMAROS AVAILABLE
of the program is made up of
OVER
100
TO
CHOOSE
OVER 50 BLAZERS AVAILABLE
LLI
classical pieces, sometimes with
AT SIMILAR SAVINGS
AT
SIMILAR
SAVINGS
AT SIMILAR SAVINGS
fn
what the trio calls "a contem-
porary flavor."
"When we're called up and
m
asked to perform, we consider
USED CAR CLEARANCE $ 500 C
FINANCING AVAILABLE
things like whether or not we
want to use all new material,"
says Kim. "Or whether or not
$3450 .tham $2950
'80 MONZA Aete. air
'79 BLAZER 4X4 mow nady
$6450 wham. $5950
we want to repeat our last per-
03 '80 DATSUN 8210 Gas saver
$2950 WNW@ $2450
'82 TORONADO Lund
$7450 wirobsts $6950
formance, or mix the old with
4
the new. We also, of course, con-
'83 OLDS FMENZA Aete
$6250 WNW, $5750
'84 TRANS AM Black, suet
$9950 win*.t. $9450
sider where the performance is
$4450 wirsksts $3950
'81 SKYLARK Law NI.
to take place, and for whom.
'83 T-BIRD HERITAGE 12.000 ml. $8950 wir*st. $8450
Sometimes, if it's for a music
club, for instance, they want to
RENTALS Different models to choose from!
hear a specific kind of music —
like American composers, or
Minimum of $2000 Call for more details!
French. We also try to take into
consideration the mood or the
time of day • we'll be performing
28111 Telegraph Rd.
or what the audience has heard
& 12 Mile
111 ye. pay Is err prim silts lax.
before, or hasn't heard."
Across free Tel-Twelve Mill
Ile., aid deal. charges only.
The three say they rarely
have any disagreements regard-
ing performances. If they do, it
usually pertains to interpreta-
tion of the music, according to
Cinci "... tempo, dynamics ...
m what notes should be short,
what notes should be long."
Who makes the final decision,
should there be a disagreement?
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w

"I don't really know that any
one of us has the last word,"
says Kim.
"I think that I don't," says Col-
lette, laughing.
Collette whose mother, Kar-
lene Salon, herself a musician,
said she feels that the people
who come to the family concerts
"get a thrill out of seeing this
generational kind of together-
ness. When my mother was
alive and would come to our
concerts, inevitably there would
be some kind of mention (during
the performance) that she was
also a musician and that that's
what things had actually stem-
med from. Oftentimes, we'd ask
her to stand up. After the con-
certs, the people who had come
to hear us would end up talking
with her."
One of their biggest fans now-
adays is Kim's and Cindi's
father, Bernard.
"My husband has attended
every program from fourth
grade on," says Collette, "carry-
ing coats, carrying the music
stands, waiting outside the
ladies' room, if that's where the
girls had to tune up — because
sometimes there would be no
practice rooms. "He's not a
musician, but he's really knowl-
edgeable about music."
"He's a wonderful example for
our husbands," adds Cinci. "My
husband is not musical — he
just plays the stereo. But he's
certainly really supportive."
The trio's next performance is
scheduled for the Farmington
Musicale, Farmington Commu-
nity Center, Dec. 4, at 10:30
a.m.

F

or their first concert to-
gether, Rochelle Barr
and her mother, Sylvia,
performed on twin pianos
for a group of friends and
music afficionados at Rochelle's
home in Bloomfield Hills. Al-
though Rochelle had been per-
forming professionally as a
pianist for several years (much
of the time as an accompanist
with local musicians and voc-
alists), her mother had not per-
formed before an audience in
more than 40 years — when, as
a result of the Depression, she
was forced to give up her career
as a concert pianist to become a
piano teacher (Later, Sylvia,
also of Bloomfield Hills, would
become a teacher of Hebrew —
which she still is.)
"She was a nervous wreck be-
fore our concert, an absolute
basket case," says Rochelle.
"And we started at the top with
Rachmaninoff's Second Suite.
That was the first thing we
learned to play together for
anybody."
But the concert was a rousing
success, and soon Sylvia had lost
most of the butterflies and the
two were entertaining other
audiences in the area.
Sylvia, who is also an accom-
plished harpist, was graduated
from the Detroit Institute of
Musical Art and studied with
the late pianist, Alle D.
Zuidema. At age 8, Rochelle
Continued on Page 18

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