Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 27 1968 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY __ _._ _. .. _. . t ... ' - music Prof. Pickut and All of His Pianos records Boulez Stars in New Columbia Release By DAVID FRITSCH Up on the fifth floor of Bur- ton Towel there's a shabby, stained, marvelous room occu- pied by a dozen or so pianos in various states of dismember- ment. Presiding over it all is a tall, distinguished man who is exactly what he looks like - a piano teacher. He is Prof. Kurt Pickut, who uses his piano tech course to turn his students into builders, tuners and adjusters of instru- ments, on the, theory that "a pianist should know all there is to know about pianos." While talking to you, he paces eagerly through the crowded room, demonstrating hammers of different pianos, or pulling away the carriage of a concert grand to show you its construction, all the while talk- ing busily in a soft German ac- cent about the projects he and the class are undertaking. At present, they are building an 18th century clavichord of the type used by Bach, and two full-size harpsichords, to be used .in a new course in harp- sichord playing which he hopes to start next spring. Prof. Pickut is also at work on a. harpsichord kit, with which a student will be able to build a full-size harpsichord for about $700, quite a startling prospect when one considers that a ready-made instrument sells, for $5000 on the trade market. He seems more willing to talk . about the course than about himself, however. All 26 stu- dents are music graduate stu- dents, he explains, majoring in APA Signs New Contract T h e University Professional Theatre Program (PTP) has sign- ed the APA Repertory Company for the seventh Fall Festival in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The APA season will run from Sept. 17 through Oct. 27, featur- ing three new productions yet to be announced. Subscription sales have already started at the Men- delssohn box office. Prof. Robert Schnitzer, execut- ive director of PTP, in announc- ing the signing, said "Subscribers will again have the opportunity of attending three brilliant premieres which will doubtless later be hail- ed with excitement in New York and on tour." a t C t t c t c 9 f c 6 I 3 1 1 By R. A. PERRY emerges even,'the more "impres- With all the recent press about sionistic,"' that is, not enshrouded up-coming young conductors and in mist, but constantly evolving hypotheses upon which dashing spontaneously out of its own ex-' young man shall replace which plorations. retiring maestro at which prestigi- One of the most exciting aspects ous orchestra, one conductor has of the clarity which Boulez effects received scant attention. Yet that is the way in which he comes so conductor and leading avant-garde dangerously close to destroying composer, Pierre Boulez, may well the weave of the musical fabric prove to be the greatest molder in his focus on the individual in- of orchestral sound since Tos- strumental threads. Instrumental canini. parts almost sound like nothing I make such 'a bold statement more than the instrument itself upon the evidence of Boulez' "Rite divorced of any intention -toward of Spring" on the Nonesuch label, ensemble color-almost: It is this from his concerts in Cleveland, treading the fine line between where he gave that already fine- anarchy and unity that reveals the toned organization even greater essence of Debussy. clarity, but also passion, and from As Boulez says in his revealing a new recording on the Columbia liner notes, "the composer is not label of works by Debussy. limited by first composing the On this new disc (32-11-0056), musical text and then decking it Boulez tears away the veil of out with marvels of instrumenta- Impressionistic mush that so tion . . . but the organization of many maestros and critics have the work is as changeable in an heaped on "La Mer," "L'Apres- instant as it is homogeneous in Midi D'un Faune," and the lesser development." The "vitrified im- heard "Jeux." The result of Bou- provisation" which the conductor lez's 'ultra-clarity and balance of creates, always lucid yet always the most minor inner voices can creat, a l yetalwhs be compared to the removal of heavy varnish from a painting. of its parts, demands that the Surprisingly, and yet so logically, listener live through its creation, the color and shapes of the music and thus it yields up to the list- ener a highly transportive musical pounding by Istomin, and the pre- experience, tensions to High Drama are simp- Boulez, with the New Philhar- ly not appropriate to Mendels- monia Orchestra responding un- sohn's lyrical and somewhat failingly and with splendid re- melancholy D minor Trio. To list- corded sound, thus demythologizes en instead to any European group, Debussy and makes understand- say to the Trio di Bolzano reading able the composer's courageous in- on Vox, or even to the older Cas- tentions and remarkable successes. als group performance, is to real- Other new Columbia releases do ize the serene possibilities for this not fare quite as well as the un- music, to realize that chamber matched Boulez disc. On MS music need not sound, no matter Sif 7064, George Szell turns to the piano, with the Cleveland con- certmaster Rafael Druian as part- ner, to perform four sonatas by G Mozart. This recording may be a labor of love, but the labor at times becomes too evident. Some ambitious music school student might well write a Ph.D. thesis on the American style of performing chamber music. This approach may be characterized by intellectual fervor, an unrelenting drive through the music, and an aversion to periods of true calm. These dubious qualities may be heard in a new disc by the Ito- min/Stern/Rose Trio (MS 7083). The passion expended on the early Beethoven Trio in C minor may be warranted; even Haydn found the work ferocious. Never- theless, the driving attacks, the how note-perfect and coordinated, that it was performed immediately after the soloists finished watch- ing Huntley-Brinkley. 761-9700 Mon thru Thur -7:00-9:15 Pickut Explains His Business piano or organ. The main pur-, pose of the course, which is the only one of its kind in the country, is to teach tuning and adjustment. "They learn work they only do at Baldwin and Steinway," he says. "They said it couldn't be taught." As if to prove that it can, a student walks in for his week- ly lesson in tuning. He and the professor go to work at one of the partially dismantled pianos. Patiently, they work on note after note, the student hitting two notes and listening, the older man giving hints, nods of approval, or telling him to hit the key harder to lower the note a little. If you're a non- musician or know little about music, you feel very left out watching this scene, especially when Pickut turns to you and says, "You know, in a few months they do it almost as .well as I do, and I've been do- ing it for years." The students also learn to adjust the instruments. "There are 6000 parts in a Lincoln, the most complicated car," explains Pickut. "In a concert piano there are over 12,000 parts." His students must learn to use a large number of tools, most of which look like carefully re- fined instruments of torture, in order to be able to make the 1,760 adjustments (20 per key, 88 keys) on a piano. "Some of them have never handled tools before in their lives", he says proudly. "We have a fantastic generation." Prof. Pickut conceived of the course seven years ago. Next year it may be extended to harpsichord and clavichord. All its twenty-six students are vol- unteers; they attend lab ses- A I TONIGHT AT 7-9 P.M. 4-APU "Perhaps the most beautiful movie in history."-Brendan Gill The New Yorker. "Exquisite is only the first word that surges in my mind as an appropriate description of this exceptional film. Its color is absolutely gorgeous. The use of music and, equally eloquent, of silences and sounds is beyond verbal description. The performances are perfect-that is the only word."- B o s I e y Crowther, New York Times. "May well be the most beautiful film ever made." - Newsweek. I in TONIGHT CITIZEN KANE Directed by Orson Welles, 1941 ORSON JOSEPH WELLES COTTON "The swift and brutal biography of a power-mad newspaper tycoon, a man of twisted greatness who buys or bullies his way into everything but friends' love and his nation's respect."-LIFE 7:00 & 9:05 75c ARCH. AUD. 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