ge Iwo THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, April 15, 1969 A Bach records- for every passion By R. A. PERRY Angel Records has curiously released a new 'recording of Bach's greatest oratorio, the Saint Matthew Passion. I say "curiously" because the set's very existence seems slightly unwarranted since Schwann al- ready lists eleven versions, at least. three of them completely excellent and yet different enough to satisfy any taste. An- gel a few years ago' issued the solemn and awesome set con- dueted by that last glowing em- ber of the German tradition generating heat, namely 0 t t o Klemperer. Whatever one might feel about ; Klemperer's prefer- ences in tempi and ensemble size, one can hardly fail to be moved by the might and dig- nified profoundity of his Saint Matthew Passion reading. For the student with a limited budget but high{standards; the Vanguard Everyman recording conducted by the imaginative Danish maestro Mogens Woldike offers a completely satisfying alternative. Woldlike's set fea- tures the creamy legato sing- ing of Teresa Stich-Randall, a good Evangelist in Uno Ebre- lius, and able support from Rossl-Majdan,: Kmentt, and Berry. Furthermore, Woldike leads tight, precise, and instru- mentally pointed performances with a pared-down orchestra that should please anyone who objects to Klemperer's nineteen- th-century massiveness. A fine choice standing be- tween the grandeur of Klemper- er and the intimacy of Woldike is the performance led by Karl Munchinger on London. Inci- dentally, all of the above three versions have been "excerpt- ed" for a single LP, Vanguard offering an especially good buy. Angel's new recording, li k e Munchinger's set, must be class- ed as a middle-road approach, though the results are superb. Conductor Wolfgang Gonnen- wein choses faster tempi than Klemperer and smaller forces, yet he also opts for a warm'er and thicker sound with grander postures than does Woldike: Whei'e Klemperer stops the pro- gression of the narrative f o r chorales that become cosmic apostrophes, Gonnenwein i n - corporates the chorales as the true dramatic strophes that they are. In many ways the v o c a l blend produced by the S o u t h German Madrigal Choir and the Consortium Musicum grants some of the most lovely mom- ents in the recording, though I must admit that I missed the flute-like sopranos which brigh- ten Wilhelm Pitz's Philhar- monia Chorus on Angel's Klemp- erer set. Evangelist Theo Altmeyer is as good if npt better than Peter Pears, and he instills such ap- propriate fervor into his reci- tatives that, instead of seeming as interruptions, they truly take on their crucial dramatic func- tion. Jesus, backed by B a c h''s "halo" of strings, is sung by Franz Crass, and he alone in this set I found seriously defic- ient in appeal. Sounding more like the village mayor than the Son of God, Crass's voice con- notes human qualities that would appeal to fans of Passo- lini. Teresa Zylis-Gara handles the soprano arias beautifully, b u t I found Julia Hamari' lacking that necessary convincing me- lancholia which should suffuse her contralto arias; her aria Buss' und Rev' w a s vocally adept but rather non-commital. Both Nicolai Gedda and Her- mann Prey maintain their us- ual standards and achieve a high degree of emotional cred- ibility, especially Prey. wacky Monkees sh o*w their stuff Angel's stereo sound is clear, rich, and undistorted, though Zylis-Gara seems to have been recorded with a certain lack of focus. In the opening d o u b 1e chorus, the Boys Choir floats beautifully between the two channels, but I still prefer the pungency in the "Sehet! Wen!" episodes that can be found in Woldike's rendition. Thus, except for the Jesus of Franz Crass, this Gonnenwein- Bach set can certainly be re- commended, as long as one keeps in mind the special beau- ties of the Klemperer and Wold- ike recordings. On SRB-4108 Angel has also released six keyboard concerti by Bach; the piano soloist is Vasso Devetzi and Rudolf Bar- shai leads the Moscow Chamber Orchestra. The problems that affect this recording endeavor are not as simple as mere com- petition. On the thirteen con- certi that Bach wrote for "key- board," several were transcribed from violin concerti by B a c h himself; the composer used them as needed in his Telemann So- ciety concerts at a Leipzig cof- fee house. Because Bach knew that he would be playing t h e keyboard and improvising cer- tain changes, he seldom bother- ed in score to really adapt the original composition to the pe- culiarities of the second-chosen solo instrument. Thus when the performer today dutifully follows the score, he is not necessarily achieving Bach's desired ends. r Miss Devetzi, who performs BWV 1052-56 and 1058 on this Angel set, uses a piano, and that complicates matters ever fur- ther. When these concerti r e 1 y upon the harpsichord, the bright piquancy of that instru- ment brightens the surface of 'the music immeasurably; the timbre of the piano just tends to blend into the string ensemble. Moreover, Miss Devetzi, perhaps trying for some ersatz authen- ticity, employs a triple sec touch that only deadens the interest of her role the more. The adagio ,of BWV 1058 sounds quite desic- cated. I might add for consola- tion that even Glenn Gould, in his sprightly and lucid piano versions on Columbia, sounds unconvincing. In all, despite the refined and precise playing by the Moscow Chamber Orches- tra, I found this Angel release disappointing. urnreisan tie for top Oscar HOLLYWOOD (/)-For the and Mr. Hyde" and Wallace second time in Oscar's 41+year Beery "The Champ" both col- history, the best acting award lected best actor awards, turned out to be a tie. Katharine "2001: A Space Odyssey" Hepburn of "The Lion in Win- which a torce o , ter" and Barbra Streisand of hich failed to receive a nom- "Funny Girl" both won the ination as best fil of the year award Monday night for best r-eceived only one academy actress of 1968a award-best special visual ef- .ofects. "Romeo and Juliet" came Cliff Robertson, the dimwit in secopd to "Oliver" for the turned genius of "Charly," was total number of awards received selected best actor of the year. with top honors in the best "Oliver" was selected best cimenatography and best cos- picture, and Carol Reed won as tume design categories. best director for the film, his first musical. The rollicking ad- The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aptatiori of Dickens, "Oliver aged by students of the University of Twist" was the big winner of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second the night, scoring in five cate- Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michi- gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, gories. Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- Ruth Gordon, the witch next day through Sunday morning Univer- door in "Rosemary's Baby" and sity year. Subscription rates: $9 by Jack Albertson, the tightwad carrier, $10 by mail. Irish papa in "The Subject Was < Roses," were heraled the, best supporting performers of the year. The tie for best actress was a stunning surprise. It had hap- DIAL 8 6416 pened only once before-in 1932 TONIGHT 6:48-9:00 when Fredric March "Dr. Jekyll Wed.--:15-3:45-6:15-8:45 -Daily-Larry Robbins Renaissan By JIM PETERS Musical performances can be described on two levels. A re- viewer needs, of course, to talk about the playing, about h o w the musicians assembled before him translated the, notes on the page. But, also, the music itself, performed or printed, requires explication and comment. The Collegium Musicum's; evening of Renaissance music Friday night was extraordin- ary if concept, rare songs and instrumentals from the six- teenth century eulminating with an antique opera by Monteverdi. But the brilliance of the plans' didn't quite come through in the Collegium's actual perform- ance. Whereas, normally, t h e product heard in the concert hall is the sole basis for critic- Ism, when dealing with Renais- sance music one must give equal credit or blame for the musicol- ogy and workinvolved. The performers on stage at Rackham Aud. could not be called unenthusiastic; t h e y did not fail to inspire the aud- ience with their delicate pre- Baroque timbres; but I must say that they made a lot of mis- takes. Director Robert Austin Warn- er planned his program in hon- or of the North Central Con- ference of The Renaissance so-" ciety of America meeting at the University, and it showed to the assembled hikmanists and musi- cologists just how much is be- ing done in this field .at the music school. Bright fanfares for Baroque trumpet signalled the start. With the grace of "courtiers the consort begaln with Se la face ce': Joys, ay pale Oy Guillaume Dafay, followed by the "Kyrie" f r o m Dufay's Mass of the same name. Recorders, ,viols, percussive tambourines, bells were on stage, along with strange instruments with strange sounds and names. Certainly, the singers through- out the evening were superb; it was the instrumentalists t h a t had trouble., But listening to the missead entrances and wrong notes and the soft thin sound of these replicas, reconstructed f r o m manuscripts or etchings, I real- ized that the actual perform- ances centuries earlier were pro- bably even less exact and per- feet. The nasal w ines of c r u m- horns, in Pierre Attaingnant's Galliard de la Battaille, are not heard regularly in symphony series, nor the tiny sound of a hand-pumped portative organ- whether played well or not, the attempt is necessarily admir- able. Renaissance instrumental mu- sic is based on contrast; in and, woes Giorgio Mainerio's Schiarazula marazula the massive noise of drums, viols, recorders, and bells, is contrasted with finger cymbals ajnd portative organ. The effect is striking, worth- while hearing if the Collegium 's group had little ensemble. Ii Ballo delle Ingrate by Claudio Monteverdi is 361 years old; it consists of three prin- cipal singers, a small chorus, and a group of dancers, plus string orchestra. The orchestra was terrible, with little ensemble and out-of- tune violins. And they played modern instruments. But they played only sinfonias between scenes and accompanied the short central ballet. The music is simple and orn- amented only for effect and stress in certain parts. T h e three singers playing Cupid, Venus, and Pluto never lost the sombre intensity of this Ren- sombre intensity of this Renais- sance didactic melodrama; all three were stylistically exact, and their voices without strain. By LITTLE FREDDY FUNN I was a big fan of the Monkees for a long time. I used to read '16' Magazine every month and listen to their albums and watch their TV show. It was a lot of fun for me, but all my friends thought I was dumb so I took up reading attendance statistics for major league baseball games. The Cleveland Indians thus won my admittedly fickle heart for a time, but when I learned the Monkees would be back with a TV special featuring Little Richard, Fats Domino, and Jerry. Lee Lewis, I made a date with my cat Frank, had my TV fixed, and sat down for a nice time. Unfortunately, the show, aired last night through thencourtesy of NBC, stunk. It was incomprehensible, a waste of time and espec- ially talent, and a crummy hour of cheap camera tricks. Other than that, 'I liked it a lot. The name of the show was 33 and a Third Revolutions Per Monkee and apparently that had- something to do with the format but I'm not sure. I watched the show with a lanky high school whiz kid who got 795 on his college board math test and he couldn't under- stand it at all either, so I must be right. Julie Driscoll, that chic little honey who recently tore up the Fillmore East with Brian Auger, started the show by eating an apple. After Brian made the Monkees appear magically, some dancers danced around in front of a surfacing crocodile and a volcano; and my cat Frank limped out into the kitche muttering about what assholes the Monkees were.- The entire show was filled with (what?) a bizarre collection of solarization techniques, tape loops, speeded up films, tilted cameras, and wacky colors. I like all that stuff a lot and it's truly wonderful to think of all the effort it took to produce them but they only spread the Monkee's paper thin talent even thinner. Alas alas: Fats, Jerry Lee, and Mr. Penniman got on the screen for tiny little cameo roles which really made me mad. It was degrading to these fine musicians and performers to have to appear in that man- ner with those creeps. They came on as those crazy Monkees launch- ed into a spoof on the 50's rock and roll occurrence. I believe if this particular bit had been played straight, it could have been just too, too much.;But the lovable Monkees blew that one too with meaning- less, repulsive performances suitable 'only for the vacuum cleaner. The show ended with a "freak-out" that elicited a sigh from Frank and sent me for more Kool-Aide.; Hopefully, it was the last Monkey special, t~~rl EXMAUSFe 4 f ? -UNDERSTANDING COMES FASTER WITH CLIFF'S NOTES! OVER 175 TITLES $1 EACH AT YOUR BOOKSELLER UNCOLN, NEBRASKA-64501 (i>. r i e ANN ARBOR SEPTEMBER 16-28 G.. .......^ ..A....,.... d.. Featuring the PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA at all concerts THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 8:30 EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor RICHARD TUCKER, Tenor Program "Classical" Symphony.............................. Prokofieff Concert aria and Recitative, K; 431, "Misero! o sogno! o son desto" .......... .................. Mozart Recitative cnd aria, "Sound an Alarm," from "Judas Maccabeus" ... . .TUCKER....... ........ Handel "Iberia"....................... ..................Debussy "0 Paradiso" from "L' Africaine".... . .. ... .. ... .. . . Meyerbeer "No! pazzo son! guardate' from "Mnon Lescaut".............Puccini MR. TUCKER Symphonic Poem, "Pines of Rome"......... ... . ............Respighi FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 8:30 THORRJOHNSON, Conductor UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION HANS RICHTER-HAASER, Pianist JOANNA SIMON, Mezzo-soprano SAROYAN'S 44 Another delightful APA revival of an American classic! Richard Tucker ..-{ Program Information 662-6264 C R PRDC N0 r "*UPPOR YOR *OA £HR F" -J I SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 12 Tho Jou ihnso~n Joanne Si, %mon Program Psalm' 150, Op. 5 . U.. VER.. T CHORAL . .... UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION ... . .....Ginastera Ghelderode k "A whiff of satanical sulphur" by the author of the APA hit "Pantagleize" Aria from "Bomarzo"v... . . ._.... ... ........... Ginastera "Fern Hill'..............John Corigliano (to text by Dylan Thomas) JOANNA SIMON Concerto No. 1 in E minor, Op.11 .E... . ..... . ... Chopin HANS RICHTER-HAASER Coi SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 8:30 EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor Program Meistersinger" ......................... W agner . . . . ...... . ..............Charles Ives (with "Blumine") .. ................... . Mahler Directed by John Houseman r Hans Richter-Haaser Overture to "Die Symphony No, 3 Symphony No. 1 11 I I Shows at 1;3, 5, 7, 9, Feature 20 minutes later Also; "WET AND WILD" (Surfing Classic) J OWEROKEE PRDC III0 SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2:30 THOR JOHNSON, Conductor & UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION MARIA STADER, Sporano JOHN McCOLLUM, Tenor r JOANNA SIMON, Mezzo-soprano WILLIS PATTERSON, Bass ZARA NELSOVA, Cellist P ragram Mass in A-flat, No. 5..................................Schubert UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION and SOLOISTS Concerto for Violoncello and Orchestra . .. .............. .Elgor ZARA NELSOVA.........Ela Zara Nelsovo SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 8:30 EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor ..... .. r...,,,,,, )OCTOBER 14-26 Gogol's p hEMG Ijislil! CJDIL m i III AI I I