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May 23, 1997 - Image 165

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-05-23

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

gni uersity Musical Society /ff,O'f"

e is h
e .
Cutturt a Kpression
i n Israel

World Culture Series

Contemagary

ltzhak Perlman

Mixed Bag

c>4.0t

In the Fiddler's House

A Klezmer Summit

featuring

A variety of musical styles are featured in the
compositions ofMark David Gottlieb.

SUZANNE CHESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS

Israel Philharmonic

The Klezmatics
Brave Old World
The Klezmer Conservatory
Band and
The Andy Statman Klezmer
Orchestra
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 8 PM

Zubin Mehta, conductor
SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 8 PM
Hill Auditorium

PROGRAM

A new work by an Israeli composer
R. Strauss 7111 Eulenspiegels Lustige
Streiche, Op. 28
Beethoven Symphony No. 2 in E-flat
Major, Op. 5 ("Eroica")

Hill Auditorium

Under the violin bow of Itzhak
Perlman, In the Fiddler's House
beings together four of today's
world-class klezmer bands on
one stage, showing Michigan
just how fast they can bulgar
and freylekh.

Chen ?imbalista, percussion

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 8 PM

Rackham Auditorium

With the magical intensity of a
snake charmer Israel's own master
percussionist cajoles an
enchanting array of rhythmic
sounds out of instruments usually
relegated to the orchestra pit!

Batsheua Dance Company
of Israel

Ohad Naharin, artistic director
SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 8 .M
SUNDAY, MARCH 22, 4 PM

Power Center

Choreographer Ohad Naharin's
hypnotic dance theatre ensemble
from Israel performs four works in
two Power Center performances,
fusing ceaseless originality with
eye-riveting energy.

Presented through the generous
support of the KMD Foundation.

Mark David Gottlieb: "An all-Gottlieb concert."

M

ark David Gottlieb, who
has composed music for a
loose string of specific per-
formances and media
productions, soon will have his
varied work linked tightly to-
gether in one program.
The concert, scheduled Friday,
May 30, at the Birmingham Uni-
tarian Church, will showcase
compositions that have classical,
romantic, folk, Slovak and Jew-
ish-Russian sounds.
"I've always been drawn to
music," said Gottlieb, 45, who
teaches at Evola Music in Bloom-
field Hills. "I've played drums,
clarinet, French horn and piano."
Gottlieb's irregular composing
projects have come between
earning bachelor's degrees from
California State and Oakland
universities, building a boat to
sail off the beaches of Central
America and Hawaii, and mak-
ing a secondary career out of
crafting fine furniture, now a
pursuit in a home studio in Roy-
al Oak.
The former Californian start-
ed with a teen rock band in his
home state and moved on to
more serious work with I'm Alive,
a 1971 recording for Capitol
Records.
"Commissions came through

musician friends who heard my
compositions and performed with
me," expla.ined Gottlieb.
A featured artist at the 1995
Michigan Composers in Concert
in Detroit, Gottlieb has won
grants from the National En-
dowment for the Arts and the
Michigan Arts Foundation.
Performers in the upcoming
concert include the violin and
cello duo of Nadine Deleury and
Victoria Haltom, clarinetist Bri-
an Bowman, soprano and Uni-
versity of Windsor faculty
member Patricia Willington, pi-
anists Steven Rosenfeld and
Carol Goodman, St. Louis. Eng-
lish horn player Robert Herman
and singer/guitarist Benny
Cruz.
"What's especially nice about
this program is that it was not my
idea to have an all-Gottlieb con-
cert," said the composer, who will
be at the piano to present three
original folk songs. "I was ap-
proached by some of the musi-
cians who will be performing." ❑

The music of Mark David
Gottlieb will be featured at 7:30
p.m. Friday, May 30, at Birm
ingham Unitarian Church, 651
Woodward. For information,
call (810) 334-8703, Ext. 27.

313.764.2538

University Musical Society

of the University of Michigan
Burton Memorial Tower
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1270

IlIc
tic ."

LNDOWIM17

ARTS

MEET AUTHOR

NORMAN
CANTOR

who will discuss and sign

THE AMERICAN
CENTURY

Published by HarperCollins

Moving deftly from Marxism to movies, Freud to feminism,
distinguished scholar Norman Cantor covers an exhaustive
range of topics relating to the vibrant culture of the 20th
century. Some of his other titles include The Sacred Chain and
Inventing the Middle Ages.
Photo credit- Joy Jacobs

FIND OUT.

THURSDAY • MAY 29 • 7:3-0 PM

BORDERS

FARMINGTON HILLS:

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30995 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD
BETWEEN 13 & 14 MILE RD.
(810) 737-0110

MA

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