Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 24, 1969 PageTwoTHEMICHGANDAIY Frday Ocober24,196 Mo-" =- ___music- Accademia: Mellows with time Samuel Beckett wins 1969 Nobel Prize Communi c.ation By JIM PETERS There are performance theo- ries and legends about certain nationalities of musicians being more fit and better-tempered to perform certain types of music. They say Germans can only in- terpret Wagner and such, and that onlyFrenchmen have the feel for Ravel. Well, the Italians don't seem to like Mendelssohn much at all. Last night's UN-Day celebration concert at Hill Aud. found the Orchestra of L'Accademia di Santa Cecilia rather tired and out of sorts with the program that was scheduled. Their conductor, Fernando Previtali, struggled to maintain ensemble and enthusiasm among his musicians throughout the first half of the evening. His first offering tended to disrupt his orchestra who were looking for something to hold on to. Rossini's Overture to The Siege of Corinth is a hodge- podge composition with sections borrowed from other composers. The music moves haltingly from slow to fast, soft to maestoso with few bridges; there is little continuity. The Orchestra's ensemble was jagged; often they were led by the timpani and resounding brass during the grander mo- ments. Such a fragmented piece does not prepare one well for the intricacies of Mendelssohn (if, indeed, there are any). His Symphony No. 3 in A minor, opus 56 demands preci- sion and sustained control fromt an orchestra. And the group from the Accademia were plain- ly bored. From the enervated introduc- festival chop to the soundboard. Every- thing was percussive and the concrete sounds (claps and taps) worked to explain the rea- sons for the piano's classifica- tion as a percussion instrument. The second section involved snatches of off-key ragtime music which then became com- pletely atonal in most imagina- tive transitions. This was really a gas: here's the percussion and the true nature of the piano tones you have been listening to all along, torn from the glossy plastic covering of tonal- ity. Mr. Abright played with ab- solute precision, even Glenn Gould would be ashamed. I am certain this was the best piano performance of a contempor- ary work I have ever heard - everything was unbelievably well-defined: the crisp, cutting edge of every sound, keyboard or concrete, was perfect in timing and intensity. Every sound,yeven in the most unbe- lievably difficult sections, h a d this sort of clear attack. Every- thing was present, including the well-deserved bravos at the con- clusion. tory andante con moto, even in- to the familiar second move- ment, only the conductor seemed to be really into the music. When maestro Previtali asked for softer tones, the orchestra lost intensity as well. The adagio was slow-paced and bland, play- ed with very inelegant phrasing throughout. And it was not until the allegro maestoso assai of the finale that the good sounds of music started to appear. With the music of Goffredo Petrassi, a contemporary Italian, Previtali's musicians perked-up. Yet, the Symphonic Suite from the Ballet La Follia d'Orlando, consisting of only three short excerpts, was hardly substantial enough to really mean anything. French Impressionist music can be dangerous to perform, for it calls for a high degree of intensity and attention to detail, and yet the artist must appear to be really doing nothing: many musicians get carried away or lost in the mechanics of the form. But the Orchestra had finally found something it liked. Ravel's Ma Mere L'Oye Suite was .him- mering and light; the Winds whispered to the strings' high hollow lines. When Ravel is done successfully no concert is lost. Verdi's Overture to I Vespri Siciliani, which concluded the program, is probably one of h1is best combinations of sweeping lyricism and "Dies Irea" wall shaking. It is music to make even the musicians smile, and they enjoyed the sweetness and bombast. NATONAL OENERAL CORPORATON- FOX EASTERN TEATRES~ F V La375 N.MAPLE PD. 769.1300 HURRY-ENDS SOON Mon.-Fri--7:20-9:30 Sat & Sun.-1:00-3:05-5:10-7:20-9:30 STOCKHOLM, Sweden (A") - The 1969 Nobel Prize for liter- ature was awarded yesterday to Samuel Backett, the Irish emi- grent playwright of the absurd, whose work was described as "a muffled minor key sounding lib- eration for the oppressed." Beckett, 63, has written both plays and novels. T w o of his most widely known plays pre- miered in the United States: Waiting for Godot a n d End- game, in which two characters spoke their lines while sitting in trash cans. Beckett's Play was presented by the APA this fall. The Swedish Academy said he was awarded the $72,800 prize for "his writing which, in new formula of the novel and dra- ma, acquires its elevation from the destitution 01 modern man. Beckett is also noted f o r his fiction trilogy Malloy, Malone Muert and Linnomable. Beckett was considered a long shot to win the prize this year, but has been a strong contender for many years. Beckett's prime challenger this, year was believ- ed to be Patrick White, Austra- lian epic novelist. The names of candidates are never officially disclosed. In Paris, Beckett's publisher reported that the author was vacationing in a floodhound village and could not be reach- ed. on Sex Discovery Lab this Sunday, Oct. 26, Union Ballroom 7 :30-9:30 RELATIONSHIP ISSUES Being Used- exploitation Permanence- impermanence Conflicting values- self and peers Changing values INFORMATION AREAS Abortion Contraceptives Diseases Family planning Values and attitudes Physiology and anatomy SHOW TIMES Wed., Sot. Sun. .1:00-3:45-6:30-9:15 3020 Washtenow, Ph. 434-1782 Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor 6:30-9:15 NOW SHOWING NOW AT POPULAR PRICES! Broadway's smash musical now the most exciting movie in years! ,,I -Daily--Richard Lee Nice start for musi HILLEL ATTITUDE/VALUE DISCUSSIONS Fitting in-being different Premartial intercourse etc. AN OPPORTUNITY TO GET INTO WHERE YOU'RE AT Order Youi Daily Now- Phone 764-0558 TGIF Biy JOE PEIIRSON The first concert of e Festival of Contemporary Music was held Wednesday night at Racka. esened by the School of Music, this series fea- tures modern works by estab- lishd contemporary composers. This, of course, doesn't assure quality, but if the remaining concers are as polished as Wted- nesday's. this series will be one of your better opportunities to lhar some really fine modern music. The first work performed w" as ashr trump et duo by Stra- vinsk . Fanfare for a vew Theai";tre, ritn for the olweri- ing of the New York State Thea- tre in Lincoln Center, this piece has r'eal power, an Id 1the use. of heeralding trumpetiwas nu(t f't ?i r'np '1,i turn'], 1clbora ted a them2 while the other repeat- ed one note which functioned as a. piot for te new material. built uplais<'" of soind using a lne modern fanfare for the openin of his year'contem- porary series- A Solemn Music I by Niccolo Castighli wasion the other hand,soth ing of ai disap- pointment. TAhePiece -ened al- most devoid of any emotional content, and the s:se of an etheril, serupnarl atnos- ihere that Castiglioni intended neer mat e i ciee this resulted from a static perform- ance rather ha from the work its'elf: soe tedynamlic changes, particularly the inter- play'. between '('1.the s oprano an wd the ense"le, ": re ir"es"ing adhid much pote°ntial. T[here was no catharsis, thou-h, a n d while the performace was fair- 1 , competent, it was execiutedc in a dry and emotionless man- ner, The soIrno lpart was un- usually demanding, and the ar- ticulated whispers of Lynda Weston through the soft, per- cussive ctios saved s t)in e of Catiglio)nIi content. he nmjor work of the con- cert, the Chamber Concerto of Alban Berg, was quite an ab- rupt transition from the other music of tl concert. Emotion and impression were second- ary: Berg considered the re- lationships between tones and themes more important. This piece was dedicated to Schoen- berg, and Berg envisioned him- self sitting on Schoenberg's right hand, leaving Webern the role of holy ghost. The compositional process of this work is strange, at best; the princip~al themes are deriv- ed frn the lt ters of Schoen- berg,.XWebern, and Berg's last rnami. ,, Every' thing has b etn de- signed in threes to enforce Bergs trinity ego trip. The con, certo is in three parts, and teeare three types of sound: keyboard, strings,, and wind. The, other structural examples of th use of the number three are too numerous to mention. Oddly enough, the best parts of this work are the ones Schoenberg would have disliked most: the repetition of thema- tic material, verboten to Schoen- Swas extremely successful. Ideas and motifs bounced back and forth fronm one instrument section to another, and the in- ter-play gave its own sort of ex- citem!ient. In one section, the' violin solo donated most of its material to the other instru- ments, each instrument then elaborating and echoing t h e material. It reminded one of mama bird feeding the young- sters, each greedy for a n e w idea. Theo Alcantara conduct- ed with exuberance, but un- fortunately the Duo Concertante (piano and violin) played with p~rof sslonal disinteres t. The mo tspectacular per- formance of the evening goes to William Albright and his piano rendition of Animations by Eugene Kurtz. This piece was a parody, ridiculing the aud- iences inability to accept n e w types of performance and unus- uai sounds. Occasionally, Mr. Aibriht would tap the piano or deliv2r an exuberant karat_ 1429 HILL ST. Friday, October 24, 4-5:30 P.M. GRADS-UNDERGRADS MUSIC-REFRESHMENTS __ _ ... t t , .... tLt .,. ;, ,., .., "^ s _ SPEN WITH HE WEEKEND -R UT EY SWOPE 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, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by! carrier, $10 by mall. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. GUILD Ihurs.-ri., OCt. 23 & 24 LATL ANTE dir. JEAN VIGO (1934) * io mnod ea fil in Conduct"a'boutzkid tak- ing over their school and if "L'ATLANTE" is as good, then we've got a hot one, "Don't believe everything you read.'- Ernie Banks 7 & 9 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 AUDITORIUM "'Putney Swope' is one of the funniest movies I have ever seen, maybe the funniest. Surely the craziest. As if Lenny Bruce had written a script for the Marx Brothers." -Martin Gottfried, WPAT "A film for the young and the hip, for the open-minded and the broad-minded, and for those with the good sense to recognize the deft satiric wit of one of the most unorthodox and bril- liant young film makers at work in America today. Mind-blowing, exhuberant originality. What makes it so exciting is that it is timely, tough, relevant, and-equally important-hilar- iously funny." -Joseph Gelmis, Newsday "Its humor is in the tradition of the new American frontier. It is funny, sophomoric, brilliant, obscene, disjointed, marvelous, unintelligible and relevant. If anybody tries to improve it, he should be sentenced. Downey is, as he likes to call himself, a '. "Go see 'Putney Swope.' A pacesetter with outrageous wit, courageous creativity, guts and intelligence. Tells it like it's never been told be- ,, 3 ' : , , , rr 0 ® 1 .a -er 3rd WEEK o A 0 ~ o a r BARBRA OMAR STROSAND SHARIF ( 41 TONIGHT ot 8:00 P.M . Adults $2.00 MATINEES: Wed,-Sat. and Sun only prince." Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times "I am quite certain that 'Put- ney Swope' is the funniest, the most absurd and the most intelligent film that you will see this week and next week and the week after." -Jonas Mekas, Village Voice fore." -Judith Crist "Funniest picture of the year! Not to be missed." -Lita Elisco, East Village Other BU YTOUSEB :C °WATSON (And MERLE) "PUTNEY n.- '" r-mr-Il