PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY rriTG vi &v .XA'hTITAi ,%r on iona PAGE TW ?V. 'Ueaav u 'as rwTT AWw'U? * 4 0z 'A Uk; UAY, JANUARY 3U, 1968 5 music Milstein's Repertoire Dampens Impressive Tecimique, Style MARIONETTE THEATRE: Arnott's 'Dr. Faustus' Devilish Griffith and Music; A Few Observations By R. A. PERRY Criticising an artist like Nathan Milstein is something like taking to task the Most Beautiful Wo- man in the World for having bad breath. There can be no question about. Milstein's flawless tech- nique, his musibal intelligence, his immaculate tone, or his so- phisticated style. Yet, for all these attributes, his recital last night at Hill Auditorium was less than satisfying; perhaps one expects too much. Part of the problem was the program Milstein chose. With all of the poetic works for violin and piano at his command, there can be no reason for Milstein to in- clude so many merely virtuosic ditties of meager musical content solely to prove what we already know: he can do it and do it with' breath-taking precision. Not Sensitive All together, Tartini's "Devil's Trill" Sonata, three Paganini Ca- prices, and Sarasate's "Tarantel- la" make up a fine circus act for the Ed Sullivan Show but not a sensitive program for a serious audience. Thus, Bach's Chaconne from the Partita in D minor would have been sufficient to awe and convince the audience of the art- ist's technical facility. Milstein's' rendering of this transportive Chaconne was indeed not only impeccably articulate but beau- tifully expressive as well. It did lack a certain passion and rhyth- mic propulsion that marked Christian Ferras's incandescent performance last year in Ann Ar- bor, yet in its own aristocratic way, it was deeply felt and com-! municative. Leon Pommers The second source of disap- pointment lay in the hands of 'the pianist Leon Pommers, and this is a strange fact, considering that Milstein and Pommers have been playing together for many years. You would not have been able to guess so from their performance of Beethoven's "Spring" Sonata. This early duet from the begin- ning of Beethoven's "middle per-j iod" is an undeclamatory work of long lyric lines. Milstein sought an expressive plasticity of a certain artifice that tended to vitiate the arching lyrical line; in any case, his con- ception was time and again inter- cepted by Pommer's nearly con- tinual mezzo-forte heaviness which showed sufficient dexterity but surprising lack of color and modeling. There were several oc- casions in the concluding rondo where the pair were not together. By LISSA.MATROSS And Faustus hath abjured the Trinity, praying devoutly to the prince of hell-"There is no chief but only Beelzebub." His prayer is answered with the gift of om- nipotence - a dominion that "stretcheth as far as doth the mind of man." In return, al 1 trifling sacrifice, his soul. But last night in Aud A there was a chief above even the mighty Lucifer. Enter Chorus: Dr. Peter Arnott, dressed in black, strides across the stage recitirc' the famous opening chorus from Christopher Marlowe's "Dr. Faus- tus" - "His waxen wings did mount above his reach/And melt- ing heavens conspired his over- throw." There then proceeds a fascinat- ing one-man, one-hour marion- ette presentation ofuthe well- I known Elizabethan work. And all the souls are in Arnott's hands. The dominion was not "all things that move between the quiet poles," as Faustus thought I it was, but a small stage six feet across. What could be more per- feet to show up the emptiness of Faustus' cunning self-deceits than the small focus of Arnott's marionette theatre. It is Theatre of the Absurd when Arnott becomes "Jove in the sky" and the only "necroman- tic arts" are those of the pup- peteer. In fact, Arnott plans to add works by Ionesco to a reper- toire that includes Sophocles, Euripides and medieval mystery plays. Last night Arnott's fingers flew, 'casting sinister shadows on the wall so that no one doubted Me- phistophilis when he said, "Where we are is Hell." And when the Seven Deadly Sins appeared from out a trap door, one above anoth- er on a string, lights blinked red and Arnott's face leered malevo- lently above the top of the stage. "I am Pride," he said straining, and then leered "I am Covetous- ness" and lisped "I am Envy." And then up popped a red flounce who wooed "I am Lechery" and #EDITOR'S NOTE: Daily reviewer Michael Beebie interviewed guitarist and composer Peter Griffith. Griffith is studying composition at the Uni- versity with Prof. Leslie Bassett and teaching guitar at Interlochen on weekends. At 8 p.m. tonight in' the Union Ballroom, Griffith will give a eoncert with Herb David. Some of his comments on music are printed belQw. On Cortemporary Music "The music being written today is radically different from the music of Mahler or even Schoen- berg because it doesn't maintain the crutch of tonality or classi- cal forms. Few people want to listen to a new piece of music a second time because it entails work to listen to contemporary music. "There has to be complication in music, however. Tonality can- not be restored and should not be restored. Some of its concepts, like consonance and dissonance, can still be used. "One of my greatest thrills was the time' I played some of my contemporary guitar pieces at Canterbury House and the people' liked what I wrote and played.: The happiest thing that could happen to me is writing things other people can enjoy so I don't' have to be alone with the pieces." On Guitar Music "Most music for guitar is a communicate their ideas of play- ing and this hurts the chance of guitar being taught in colleges. Having guitar taught at Inter- lochen will raise the status of the instrument and will produce knowledgeable guitarists w h o know about music." On Pop Music "A whole new style of art song is being created by groups like the Beatles and Jefferson Air- plane, especially the Beatles. "Eleanor Rigby," "She's Leav- ing Home", "Yesterday" and "Norwegian Wood" all represent this new type of art song. These pieces have their own style and can't be played properly by Man- tovani or the Hollywood Strings. In fact, if I were Mill in a rock group I'd never attempt "Eleanor Rigby" because I wouldn't have a string quartet at my disposal. "The Beatles are synthesizing rock, classical, jazz, blues, and country and western, but what they've got to do is re-define what they're using and get their own bag." On Listening to Music "Contemporary music -is so dif- ferent that the average concert- goer doesn't know how to listen to it. I don't think a person should go to a concert knowing beforehand that he's not going to drag. I think it's a waste of time like what he'll hear. playing transcriptions of Mozart "The average concert goer is dances. I hope to write composi- like the guy who goes up to Miles tions for guitar which 'will force Davis and says, 'You play hor- publishers to set standards for rible! All those squnky little notes guitar music. and that little trumpet. It's just "I must really have loyaalty to terrible! I used to do that when I the guitar and I'm buf'ned up be- was a kid.' cause it's treated so lightly. [t can "Music is probably the most be a trite instrument, especially powerful art form, and people when taught by commercial have got to realize that the only people who aren't musicians. way to learn to enjoy new music "Many excellent guitarists can't is by listening to it." *1' --Daily-Andy Sacks Art Buchwald 'Floppy Buchwald Misses the Boat, -Daily-Anita Kessler PETER ARNOTT and his marionette theatre. I DIAL 5-6290 G. MICH IGRN SHOWS AT 1,3,5, 7, 9 P.M. ENDING WEDNESDAY 4mvily, M- By DANIEL OKRENT' Was~ington humor columnist Art Buchwald rolled onto the stage at Hill Aud. Sunday night 20 minutes behind schedule and never managed to catch up. A combination Walter Lipp- mann-Allan Sherman, the bouncy B u c h w a 1 d managed to toss enough frivolity out of the cor- ner of his floppy jowls to keep the audience relatively happy, but stumbled on his humor's mouldy staleness and simple chuckle- ability. Oh, you can't say that Buch- wald isn't funny - he offers enough in clever comment on the nation's politics to sate both his listeners and the readers of his thrice-weekly column, syndicated in over 400, newspapers. The problem is that if you happen to be among both audiences, it's just a replaydof thersame record ("I'm not a dove or hawk - -I'm a chicken"). The net result is the kind of humor that yields a chuckle rath- er than a guffaw, Sometimes it raises to chortle level: His de- scription of President Johnson ("He's humble, shy, kind, with- drawn and very short") was about L a !r R t 7 r f 'r 'r t t r His presentation of his own personal graffiti (" 'Good night, David.' 'Good night, Goliath.' ") was at times amusing, as was his recap of his student days at Southern Cal, or the results of his personal survey of college males' sex attitudes: "At first, I thought I should say 'yes' to her, but I'm glad I didn't. When I got back to my fraternity house, all the guys congratulated me for not letting her take advantage of me." . Perhaps the best parts of the evening were Buchwald's frank appraisal of his information- gathering methods ("I make up everything"), or the attempt at "straight" evaluation of the cur- rent Washington situation. But, in between, Buchwald fumbled before scoring. clew across tbe stage to lant a r Perfunctoriness kiss on Faustus' cheek. Again, perhaps one expects too The marionette cast was won- much. When artists on tour playI derful, what with the Good and, Evil Angels floating magically in the same program night after the air and the faceless, brown- night, a certain perfunctoriness cloaked Mephistophilis stalking can too easily creep in, and the slowly across the stage. And the artists may seek to overcome this old, bearded clown danced lech- by trying too hard to effect ex- erously as he pleaded that he might be turned into "the likeness pressiveness. Though sincere, they of a little pretty frisking flea, that substitute artifice for infeeling. I may be here and there and ev- One goes to a concert hoping erywhere" amongst "the pretty awhen wenches' plackets."! for that occasional night wn And above the proceedings, the the artist does not merely play his omnipresent face of Arnott. In instrunient expertly, but is sub- I the final soliloquy, when Faustus sumed by it. For all of Milstein's cries out "O I'll leap up to myI established greatness, for all of God! Who pulls me down?" it was not the dead mask of the the technique he exhibited, last puppet but the face of Arnott night was just not one of those that showed the torment of the nights. past four-and-twenty years of sin. "More belly laughs per minute than in any new film in town! ed:Cue Magazine OA U P DaffydwonderfulD cleverlyCdirect- hKuI j "The Tension Is Terrific !" -N.Y. TIMES "Keeps You Glued To Your SeatI" MICHIGAN DAILY AUO EBR +i Ia WATUNTILDARK 1 cinema 'Smashing Time': Mod Put On WAYSIDE "1 THETRE A' K-MART - - 3020 WASHTENAW- D..l.434.:. /82SH Ng NOW SHOWING so #few! x so 0 -in- m VP (0 /§ 4 r [ rI1 echnj icalm' Wednesday -Saturday 1:15-3:50-6:30-9:10 Monday-Tuesday; Thursday & Friday Shows at 6:30 & 9:10 I Next: W. C. FIELDS FESTIVAL Vth Forum 210 S. FIFTH AVE. 761-9700 SHOW TIMES: MON. thru THUR. 7:00, 9:00 FRI. & SAT. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 - SUN. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 "The most interesting film released in the U.S. this year. Full of effective cinematic innovations. PRIVILEGE is excellent. It is full of satirical cynicism. PRIVILEGE will shake you up ..,." --FILMS IN REVIEW . remarkable . . . unmistakable brilliance . . . it is a striking film, a moving piece of work to watch .. ." Penelope Gilliot. -THE NEW YORKER pr pcrhas brilliance and startling satiric bite . . . This vigorous protest picture generates reason and power .. -Bosley Crowther, N.Y. TIMES PAUL JONES JEAN SHRIMPTON THE JOHN HEYMAN/PETER WATKINS PRODUCTION TECHNICOLOR' SATURDAY 4 Creative Arts Festival Tuesday, Jan. 30 HERB DAVID and PETER GRIFFITH, guitarists; Union Ballroom, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 31 PAUL KRASSNER Union Assembly Room, 7:30 p.m. Student Laboratory Theatre Frieze Arena, 4 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 1 STAN VANDERBEEK Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m. LORD CHAMBERLAIN'S PLAYERS "Salome" Angell Hall Foyer, 8 p.m. STUDENT LABORATORY THEATRE. Frieze Arena, 4 p.m. as far as he made it into the lat- ter category, and this rare display was pleasing to the audience. However, it was also so pleas- ing to Buchwald himself that he would ,sporadically break loose from his Bronx deadpan and giggle like the proverbial howl full of jelly. Tsk, tsk. No tech- nique. To make matters worse (or, ac- tually, better), the evening with Buchwald turned out to be a grand total of 55 minutes long - including the question-and-an- swer period that followed his main address. By DEBORAH LINDERMAN "Smashing Time" is not, any- way, a crashing bore, but it's not exactly smashing. It's intended to put on the whole bag of mod chic: psychedelic color, homosex- uals, second hand clothes, ice cream parlors, country style, "blurred grainy photographs", kitch, sculpture - happenings, switching on, turning off (lots of shots of literal switches flicked and turned), ciao, etc., etc. . . And since a lot of mod is al- ready camp, the film gets into 'the tricky problem of casting ironies on ironiesand "outwit- ting" camp. The best way to do this is to present a thing for what it is and let it show itself up: the best frames in the film are "non- committal." But much of it suf- fers from a want of deadpan. Also it falls into the late-period trap of James Bond films -- not tran- scending its own vulgarity. The principals don't help much. As the plot goes, they are two bumpkins who come to "Lundun" to dig the swinging scene. One is "with it" (Yvonne,- Lynne Red- grave) and one a "dud" (Brenda - Rita Tushingham) and they both do make it and then get sick of it and split. Yvonne wins 10,000 pounds on a telly show "You Can'tdsHelp Laughing"( Candid Camera), buys an agent, cuts a hit record, skyrockets. Brenda wins a hip photograph- er. She's supposed to be "out of it" but, of course, by "being her- self" is really "real" and the lat- ter-day ,David Hemmings (Mi- chael York) "gets her" and she gets him. Redgrave has some excellent comic moments. All bunnied-up in pink vinyl and ratted braids, she' does her youth cult hit "I'm a foo-oo-ool, but I'm coo-oo-ool,j And I'm young" - musically it's a good joke). With the same kind of breathy idiocy, she pronounces an up-comer's try "you know, too samey," by which she means monotonous.E lot of people"; swamis and B- movie gangsters turning out for Yvonne's "in" party atop the re-, volving restaurant of the General! Post Office Tower. The directing suffers from be- ing heavy-handed and indecisive, which is only to say not enough is left un-editorialized, and tooj ,I But the natural comedian has much is straight which shouldn't' a power of doing very little., be. Thus the film's style never Though her "point" is unreserved completely masters its inconse- zeal for mod, she oft over-keys quence, and once you leave it, it herself, loses comic control, and leaves you. then seems just ungainly. Tush- -, ingham likewise has a gimmicky 761-9700 mugging quality to her which Forumni comes from not letting her role absorb her. There's supposed to be some kind of charm in the combined e force of the one's enormity and the other's' sallowness; thre couples behind me kept telling each other "great - it's Aubrey, Beardsley", but despite these pressures the duo somehow stayed very much what they are. There are some horrible ob- vious "off-color" gags (watch for "I'm very glad I'm just a pussy" and "Tell your sister not to get upset") ; lapses into musical com- edy where people suddenly sing for no good reason; and ancient! ">BOGART slapstick devices - rooms full of THE KING- soap bubbles, ceilings falling in,IS BACK WITH pie-throwing marathons."TEQEN Done right these could succeed, THE QUEEN' contra-Hollywood, but their sog- S giness is offset by little mini-spots SATURDAY that do get there: the "candid camera man" who never muffs HUMPHREY KATHARINE that state of high-hilarity-no- BOGART HEPBURN matter-what; the dumb owner of a kitch shop, Too Much, explain-u ing in a creamy voice "it's a pun, an expression"; Yvonne's agent I TTE LR..' saying "believe me, she's a wholeMO .. _. " Program Information 2-6264 CALIT EASTWOOD THE GOOD THE UGLYB LE E ofC---EFI -so Str ng EKLaWAIILAC ;H ~ n the role of Tyco- I 'BO LEONE HN ISCO PE$ -INICOLOR" M \rI antrIl CMM BOGART "AFRICAN QUEEN" I I I_ 3 SHOWS DAILY Sunday thru Thursday At£iaj x~ THIS WEEK WEDNESDAY, JAN. 31 EXPERIMENTAL FILMS. PROGRAM NO. 2 THURSDAY, FEB. 1 STAN VANDERBEEK The New York film maker will appear, in person, at Cinema Guild FRIDAY, FEB. 2 CHARLIE CHAPLIN N IGHT SATURDAY &s SUNDAY, FEB. 3, 4 1:30 - 5:00 8:05 II I I NATIONAL OENERAL CORPORATION __ 01:6-0 1~ L0 j : I Feature Times MON-FRI. 7:00-9:00 FOX EASTERN THEATRES1 FOX VILL6E 35 No. MAPLE RD.. 769"13OO S3W1.L J1lLV3l j 4 leave the children home. EL ZABE-.. __i 1, 11 I 1 ! I i , I