THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, January 24; 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, January 24; 1969 i records New guitarist; new releases By R. A. PERRY, It is very costly for a record company to promote a new name, but in guitarist Christ- opher Parkening, Angel records has, an artist who should prove most durable. On Angel 36019, Parkening, who though only 20 is a-.-professor of guitar -at the University of Southern Califor- nia, clearly shows the reticent, careful style of his mentor, the great Andres Segovia. Differing from the buoyancy and loose- ness that the young Julian Bream showed on his early Westminster discs, Parkening reveals in works by Bach, Weiss, and Tansman each musical line and much rhythmic innuendo with masterful control. Bach's great Chaconne from BWV 1004 and the Prelude from BWV 1007 (transcribed by Segovia of course) are played with special beauty and clarity. This is an excellent recording that has al- ready spun many times. on my turntable. M4ahler's musical setting of twelve German folk-poems, Iles Knaben Wunderhorn, pro- vides a rich gamut of emotions, observations, and dramas. The range of feeling extends from the highly-charged tensions of "Revelge" to the love-lorn path-, os of "Wo die schonen Trom- Deten basen," the latter proving that Mahler could write as lyri- cal and tender a song as Schub- ert. No fan of Mahler or lover of lied should be without Angel's new recording (36547) of this song set rendered by Schwarz- kopf. Fischer-Dieskau and con- Of fer nKilma ViSittfg post Czech playwright Ivan Klima will be a visiting professor at the University next year-if' he is al- lowed to leave Czechoslovakia. Klima.has been invited to ac- cept an appointment as visiting assistant professor of Czech lang- uage and literature. The play- wrightwas here in December for, the premiere of his play, "The Castle," which vas producedby the Professional Theatre Pro- gram. He has indicated to University officials that he will accept if his government permits him to do so. Prof. John Mersereau, chair- mian of the :Slavic language and literature department, recom- mended the offer to Klima which has now been approved by the' executive committee of the liter- ary college. ductor, George Szell. Schwarz- kopf sings with special expres- siveness, as in "Das irdische Leben" where she distinguishes the three dramatic voices with- out exaggeration. Her articula- lation of the line "Warte nur, warte nur, mein liebes Kind" typifies the poignancy she can convincingly emote. Except for slight hamming in "Revelge," Cancellation The duo piano concert which was to be given by Eugene Bo- ssart and Charles Fisher of the music school faculty at. 4:30 p.m. Sunday in Rackham Lee- ture Hall has been canceled. Fischer-Dieskau exercises a con- trol which has been lacking in some opera discs of late and which equals the quality he set in such recordings as his Schwanegesang. Szell opts for a less angst-laden atmosphere than given Mahler these days (Bernstein and Wyn Morris) but the orchestra accompani- ments are no less pointed, de-t tailed, or sympathetic. Speaking of Mahler, his Fourth Symphony provides the easiest access into the composer's nine mystical and grand ex- positions in this genre. A new recording by Maurice Abravanel on Vanguard VCS-10042 reveals, as no previous edition f have heard, the smallest inner voices and instrumental exchanges. Certainly the outstanding Dolby sounds helps here. Nevertheless, for all of the clarity and expert first-chair playing, the details >do not all coalesce to form the appropriate mystical and maca-, bre idyllic gestalt that should be found in the symphony. Netania Davrath, the soprano in the fourth movement - a child's view of heaven, is likewise very explicit but somehow over- ly so. This Vanguard release is important for the way is reveals Mahler but it cannot equal the now deleted Kletzki version for its wonderfully effulsive and mysterious atmosphere. I first heard Gerard Souzay in concert at the English Bach Festival in Oxford, where a stu- dent ticket placed me, in an un-American fashion, in the first row. From this vantage point, the baritone's voice was incredibly subtle in its shadings of pitch, tempi, and emotion. Such qualities, the hallmarks of Souzay's singing, are necessities for French song, and thus Phi- lips recording of "Melodies by Gabriel Faure" (PHS 900-191) with Souzay and accompaniest Dalton Baldwin succeeds mag- nificently. Souzay's overwhelm- ingly sensuous shading of colors is exquisite in the most meti- culous sense of the word. Text translations on the jacket are quite messed up but such a pet- ty complaint should not deter you from a fine vocal recording. World Series' reissue (PHC 2-016) of Bizet's Les Pecheurs De Perles is a set to avoid. The opera holds some decent lyrical arias and choruses, though the plot--a love triangle among the "Hindoos," with many invoca- tions to "0 Die Brama"-has more "camp" moments than most operas. The young tenor voice of Leopold Simoneau is an asset, but the excessively nasal and bland singing of both Xavier Depraz and Rene Bianco make it difficult to appreciate the many felicities of the score. The recorded sound is muddy. The late Fritz Wunderlich who died in 1966 has had many re- corded tributes lately. His ability to spin legato phrases expressive of innocent virility can be best heard in arias from The Magic Flute and ThenAbduction from the Seraglio on Heliodor's HS' 25075. Nonesuch's reissue (H- 71211) of Wunderlich's reading of Schubert's Die Schone Mul- lerin cannot be as highly prais- ed. This recording stems from aj 1957 performance (when the singer was only 26) and Wun- derlich had yet to develop truly mature interpretative powers. Though the lyrical songs ("Das ' Wandern") fare best, those songs which express the mill- hand's deep doubts and frus- trated angers have none of the sustaining power and interest that Fischer-Dieskau produces. Furthermore, Nonesuch h a s "electronically rechanneled" the sound to a blurry pseudo-stereo, and the piano accompaniments of Kurt Meinz Stolze serve only to remind one what an asset. Gerald Moore was. Short notes: A good sampling of Stravinsky's piano music, from the neo-classical (complex Satie, in a way) to the jazzy, can be heard on Nonesuch's H- 71212, with the less-than-nimble pianism of Noel Lee. An excel- lent Mozart recital by Alfred Brendel is contained on Van- guard VCS 10043; it featuresthe K 310 Sonata, the K. 511 Rondo, and the K. 396 Fantasy. The performances are characterist- ically Brendelian: clearly struc- tured and rhythmically strong, more Germanically impelling than Romantically compelling. When Charles Ive's Second Piano Sonata (musical essays on Emerson, Hawthorne, the Al- cotts, and Thoreau) was pre- miered by John Kirkpatrick in 1939, it was called "the greatest music composed by an Amer- ican." Kirkpatrick, who learned the piece with Ives at his elbow, has recently recorded the Sonata on Columbia MS 7192. Its fas- cinating complexities require, as Ives said, "using your ears as a man." poetry and prose Name undergrad Hopwood winners Undergraduate Hopwood Awards for creative writing have been presented to ten freshmen and sophomores for essay, fiction, and poetry. The awards total $975. These awards, and the major awards which will be announced in April, were made possible by playwright Avery Hopwood, '05, who left the University a grant for recognition of the best crea- tive writing by students. In essay there were four awards: $150 to Barbara Louise Maurer, '71, for "In Relation to Morning;" $100 to Alan Ferrari, '72, for "The Delineation of Spiritual Love;" $100 to William Jestat, '71, for "The Experience of a Nation;" and $50 to Joan Oleck, '71, for "A Tribute to Roseanne." Two awards were made in fiction: $150 to Maureen Hunter, '71, for "Les Feuilles Mortes;" and $100 to Karen E. Wagner, '71, for "One Does Not Hug Witches." In poetry there were four awards: $100 to Pete Anderson, a freshman in the Residential College, for "Silver Strings;" $100 to Kristin Lems, '72, for, "Sunstrokes;" $75 to Gregory Jarboe, '71, for "A Sewing Machine Found Awkward on the Beach;" and $50 to Michael Roberts, a sophomore in the Residential College, for "Of My Inner Own." The judges in fiction and essay were Profs. Warner Rice and Carleton Wells; in poetry, Profs. Arnold L. Bader and Robert F. Haugh. Sixty-three students entered a total of 75 manuscripts: 11 essays, 27 works of fiction, and 37 poems, JOHN WAYNE STARTS WEDNESDAY MGM presents the John Frankenheimer- Production of Inefixe Metiocolo' HURSDAY and FRIDAY TOUCH OF EVIL Directed by Orson Welles, 1958 MARLENE DIETRICH ORSON WELLES CHARLTON HESTON "Welles at his most grotesque!" 7:00 & 9:05 75 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 AUDITORIUM POSITIVELY ENDS TUES. NATIONAL GFN~rAL COR1,1- FOX EASTERN T rATRESin.1C FoH VILL8GE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-"769-1300 Monday-Friday 7:00-9:15 Saturday-Sunday 2.15-4:30- 6:15-9:00 q If you like Urban Renewal? Hy- pocrisy? . . . all the Human Drives and Urges? You'll Love Our Very Spe- cial Sneak Preview Friday Only 8:20 P.M. F R I DAY ONLY s " " * a *, . * 0 " ." g- w S " " 1'PfA / f kn t .THE MORNIN5 [tTELEGRtAP4 .-Nt'EW YORKPOST~ upitdae. S' tiev TrECHNCL r ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ' " -mmA i !.i kkku~I I I r I l 1 I I1 . 1 7 Vii; "Expldsively Funny miss it."-L.A. Times don't 1 I OIL_ a I'l. -"' NANSOMA January 24-25 THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING, THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING, with ALAN ARKIN JONATHON WINTERS CARL REINER MICHAEL J. POLLARD (W. C. Moss) "A °Counter-Revolutionary Film" -Pete Meyers j Spontaneously Perforied and FILMED EXACTLY as Presented LIVE in Son Francisco and Los Angeles Wake up to I I This Winter DIAL 8-6416 1 SNEAK PREVIEW TONIGHT-8:.0 .. ... ......... . ...... 'ULYSSES'A SUPERB FILMi" .-fe Magazine " 4aN r It HELP CREATE . 11 ,. ._ _, The Aternative STUDENT-FACULTY COOP COFFEE'HOUSE Shares on Sole on the Ding Now! "The Best Suspense Western Since'High Noon s Angeles Creative Arts Festival is .. COMING ATTRACTIONS a Jazz: ROBIN KENYATTA and the African Contemporary Ensemble JAN. 30 UNION BALLROOM 7 $1.00 students $1.25 non-students: :30 "An exercise in sheer terror ...one of the great scare films of all time...it is delicious. It is nothing to see on a dark and stormy night." -Life Musical Theater: THE BELIEVERS "The Black Experience Song" FEB. 1 HILL AUD. .8:30, $2.50 students $3.00 non-students Tickets availableoin Fishbowl and 3rd floor League HELD OVER. BY POPULAR DEMAND FRI.-"ULYSSES" 7:00 - "BALCONY" 9:15 SAT. & SUN.- "ULYSSES"-3:00, 7 :00 "BALCONY"-5 .15, 9:15 iE l r t Ili I N Info: 662-6264 HELD OVER 6th WEEK.. r bad COOS aind thrG Iro EG d ac-ad i cthcn. h f q the "A BOLD, SEXY, DISQUIETING FILM STRICTLY FOR ADULTS! NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES Presents in a Pakula-Mulligan Production of .....IE . BU...., ... ..n. u..n.... ...... ....,.n. ..ann