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'77"
The Brentano String Quartet: Misha
Amoy, Michael Kannen, Serena Canin
and Mark Steinberg.
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Under Supervision of the
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DE'T'ROIT
JEWISH NEWS
2/6
1998
94
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CLASSIFIEDS
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RESULTS!
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(248)354-5959
formed in 1992 and the first quartet-
in-residence at New York University,
draws on experiences at summer festi-
vals as well as prestigious concert halls
across the country for the master class.
The Yiddishbbuk piece bears the
initials of persons commemorated in
the work. The first movement com-
memorates three children interned by
the Nazis at Terezin, where they died.
The second movement bears the ini-
tials of writer Isaac Bashevis Singer,
and the last movement shows the ini-
tials of composer and conductor
Leonard Bernstein.
— Suzanne Chessler
The 13rentano String Quartet with
ON A CLASSICAL NOTE
Paul Katz performs at 8 p.m,
Sunclay, Feb. 8, at Orchestra Hall.
$6 - 39. (313) 576 - 5111. For tickets
to the 7 p.m. forum ($15/non-stu-
dent, $5/student), call (248) 737-
9980. The Paul Katz master class
runs 11:45 a.m.-1:45 p.m. today,
Feb 6, at the Emma Schaver Music
Building at NiVa.rie• the Brentano
master class runs 4-6 p.m. Monday,
Feb. 9, in the Emma Schaver Music
Building. (313) 577-4785.
Yiddishbbuk — Inscription for String
Quartet, a work by Osvaldo Golijov,
will be part of the Orchestra Hall con-
cert performed Sunday, Feb. 8, by the
Brentano String Quartet with Paul
Katz.
Sponsored by the Chamber Music
Society of Detroit, the program also
includes works by Beethoven and
Schubert and is the centerpiece of an
artistic outreach program.
Brentano's Michael Kannen and
CURTAIN CALL
Katz, a member of the Cleveland
Controversy is at the heart of the
Quartet, will discuss "The Cello in the
next
production of the Jewish
Chamber: The Cello's Role in String
Ensemble
Theatre (JET), Taking Sides.
Quartets and Quintets" an hour
Ronald Harwood's docudrama
before the 8 p.m. concert.
explores the choices made by Wilhelm
The quartet will visit Brookfield
Furtwangler, chief conductor of the
Academy in Rochester Hills today to
perform for the elementary
students, said Lois Beznos,
Chamber Music Society
president and chair of its
board of trustees. Also
today, Katz will conduct a
master class in collabora-
tion with the Wayne State
University Department of
Music.
On Monday, Feb. 9, the
quartet — including Mark
Steinberg on violin, Serena
Canin on violin and Misha
Amory on viola — will be
part of a full-day residency
and master class at Wayne. John Michael Manfredi and Robert Grossman in
JET's production of "Taking Sides."
The Brentano Quartet,
Berlin Philharmonic during the Third
Reich.
On one side, Furtwangler is
accused of serving the Nazi regime by
an American tribunal, which asserts
the conductor aided Hitler by contin-
uing to work during the war.
On the other side, the late conduc-
tor claimed he stayed to defend the
intellectual life of his people against an
evil ideology.
Taking Sides runs Feb. 11-March 8
at the Maple/Drake Jewish
Community Center with Evelyn
Orbach directing Robert Grossman as
Furtwangler, John Michael Manfredi
as Major Steve Arnold, Betsy Brandt
as Emmi Staub, Charles McGraw as
Helmuth Rode, David Wolber as
Lieutenant Wills and Joanna Hastings
Woodcock as Tamara Sachs.
Some critics have said that
Harwood tries to sway the audience
toward Furtwangler's position by por-
traying him as perhaps a too-sympa-
thetic character.
Harwood's interest in the subject
also involves comparing Furtwangler
to another artist, Herbert von
Karayan, who joined the Nazi Party
twice but did not encounter the same
negative reaction.
At the end of the play, Harwood
wants the audience to think about the
issues of what defines a Nazi and what
constitutes support of Nazism.
In an interview with Albert-Reiner
Glapp, Harwood says, "I want the
audience to take sides. I think [the
play] is about an important subject —
an artist in a totalitarian society."
— Suzanne Chessler
Taking Sides will be performed at
7:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Thursdays
and Sundays, 8 p..tri. Saturdays and
2 p.m. Sundays, Feb. 11-March 8,
at the Maple/Drake Jewish
Community Center. Another mati-
nee is at 2 p.m. Wednesday, March
4. (248) 788-2900.
Dr. Charles Calmer, new artistic
director of the Detroit Symphony
Orchestra, will conduct a talkback
after the Wednesday; Feb. 18, per-
formance.
.,„