Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 18, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 18, 1969 musicQ Gulli, Cavallo: Quiet, Jack the Bear By JIM PETERS The Musical Society's Cham- ber Arts Series has consistent- ly presented artists of the finest Caliber this year, though their varvilug audiences have not al- ways seemed to realize this. Last night at ac:kham Aud. the con- cert due of Franco Gulli, violin. and Enrica Cavallo, piano, per- formed to an audience who were. for the most part, rather non- plussed by their brilliance. Unenthusiastic audiences tend to destroy a musician's attention to details, his devotion to his craft, since he needs the em- pathy.- of appreciative listeners and the reward for his work. But with those sure of their skill and committed to their art, the making of music itself is enough. Gulli and Cavallo chose a program without spectacular effects, without the fireworks and tricks which please audi- ences, but no more. Their three selections were selected to show quiet, intense artistry, without frills--serious music performed expertly. Ferruccio Busoni's Sonata in E minor, No. 2, opus 36a comes from the change-filled era of the turn of the 19th century; it is one long free form fantasy divided into movements. Caval- lo's sure mastery of the turbu- lent opening section controlled the rising melodic line through- out the piercing declarations of the violin. Busoni's themes are only touched with the late Roman- ticism of his time; one gradu- ally hears new ideas, new tonal- ities emerging, especially at the end of the langsam movement intense and into the presto, so the per- former must not give way to effusive sentiment, though the aura of it is sometimes there. Gulli is a master player; his technique cannot be faulted, and all his phrasings and in- terpretation seems to have come from an obviously thorough knowledge of the scores he per- forms. The variations in the final movement, marked an- dante con moto, were as ener- getic and as rhapsodic as his delicate high register playing in the presto. I did tire of a peculiar bland- ness in Cavallo's playing of the Debussy Sonata which followed. Under the restrained emotion of Gulli's tense violin, her lack of attention to dynamics and to- tally heavy-handed approach to this last complete work by Debussy only emphasized how hard Guilli was working to keep his tone bright. This showed- off the artistry of the violinist, but I expected a more spirited equality. Igor Stravinsky has been known to shuffle various ver- sions of his works around like playing cards. He issues revised versions of his ballets, piano reductions, and sometimes or- chestrations for various instru- ments. The Divertimento play- ed last night is a scoring for violin and piano of a symphonic suite from Stravinsky's ballet Le Baiser de la Fee. It was here that audience finally caught on to quality of the performance which up till then they had been merely sitting through. With this add- ed dose of encouragement, the pair on stage began the four differing sections with the sure- ness of consumate artisans. The sinfonia introduction is broad- ly written, using rhymic var- iations and changing dynamics to make way for the jaunty Swiss Dances. Long melodic lines are checked randomly by forceful rhythms reminiscent of L'Historie du Soldat. With his intonation and stylistics perfectly suited to the often outlandishly cute Stravin- sky lines, Gulli gave what must be called a truely virtuoso per- formance of this piece. Encores are beneficient gifts to audiences, thanking them and displaying the pleasure of the artist. Last night's b r i e f Brahm's Scherzo was not de- served. The few who knew how well Gulli and Cavallo h a d played were, no doubt, al- ready satisfied with the con- cert, and the rest probably did not care. WABX Presents: GORDON LIGHTFOOT Friday, Nov. 21 8:30 P.M. FORD AUDITORIUM (Detroit) TICKETS: $4.50, 3.50, 2.50 Tickets available at Ford Aud. Box Office and at oil J.L. Hud- son stores. MAIL ORDERS: Send checks or money order with self-address- ed envelope to: Ford Aud. Box Office, 10 E. Jefferson, Detroit, Mich. 48226 In association with Audio Arts NOV. 20 & 21 7 & 9:30 Natural Science Auditorium Tickets $1.50 JACK THE BEAR, a play by John East Bound Mound at Canterbury aCouncil probes youth activities (Continued from Page 1 to work with other groups in the city to help establish programs to benefit the youth of the city. Proposals included the estab- lishment of a people's mall, free of police, in several blocks of the south camp~us area around the South University business district. Facilities would include a youth hostel, a free healthiclinic, parks, "liberated schools" and publica- tions. 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 mail, Summer Session pubnshed Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. -Daily-Richard Lee Slade will be performed by the House tonight. FREE. DIAL 5-6290 The motion picture de- signed to save the world from sanity. MICH IGANENSIAN j BEFOR E the price is higher in the Fishbowl-Monday thru Friday 10-4 OR Just return this card wxith $7.00 (check or money order payable to the MICHIGANENSIAN) to the Student Publi- cations Building, 420 Maynard. A receipt will be sent within 3 weeks after your order is received. NAME__F___ ______ -Daily-Richard Lee A fine forum of composers By JOE PEHRSON The Composition Department of the School of Music present- ed) the second of four concerts of modBern works last night at the Recital Hall on North Cam- pus. This series, the Composers Form, tea to ressudent works, many of whi och vare products of the Mus ic Sho' courses in composition. If this concert is represemiatie of the new music compo at h campus, tie variety f ne idas and gen- cr quity of studeti works approace, tihat of the well- known works presented in the contemorary festivals. , Details, Burton Beernlm1n, is an exercise in minaturization and qtie sounds. The focus on individual sound events sup- posedly created an atmosphere of smallness and music in mina- tur'. This was somewhat suc- cessful, but the details, the sotl"co" "os V none too iteresting. Meliss'a, Sutite for 'three Flutes, by.Joan Harkness, is a significalit departure in modern flute sound. Normally, the con- temporary flute is strident and busy developing lines of expo- sitiion. In this piece, the beauty and purity of the flute tones was emphasized. Structure was secondary, and the areftIl use of unison suggesd that per- haps the sound of the flute has been underestimated. William Albright, noted for his eccentric performances of avant-garde and rag-time piano works, added the two hands of his wife Sarah in a duet espec- ially written for this couple. The Cats Meow, by Russell Peck, was thoroughly Albrightlan in tone, ranging from atonal key- board punching to freewheeling rag. This piece was as busy as Albright normally is himself, and the casual use of chromatic jazz was as humorous as the performance. Cartoons for Solo Clarinet, by William Hamilton, was one soltitionto the problem of con- temlporary solo performance. Divided in three sections - flarangue, Song and March, this piece shifted its sound tex- ture constantly, and while this often created interest, it allow- ed little room for development. The Song, with pitches select- cl from a serial row, was lyri- cal in the Schoenberg tradition. Unfortunately, this was s o o n broken by gutteral sounds, many of which are never heard from the voice of the clarinet except il error. String Trio, by Stefan Ehren- kreutz, developed a sense of power with a rough and unusual- ly harsh string sound. Ehren- kreutz is more concerned with texture and sound fabric than with exposition-there was little separation of voices, and con- tent was minimal. The continu- ity, primarily a result of care- ful sound selection, was always maintained, and all extremes were compensated. The result was a total sound, and a to- getherness usually only heard in Bartok. Requiem, by Kurt Carpenter, was a strange fantasy of sound - evoking a mood of darkness and primitive ritual. The sounds were perfectly integrated, and the occasional grunts of an en- semble of druids completed the image. The absurdity of this at- mosphere, complemented by the rather matter-of-fact manner of some of tile groans, was matehed by an absurdly intense crescendo. According to Car- penter, this represents Uncle Sam's anal fixation, and a mar- tial grotesquery which far ex- ceeds any distaste a druid could evoke. Program Information 662-6264 GUTHRIE AiiciEs, COLOR by DeLuxe. United Artists SHOWSAT 1 3, 5, 7 and 9 STARTS THURSDAY! A man went looking for America. And couldn't find it anywhere... RAYBErRT PRODUCTIONS penU eas r - ReleasebyCOLUMIAPICTUrSf CANNES FILM FESTIVAL WINNER! , KATHARINE HEPBURN as Th) of Cl-illLLOT TODAY AT 1:00-3:45-6:20-8:55 FRIDAY "HAIL HERO"' ANN ARBOR ADDRESS- i MAILING INSTRUCTIONS: S 1 additional charge if you wish the book mailed anywhere in the world. TV RENTALS ~10 per mouth FREE Service and Delivery ---NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED--- CALL. Nelac tV Ueintals 662-5671 SERVING BIG 10 SCHOOLS SINCE 1961 "Student Control of Student Money -FREE CHECK CASHING -ASSETS OF $145,000 -LOANS Owned, Operated by and for Students School (e.g. LSA, etc.) RADICAL FILM SERIES presents THE YOUNG AND THE DAMNED Directed by LUIS BUNUEL Bunuel who is "an old hand at blending surrealist imagery with leftist social protest has always had a special gift for making us see and feel the horrors with which we know life abounds but which we so devoutly prefer to avoid discussing."--Life. In Young and the Damned (filmed in Mexico as Los Olvidados) he presents a bru- tal study of slum children running wild on the outskirts of Mexico City, where they steal, beat up a blind beggar, attack a legless man and commit murder. Bunuel ex- amines the piles of rubble, squallid hovels and garbage heaps where poeple scrounge for food like animals. "There is nothing imagined in this f ilm. It is all merely true." Bunuel WEDNESDAY, NOV. 19 7-9-11 P.M. dmission 75c HOUSE--330 CANTERBURY Ma ynord i I - ----------- = . WHAT'S A IA(g 42 Petition for DLIS FESTIVAL General Chairman and See Petitions available NOW in UAC offices, 2nd floor, Union Dept. L U of M Students Credit Union I st floor Michigan Union M-F-9:30-4:30 S-10-12 I Phone 662-8500 ' G THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN I low . ' . . y The School of Music and Department of Art November 21, 22, 24, and 25 8:00 P.M. Ann Arbor Al I'll i I I'