Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fridav. November S. 1968 TH IHGNDAL rdvNnhrR1Q v aYf vvci i iv i v, i iuv =theatre How was Soph Show?-- Well... music Londoners excel in tonal blend By TIiOMAS R. COPI As football coach Bump Elliot could tell you, some Years pro- duce a better crop of sopho--_ mores than others. And just as some sophomore classes, come up. with good football players, some also come up with fine singers and dancers from which the producers of Sophi Show can select their players. Unfortunately, there are lean years for both Bump and for Soph Show. But it is important that- the people responsible for producing Soph . Show pick a show that best displays the tal- ent they have to work with. In picking Carnival for Soph Show '68, the producers have not made the -best possible choice. Carnival is not really a fery memorable show. It's theme song, "Love Makes the World Go 'Round," is really its only good song. The thing that made Carnival the hit that it was on Broad- way was the magnificent voice of Anna Maria Alberghetti, an opera singer who- turned her talents to the world of musical comedy. Deborah Swets, who played the lead in' last night's production, is simply not Miss Alberghetti. But neither: can 'we realistically expect her to be. But what we can expect is that the burden of carrying an entire show shoildn't be put on, her shoulders . Miss Swets has .a sweet and honest, but unfortunately also a frail, voice. Just for the sake of audibility; she'perhaps could have done her solos a capella. And the other leads, with one exception, had the same prob- lem--that of being heard.. But let's not write this year's Soph 'Show off as a total loss., The usual vitality; vibrance and enthusiasm that only college; sophomores can bring to a stage production was there. And a bevy of 'beautiful coeds, led (in body and spirit) by "snake dancer" Debbie Winston, added what only beautiful coeds can. And the puppet.'show around which .much of the action re- volved; which could have been the weak poirnt of the show, was' instead its strength. Most of' the mTally funny lines; were given to the puppets, and the puppeteers did an excellent job with their flannelt charges, es- By R. A. PERRY As the Chicago impressario Harry Zelzer once said, "Good music isn't nearly so bad as it sounds." I might add that some music is not nearly so good as it sounds, especially when the sounds are produced by as out- standing a group as the Melos Ensemble. Comprised of twelve of London's top musicians, this ensemble, which might be com- pared to the Serkin/Casals Marlboro group, have developed both an amazing diversity of programming and a consensus of feeling that comes only from long acquaintance together. Several members of the En- semble perform widely as solo- ists in England and Europe, such as Gervase de Peyer, who, for my five bucks a record, is the best clarinet player alive; other members, such as Emanuel Hur- witz, Cecil Aronowitz, and Ter- ence Weil, fill the first chairs of England's major orchestras. Their concert in Rackham Aud. last night, sponsored by the University Musical Society, was a delight. For two hours, the smell of political offal and the polite lies of academic posturing were supplanted by humanity, intimacy, dignity, and harmony. Chamber music is indeed the most civilized art. The evening's program open- ed with an appropriate warm- up, Schubert's, "Adagio and Rondo for Piano and Strings." Although written for an ama- teur cellist, the piece, little more than a series of melodies, high- lights the piano and violin in an almost 'concertante fashion, the lead usually coming from the piano. Pianist Lamar Crowson olayed with a notably flowing and clean touch, as he did all evening despite the poor piano that Rackham provides. Not being an enthusiastic Shostakovitch fan, I did not an- ticipate his Op. 57 Piano Quin- tet with great relish; thus, for me, it was the surprise of'\the evening. Shostakovitch wrote the Quintet in 1940, after hav- ing been severely censored by the appropriate Russian Bureau for his-"petty bourgeois cerebra- tion." For this Op. 57 attempt at serving the weal of the mass- es, Shostakovitch received the Stalin Prize. Yet the work is in no ways a political poster; on the contrary, it seemed to me to be evocative on, a very personal level, espe- cially in the plaintive first movement. Here, each string instrument voices in turn a melancholic sigh, communica- ting in common with the piano's searching. Both Hurwitz and Aronowitz were very moving, their string tone pure and ex- pressive. First violinist Hurwitz, who tended to slide into notes rather inappropriately in the Schubert, was wonderfully precise and electric in the following Scherzo. This movement explores vigor- ous gypsy tunes that almost turn into a Danse Macabre. I don't feel that the Intermezzo "worked," the piano writing be- ing too diffuse and aimless, and in the Finale the Russian's sar- donic humor was perhaps too tempered by these wry English- men brought up not on Gogol but on Punch. In any case, the hallmark of the Melas Ensemble, tonal blend, was certainly apparent, as was ensemble precision. In his "Contrasts for Clarinet, Violin, and Piano," Bela Bartok sought just the opposite of what the Melos had perfected and strove not to blend the clar- inet and violin but to explore the various ways in which the in- struments are antagonistic. Thus the violin begins pizzi- cato and the clarinet with sus- tained phrases; they trade roles, only seldom coming to some agreement, and then as the movement closes, are again in direct contrast. The instruments attempt cohabitation in the second movement, but things just don't work out, and in the explosively virtuosic third move- ment, they are at each other's throats again, with the fiend- ish buzzing of the violin being met by shrieks from the clar- inet. The piano really only serv- es as a continuo. The piece was written in 1939 for Benny Goodman and Joseph Szigeti and I cannot believe that they played it any better than Hurwitz and de Peyer did last night. The tone quality that de Peyer produces makes other pro- ponents of his instrument sound like kazoo players. The program closed gracefully with Mozart's E-flat Quintet for Piano and Woodwinds. The work is pure musical incense; lyrical whisps disappear as they are produced leaving only the aura of Good Things. Oboist Peter Graeme was excellent if a bit too prominent, and the en- semble unity of phrasing per- fect and expressive. _ _ -Daily-Richard Lee THE INCOMPARABLE ROSALIE is carried onto the stage to open last night's Soph Show produc- tion of Carnival. pecially with Horrible Henry, the sweetest walrus (seal?) ever -to appear in Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Marjorie Adler and Janet Pal- lock, choreographers, put to- gether some fine numbers which were succesfully carried out by the large chorus. A standout from another soph show a few years ago summed up last night's show pretty well when she said that it was, over- all, a strong production. There were no individually weak per- formances, and there were a couple of strong ones. The best individual perform- ance, by far, came from Marilyn Miller as The Incomparable Rosalie. Her character was well developed, and she was hilar- ious. Hers was also the strong-t est voice on the stage. Miss Swets played the sweet, innocent, Lila very well, but her character just wasn't exciting. Mike Horowitz, as circus di- rector Schlegel, ,was consistent and amusing. Tom Zick-Marco the Magnificent--did more of a caricature than a chajrictariza- tion in, his role as Evil Lecher, but he was effective, as wit- nessed by the audience's re- sponsiveness. It's always nice when theatre-goers can take ad- vantage of the medium and hiss the villian. Greg Jarboe, who is billed as a "natural comedian," was plea- sant enough in his role as the hero's only friend and co- puppeteer. Frank Tell, the her, who tended to overplay his part, had the only audible voice, unusual for male leads in the student :productions of recent years. In the final analysis, it must be admitted by those of us who didn't particularly enjoy last night's performance that it was more the fault of the play than the players, although they didn't help much. DON'T MISS NEIL YOUNG, of The Buffalo Springfield not only alive but in person, at cMll? aIRLY AO.U.B FREE EATS 8 p.m. doors open $1.50 at the door Fri., Sot., Sun. .d PRESENTS SOPH SHOW "CAR NIVA L" Tickets are still available for tonight's performances. Try Daily Classifieds 2nd shows at Week ,1, 3, 5 Dial 5-6290 7 and 9 1'HELD Over! This is the story of the self-confessed Bos- ton strangler. It is a remarkable motion picture based on fact. Why this man? Why did 13 women open their door willingly to him? The result is a film that is not what you expected. BOSTON STRANGLER Tbny Curis THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC AND DEPARTMENT OF ART Present PUCCINI'S "'LABOHEME" (English Translation by Josef Blatt) NOVEMBER 22-23, 25-26, 8:00 P.M. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre ALLTICKETS -$3.00 Mail orders accepted now. Make checks payable to "University of Michigan." Send self- addressed, stomped envelope to School of Music Opera, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Box office opens Monday, November 18, 1968, 12:30 to 5:00 P.M. 5' r "NAZARIN is one of the great films of Bunuel's career... And made me remember something Bunuel once said: 'To show with a cold white eye what they have done here on earth in the name of God."' -Penelope Gilliatt, The New Yorker "STUNNING-A movie that really glows ..{:the thing for you to see!" -Judith Crist, Today Show, NBC "An amazingly strong film with earmarks of a classic. It should endure as one of his best, most significant works. An exceptional film to savor more than once." -William Wolf, Cue "More Bunuel than 'Belle de Jour'.... Bunuel is one of the most audacious, single minded and creative directors in the history of the cinema." -N.Y. Times 'A, "The enormous power of NAZARIN will leave you limp . . . it shouldn't be missed by any lover of fine cinema art." --Frances Taylor, Long Island Press "No one interested in cinema today, can afford to miss it . . . a starkly, simple, beautiful parable, which is visually, a Goya etching." -Bernard L. Drew, Hartford Times. LUIS BUNUEL'S TRA;ZAR17 11 G/'RAND CAN NES~ I T ',SlIN.I. starring froncisco robol " rta macedo " marga lopez * plus: CLASSIC 'V : TIM ;, FIFTH AVE. U - .~ - £a a riA urmE vI I I 1