THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 12, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 12, 1968 records Paul McCartney 's co-optation of r~ii TWICE DAILY at 1:30 and 7:30 Dial 665-6290 By RALPH J. GLEASON Liberation News Service The Beatles have finally dealt directly with the American radi- cals, politicos, and activists of the student movement who have been demanding that they say something. . The Beatles have said some- thing and what they have said is not going to be popular with a great many. The more politi- cal you are, the less you will dig the Beatles' new song, "Re- volution." "You say you want a revolu- tion," the Beatles begin in this first release under their own firm label, "Apple." Then they sing, "Well, you know we all want to change the world." So far, so good. The second line is without grounds for dis- pute, too. You tell me that's evolution, well you know, we all want to change the world.. Even the first refrain is with- in the line of the current left- political reasoning: "But when you talk about destruction, don't you know you can count me out." That last bit is where the trouble begins. You can see the activists dropping out wholesale. How can you make omelettes without breaking eggs? Then the lads go on, You say you've got a real so- lution, well, you know we'd all love to see the plan, indicating that at least they'll listen. Then they add something which speaks directly to a lot of people and their attempts to get the Beatles to do something. You can ask me for a contri- bution, well, you know we are doin' what we can. And then they add a Joan Baez capper, But if you want money for people with minds that hate, all I can tell you is brother you have to wait. Even up to here, all the disc does is nibble at the edge of putting down politics. The final verse really does it. You say you'll change the constitution, well, you know we all want to change y head You tell me it's the instil tion, well, you know, you b ter feed your mind instead But if you go carryin' p tures of Chairman Mao, y ain't gonna make it with ar one anyhow .. . So much for that. Thee which the Beatles stick into space between the verses ca the distant refrain "Don't know it's gonna be allllright allllllright?" and in the clo moments the word "allright repeated eight times. So the Beatles say put do your flags and believe that we need is love and say word and you'll be free. With the exception to the ferences to Los Angeles smo "Blue Jay Way" and per] another which I can't thin right this second, this son the first one the Beatles s to have directed toward Ar icans, specifically student a ists, Beatles fans all. And the American acti are going to have to deal this if they insist on the that the Beatles embody youth movement and that movement is by radical de tions revolutionary. They will also have to with what Paul McCartney a reporter from the New M cal Express while discussing ple's plans for financial hel creative people as oppose( giving the money to help, cripples: "Cripples are not necess having a hard time of it," Cartney said. "And even if are having a hard time of it their hard time. It is, ma doesn't matter what you about helping cripples or I . . . there's no way-to pour lions of pounds into India make India all right." Then the NME reported a McCartney if he hadn't starving people and it d worry him. "No. Starvation inI doesn't worry you," he told reporter, "if you are ho You just pose. You don't know it exists. You've only the Oxfam (a charity orgai tion ads, You can't preten me that an Oxf am ad reach down into the depti Seraphim tries ozart s quintets, by R. A. PERRY An excellent introduction to the private pleasures of cham- ber music can be found in the six string quintets of Mozart. Except for K. 174, the quintets were written toward the end of Mozart's life when the compos- er's music revels in and reveals a joyful seriousness nowhere else found in music, except, per- haps, in Bach. Pensive and mov- ing andantes, ebullient rondos of ingenious wit, graceful men- uettos of intriguing instrumen- tal counterpoint all seem to just flow out, never to have been toiled over in manufacture. It is music purely from the mind, never from the drawing poard. Angel's new release of the complete quintets on their bar- gain Seraphim line poses a few problems. Competition is keen and offered primarily by the Budapest Quartet with t h e warm viola playing of Walter Trampler; but this latter re- lease comes on the higher priced Columbia label. Although t h e young Heutling Quartet w i t h Heinz-Otto Graf filling the fifth chair cannot equal the full mas- tery or elicit the subtler insights of the Budapest, they do a very fine job Indeed. In ensemble, the young Ger- man musicians' possess almost perfect Intonation a nd blend, and their sylistic ideas have ob- viously been, mulled over and unified as well. Furthermore, the lead violin of Werner Heut- ling never loses its sweet pitch or emotional poise. Stylistically, they abide in t h a t European eradiction of a warm, angst-free approach to chamber music, as opposed to the tenser, leaner sound of such American groups as -the Julliard or F i n e Arts quartet. In other words, t h e Heutling sound is very pleasant to listen to. Being a fairly new group, however, they still seem quite ,conservative in the amount of spontaneity t h etyallow them- selves. They do not have full confidence in theirsymbiosis to play as freely as the Budapest can; thus the finale of K. 593, for instance, lacks the jocularity it really should have. The Buda- pest paint a larger and more expressive canvas; the Heutling are miniaturists - everything in its place and beautiful to be- hold, but basically less open and expansive. Still, how many groups can be favorably compared to the Budapest? The Seraphim set represents an extraordinary val- ue: the performance well above average, the stereosound warm and well-defined, liner notes unusually full, and t h e price wonderfully low. (SIC 6028) Another set that can be reco- mmended with certain qualifi- cations is Alexis Weissenberg's rendition of t h e "Complete Works for Piano and Orchestra" of Chopin on the Angel label. (SC 3723.) No doubt aware of other outstanding recorded per- formances of the two Chopin concerti, the producers at An- gel felt that by including such rarely heard pieces as the "Kra- kowiak Rondo," "Andante spi- anato," and "Fantasy on Polish Aairs," they would induce the buyer to invest in the three- record set. These shorter works do in- deed abound in the grandilo- quent Romantic flourish, a n d Weissenberg plays them vigor-, ously and effortlessly. They are a welcome addition to the cata- log and will spice up any collec- tion. The major attraction, Weiss- enburg's renditions of the con- certi, may not, however, con- vince those who cherish their Rubinstein, Lipatti, or Aaskena- zy recordings. With an unfail- ingly crisp and brilliant touch, W e is s e n b e r g unquestionab- ly misses some of the softer, subtler poetry; yet in clearing the air of that drawing room- sachet feeling, he revitalizes Chopin's music with a virile and tense excitement that I found quite beautiful. It is not a ques- tion of technique, merely of how you like your Romanticism serv- ed up: flowers or steel. Stanislaw Skrowaczewski leads the Paris Conservatoire Orches- tra in a sympatico role, but the stereo sound spreads so that one loses all sense of instrumental definition. On the other hand, the closely-milked piano has been outstandingly reproduced. Two short notices: The artistry of the legendary horn player Dennis Brain has been better served than on Seraphim's new release 60073. Featured is Mo- zart's E flat quinete, a melodi- ous and lively work that re- quires more than a good horn player - the horn is t h e r e really only for added sonority. Finally Leonid Kogan's per- formance of the Tchaikovski Violin Concerto possesses fan- tastic brio and urgency. (S 600- 75). In contrast to t h e silky sweet approach to t h i s well- known concerto (Perlman's re- cent RCA disc), Kogan digs into the virtuoso guts of the work, gives each double stop full measure, and leaves no express- ive moment unmentioned. concernTHEDV NC osEVER! our your soul and actually make GONE WITH THE171D you feel for the people any tu- more, for instance, than you feel et- about getting a new car. If it Friday and Saturday $ 5O All Other , $ 00 comes to a toss-up, you'd get Eves. anddAll Day Performances ic- a new car. And don't say you wouldn t, because that's the - scene, with you and most peo- n- pie. The point is also, 'Do you really feel for Vietnam?' and echo the answers are the same. May- Wan 10 see the"Sandpipers the be I'd rather listen to a rock rries record than go there and enter- you tain and maybe, underneath, They're coming with ... that's the truth in all of us. ITo sing know one is morally better than t" is the other, but I know I'd never The Bob Hope Show get around to it. I'd be a hypo- wn crite." t all And there you have it. The the answer to the questions raised SATUR DAYSEPTEMBER21 by ,the people who wanted the re- Beatles to speak out against the 8:30 P.M. g in war in Vietnam. To the people haps who wanted the Beatles to en- k of dorse this cause or endorse that University Events Building g is cause and contribute to this eem campaign or that campaign. Ticket prices: $4.00, $3.00 mer- Where does it leave every- Sign up for tickets in your housing unit ctiv- thing? Well, I for one, welcome Block ticket orders due Se-t. 1 3th what McCartney said as a vists breath of fresh air. I think they or Mail orders 2503 S.A.B. with are dealing with "what is" as or Single Sales begin Mon., Sept. 16th (lobby of S.A.B.) idea Lenny Bruce did and not in the "what should be." And the only Presented by Michigan Fraternities t h e , way we are ever going to get and Sororities fini- around to making what is into what should be is by starting deal with reality. For that I am told grateful. Their attitude, as ex- dusi- pressed by McCartney, is much Ap- healthier than the patriotic lp to crap ladled out by James Brown d to and Martha Raye and Sammy CI say, Davis and it faces right up to the problem. arily Money won't buy ma love. Nor THURSDAY and FRIDAY Mc- will it buy salvation. they , it'sING ,n. It say i ndia -" mil- 'AND and -30x0 Washtenaw. Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor sked seen CQUNTRY lidn't I O D Dir. Joseph Lomey, 1964 India 3the ddiLectedby nest. Wrien*orhescrnnddirec.ed'by Private Hamp (Tom Courtney) volunteered for even Richard Brooks active duty in the WW I British army because "the seen ACorumbi PicturesRelease InPonovisio" wife and her mother dared me." After three years of riza- service in Frnce, Hamp deserts. He is caught, court- cd "IRRESISTIBLE!"-LIFE martialed, and condemned to death by officers intent hs of on makingan example of him. The defending officer in the court-martial, Cap- t°°"'s""""tain Hargreaves (Dirk Bogarde) is at first antago- nistic toward Hamp, but during the trial he realizes that Hamp had reacted in a human way to an in- SUGGESTED FOR MATURE AUDIENCES human situation. -__---___When the firing squad's volley fails to kill Hamp, I wHargreaves, in the final bit of irony, is forced to Lose Something? personally conclude the execution Find it with a 7:00 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE Daily Classified 662-8871 75c AUDITORIUM S7 4~ r r THE MICHIGAN BANDS r m MISSED US?? " II Auditions for VAC Musket's CAMEILOT THURSDAY thru SATURDAY SEPT. 12-14 BASEMENT OF UNION All necessary information about late sign-ups at Musket Office, UAC wing-2nd floor of Union Take Great Pride in Presenting JOHNNY CARSON, IN PERSON with Doc Severinson and Orchestra Marilyn Maye Bud and Cece Dance Team in 2 Shows at 7:00 and 10:00 P.M. on Saturday, October 5 at the UNIVERSITY EVENTS BUILDING S ALL SEATS RESERVED. Tickets priced as follows: Events Build Floor: $5; Blue Section: $4; and Gold Section: $3. Mail orders may sent to Johnny Carson Show, 1024 Administration Building, Ann Ar 48104. Accompany your order with a check made payable to Michigan Bands. Orders will be filled beginning on September General sales will begin on September 30. ing be -bor the 27. The hanging was the best show in town. But they made two mistakes. They hungthe wrong man and they didn't finish the job. a guide to: Apartments Bars Restaurants with maps and hints on, life in Ann Arbor $1.00 ,S. I L mod L: E 1I At your newsstand NOW NOTICE: BECAUSE OF THE STAGGERING RESPONSE TO ZORBA LAST WEEK, THE Vth FORUM HAS MADE SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS TO BRING HIM BACK AGAIN BEFORE HE RETIRES. YES, THE OLD MAN IS BEING RETIRED-THE MOVIE IS BEING WITHDRAWN FROM CIRCULATION LATER THIS MONTH-THIS MAY BE YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SEE A ZORBA THE GREEK ACADEMY AWARDS "'ZORBA THE GREEK IS A DECIDED MUST-SEE! Anthony Quinn's Zorba possesses all the energies and urges of the great ones of history and myth." -Bosley Crowther, New York Times I ANDRE MALRAUX D/IS ANTHONY QUINN ALAN BATES EFL r 1 Ar- AAC "A grand uproarious Bacchanalian bash." ('Aw fhlA tho;"w- ho-Qt ,rti-r oftheat'~r! I I Time Magazine A tEONARD FREE MAN PRODUCTION cost'i g :: sodgeted Fm Matur ean fl -- QTlIllW _ ft rn ii aU'--n I