Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, April 1, 1969 Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday. ADrII 1. 1969 records Floating music in a sea of silence BUDGET SQUEEZE Poets may be pinched By R. A. PERRY Charles Wuorinen, co-director of -the Group for Contemporary Music at Colum- bia University, is a composer whose works clearly illustrate the tendencies of mod- ern music. Without resorting to eclectic sources or to electronic effects, and with- out embracing non-musical infiltrations of mixed-media, Wuorinen almost pris- tinely focuses upon minimally structured instrumental effects less for their ex- pressive possibilities than for their purely sonic qualities. In both his Piano Concerto and in his Chamber Concerto for Flute and Ten Players (Composers Recordings Inc. No. 239 and 230), Wuorinen builds up "events" which change both in density (or as he calls it, "populated musical en- vironment") and in relation to the feat- ured instrument, here piano or flute. Even the moments of pause, says Wuor- inen, may be considered "windows open- ing on the silence in which the piece swims." This music,. thus, seeks inspira- tion not from our constricted, architect- onic terrestrial environment, but from the openness of outer space or microcosm of atomic bubble chamber, when there is neither beginning nor end, just the mark- ings of events. Wuoriien's music, like much modern music, enrichs us in direct proportion to our degree of concentration upon it; you can't read to it. Vanguard records has reissued on its budget Everyman label a collection of songs by Henry Purcell, that master of drama tempered through melody. Lark- voiced Alfred Deller assumes the major role on this disc (SRV-280), with worthy support from April Cantelo and Maurice Bevan, the latter, I feel, being much too gentle with "Let the Dreadful Engines," from Purcell's Don Quixote. Many of the songs in this collection are seldom heard, and Vanguard has packed the disc as full as the grooves will allow. Also esoteric are the Unfamiliar Mas- terpieces for Orchestra by J. S. Bach that Robert Rudolf conducts for Westminster (WST-17151). For many of the pieces on the record, unfamiliarity would appear warranted, especially in Rudolf's uninter- esting and metronomic tempi. Other exerpts, however, such as the Sinfonia S. 49, which appears to have been intended for a keyboafd concerto and is here rendered with a lively organ solo by Kurt Rapf, bear repeated listening. Another fine selection, a Chorale Fantasia (S. 8) suffers from the wobbly trumpet playing of Wilhelm Heinrich. The record's sur- faces leave something to be desired. JQerg Demus, presently replacing Ger- ald Moore as accompanist for the lead- ing lied singers, and Paul Badura-Skoda, who has many fine Mozart recordings to his name, have often teamed up to play four hand piano music. A recent West- minster recording revealing their won- derful symbiosis features three pieces by Schubert, the Rondos, Op. 107 and 138, and the Fantasy Op. 103, .as well as a Mozart morsel, the K. 501 Andante with Variations. Schubert's Op. 138 and 103 delve deeper into romantic sentiment and are compositionally more involved affairs than the music-box charm of the other two works on the disc. Demus and Bad- ura-Skoda play with skillful light touch, and even in the more dramatic passages, their essential elegance emerges as the motivating approach. The balance be- tween piano parts has been captured well by Westminster on WST-17156, a record to spark and feed your reveries, assuming you have reveries. The Quartetto Italiano have been play- ing together without a personnel change for twenty years and the result of such long melding of musical sensibilities can be heard on Philips 900-197, where the ensemble plays Dvorak's popular American Quartet and Borodin's Quartet in D. What this foursome stresses is not so much the articulation of each voice but a timbral unity that allows an individual to foray out of the gestalt rather than accepts independent lines into a collec- tive. Because of this approach, which is quite breathtaking to hear, the Quartetto Italiano miss some of the details and richness of articulation in the Dvorak, and for that reason I continue to prefer the beautiful performance on London. For the Borodin, however, which is a piece of less complexity and of simpler lyricism, the Quartetto Italiano offer a tonally mellow rendition quite suitable to the music. This Borodin quartet, of course, is the one from which the composer himself cribbed for his well-known Nocturne. Finally, Nonesuch adds honor to its growing catalog of non-Western music with a recital by Goro Yamaguchi of Japanese Shakuhachi music. (H-72025) The shakuhachi is a bamboo vertical flute with five finger holes; its history traces to T'ang China and it has been utilized for both secular and religious purposes. Since the seventeenth century it has been associated with Zen Buddhism and with the komuso priests, or "priests of noth- ingness." This word komuso seems to apply to the music quite well, for unlike Indian sitar music, which strives to simultane- ously astound you with the virtuosity of the player and capture you in pyramiding emotional entrallment, the music of the shakuhachi is as unassuming, simple, and' enigmatic as is much sumi painting. Through the repetition of small motifs the music hypnotizes but at the same time sensitizes you to the slightest alterations in phrasing and patterning. Mr. Yamaguchi, who has'released over a hundred recordings in Japan, offers Cranes in their Nests and Bell Ringing in the Empty Sky, the latter, a piece held sacred for its religious profundity, had a refreshing and liberating effect on this pagan westerner. Such deceptively simple and strange music, which finds its subtle reverberations beneath the level of in- tellectual awareness, strikes to the heart of "yugen," the Japanese word for "spirit- ual depth existence." By MARY RADTKE Nothing comes free anymore, not even poetry. And the popu- lar English Dept. readings may prove this statement. For unless additional financial support can, be found, these Tuesday after- noon readings may be seriously curtailed. Prof. Bert Hornback, program director, received word recently of a cutback in the financial; support which the program has received this term from t h e President's and the Dean's Of- fices. The $1500 contributed by these University sources for the cur- rent program has been reduced to about $500 for the program next year. Hornback estimates 'the projected two term program next year will require $2500 and is seeking pledges from within the University to cover the ad- ditional expenses. So far, Hornback says, Rich- ard Wilbur, Galway Kinnell, and Bill Stafford have b e e n - music Voices of Michigan: Nice start By JIM PETERS It usually takes only one man with an idea or goal to get things rolling; it was Noah Green- berg who called together Medieval music fans and formed the New York Pro Musica. Now, there's another name to add. Although on a much smaller scale, Steven Glenn, 'a masters student in the Music School, has his own group of friends who make music with him. And in their concert last night, the Voices of Michigan Choir showed that they know what making music is all about. The cavernous auditorium of Ann Arbor High School was the setting for a varied program of seldom heard choral works. The group, formed by Glenn only in January, sounds like they've been singing together for years; so their ensemble and precision resulted from dedication and hard work, as well as expert handling by their con- ductor. A bright English madrigal, Come Let's Rejoice, began the evening's fare. The quick staccato line proceeded with perfect ensemble, and the en- thusiasm of the Choir was evident. Tackling something more serious, they per- formed Verdi's Ave Maria. But this is not the melodramatic screaming Verdi. His music here is rich and restrained, the usual fire turned to con- templation. Glenn's handling of the polyphony cannot be, faulted, though the vocal line was muddied in spots. But the fine sustained build to the end, and the gentle crescendo in the Sancta Maria section overshadowed this problem. Nachtwache is soft, and Brausten Alle Berge is filled with short canonical sections led first by the altos and then by the basses. The fluidity of the melodic line masked the group's tight ensemble, and they performed effortlessly within the song's complexities. Only in the final song, Im Herbst, were there troubles, but the faltering ensemble was soon put back together. William Schuman's Secular Cantata No. 2 is irritating stuff. The discordant harmonies never seem just right to me, and the forte passages usually come right out of nowhere. But Glenn's choir moved through the three sections with ease. The Long, Too Long, America section's narration moves to Look Down, Fair Moon in which tenor Jerry Vander Shaaf offered soft lyricism. In the finaldSong of the Banner, the choir ran fast and good. A brass choir of ten instruments was added for Norman Dello Joios Ode to Saint, Cecilia. Using. the age-old Dryden text, the composer has omitted the usual solos and he presents one fabric of choral sound, punctuated by crackling brass. Dello Joio's melodies are beautiful, and the expressiveness of Glenn's interpretation and his sure hand kept the balance between chorus and brass ensemble exact. With the substitution of a chamber orchestra for the brass, the Choir finished with Haydn's Te Deum. This is certainly not one of Haydn's major works, but it is jubilant and full of good noises, and the performance was just as exuber- ant. Last night was the Voices of Michigan Choir's cinema One Face' of i fe By GORDON BEAUCHAMP John Cassavetes is probably best known to movie-goers as the step-father of Rosemary's baby. He is also a director and, on the basis of Faces, a very good one. So humane in its conception, so firm in its execution, so brilliant in its technique, this film makes criticism difficult and viewing a joy. To tell what Faces is "about" would be to recite cliches: the emptiness of middle-class lives, the lovelessness of their marriages, the joylessness of being middle-aged; the husband who spends a night with a call girl, the wife who sleeps with a boy and then tries to commit suicide. Yet what is amazing in this film is the richness and understanding that Cassavetes finds in these cliched lives and situations. One would have not believed that there was such depth in such shallow people, but it is there. And time and again Cassavetes elicits this depth with small touches and subtle strokes that are brilliant.d His technique is unique and unmistakable - best described as a home movie made by a master of the film medium. Both crude and beautiful, Faces' beauty rises out of its crudeness. As. the slick technicolor style of the big studios has come to repre- sent both visual and emotional dishonesty (in, for example, Divorce American Style which,, in its treatment of the same subject as Faces, is both brainless and ugly); similarly, the raw, grainy tex- ture of this film corresponds to its uncompromising honesty. Everything coalesces: the banal dialogue, the perfectly realized mise en scene, the over-lighted, slightly unfocused visual style, the brilliant and almost embarrassingly realistic acting. A totally integrated film emerges in which every detail is significant. Take, for example, the richness of detail in the house of the married' couple, one of those monstrous California moderns, every square foot of which proclaims a lot of money and a lack of taste. To talk about symbolism in a movie so thoroughly realistic may seem arbitrary, but surely this house is a symbol - cold, barren, tacky, empty. When the wife. (Lynn Carlin) make her nightly round to lock all those patio doors, one realizes how completely she is living in a piece of real estate, not in a home. In one scene, Cassa- vetes dissects an anatomy of suburbia. But Cassavetes is not attempting ridicule or expose: "What suburbia is really like!" Faces tells us more than the statistics and sociologists, the Vance Packards and the David Reismans about our society - the status seeking and pyramid climbing and lonelyt crowding. It tells more because it looks at the human, the man in the organization man. While neither sentimental nor cynical, Faces is honest, a mirror not a cartoon. If the characters are often ridiculous and disgusting, they are also lonely and yearning. One comes to care about them, finally very much. One cares, no doubt, because these characters are so beautifully realized. The four principals - John Marley, Lynn Carlin, Gena Rowlands, and Seymore Cassel - are perfect, each a vivid, com- plete creation. And even the smallest roles are created with im- mense depth. Behind each person, no matter how briefly he appears, one senses a whole life, implied in a gesture, in a single phrase. For example, the four wives, out on the town, pick up a young stud (Cassel). One of the women, who is fat and ugly, is dancing with him and suddenly looks up and says, "Will you kiss me?" All the frustration, the repression, the disappointment of a lifetime are in that deftly captured sentence. Cassavetes is particularly adept at creating the dynamics of the awkward situation, the times when no one knows what to say and then says the wrong thing. Some of the scenes are so real and so embarrassing that one begins to squirm with discomfort. Yet they are comic too, and sad and very much the stuff of life as it is. scheduled for next year. These poets will follow the pattern set by such men as Ethridge Knight and Donald Hall who attracted overflow audiences to this term's readings. Due to the monetary restric- tions, some poets have cut their fees. Richard Wilbur, for exam- ple, agreed to come as a favor for about half his usual fee," Hornback explained. However, the poets need t h e financial s u p p o r t obtained through their readings to live on while they write. "To ask major poets to come as friends for less money than they deserve is unfair to them. It's also very embafrassing," Hornback said. "Slowly the prospects of find- ing support for the, program within the University are im- proving. At least now we h a v e enough to pay the "poets w h o have already agreed to come for next year's program," he says. "We have to keep this pro- gram going until more money becomes available. The Univer- sity will someday have enough to finance an extensive program of literary arts, but there won't be any audience for it if this program dies out," he said. Several "stopgap" measures have been considered by Horn- back to keep the program of poetry readings alive while wait- ing for this additional money to become available: -- The writer-in-residence program may have a poet as one of its visiting writers next year. - The English Dept. may co- operate with the University Ac- tivities Center to sponsor t h e appearance of a major poet. - The English Dept. visiting lecturer program may be able to provide some funds,- although Hornback ad it s that "the average departmental budget, for lecturers is only about $500 and most of that is intended to go for professional lectures." - Two departments working together can perhaps sponsor one poet. The Classics Dept., for example, has indicated its in- terest in helping to bring Rich- ard Latimore, who is known for his translation of the Iliad as well as for his poetry. However, as the poetic inter- ests of the departments seldom overlap, Hornback expects such interests of inter-departmental cooperation to be rare. A more practical alternative, he' feels, is the establishment of a read- See POETS, Page 3 p '1 41 4 3020 Washtenaw,_Ph. 434 -1782 FEATURE TIMES Wed., Sat., Sun. 1:15, 3:50, 6:25, 9:00 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor Mon:, Tues., Thurs., Fri. WALT DISNEYS 4I -Associated Press .Dog bites man Yogi, the quick sniffing Labrador specially trained to discover 'marijuana, scored again ,as Beatle George Harrison and his wife Patti were brought to court and fined $600 each for keeping marijuana in their home. When Scotland Yard officers raided the Harrison's house March 12, Yogi pointed the way to enough marijuana for 120 cigarettes. Nice going, Yog. Iirst concert, and they looked like they were The three songs by Brahms from Opus 104 having fun. The enjoyment was theirs, but the are in the same mood, introverted and quiet. pleasure could hardly be kept from the audience. ,r I -"> ri ro U Something To Swap? Try Daily Classifieds Radical Caucus General Meeting -TONIGHT- WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY 4:10 P.M. Student Laboratory Theatre Department of Speech presents 'BED)TIME STORY, by SEAN O'CASEY April 2nd and 3rd Admission Free ARENA THEATRE, Frieze Building TECHNICOLMR'PANAVISIW Q '9EA~Walt DF.wy Ptduetlmie ( The Michigan Daily. edited and man- aged by students of the University of Michigan. News pho6e: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michi- gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $9 by carrier, $10 by mail. Our Silver filigree Earrings come from India Israel Lebanon - Thailand Portugal India Art Shop 330 Maynard St. L ~O <==>o-_<= =! p 11 8:00 Room 3511 SAB I L.: PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM I I * HURRY!!! LAST 2 DAYS * Presents . tatfo "A VERY FUNNY, IRREVERENT, NOW-GENERATION- MOVIE LAMPOON!" ACADEMY AWARD WINNER I NO The University of Michigan GILBERT and SULLIVAN SOCIETY ANNOUNCES PETITIONING for its all-campus summer musical THE MUSIC MAN PRODUCER COSTUME DESIGNER -wol Cue CLOSELY WATCHED GretlftgSTRAINS (x no , edmaDIatrlbuted by Stgma lM-A Fimwayu Compasy. "X" no one under 18 will be admitted Festival Theatre of Canada THE ALCHEMIST with William Hutt Powys Thomas, Bernard Behrens Directed by Jean Gascon Apr. 3, 4, 5, 6 "Bubbling cauldron of bravura!" -DET. NEWS "A fantastic theatrical romp!" -A.A. NEWS DIAL 8-6416 Tues. -Thurs.6 :48-9 :00 Wed.-1 :15-3:45-6:15-8:45 FACES" is "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" -Judith Crist --New York Times "FACES" Is "A PHENOMENALLY GOOD PICTURE!" -Newsweek "FACES" "A MILESTONE! A FINE ACHIEVEMENT!" -Judith Crst I I Eves. 8:00 P.M. Mats. Thurs. & Sat. ' I I O 1 I