Arts entertainment COMMON GROUND SANCTUARY ART IN THE PARK 2002 3 3 ar t4 AIN 'AK K. t3tltAAtiVti14ANI. NI I C I+ CI AN Art it the Park teats COMMON ground Samtvary's crisis services for youths, adults and farades "I have stood high on the mountains where the spirit of God breathes; I have walked in the meadows, lulled by the sound of cowbells. But I have been unable to flee from my destiny ... the pale figures of my life pass before me like the shadows of a long-lost happiness, and the song of longing sounds again in my ears." — Gustav Mahler, from a famous 1879 letter ay One of -the Top–Ketted Shows 14.attoviwide Childrevor's Aregaz Over ISO Artists * Food 6- Cratertaiviment Art S- Aativiliee Free Admission Plus Fee r FterkIng Iv* 041-y Peeks tz flours Saturday. Ail Pay Sutidayl • Sitletirt AttettOirt. For tpiforisiattosi calk Z484-$6.8150 I www.ConevtoPiGrourtdSaptetuary.org • $317.1.3•48C1sZet, (Observer t.rentrit- NEWSPAPERS 1e 1 - Afie-caton , Sktfavitirox CoVPS i? , 13 pRc., rERTIES <' ICARE ...... \ivit E " r . •mesi R Shirley IlLoOus Fund 4 651750 • • • ■ s KIN G Ca e 4 th S. Briskin tG G op nts Novi Location ow Open for DINNER Wed. - Sat... Featuring... F One Entree O CC I I & Purchase Receive 50% Off PP-- Second Entree of Equal or Lesser Value. • No Weekends or Holidays • One coupon per table • Dine-in only • exp. I 1-30-02 " ---- 'Coupon Accepted At Novi Only" --- -1' 11 I — Gourmet Breakfast Specializing in Eggwhite Omelettes — Fresh Squeezed Juices — Lunch Menu — Dinner Menu (Novi Only) Gourmet Pizza and More! \pc' Downtown Novi 43155 Main Street (248) 347-6690 West Bloomfield 6680 Orchard Lake Rd. (248) 626-3750 Hours: Mon-Fri 7am-3pm • Sat & Sun 8 am-3pm • Dinner starting at 5 pm NOVI ONLY I THE GALLERY RESTAURANT I Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful atmosphere of casual elegance BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER OPEN 7 DAYS: MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. West Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313 9/13 2002 88 0000024550 Harwood (The Dresser, Taking Sides), Mahler's Conversion; which had a one- month run, centered on a historically accurate 1910 meeting between Mahler and psychiatrist Sigmund Freud. (An alleged "social anti-Semite," Alma carried on an affair with groundbreaking architect Walter Gropius during the later years of het marriage to Mahler; after his death, she married Gropius, and then famed Jewish writer Franz Werfel, with whom she escaped the Nazis to America, aided by diplomat Varian Fry) "From all I've read, Mahler had no use for organized religion," said the DSO's Greenwell. "Even as a young man, he showed an interest in Catholicism — what attracted him was the mysticism, the magic, things he found lacking in Judaism as he knew it." However, Greenwell agreed that Mahler's conversion was more a matter of career advancement than spiritual searching. The consensus of Mahler scholars is that the conductor/composer was more a Pantheist, a worshiper of nature, than a Catholic, and his concept of God was as a loving and accepting parent. Many musicians and scholars find Jewish influences in Mahler's music, while others see his melodies and texts as having more to do with Germanic "folk" elements, spirituality and love of nature. Musicologist/psychoanalyst Dr. Stuart Feder, who chaired a panel discussion on "Mahler and the Jewish Question" at a conference on the composer this sum- mer at Bard College in New York, feels Mahler's work is shot through with Jewish references. Dr. Feder, whose publications include the 1997 article "Gustav Mahler: A Composer's Childhood," noted that Mahler's text for the "Resurrection" Symphony (Symphony No. 2) includes a reference to_"a still small voice," a famil- iar term in Jewish liturgy. And, Dr. Feder said, an alternating melodic pattern of fourths and fifths in the same work is reminiscent of the blasts of the shofar. At the Bard conference, Dr. Philip Bohlman, associate professor of music at the University of Chicago, cited the "klezmer-type" melodies of the First Symphony, saying it would be "remark- able" if Jewish musical themes would have been "entirely unremarked by Mahler when he encountered his own musical world." According to his friend and colleague Alfred Roller, Mahler once said people should first listen to his music and "see if it means anything to them, then either accept or reject it. "But as far as their prejudices for me as a Jew, they should leave these at home," Mahler added. "That much I demand as my right." ❑ The Detroit Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of Neemi Jarvi, will perform Symphony No. 3 in D Minor by Gustav Mahler 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday and 8:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 19-21. Due to construction at Orchestra Hall, all concerts will take place at the Detroit Opera House. $20-$80; students and seniors (60 and over) can purchase half-price tickets at the box office one hour prior to classical concerts, based on avail- ability. For tickets, call (313) 576-5111 or go to the Web site at wvvw.detroitsymphony.com . Discounts are available for groups of 10 or more by phoning (313) 576-5130. MINENSINIBISERISNEW.