_Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY S aturday, January 17, 19 7. "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST !" 'Synthesizer' lum cool is di -NEAL GABLER, Michigon Daily mamitI "quality" of this fine new "ex- cursion into sound." In order not to disappoint the eager listener, Carlos has pro- v i d e d appropriate diversion: lines and phrases are broken, and a percussive use of "white sound" assures your undivided attention. Staccato s o u n d s bounce through your living room - first from the 1 e f t speaker, then right, then cen- ter, then left again. There is more than enough to keep your ears busy -why, you don't ev- en have to listen! The music listens for you - a veritable triumph of technology. The only "serious" effort on this album is the Moog per- formance of the Fourth Bran- denburg. T h e Brandenburg is carefully done - Carlos takes considerable p a i n to approxi- mate the timbre, through care- ful selection of t h e overtone blend available with the Moog - of the original instruments. When all the gimmicks are tak- en away, when the novelty be- comes a serious effort, all that is left is duplication - and a rather shoddy one at that. Car- los is getting better, but it will take a considerably more so- phisticated instrument than the Moog Mark ZV to duplicate the timbres required for the type of music he is attempting to trans- scribe. Perhaps this can be done - but why the effort? A "Well-Tempered" synthe- sizer is already an anachronism. Electronic means has offered a range of sound that has been completely inaccessible until t h e present century. Sound quality, timbre, and range nev- er before heard, much less real- ized, is now possible. Then some- one (notable Robert Moog) comes upon the bright idea that a synthesizer with a keyboard is a more "musical" synthesiz- er. True, it is more convenient, but equal tempering or well- tempering (more like well-tam- pering) of synthesized sound de- stroys any new potential that electronic sound c a n offer. Sound already has been temper- ed: the structure Bach heard was designed in tempered sound. NOW 4TH WEEK Barring all gimmickry, it is impossible to "enhance" music of the past through electronic means. If performed properly -- and this includes t h e type of Gouldian accuracy that affic- ionados of Switched-On Bach claim impossible - the music will be itself. And unless music, a sound concept, can be itself (whether electronically recon- structed or conventionally per- formed) it will not develop - an idea becomes blurred, espec- ially if conflicting i d e a s are parodies. We become less and less certain of the original con- cept. We are far from the era of the tempered scale, a n d the music Bach envisioned (per- fectly accurate in his mind5 is inseparable from the sounds he intended, sounds which Carlos must imitate. M u s i c and its sound are one and the same - to change sound and leave only structure is to destroy . struc- ture. Structure is organized sound, completely dependent on the given sounds and will auto- matically change if s o u n d changes. The music of Bach has de- stroyed itself - only by being itself, and has moved on. Elec- tronic instruments free f r o m the well-tempered bonds that former musics in their own con- text have prohibited, will de- velop new musics, and will es- tablish new rules that will be part of the sound conception. Carlos has done nothing but attempt a short-circuit, an elec- tronic one at that, and Colum- bia will be one of the first to plug you in. . _.__ _ "Dazzling... Devastating.. Brilliant! Must be seen by anyone who cares about 'the development of modern movies)" -Newsweek "Staggering... Illuminating... Magnificent! t is the stuff af nowI Young people...: should be required to see ,Medium Cool'!" -Holiday Stunning! One of the best pictures of 1969!"-Cosmopolitan ip-T- E'Opg "a pITHAVN"' A "" T "" 0 As impassioned and impressive a RfIm as any released so far this year! Signals perhaps a new bold-. ness in American cinemal Extraordinaryl" -Tim "Powerful! The First entirely serious, commercially spon-. sored, basically fictiona RFilm to be born out of the time of political and social troubles through which this nation has been passing !"-LiI. Paranount \ S Pictures presents Pr p'dc ywt,,. ~edb wly FcCidman & klaloll wexer/kastell wexier S ? 9tenicobrapamount picture -_ - I X persons under 18 not admitted FRI. 7, 9, 11--SAT. 5, 7, 9, 11-SUN r- II 11 rl IIML4BI II ~cni 1 nrxn ~ I' 'I !egents approve expansion of ' ThiSm NK I The evaluation came at yester- day's meeting, with Regents Rob- ert Brown (R-Kalamazoo) and Paul Goebel (R.Grand Rapids) grilling store manager Dennis Webster for about two hours. Most of the discussion centered on the store's proposal that its in- ventory ceiling be lifted entirely. The administration has been hesitant in recommending a raise In the inventory ceiling because this would presumably increase the University's liability should the store fail. An agreement that the University would meet any unpaid debts of the store in the event of a failure was a key ele- ment in the Regents' original approval of the store. The store's operators maintain- ed that the $25,000 inventory limit kept them from meeting the de- mand of their patrons for school supplies. Besides requesting a release from the inventory ceiling, the store re- quested regental authorization to borrow up to $15,000. This, along with the $10,000 in cash reserves, would presumably be used by the store to raise' the value of its in- ventory from $25,000 to $50,000. $5,000 would be used to stock the Bursley branch. The executive of- Bursley. According to acting Vice Pres- ident for Student Affairs Bar- bara Newell, the executive officers felt that any additional increase would be unwise in the face of -the eventual merger of the discount store and the University Bookstore approved by the Regents 1 a s't October. "The more complicated and ex- tensive the discount store, the more complicated the merger pro- cess would be," she said. However, a member of the Book- store Policy Board, Bruce Wil- son, told the Regents that t h e Board supported the discount store's ;requests. The Regents subsequently ap- proved a proposal offered by Re-E gent Otis Smith (D-Detroit) to raise the ceiling to $40,000. , BILLY VANAYER Electra-Recording Artist Superb guitar, banjo, tamboura Superb sense of humor Great performer Funny as hell! 1 1 I- -. = \7( .+aI -, .,r . e Hi-Fi Headquarters in Ann Arbor for 23 Yeors 304 S, Thayer 665-8607 Across from Hill Auditori4m musi ccenter, Inc. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ::r..-o"""...o".::.:v.r:i>>7qrrrrr.prrr ."fi}::t?"rS?:::' rr.ty"'::7:4 ::'v,;.?y}:?a. :: i"v:S ":r'q;:{:;;::?; MPANAVISIONe.TECHNICOLOR UnltedArtists SHOWS AT 1 :00, 3:40, 6:20, 9:00 P.M. 1 The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S. A Bl d g ., before 2 p.m., ofthe day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- tion notices a r e not accepted for' publication. F o r more informa- tion, phone7 764-9270. SATURDAY, JANUARY 17 Day Calendar Midwestern Conference on S c h o o l Vocal and Instrumental Music - Re- gistration: Rackham Lobby, 8:00 a.m. Basketball: U-M vs. Illinois: Events Building, 2:00 p.m. Degree Recital: Collette Bick, violin; School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. General Notices Senate Assembly: Monday, January 19, 1970, 3:15 p.m. Rackham Amphithea- ter, agenda: 1. Consideration of the minutes of the December 15th meeting; 2. Report of SACUA activities; 3. Com- mittee Appointments: Election of a Chairman and a Vice Chairman to the Senate Advisory Review Committee; 4. Remarksdby Vice President Norman on Research Aspects of the University; 5. Report of the Calendar Committee -Professor George Hay. P lcement Servi1ce GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B-. Current Positions received by Gen. Div., here are a few, come and browse through others: Local County Organization, m a 1 e worker for group and casework services, exper. required, 3-4 years group :work, BA in soc. sci., but prefer MSW or MS in behaviorial Sci. areas. Sinai Hospital, Detroit, Student with interest in medicine for research in biochemistry. 1Ketchum, Inc., Ann Arbor: Secre- tarial position, typing, accuracy, a n d filing duties for full time until April, fund raising for Girl Scout Council. Democratic State Central Committee of Michigan, Lansing, Director of Pub- lic Information. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERtVICE 212 SAB, Lower Level Glacier National Park, Montana. Ap- plications have arrived at Summer Placement Service; 212 Student Activi- ties Building. A wonderful place to spend your summer. Platt National Park, Sulphur; Okla- homa. Ranger-Naturalist positions open for coming summer. Application dead- line February 15. Further details at SPS, 212 SAB. ENGINEERING PLACEMENT SERVICE 128-H, West Engrg. Bldg. Engineering Placement Meeting No. 3: Employment interviewing and Plant Visits." What to, expect and how to act during employment negotiations. Third of four meetings. Professor J. G. Young, January 19, 1970, 4:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. in Room 325 West En- gineering Building. (Afternoon and evening meetings will be the same.) ORGANIZATION NOTICES The Free University will hold registra- tion in the Fishbowl on Jan. 24-31st, 1970. For info, call Li. Hunt at 764- 8865. <* 4' * * Presents NIKOLAIS DANCE THEATRE Hill Auditorium WEDNESDAY, JAN. 21 at 8:30 PROGRAM: MANTES (from IMAGO); NOUNENOM and TENSILE INVOLVEMENT (from SOMNILO- QUOY); TOWER (from VAUDEVILLE of the Elements); TENT TICKETS: $6.00, $5.50, $5.00, $4.00, $3.00 LECTU RE-DEMONSTRATION TUes., Jon. 2Ct8;3C-1.OO Musical Society Office in Burton Tower-Ph. 665-3717 "Tehap Ia when 'm srih smr euiu thanthehapy Iseemd t bewhe as stoned! ~1h ir nte'pcue snmd hi.Fo vra er hewso apeains oeru'rgskoz ~s"see."Ths s owsh dscibs t I, UM Baha'i Club ligion Day, Jan. Jewett. sponsors World Re- 17, 7-9 p.m., 1474 "I thinky speed' is a lot worse than heroin. Kids have got to know about it, because they can fall so easily into taking it through the diet pill hassle, or needing something to help them study. You know, that's crazy. Because the combination of am- phetamines and no sleep just blows your memory completely. There are whole sections of my life which I just can't remember. It got to be just 'do a little more, do a little more,' until that was ail there was. And the 'crashing'... sometimes the 'crashing' is just really awful! "For me to stop taking it, I had to feel that people were car- ing. And they were. I was really lucky. I was very close to two people that were really into amphetamines very deeply, and I loved them a lot. But as far as they were concerned, the only f,:... + -. 4eat na e af ' a tha ther life And I I U A 4th Week Shows ot 1,3,5,7,9 William Faulkner's P Novel "The Reive ulitzer Prize-Winning rs" is now a film!Y DIAL 5-6290 I I I Ii - . ---- - - ------ - - - ---I- B i U