I PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN, DAILY TURSDAY, NOVE~MBER 2. 1987 RAGE TWO TIlE MICIIWAN DAILY - -- -- 4-*- - I I - I --I- ---W , & OU I MUSIC= Records Reveal Ives' Harmonic Complexity) 300 Sit In To Protest 'U Classified Research Continued from Page 1) eluding Smith, lined the first- sified research contracts are re- floor corridor, discussing possible jected." Rapoport delivered what techniques involved in removing Norman termed "an eloquent ad- iclassified research from the Uni- dress." classing classified research versity, while those upstairs failed "a denial of knowledge in an in-I to confront President Hatcher, stitution devoted to enlighten- :who was in New York yesterday. By R. A. PERRY Charles Ives' "Quartet No. 1" pleasingly blends late Beethoven with rustic Dvorak. Complex enough to provide repeated listen- ing involvement and surprise, the work is lyrical enough to please the less intellectually demanding musical desires. Ives' Second Quar- tet, however, is a totally different affair; it gropes its way relentlessly through that non-cartesian world of atonality, and offers the barest lyrical centers of gravity upon which the mind can fall back. Ives wrote, in "Essays Before a Sonata," that "beauty in music is too often confused with something that lets the ears lie back in an easy chair." Indeed, musicologists are slowly perceiving, in awe, what an isolated originator Ives was. His "Second Quartet," for example, was written in the same year; 1907, that Schoenberg published the first completely atonal piece of music, his "Opus 10 Quartet." A few years ago, the Kohon String Quartet of N.Y.U. gave both works their premiere recording on the Vox label. Perhaps because these performances had severe lim- itations-the primary being a pro- pensity to muddle rather than ex- plicate Ives' harmonic complexities -the works were not seized and included in quartet repertoire. A new recording by the prestigious Juilliard Quartet, issued this month by Columbia, should reme- dy the situation. In matters of technique, co- hesion of voices, and solidarity of intent, the Juilliard are simply perfect. They may not be every- one's choice for Schubert or Mo- zart, but in the modern repertoire they are unexcelled. In the Ives "First Quartet," the Kohon's unfinished quality en- hances Dvorakian elements in a way that the slightly clinical Juil- Non-Violent Mood Prevails At Military Research Sit-in liard can not; also the quicker tempo of the first movement taken by the Kohon group both conveysI the dance spirit and provides con- trast to later slower tempos in a more successful manner than the Juilliard achieve. In every other aspect, however, the Juilliard ex- cell, and they are never, as the Kohon so often are, overcome by the problems that the music pre- sents. Columbia's recorded sound is infinitely clearer and less distorted, than Vox's. A truly beautiful performancej of Berlioz's "Symphonie Fantasti- que" can be found in Seiji Ozawa's reading with the Toronto Sym- phony. In this work usually over- played for its every coloristic de- tail, the young Ozawa opts for a restrained classicism. Limiting the espressive range, he manages to effect a plasticity of line that eschews drama for its own sake. The second movement waltz, for instance, is lithesome, not giddy nor glittering. The Toronto Sym- phony responds in a wholly pro- fessional manner, and the rec- orded orchestral sound is, for Co- lumbia,'remarkably transparent. Chamber music enthusiasts will find an extraordinary bargain in Odyssey's reisue of Mozart's "Piano Quartets" as.played by the Buda- pest Quartet with George Szell at the piano. Szell's piano playing is in many ways as facile and "per- fect" as his conducting; that is, it lacks an explorative, involved, plastic, deep communication with the spontaneous development of the music. He sounds like he is playing music found rather than like he is finding music. This is quibbling, perhaps, for few artistsj (Toscanini, Casals, Schnabel, Fer- rier) can achieve such a desirable "Einfuhlin." Though Schnabel and the Pro Arte give the most communicative performance of K. 478, the Szell/ Budapest find a splendid balance between the surface grace and theE meditative level in both K. 478 and K. 493. Recorded in 1946, the sound is warm and resonant, lack- ing the end-groove distortion found on many of today's press- ings. Furthermore, the Budapest were then in their most mellow years. Carl Orff's "Catulli Carmina" at first sounds vivacious and stimu- lating, but soon the enthusiasm appears premeditated and the ef- fects ar'e incredibly repetitious. In a manner nearly identical to his earlier "Carmina Burana," Orff has set mildly salacious poems of Catullus to music for tenor, sopra- no, and chorus. If you own a copy of "Carmina Burana," it should suffice, but if you are a true fan of this "sui generis" composer, you will be pleased to know that Eugene Or- mandy and the Temple University Chorus give forth the verbal eja- culations in an appropriately pun- gent style. CORRECTION A story appearing in yester- day's Daily inaccurately re- ported the size of sites pres- ently being considered by Ann Arbor's Human Relations Com- mission for use in the city's public housing program. The number of families to be housed in each site has not yet been determined, contrary to the story which stated that 15-40 families would be housed in each. In addition, the acreage presently under consideration does not total 20 acres as re- ported, but includes several sites ranging in size from two to almost 20 acres each. A $27,000 survey of the need for public housing reported com- pleted is actually still only a proposal. ment." Besides calling for an end to all Prof. Max Heirich of the sociol- classifed.researcn, te handful 0f ogy department and Prof. Nicholas demonstrators still remaining at Kazarinoff of the mathematics de- the end of the sit-in called for the partment backed up Rapoport's establishment of a faculty-student assertions. comittee to determine the future Profsso Emeitu Wiliam status of Willow Run Labs and to SProfessor Emeritus William G. investigate broad guidelines for Dow, retired chairman of the elec- University research and policy trical engineering department, said he was "proud of the role I've had in strengthening our country" by acepting classified contracts, and that "we've thereby aided the mil- UNIVERSITY OF MICE' itary establishment in doing some- thing good." DEPARTMENT OF S Th'e demonstrators then divided into three groups, occupying the first floor and ante-room leading present into the offices of Norman and Smith, the corridor leading into President Harlan Hatcher's office. and one sector of the main lobby. "I think it was a great tactical mistake breaking up the whole SER JEANT I meeting just when things were I I I getting interesting," Norman said. Another 100 demonstrators, in- f t t a MISSISSIPPI BLUES SINGER- SKIP JAMES Just returned from European tour APPEARING THIS WEEKEND at the eJPTENBUN Y i~OUgE Friday, Saturday, Sunday 8 P.M.-$1.50-after 2nd set--$1.00 SKIP JAMES, food, tables, chairs, low light ... IIAN PLAYERS WEE CII MUSGRAVE'S DANCE t. nov.1-4 *1 (Continued from Page 1) were willing to settle for just an end to classified projects and a tripartite review of research policy. Still others were concerned only with the Thailand project itself, while some undoubtedly came only to listen to other peoples' views. While several demonstrators seemed to relish the very remote possibility of a confrontation with club swinging police and while others were talking about an "as- sault" on Willow Run Labora- tories in Ypsilanti, most people seemed sufficiently unsure of their positions on specifics to be willing to merely talk about the situation. Furthermore, the predisposition towards violence that has been observed in radicals in Washing-, ton and in Oakland, Calif., was notably lacking at yesterday's sit- in. This was demonstrated when the protesters voted by an over- whelming margin not to use any sort of disruptive tactics. An overview of the afternoon's events yields testimony to the stature - or lack thereof - of classified research as volatile campus issue. Unlike the ques- tions of student conduct rules- making and the military draft, both of which elicited far more enthusiastic campus response, classified research has no per- sonal impact on the vast majority of students. In fact, at the meeting's end, only 25 stragglers remained to de- bate the technicalities of a press release. At 7:30 p.m., the janitors came in to sweep the floor. SIDNEY POITIER "TO SIR, WITH SUTECHNICOLORB! WARM, MOVING SIDNEY POITIER "TO SIR, WITH LOVE" - TECHNICOLOR" AND HUMOROUS" -N.Y. News , wed.- sa 4 I. 2 GREAT HITS ENCORE! "1GEORGY GIRL'IS SUPERIOR! WONDERFUL PELL-MELL ENJOYMENT, IMMENSELY ORIGINAL!" - Bosloy Crowther, N.Y. Times NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FEATURE TIMES Fox EASTERN THEATRES Mon.-Fri.: NOW F HLL GE :30-8:.1-9:55 SHOWING p VI L G Sat.-Suri.: 1:30- No. MAPLE RD.-769-1300 3.10-4:55-6:40- 8:20-10:00 MMpresents , ' Aiudd Bernard- Irwin Winkler Production Box Office Open Daily 12:30-5 p.m. I STDNEY POITIER "TO SIR, WITH LOVE" TECHNICOLOR* l J I I roommate. roommates roommate. 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