THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 3, 1969 Poj e Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 3, 1 969 u music i f ,w f '7 ' _," 7 shouts, moans, squeaks... AUTO INSURANCE FOR EVERYONE " e ith lU o!'rco'4nzz- able rh r intervals, but Congloierations of claps, shouts, mtoats, shreks. burps, clicks, bangms, s0uawk spurks, yelps, thumips, coghs, ain hiccoughs Suc~h a1 di 5paraingt descii- titi ol contemporary music might ve I m ai e - ntrails of an4o. wo1e, t spart of a hinu conspiricy to un- dermine art. Bi it drew only laughter from the enthusiastic audience gathered in Rackhan Lectur( H all last S a tu r d a y niglht for th e hirst Contemupor- ary Directions COncert of the 1969-70 season. The unknown critic's a 1 r quoted at the top was air d in William Albright's theater spec- taclei BeuLhiand Rag, the pro- gram's grand finale. This fan- tastical combination of dispar- ate ehements, which included an actor, jazz ensemble, live elec- tronic modulation of sound, electronic tape, nature slides, and even a Mickey Mouse flick, was an evocative tour de force that conjured up an incred- b rmn of reactions in the Bsides ihis, Albright's psycho- ensua ge(ticulation not merely implied but embodied an im- portant esthetic point: that the most vital art is invariably an attempt to o approach totally in- novative se-epression. This stance is applicable not only to most of the works on the t1e Funny Girl By GOR MAN T:AVUCAMP Back i ti 40's and 50's the big studios use to churn out films about faious people- Chonin. Maamte Curie Mata Hai, that sort fi thing. The genre dwtndh d somwhlat in the0 buta rash of silerscreen bographies ave turned up at the local lBijeaux Two currntl on display in Amn Arbor ate dora 1or The hive ieol as it has been mnure : xuly rechristened . bae on t e of La Dun- can,. Ia reem I(ancer, and F un- ny Grllie arvlousSris of iiiiiQIs: tiiri f he in s Tis the inre amit f teiwo fi. movit tis re- vinutr bu gives eh Wh er Fntixirllni sit l oFn ny' s eary aee and iur, ll-e :a1 mrig, dr t - tempts nt en'.ins> thle whle\ ots ubec 'mn ainoing, hecknp- eredn n'.te. Tin a ae ix e 7Luni v r'1 1 . I < a fai smwat Ginoeretere f vigntte rninutbsu he love lie.s The episodes Iara flash bhacks stmunt ato d urby the aglingtace but a lb the n fie edark.gas madeivti ihetiughtieiy the car''in r.a hehk 9l, o hats redm the vie T is vieer nedrgives awhy tshe endin. P ONSU DER18 In ~ ~ w itDoiinlves lnyI thn ha w se. ' he swttrer clms memn Ioa y al amnazng actress, beautiful, re- sourcetul, unpredictable. As Is- adora, she dances down life's road from the dewy, nubile young senisation of the 90's to the jaded, haggard (somewhat too haggard) institution of the 20's. At mid-point she is abso- lutely ravishing, during her af- fair with Paris Singer, non- acted by Jason Robards. The ratlr batty candor of a woman boti revolutionary and naive is conveyed expertly. If ] edgrave is the better actress, Streisand is the greater star, th e brighest light in the ettert annet galaxy. (If that sounds like idolatry, it is.) From the first moient when, swathed it ar she crosses a bare s lances at herself in a irn or att smiles, "Hi-ya, gor- geus'' he screen lights up and "i dim r a momient. Streis- ant, e Garo o Bergman, is a phy,:al lci otnoii, a being wvhose nlf'mee)presetince won a movie screen radiates a kind of magic. Fa rly in the film site sings a am by tar but. io ont' knows it.'' She's only two-thirds right: we do knowit.., Willian Wyler, who directed Funny Girl, was wisely content to make it an all-Streisand stoxv Everything in it is there enhanee her. It is an old fashioned, straight forward star vehicle, but i\owwonderfully it invtes along. Omar Sharif, as Nick Artistehi, is pretty( "to tell the titth, it hurts my pride; the 11 was 'pret tier than the bride'.' Fanniy nlrients). but lei about all. Kay Medford is goud. as always, as Fanny's mthtl W. Bttto repeat myself it's all Streisand. She sings, ste dances, she clowns, she suf- fers and she roller skates-what more can you ask? Few films give such sheer, unalloyed pleas- nr as Funny Girl does. So en- joy. enj. 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 en Yoilonti & Ann Arbor NO W SHOWING 'I tAv program, but moreover is an important force behind the Contemporary Directions series itself. Guest composer Phil Winsor's charming fanfare Coronation opened and closed the concert. Four trumpeters were placed on stands as far apart as possible in the lobby of Rackham, in order to achieve natural rever- beration. A pleasing smear of bright sounds, particularly ef- fective when heard from a dis- tance, was the result. Following inside was a rath- er sluggish, uninspired per- formance of a nonetheless fine work, Anton Webern's Con- certo. Bouguslaw Schaffer's Imago musicae, however, was an indisputable lemon. Pretentious, awkward notation and a gen- eral poverty of musical ideas in- sured its failure, in spite of the valiant attempts of solo violinist Barrett Kushner and conductor Sydney Hodkinson to raise the work to an acceptable level of mediocrity. But George's Crumb's magni- ficient Eleven Echoes of Aut- umn 1965 wiped away any traces of lingering dissatisfac- tion. Here is a work that abounds in what the layman might term special effects" - playing on the piano's innards, blowing only air through the alto flut2 bowing without vibrato, bend- ing sounds, whispering, whistl- ing, to name but a few. And yet these function so simply, so directly, so beautifully, that the same layman would be the first to defend their organic necess- ity. The four performers imbued Crumb's haunting, evocative score with a sense of breathless! serenity. The first performance of George Balch Wilson's recent- ly completed Concatenations called for integration of electric guitar, amplified accordion, and percussion traps in an other- wise conventional chamber en- semble. Sydney Hodkinson's able, if somewhat stiff, inter- pretation successfully brought out the wide-ranging emotional content of the music. Wilson possesses a unique ability to in- The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michian 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sy year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mal. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- ton rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. - TONIGHT GOLEM dir. PAUL WEGENER 1920 A frightening parable of a man given the power to create life. "Bring Your Seat Pad" 7 & 9 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 AUDITORIUM still urgency into highly com- pressed gestures and yet main- tain an exhausting sense of ex- pansiveness overall. Ten years ago, it would have been absurd to dream about even half of a concert li k e Saturday's, let alone a whole series. Established musical in- stitutions showed no interest whatsoever in financing pro- grams of new music. Their bag was and is to remain within the proven safe confines of predict- able classical and romantic warhorse programming. But two young American com- posers, George Balch Wilson and Salvatore Martirano, had dif- ferent ideas when they met in the romantic Italian fishing vil- lage of Erchia in 1959. With the spiritual aid of Vino Brolio, these young artists decided that the complete lack of perform- ance outlet for contemporary music was no longer tolerable. The time had come for drastic action by composers themselves. When Wilson returned to Ann Arbor in 1961, he found the ONCE GROUP was already performing new music inde- pendently. But the initial musi- ca accent of ONCE gradually turned to theater, and by 1964, the group had more or less run its course of effectiveness as far as music was concerned. The turning point came in the summer of 1966. Armed with a budget that in the end budged little more than mimeographed programs, Wilson managed to piece together a program of new sounds with School of Music students performing. A standing-room-only mob w a s the response to this unpubliciz- ed labor of love. Subsequent grants from the Rackham School of Graduate Studies and the Rockefeller Foundation, coupled with the dedication of key individ- uals like Wilson, Ross Lee Fin- ney, and several hard-working musicians, have nurtured Con- temporary Directions to its pre- sent thriving state. Music on a piece of paper is not real music. Music is a live art, fully alive only when real- ized in performance. When a society cannot "afford" to pre- sent contemporary musical ex- pression as well as past master- pieces, it runs the risk of turn- ing a vital art into a dead in- stitution. Contemporary Directions stri- ves to avoid such an abhorrent cultural bog by presenting its programs to the public free of charge. Cancelled 0 We also write motorcycle and motorscooter insurance. "EASY BUDGET TERMS" 482-9533 .2 234 W. Michiqon Ave. Ypsilanti INSURANCE CENTER ARLAN'S DEPT. STORE 2465 W. Stadium Blvd. Ann Arbor 665-3789 U IHA PRESENTS iain te Ijide Rejected 0 Declined SUBJECTS NEEDED FOR EXPERIMENT: Must be native speakers of English with no history of a hearing disorder or speech impediment. Subjects needed for four hours at $1.50 hour. Please call DAVID P I SO N I, 764-2594 from 10 A.M.-12 Midnight or CRLLB, 764- 0510 9-5. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4-8:30 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM TICKETS: $2:00-$2.50-$3.00 on sale at SAB September 29-October 3 ' f ' STARTING TONIGHT AT 8 P.M. STRTN TNIH DA DIAL 5-6290 ACADEMY AWARD I BEST ACTRESS! * BARBRA STREISAND 1The WILLIAM WYLER- RAY STARK d I ~~c~est people,~g SAIMPAS r+ r COLUMBIA PICTURES and RASTAR PRODUCTIONS p'esent BARBRA STREISAND -OMAR SHARIF:"FUNNY GIRL" KA MEDFRD ANNE FRA ,Cg ALTER PODGEON3asmraZr H EERI RLy tcULE SYNE lBOB MERRLL LU i MATINEES at 1:30 on Wed.-Sat.-Sun. Onlv-Fri. & Sat. at 8- -Sun. Eve at 7:30 IN HILL AUDITORIUM SECOND ANNUAL DANCE SERIES NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA ...... Fri., Oct. 17 PROGRAM: Solitaire; Four Temperanents; and The Nutcracker, Act. II. * JOSE LIMON DANCE COMPANY "'NIKOLAIS DANCE COMPANY. DANZAS VENEZUELA. RAYOL WINNIPEG BALLE'T' 8:30, Sat., Nov 8:30, Wed., Jan. 5:30, TCus., Ieb. 2:30, Sun., Mar. .1 21 17 15 AI "MacaUbre Success ." -Ann Arbor News "Mounts to a Marvelous Climax" -Michigan Daily TONIGHT AT 8:00! r0 SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 12 Directed by t4Cwt John Housemanq4k plus "PLAY" by Samuel Rrktt "For these modern Dance Companies, Lecture-demonstrations are scheduled for Fri., Oct. 31, and Tues., Jan. 20 respectively. Tickets: $1.00. Season ticket subscribers to the Dance Series will receive complimentary admission. SEASON TICKETS: $17.50--$15 00-s12.50--$10.00-$7.50 SINGLE PERFORMANCES: $6.00-$5.50-$5.00-$4.00-$3.00-$2.00 MISHA DICT1::1TERI Brilliant -young Amercian Pianist Winner at Tchaikovsk y Cmnpetition in Moscow in 1966 Monday, Oct. 6, 8:30 P.M. IN HILL AUDITORIUM PROG RAM: I kWA W 9 fmAI,- f A