Smienty-Third Yesr EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHiGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Wber Opinions Are "rem STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBoR, MicH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Trutb Will Pre"vail Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in at reprints. TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL SATTINGER IT ISN'T ME. IT'S BEETHOVEN!' Toscanini 's 70 Years of Conucting: May Festival Programming Shows Little Imagination WELL, THE MAY FESTIVAL is almost upon us, and the excitement which surrounded it last fall when the programs were originally announced has begun to flare up once more. Most of this excite- ment must be based on pure gut reac- tion, however, for the scheduled programs, far from showing the high degree of imag- ination expected from the University Mu- sical Society, are really pretty much of a hodgepodge. Nor need one look any further than the first concert for an example of the shoddy thinking which went into this year's pro- grams. In addition to Beethoven's Seventh Symphony and his Leonore Overture No. 3, pretty safe works to request from Eu- gene Ormandy, soprano Joan Sutherland is on the agenda with two arias from Ver- di's "La Traviata" and the "Mad Scene" from Donizetti's "Luci di Lammermoor," which in turn are pretty safe works to re- quest from her. THE LACK OF INGENUITY is painfully obvious. If the idea was to spotlight Miss Sutherland, why have her share the podium with the two Beethoven composi- tions, either one of which has enough drama to effectively steal her thunder? Wouldn't it have been far better to build the program around Miss Sutherland, either by devoting the entire program to her or by filling it out with other works of the same "Verismo" nature as the arias she has chosen to sing THERE SEEMS TO BE no end to the lack of either imagination or common sense to be seen in the May Festival schedule Looking over the other programs, we find such inanities as the fact that only two of Debussy's three "Nocturnes" are being performed-although the third, which re- quires a chorus, could just as easily have been included, with the Choral Union stepping in. We see that the most renowned com- poser of our age, Igor Stravinsky, is com- ing to campus to conduct his own "Perse- phone"-and then a piece by Schoenberg has been put on the otherwise all-Stravin- sky program, as if the idea that this would' be the ideal occasion for such an all-Stravinsky program-a fine honor to that genius - never entered anybody's head. But why go on? I SUPPOSE it would be like asking for the moon to suggest that Van Cliburn might have gotten the same huge turn- out while playing Tchaikovsky's second piano concert for a change, or that Or- mandy world have gotten no less a stand- ing ovation if he had chosen one of Rachmaninoff's other symphonies (which are rarely if ever played), instead of the Second. After all, other concert programs have managed to avoid being imaginative on occasion. And yet it would hardly seem that calling for the same concert pro- grams to show at least some good sense would be asking too much-except, ap- parently, from the Musical Society. -STEVEN HALLER E t . .. The true artist is not proud. He senses dimly how far he is from his goal, and though others may admire him, he feels sad not to have reached the point where his better genius lights the way like a distant sun.." -Ludwig van Beethoven July 17, 1812 By JEFFREY CHASE and JOHN FARRER THE GLOOMINESS of a cold, rainy, mid-winter afternoon dissolved into an aura of warmth and hospitality as we were greet- ed by the housekeeper at the late Arturo Toscanini's home, over- looking the Hudson River, in Riverdale, New York. Passing rooms and objects which we were most anxious to observe at close-hand, we were led down the stairs of this late-Victorian structure into the almost legen- dary sound laboratory in which Mr. John Corbett, recording en- gineer, spends his working hours preparing tapes of Toscanini per- formances for recorded issue. With him to meet us was Mr. Don Gillis, Sr., producer of the late Tos- canini's National Broadcasting Co. weekly broadcasts. It was here, in this room lined with the tapes of the Toscanini performances, that we got our first real glimpse into the Tos- canini legacy. MR. CORBETT explained the uses of the equipment surround- ing us and the processes for re- moving extraneous noises-i.e., coughs-from the tapers which will be used to make the records for public consumption. Mr. Gillis discussed Toscanini's attitude toward recording: Tos- canini never interferred with the sound engineers in any phase of the recording process. As long as they did nothing to endanger the performances, he respected their knowledge and techniques. We were amazed at the number of unissued performances housed here and hoped releases would be soon in coming. Performances of the complete classical repertoire and then some were stored on these shelves. It disappointed us to think that probably at least half of these tapes would never be made available to the public -not because Toscanini's ton Walter won't release them, but because record companies feel their financial return is insuf- ficient to warrant the expense of mass producing recordings from these tapes. THEN Walter Toscanini (W.T.) came down to greet us. Excitedly he explained that just recently he and RCA Victor, for whom his father made the famous broad- cast tapes in Studio 8-H, agreed'to release 10 albums within the next three years. W.T. submitted to RCA 15 album combinations of performances from which 10 will be chosen. The first of these, al- ready released, is a two-record set of overtures. W.T. began our tour of the house, leading us upstairs to the large, central living room, which is surrounded by a second-story, balconied overhang. He explained that his father fell in love with this (pointing) view of the.Hudson River-it reminded him of a scene in his native Italy. And his father was a very senti- mental man. He bought the house in 1946, when conductor of the NBC Symphony Orchestra. W.T., a widower, lives here now, and uses the third story as offices for the collecting and organizing Tos- canini memorabilia. *, * * W.T. POINTED to the grand staircase which separates to the right and left at the first landing, to give two routes to the second floor. He recalled how proud his father was of it and how he would, somehow, make his guests aware of its presence. When we asked if we might take pictures, W.T. was most per- missive, and got a floodlamp which he carried with him throughout the tour. He showed us Toscanini's study and his bedroom on the second floor, the offices on the third and the several sitting rooms off the living room on the first. As we walked, he answered questions about the many momentoes (e g., Toscanini's baton and a bronze medallion given him) in the rooms and portraits and photographs of the Toscanini family on the walls. * * * BY CHANCE, our visit had oc- curred on the birthday of W.T.'s grandchild. Having graciously spent a long afternoon with us, W.T, with equal grace, now made hi~s excuses to visit the birthday child. After the parting good-bys, we thought how lucky we had been, to have been granted this private, personal tour of an historic home which, being a private residence, remains unaccessible to the public. This very fact will keep it a curiosity, enveloped in mystery and respect. WHEN TOSCANINI (1867-1957) began his career, in 1886, music served primarily as a means for performers to ostentatiously display their virtuosity. Whether or not they followed the com- posers intentions was of.little im- portance to them; they used the music as a springboard from which to "romanticise" the audience into feelings of lush emotion. Rubato, crescendos and decrescendos, ac- celerandos and ritards were the common liberties taken in per- formance. Music was fashionable, . I ARTURO TOSCANINI, Italian-born conductor who for 70 years "put my blood" for music. His constant goal, however, was not virtuosity, but a conscientious performance of only what appeared in the printed score. BRAHMS SYMPHONIES: Ansermet Adequate in New London Release { s Testing, One, Two, Three . . . THE UNITED STATES and Russia an- nounce that they are both cutting back on the production of nuclear weapons ma- terials. Tht Associated Press calls the cut- back plans "a developing international agreement." Senators Hickenlooper and Jackson say the Russians should open their nuclear production facilities for in- spection, and Sen. Wallace Bennet says Khrushchev's announcement of Russian cutbacks "is more disturbing to me than the reduction in our own production." Clearly there is something wrong some- where. The U.S. does something; Russia does the same. Nobody claims there were any formal agreements made or deals in- volved. Where is the "developing interna- tional agreement?" HICKENLOOPER and Jackson, along with a number of other senators, im- ply-what? That we should not cut back our production until the Russians open their plants for inspection? But the only reason we're making the cutback is be- cause we already have more fissionable material than we need. Or are Hickenlooper and Jackson im- plying, as Sen. Bennet clearly is, that it would have been better if Russia hadn't announced it is cutting its production of fissionable materials? Bennet asks, "If this is a further step along the road to nuclear disarmament, does it mean we have abandoned the idea of inspection and verification?" Appar- ently he thinks it is and we have. But he is wrong on both counts. How is cutting unnecessary production a step along the road to disarmament? It doesn't help the defense of the country to spend money on entirely worthless weapons pur- chases instead on goods and services with at least some usefulness. And, if the cut- back is not a step toward disarmament and no formal agreements were involved in the joint announcements, how can the idea of inspection and verification have been abandoned? WHAT IS INTERESTING about the whole thing is the way it pushes the announcements of the cutbacks out of context. The senators talk in terms of disarmament and suddenly President Johnson, merely by taking a sensible eco- nomic move, is pioneering a giant step toward ending the Cold War. A more sober analysis might take into account a second White House announcement yesterday- an announcement that the United States has conducted more extensive under- ground nuclear tests since the limited test ban treaty became effective than it has announced. -EDWARD HERSTEIN Acting Editorial Director JOHANNES BRAHMS: The Four Symphonies; Academic Festival Overture; Tragic Overture; Var- iations on a Theme by Haydn. Ernest Ansermet conducting L'Or- chestre de la Suisse Romande, LONDON stereo CSA 2402, $23.92 (monaural CMA 7402, $19.92); four records. WITH SUCH gentlemen as Rafael Kubelik, Georg Solti and the peripatetic Herbert Von Karajan to choose from, it is sur- prising that London entrusted the conducting chores for this new set of the orchestral works of Brahms to Ernest Ansermet, who generally seems more at home with Debussy, Ravel or Stravin- sky. Although he is faced with competition from the versions by Bruno Walter and Otto Klemperer (to name only those whose per- formances are available as a boxed set), Ansermet comes out quite well, if without turning out one really memorable performance. Every conductor has his own approach to the music of Brahms, of course, and Ansermet is no exception. You will not find in these performances the galvanic tenseness of Toscanini, the gen- iality and warmth of Walter, or the massive ponderousness of Klemperer-at least not as a mat- ter of course. If there is one qual- ity that does stand out in Anser- met's otherwise fairly literal read- ings of these scores, it is the lyric- ism in which Brahms excelled. It stands to reason, then, that An- sermet's best work comes in the Third Symphony; here he han- dles the songful passages without getting too schmaltzy about it. Comparing it to another very good performance, the one by Lorin Maazcl on DGG, one sees that the latter conductor injects several ritards which Ansermet will have none of. It should be noted, ncidentally, that Ansermet observes the repeat of the first movement exposition, which neither Maazel nor, I be- lieve, any other conductor except Klemperer bothers to do. Ansermet also observes the re- peat of the exposition of the first movement in the Second Sym- phony, a rarer practice still; and both this movement and the fol- lowing one clearly show Ansermet at his best. But Ansermet's lack of preoccupation with brisk tempi in the third and fourth movements puts his version of the work on a level below William Steinberg's Command recording in my affec- tions. Neither conductor appears happy with Brahms' marking of "presto ma non assai (fast, but not extremely fast)"; if Stein- berg's tempo here is not "pres- tissimo," it is at least a good solid "presto," and as such it comes far closer to the mark than Anser- met's tempo, which in comparison sounds closer to "allegro." Ansermet's reading of the First Symphony, which may have been called "conductor-proof," is a good one. If he generates no real tension in the vigorous first move- ment (one must turn to Toscan- ini for that sort of thing), he does not drag his feet either. In gen- eral, his tempo is not much dif- ferent than that employed by George Szell in his fine recording of this work for Epic (now out of the catalogue, unfortunately), but h (Anermen)o n a hit faster a bad horn blooper mars the 108th measure, further shifting the bal- ance in Szell's -favor. Although Szell's recording of the First Symphony is not with- out distortion, it is minimal com- pared to that which disfigures the last movement of Ansermet's version, making such passages as the paean of brass sound in the coda all but unbearable tolisten to. I suspect that the original master was greatly overcut. This is unfortunate, since one guesses, from listening closely to what manages to come through rea- sonably undistorted, that Anser- met does quite well in this move- ment. Ansermet's performance of the Fourth Symphony is similar to that of the Second in that it is impressive through the first two movements. Here his lyrical bent finds a perfect outlet, and the re- sult is some of the most mellow Brahms I have heard in some time. The third movement is rather dull at the slow tempo An- sermet elects, however; here I pre- fer the brilliance of the now-de- leted Igor Markevitch version (DOG). That version is also unique in the wonderfully dramatic opening Markevitch obtains at the begin- ning of the last movement by tak- ing it at quite a slow tempo. (In fact, he takes the first 16 meas- ures in about 35 seconds, as op- posed to about 25-the usual speed -for Ansermet. That difference of 10 seconds is definitely an asset, especially as Markevitch speeds up the tempo considerably at measure 153.) Ansermet's reading is more literal and does not bear the individual mark of the con- ductor nearly so much as does Markevitch's. I continue to prefer the latter recording and recom- mend it over Ansermet's to anyone who can find a copy. In the three shorter works in the set, Ansermet again meets stiff competition; for the most part he manages to hold his own, but there are still other more preferable versions. In the case of the Tragic Overture, I prefer a more vigorous performance such as Maazel's or Reiner's; others may prefer a slower tempo and should find Ansermet's version a satisfying one. The Academic Festival Overture receives a splendid performance, one full of spirit and (except for distortion at the end) well recorded. For those to whom the best stereo-. phonic sound is not of the utmost importance, an even better per- formance exists: that with Bruno Walter and the New York Phil- harmonic (his older Columbia performance). Where the Variations on a Theme by Haydn is concerned, Ansermet's version is a good one; compared to the Van Beinum per- formance, the latter rendition is often faster, to good effect-ex- cept in the sixth variation, where Ansermet's horn players offer a virtuoso performance. Musically speaking, however, both record- ings pale beside the classic one by Arturo Toscanini and the NBC Symphony (RCA Victor). Yet I would still consider Ansermet's version the best one in stereo. London has given Ansermet generally fine sound which is rich in bass response but not exceed- ingly brilliant where the brass are concerned. At the same time, MOZART SYMPHONY: Lengthy Recording, the7et WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART: Symphony No. 41 in C Major, K. 551 ("Jupiter"); Serenade in G Major, K. 525 ("Eine Kleine Nachtmusik"). Erich Leinsdorf conducting the Boston Symphony Orchestra, RCA VICTOR stereo LSC-2694, $5.98 (monaural LM- 2694, $4.98). WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART: Symphony No. 41 in C Major, K. 551 ("Jupiter"); FRANZ JO- SEPH HAYDN: Symphony No. 103 in E-flat Major, ("Drum Roll"). Herbert Von Karajan conducting the Vienna Philhar- monic Orchestra, LONDON stereo CS 6369, $5.98 (monaural CM 9369, $4.98). PERHAPS the most unusual thing about Leinsdorf's record- ing of Mozart's "Jupiter" Sym- phony is its length: the timing.-, on the record label total 39 min- utes and 16' seconds, as opposed to the norm of about 25-27 min- utes. But Leinsdorf .is not being sluggish: he achieves this dura- tion by taking every repeat Mozart wrote into the score. Of course, all the repetition in the world wouldn't help if Leins- dorf had turned out an otherwise inferior product. This he does not do-in fact, I will go far enough out on the proverbial limb as to label this recordirig the "best" of the available stereo versions. Cer- tainly it surpases the sluggish ef- fort by Bruno Walter on Colum- TCHAIKOVSKY: Maazel's New Album Sparks Old Symphony bia; the Toscanini version on Vic- tor is rougher competition, but I would give Leinsdorf a slight edge by virtue of the many repeats ob- served. It goes without saying, then, that the recent version by Von Karajan, which is not with- out merit, still must be considered as being on a less elevated plane of inspiration than Leinsdorf's version. A direct comparison between the two versions demonstrates the marked variance in tempi taken by the respective conductors. Wherer as Leinsdorf takes the first move- ment at a vigorous tempo, Von Karajan is slow and heavy, further betrayed by engineering that does not bring out important wind pas- sages nearly as well as does Leins- dorf's recording. In the final movement, it is Von Karajan who moves at a clip which leaves Leinsdorf far behind; but while such a tempo certainly adds ex- citement, Leinsdorf's tempo seems more appropriate to the noble character of the movement. Leinsdorf rounds out his disc with a graceful performance of Mozart's durable "Eire Kleine Nachtmusik." Here Leinsdorf is not as fastidious about repeats as he was in the "Jupiter" But by far the most interesting thing about Leinsdorf's reading is his use of an acciaccatura at the beginning of the fourth full meas- ure of the Menuetto. This short apoggiatura is said to have been a common technique of Mozart's day, where it was generally indi- cated by R sixteenth note inserted before the normal note as a grace note. According to one authority, the use of it by Leinsdorf is in accordance with modern editions of the score; however, the most recent complete set of the works of Mozart available to me, the old Breitkopf and Hartel edition, shows a grace note which is an eighth note and which thus does not designate a true acciaccatura. Whether Leinsdorf is correct or not may hinge on how this passage is designated in the volume of the 1959 Baerenreiter Kassel edition, containing the "Nachtmusik," which hopefully would clear up any errors made in earlier col- lections of Mozart's works. Un- fortunately, however, this volume has apparently not yet been pub- lished. Most if not all other mod- ern recordings of this work utilize a series of eighth notes through- out this measure. Since Von Karajan's reading of the "Jupiter" Symphony does not spill onto the second side, as does Leinsdorf's, he is able to, include with it another symphony, Haydn's "Drum Roll." His rendi- tion lacks the more prominent tympani and more incisive tempo of that by Markevitch (Epic, now deleted); and he observes the re- peat of the first movement expo- sition while ignoring two separate repeats in the second movement. The sound on both sides of the T nnrn- An ia -ns nnA natin I nrlt Stalling the Rights Movement "OUR PEOPLE DEMAND a confronta- tion between the mayor and local civil rights groups on the following points: 1) Employment: close down all con- struction sites immediately until the work force in that industry is fully integrated; 2) Slum Housing: begin an immediate "rent strike" through the ghetto area; 3) Schools: produce immediately a plan with a time table for total desegregation of all schools; 4) Police Brutality: create a public review board, selected by civil liberties, civil rights and church groups to investi- gate complaints of police brutality "Or STALL IN at the.World's Fair." So says the pompous and irrational handbill distributed by the Brooklyn chapter of the Congress of Racial Equal- ity. MAJOR CIVIL RIGHTS leaders in the country have denounced the ,plan of as harmful by everyone from the Presi- dent to the man in the street, the plan is a blatant-yet unfortunate-affirmation of irresponsibility by certain sectors of the pro-rights establishment. THE QUESTION "WHY?" is most dis- turbing here. Why-the World's Fair? What can the Fair do to aid the cause of civil rights? It cannot break the "stall in" of a Senate filibuster; it cannot change deep-seated prejudice in white America's heart. Why-an expressway tie-up? Nothing is more annoying than sitting behind miles of stalled cars on a crowded ex- pressway. How can action of this type win America to the cause of civil rights? PERHAPS THE ANSWER to these ques- tions lies in the frustrated desire of some leaders of rights groups to prove to themselves their ability to rally power, to +mmnw tsa nti +twistdwrench into the PETER ILITCH TCHAIKOVSKY: Sym- phony No. 5 in E Minor, Op. 64.E Lorin Maazel conducting the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, LONDON stereo CS 6376, $5.98 (monaural CM 9376, $4.98). IT IS TRULY unfortunate that the record-buying public has gotten itself into such a rut where the music of Tchaikovsky is concerned. It has really taken to its collective heart only the last three of his symphonies (not counting Manfred or the recently reconstructed "Seventh Sym- phony"), lavishing love and af- fection on these works to such an extent that Tchaikovsky's first three symphonies have become all but lost in the shuffle. Take the Fifth Symphony for example, of which there are now 27 recordings in the catalogue (as opposed to five of the First Sym- phony, four of the Second and only two (!) of the Third). With that great a selection to choose from, any desired type of per- formance can be found. Do you wish a massive performance, marked by a too-slow traversal of the last movement? Then you chniM.wu W -m -- r ri Avnr out quite surpassing it. Both con- ductors manage to spark no little excitement out of Tchaikovsky's battered old score; but where Monteux does it with gradual ac- celerandos, Maazel concentrates on making every brass outburst clear and forceful. For the most part, he provides fine pianissimos where the score calls for them, but when it's time for a fortissimo (or louder), even Bernstein can't' shout down Maazel. Maazel limits his excesses to dynamics, however, maintaining a steadier tempo than Monteux (even in the last movement, where Monteux is livelier if not louder.) But I will cavil with Maazel's handling of the transition into the exposition of the last movement; whereas the score calls for a tym- pani crescendo and pianissimo basses, Maazel turns the crescendo over to the basses, thus drowning out the tympani (yes, it is pos- sible to drown out tympani). It should be added, incidentally, that both conductors present the sym- phony intact, without the dis- figuring cuts other such as Men- geiberg have seen fit to inflict upon the last movement. The choosing of a Tchaikovsky Fift thPm ,CA +C tm nrtt, )