,767/efe rterd A Sound Legacy Octogenarian musician Marvin Kahn debuts his newest compositions. . KIM ROTH ta i & Banquet c elvte Special to the Jewish News - D Great for Events Up To 100 People • Full Service Bar • Elegant Dining Room • Professional Staff Quality Kosher Catering (248) 352-7758 7295 ORCHARD LAKE RD. • WEST I3LOOMFIELD, MI GIFT CERTIFICATES itip„ r■ r Ii. - Celebrating our 26th year! Coupons offered good only at Farmington Hills location. LUNCH & DINNER 7 DAYS CARRY-OUT &INE D-IN FAX ORDERS 248-855-8429 $2 OFF ANY PURCHASE $10 OR MORE • Limit 1 •Dine-in Only • 1 Coupon Per Party • Not Valid With Any Other Offer Expires 12/15/01 (Of) Farmington. Hills 31005 Orchard Lake Road Just West of 14 Mile 248-855-4868 JN $3 OFF ANY PURCHASE S15 OR MORE • Limit 1 •Dine-in Only • 1 Coupon Per Party • Not Valid With Any Other Offer Expires 12/15/01 JN ition Continues... Holiday Affairs, Bar/Bat MitzVahs, Weddings, Business Meetings can now be catered off premises or in our beautifully decorated dining rooms! 18 West Pike Street • Downtown Pontiac • jfitzpa442@aol.com 11/9 2001 86 lives in Traverse City, was instrumental in bringing Legacy to fruition. She suggested her father apply for a grant from ArtServe Michigan, a statewide nonprofit organization building sup- port for the arts, to fund the composi- tion and production of the recording. He was successful. "I'm very proud of that woman," says Kahn of Tarnow. "She's so strong and able to take charge," he says. "I have three daughters, and they're all like that.", etroiter Marvin Kahn laughs when he talks about the "intermission" in his musical career. It lasted 25 years. Now in his "second set," the 84- year-old alto clarinetist will premier his new CD, Legacy, Friday, Nov. 16, as part of Jazz Fridays at the Detroit Institute of Arts. The recording is a jazz tribute to Michigan Legacy Art Park, a 30- acre wilderness sculpture park at Crystal Mountain Resort, located near Lake Michigan between Cadillac and Frankfurt in the west- ern part of the state. Kahn first visited the park in 1999 for one of his many performances with the Jeff Haas Trio, and returned the following year with pianist and collaborator Keith Vreeland. Experiencing the park made a last- ing impression. "I loved the usonian quality — how things in the park are part of the physical properties surrounding them. It's a wonderful, natural place," he says. The park didn't inspire him to write the songs on Legacy, he explains. "I think 'being inspired' is very fictional." Instead, Kahn reacted. For the song "Frog," he would look at or imagine the large galvanized steel and copper patina-covered amphibian in the park while practicing, and play Marvin Kahn: "By the time I was 14, whatever melodic line it seemed to I wanted to be a bandleader like suggest to him. Glenn Miller" "Red Demon," after a sculpture by Jim Pallas, is "a crazy little piece," and can be interpreted as anger, humor or Budding Musician ridicule, Kahn says, just as the sculpture can be interpreted by viewers in differ- When Kahn was in middle school in ent ways. Highland Park, he took up the clarinet The phrase, "Ooh, look at the and discovered his "natural love" of trees," came to Kahn as he meandered the instrument and of swing music. through the park, and he composed a "I got hung up on it; I was obsessed. By the time I was 14, I wanted to be a "flowing melody" for that line. Kahn wrote the piece "Vessel" after bandleader like Glenn Miller. I wanted artist Joe Zajac's work of masonry. to be famous and have a lot of money Shaped from stones, the sculpture and a lot of girls." rises at an angle and widens at the top, In his early 20s, Kahn "was going great guns" under the moniker Tommy just like the musical line, which "starts low, goes up and then swells at the Marvin. His band played Detroit's top," explains Kahn. major venues in the late 1930s, includ- Kahn's daughter, Terry Tarnow, who ing the Graystone Ballroom, then