Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, April 14, 1970 age,11twoTHMCHGA DIL music A long, mixed evening of Blues A cente By ,JOE PEHRSON First of two parts Yes, we all know about Hill Auditorium. Yet behind that familiar eggshell, housed in one of the many rooms of a back- stage labyrinth, is a creative center. This is the School of Music's Electronic Studio - a strange sight to the uninitiated. Looking like a cross between a gigantic model t r a i n control panel and the Wizard of Oz's electronic antechamber (no one quite knows w h a t he did in there), this equipment might seem incomprehensible. Actual- ly, it is not at all foreign to the world of electronics - though the arrangement, the combina- tion of electronic g e a r. indi- cates some purpose other than that of your television repair man. Electronic music is n o w. thanks to the Moog revolution which supposedly has everyone "switched-on," a rather famil- iar development. Mixed media is also popular - people are be- coming aware that technology can be used to create something enjoyable. The new interest of- ten makes these art forms seem an immediate development. This 'r for creativity MUSKET is not the case; the popular- ization is recent, but composi- tion in electronic sound h a s been going on since the 1950's aid music concrete - the use of natural or recorded sounds - since the early days of radio. A changing conception of sound forced experimentation in new types of sound, reproduction, and the School of Music, under the leadership of Ross Lee Fin- ney, initiated a program to bring electronic music to this campus. Although modern music was studied at the University before the 1960's and student works were heard in Composer For- ums, there was no performance of current music from outside the University. George Wilson, the present di- rector of the electronic studio, established the Contemporary Directions series shortly after the studio was designed (1963). New music from outside t h e community- could be performed, and the increasing involvement w i t h contemporary practice could find a creative outlet in the electronic studio. The studio is constantly in use. The schedule now r u n s throughout the night and the A offerng in black and' white By JI PETERS Considering the last minute obligations of finals and over- due term papers, I'm sure not too many people knew about the spring choral concert held at Huron High School on Sunday night. Stemming from graduate work ,requirements, the per- formance marked the conduct- ing debut of Carolyn Dameron in a program which was ambi- tious in its conception, but less than perfect in realization. Conductor° Dameron's offer- ings included some seldom- heard works by Stravinsky and Charles Ives, but the ad hoc chorus a n d instrumentalists never seemed to get beyond the notes of their music, technique without emotional+ content. Stravinsky's short Pater Nos- ter and Ave Maria are highly reminiscent of the declarative DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN TUESDAY, APRIL 14 Day Calendar Trumpet Student Recital: Sch. of Music Recital: Hall, 12:30' p.m. Botany Seminar: B. L. Haines, Duke, "Plant Growth Responses to Nutrient Accumulation in Refuse Dumps of Leaf- cutting Ants" 3082 Nat. Sei CA!; n m Physics Seminar: P. Federbush, "Model Field Theories", P & A Colloq. Rm., 4:15 p.m Psychiatry Lecture: E. Anthony, M.D., Washington U., "The Response ~o the Irrational": Aud., Children's Psychiatric Hospital, 8:00 p.m. \ Continuing Educ. of Women Recep- tion: "Milestone 1970" - honoring Con- tinuing Ed. of Women Scholars: West Conf. Rm., Rackhamn, 8:00 p,. Degree Recital: Carol Muehlig, organ: 2110 SBch. of Music, 8:00 p.m. Degree Recital: Haldis Pyle, piano; Sch, of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. General Notices Attn. Faculty Members of: College of LS&A, Sch, of Educ., Sch. of Music, Sch. of Pub. Health,, & Bch. of Bus. Ad. Stu- dents expecting degrees May 2, 1970. are advised not to request grades of I or X. When such grades are abso- lutely imperative, work must be made up in time to allow you toxeport make- u.p grade not later than noon, Thurs., Apr. 30, 1970. May Festival Ushers: Still a few usb- ering positions open for 1970 M a y Festival; if interested, call Mr Warn- er, 668-8597. \- Attn. U of M grad students who did underground work at U. of Western Ontarion: Henry Lewis Caul:Ins Schol- arship avail., value approx. $2,000 (Ca- nadian), submit applics. to Dean of Graduate Studies, The Univ. of W. On- tario, call D. E. Durner for further info., 764-2218. (Continued on Page 7) style of his Mass period, the cul- tivated atonality before his 12- t o n e adventures; and , the group's a capella voices were well-balanced. Yet .both pieces require broader overviews to handle the tightly-knit sound; Dameron was not concerned enough with phrasing, essential in these short pieces. The song cycle, Quartette, opus 92, of Johannes Brahms which followed featured some fine solo work, but the choir lacked the ensemble and posi- tive emotional unity to achieve any real effectiveness. The con- trapuntal "Spaetherast" moved well, but was dry; and the com- plex dialogue of'voices in "War- um?" suffered from weak tenor and bass lines. The enigmatic Harvest Home Chorales of Charles Ives used brass choirs of trumpets and trombones to color the simple statements of the chorus. Dam- eron's group did not have the power to stand equal to their brass protagonists. The problem in performing Ives is to sustain the tension of each piece from the first discord, building from it as a brief but cOmplete intro- duction to the relative tonali- ties of the work. Sunday night's performance was too relaxed, the dynamics too controlled - tension without breath. Mozart's festive Vespe'rae Sol- emnes de Confessore, K. 339, di- vided itself into seven uneven sections. During the concerted sections with trumpets and tim- pani, the choir's sound w a s muddy; only during more deli- cate piano passages was clarity restored. Soprano Nancy Seabold was outstanding as soloist in t h e piece, soft and lyric, with a wise ear for embellishments; the or- chestra itself seemed somewhat a burden to her in the "Lau- date Dominum" section. The brisk' "Laudate, pueri" which proceeded it was marred by too legato an approach stylistically. But, suddenly, things turned out much better. The closing "Magnificat" brought chorus, orchestra, and soloists together; and, this time, hearts and voic- es were exalted. It was another concert which should have be- gun again from that point, of- fering music in more than black and white. equipment gets little more rest than the composers. Compared to some of the larger electronic centers in the country, this is a small unit, It is designed, how- ever, in a way that perhaps il- lustrates the popular belief that new media need not be separate from personal experience. The equipment has been con- structed for simplicity of op- eration. Henry Root, the engin- eer in charge of technical main- tenance, insists on direct con- tact between a composer and the medium. Everything is cen- tralized - the composer need not be a technician. In, fact, Wilson believes anyone with an average amount of intelligence can operate the studio. A com- poser can choose and tape the sounds he 'wishes, with little in- terference from technical de- tails. In many ways, this involve- ment is peculiar to electronic studios in this country. It seems we are part of what Wilson calls the "do it yourself" syndrome - the composer, pipe in hand, enjoys twisting knobs and ad- justing tapes. In Europe this is not the case: a composer with a particular musical idea will pre- sent h I s concept, in notated form, to a technician. The tech- nician then gets to push the buttons. The advantages to this direct type of composition are obvious. As in the physical sciences, many of the more important in- novations have been accidents. The composer can sculpt his sound, blending and altering his original intention, and it just may turn out that the "mis- take" is preferable. The techni- cian follows the prescribed pat- tern with no alteration. Chance has been eliminated. Even worse for the Creative process is the time lag between a composer's conception on pa- per and the actual rsult. The composition comes back from the electronic laundry complete, but if changes are to be made, the whole business must be sub- mitted again. Step by step al- teration is impossible, and an important part of the compo- sitional process has been lost. The manual transcription of sounds to tape is a tedious pro- cess. Tape must be measured to achieve the proper duration of each sound event. Sound gener- ators, each producing a partic- ular type of audio wave, must be mixed and filtered, and tape splicing is frequent. In short, this is a chore which requires a tremendous amount of pa- tience. A complex ,sound idea requires dubbing - one record- er serves as a master, and pre- recorded sounds are combined for the final two-channel ver- sion.y Wilson looks forward to some immediate modifications of the present equipment - most of which will not change this type of studio but will make the me- chanical process a bit less fa- tiguing. A computer, program- med for certain types of sound, could be used to eliminate some detail - it would function like a stop for change in organ reg- istration: patterns, types of sounds, would be immediately available. The Moog operates essentially in this way, and a keyboard fa- cilitates the choice of sound. The electronic studio has pro- visions f o r a small keyboard, but Wilson questions the use of a keyboard as a total substitute for manual work. A keyboard has its own limitations, a n d sound events must be heard in the time it takes to press two co secutive keys. The Moog, the , of the type displayed on any of the "switched-on" rec- ords is not the ultimate elec- tronic machine, but is an in- strument of convenience, Continued tomorrow By BERT STRATTON Otis Rush is a great blues guitarist. Unfortunately, many people didn't stay at the Blues Festival Preview concert Sun- day night long enough to find that out. Apparently most of the au- dience thought that John Jack- son's country blues act was the grand finale. When he finished at 11:30 p.m. a good deal of the crowd left, probably driven by tiredness and guilt complexes over unfinished term papers. Now I say that's too bad, be- cause Rush's performance was worth all the other three acts put together. Backed-up by a solid group of Chicago rhythm and horn players, Otis' vibrant sound sponged into the various empty corners of Hill Aud. Al- ternating between his domineer- ing guitar picking and his high- pitched vocal lyrics, Rush dis- played a talent that only B. B. King can match. He played it all, the jazz of Lou Donaldson in "Blues Walk," his own blues "I Can't Quit you Baby," and the soul of Wilson Pickett in "Knock on Wood." Rush also pointed out just how badly the preceding Chi- cago blues band of John Little- john had done. Littlejohn was second on the program, and with any degree of "togetherness" he could have had the crowd rock- ing. But he didn't. Accompanied by the most unrhymthic; unco- ordinated black band in exis- tence, Littlejohn tried some B. B. King licks on his guitar. For the audience it amounted to a case of "we've seen this all be- fore, and better too." Almost as an afterthought, about three-quarters through his act, Littlejohn pulled out his slide, which was the reason he was invited in the first place. On "Dust My Broom," the El- more James sli d e classic, he played a moving rendition, but it came too late to save his per- formance. Littlejohn's act was the =only one of the evering that didn't get a standing ovation, a rare occurence for any musical group in Ann Arbor these days. The hit of the evening, un- expectedly was John Jackson: A Virginia gravedigger, a tat- tered-clothed backwoodsman, at times an outstanding git-ar picker . . . all in all everything that makes a good o1' nigga. So naturally he was drunk on his ass. Buy one of his records if you want to know what he can real- ly do. They're good, but Sunday night he was pathetic, just gen- erally incoherent and bumbling. It was hard to t e 11 if the crowd was laughing at him or with him. I suspect it w a s a mixture. A lot of people were genuinely moved by Jackson's unassuming "woodsy" sincerity, Premiere Production PUT-ON A Comedy of Sorts by LAWRENCE KASDAN APRIL 16-19 Thurs., Fri., Sat.-8:30 P.M. Sat., Sun.-3:00 P.M. RM. 2065 FRIEZE BLDG. DONATION: 50c MUSIC DIRECTOR CHOREOGRAPH ER Pick up petitions UAC office,' 2nd floor Un'ion A' DUE APRIL 17, 5-:00 P.M. w on"Wo il I 2,000 PA I R Brand. Name Permanent Press PANTS (FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK) BUY 1 PAIR AT REGULAR PRICE AND GET THE Campus Musical * 2nd PAIR Theatre Co. Opens Applications for of equal value for, only $.O Real Savings on a Large Group (2,000 pair) of Our Brand Name Discontinued Permanent Press Pants . . . All from Our Regular Stock! (Sorry, We Can't Mention Brand Names) EXAMPLE: l1st pair $1.00 2nd pair $2.00 both pair $12.00 average $6.00 PRICES FROM $7.00 to $14.0 211 S. MAIN ST. I* V 11 I ~iscount records 1235 S. University 300 S. State I _------ 4-5 6-. q -- - - 7 U I MISSED "HARVEY?" DON'T 'MISS "HAIR!"11 -SUBSCRIBE NOW- p WelecE Stude " DISTINCTIVE HAIRSTYLINI And Women- " 8 HAIRSTYLlt The Dascola Arborland- Mnnle.I Vi Sublet Cheap-July-August 6 BEDROOM HOUSE 3 Bathrooms, Spacious Downstairs, Washer and Dryer; Air Conditioning, Large Back- yard; at Hill and Lincoln. 1-6 People (or more if you shack). Got a Noisy Bug ('62-'70)? 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