The Michigan Daily-Sunday, December 10, 1978-Page 7 'U'J By ANNA NISSEN The UniversJty ,of Michigan Dan 3ompany gavea beautiful performani >f three outstanding new works and o 950 composition Friday night at Pow ienter. The Company, comprised e irely of dance majors, began workii owards this production in Septemb vhen Gary Lund, Laura Glenn; and Gi dancers give life to new works' ce ce ne " er m- ng ,er us Solomons Jr., all nationally recognized dance artists, held auditions through the dance department for students to perform their new pieces. The program opened with the premiere performance of " Terranulluis Wrought," choreographed by Gary Lund. Seven dancers in sleek green skin suits For Elvin Jones, the beat goes on BY HILARY LEFF When three fine jazz musicians all come from a single family, you know there must be magic somewhere. In this case the magic is in the Jones family, out of which came Hank, Thad and Elvin, all superb instrumentalists. and each with a style all his own. According to leading avant-garde drummer Elvin Jones, who is playing the Earle this upcoming Monday and Tuesday, the music of all three brothers is Ivery unique. "I was totally self-taught," he continues, "beccause I couldn't afford lessons and when I started, at age 12, there wasn't really anyone I was listening to. . . I just always liked drums and I always liked jazz." And that is what started Jones off, some 39 years ago. Although he began by himself, he joined his high school marching band in order to play with other people. After doing his bit for the military Jones returned to his native Detroit, where he played with tenor saxophonist Billy Mitchell at the Bluebird. "I WAS JUST a very enthusiastic, eager student of the art without any style," he recalls. "After playing in Detroit for awhile, I went to New York to audition for the Benny Goodman band, but I didn't make it, so I started to work with Charles Mingus and Teddy Charles. I had offers from people like Miles, but I thought they were frivolous, and Mingus was sincere." Sincerity ,is a word that comes up often in Elvin's conversation. "No one is going to find a pot of gold at the end of this rainbow," he claims, "so you have to be sincere in what you're doing." This refrain is' also heard when discussing how he chose his sideman. "I look for honesty and sincerity in my sidemen," claims Jones. "If they have that then I think they can develop into good musicians ." And he knows good musicians, because he has played with some of the best. He spent six years as drummer for Coltrane, and has done gigs with such jazz giants as Sonny Rollins, Tommy Flanagan, Kenny Burrell, and Pepper Adams. vitalize the stage with amoebic contor- tions and floor patterns, writhing and rolling to an African chant. Three red clad dancers wheel in a jungle gym, ex- ploiting the additional space it provides by climbing the robes. and swinging chim-like on the bars. The green dan- cers then discover their red cousins and the blue dancers who by then have also entered the stage. THE REDS are pinched, squeezed, and lifted by curious hands of both groups whose indifferent, independent movement is, unfortunately, too unin- The University of Michigan Dance Company Powe'r Center "Terranuliius Wrought" Gary Lund, c/wreographer "The Exiles" Joel Limon, c/wre'ierapher "Muse' Laura Glenn, cwreokrapher "Acrylic-Flake Diagram" Gus Solomons, chorexraph tegrated and distracting. Finally the reds reverse the situation and coax the blues and greens into combat with each other. Several of the blues and greens try to brek away from the violence, but the reds swing them around and back into the brawl in a dancerly version of "Red Robin, Red Robon." The music, composed especially for the dance by Terry Tilley, sounds like a primitive, guttural purring as the slow, fluid war continues and the wounded are revived by blue and green survivors who skip around them -in Ring- around-the-rosie-like resurrection. Then the red imps urge several blues and greens to stretch lazily on the jungle gym. The music shifts to a monkish chant as the blues and greens crack-the-whip in slow motion. This emotionally stirring dance appears to be a visual antithesis of "the meek shall inherit the earth" beatitude. THE SECOND piece, "The Exiles," is a dance of Judeo-Christian origin. Choreographed in 1950 by Jose Limon to Arnold Schoenberg's Chamber sym- phony No. 2, it depicts Adam (Gary Lund) and Eve (Laura Glenn) just af- ter the Expulsion as they flee from Paradise and look back regretfully. Light rises from the east, as Adam and Eve shamefully entwine green cords around their bodies and vacillate bet- ween lewd dalliance and bitter repugnance. In mutual guilt, they slink off to the left as light from 'the east of Eden fades. Limon's choreography is superb. It emphasizes the use of the floor.wherein the dust of man is composed. Lund and Gleii contact the ground surface, rolling and stretching prostrate upon it. Lund leaps vibrantly to relieve what might otherwise be considered tedious. Glenn's scampering about on her tip- toes, however, lacks the crisp vitality of Lund's style. Perhaps this is inten- tional, consistent with the Genesis and Paradise Lost conceptions of Eve's secondary brilliance. Even so, the dan- Holiday Art Sale Featuring Gallery Artists Nov.29- Dec.22 Recept ion: HOURS Fri., DeC-1 7-9 Tugs - F", 9 - 5 Saturday,12-5 764- 3234 FIRST FLOOR MICHIGAN UNICN cing and choreography as a whole are superb. a "THE EXILES" presents man as he is destined to live according to Christian tradition, and the third num- ber, "Muse," explores this saine theme of man's desinty with secular associations. Based on Virginia Woolf's novel The Waves and choreographed by Glenn, "Muse' assimilates group body movements from, of all things, syn- See DANCERS, Page 9 Wilson honored A professor and a former instructor at the University's School of Music have been selected as outstanding composers this year by the American, Society of Composers, Authors and PUblishers (ASCAP), the University announced. Prof. George Wilson of the Music Composition Department and Jerry. Bilik, a University graduate who taught, composition here, are the recipients of the award. The awards demonstrate the organization's "continuing commit ment to assist and encourage writers of' serious music," according to ASCAP. Laurence Olivier's 1946 HENRY V "The seductive power of pacing alone with its shifts and contrasts, in scene after scene, have seldom been equalled in a movie."-James Agee. Breath- taking color photography, a score by William Walton and a perceptive per- formance by Laurence Olivier. One of the insurpassable Shakespeare films and a vivid contrast to Olivier's black and white study of Hamlet. Wed: IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT Thurs: HITCHCOCK' S29 STEPS Fri: IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE CINEMA GUILD TUESDAY NIGHT OLD ARCH AUD. 7.00 A :20 $1.50 This Week at CINEMA II WED. DEC. 13 Yves Robert-1967 ALEXANDER "The reshest, By the director of THE TALL BLOND MAN WITH 4unniestrnO',eONE BLACK SHOE. After Alexander's nagging wife sors, e Al . of many years dies, he gleefully abandons all of the responsibilities that burden him as a res- pectable citizen, causing bedlam in the little farming community around him. This film is for anyone who has ever tasted or longed for the pleasures of irresponsibility. At MLB 3 FRI. DEC. 15 JAMES BOND in 1965 THUNDERBALL Agent O07's mission in this film: discover who hijacked two nuclear bombs in a NATO aircraft over Europe and who is secretly holding them for a ransom of 100 million dollars. He does just that with his usual finesse and savior- faire. "The color is handsome. The scenery in the Bahamas, an irreisistable lure. Even the violence is funny: that's the best that can be said for a Bond film:"-N.Y. Times. At Angell Hall, "Aud. A" SAT. DEC. 16 Paul Mazursky 1974 HARRY & TONTO ART CARNEY won the Academy Award for his portrait of a feisty New Yorker who won't say die when his tenement dwelling is torn out from under him. Instead of relegating to the old folk's home, Harry goes on. a physical and personal odyssey that takes him from New York to Cali- fornia and leaves you feeling not just good-but great! "Mazursky's film just before AN UNMAR- RIED WOMAN foreshadows that film's theme of inner rejuvenotion of an immensely likeable character. A perfect holiday treotJ With ELLEN BURSTYN, C1I4EF DAN GEORGE, LARRY HAGMAN and GERALDINE FITZGERALD. Plus Short-A TALE OF TWO KITTIES-One of Fs+ first Tweetie Pie cartoons with two cats named Babbit & Catsello. Directed by Bob Clampett. At ANGELL HALL. AUD. "A" SUN. DEC. 17 Henri-George Clouzot 1955 LES DIABOLIQUES An ingenious thriller set in provincial France about an elaborate murder scheme planned by a schoolmaster's wife and his mistress. The problem: the corpse keeps disappearing. Written for Hitchcock by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Norcejac, authors of Vertigo, this macabre little tale twists and turns its way to a surprise climax. With SIMONE SIGNORET and VERA CLOUZOT. French with subtitles. At An ell Hall "Aud. A" All f ims $1.50 SEE YOU NEXT TERM Academy Award Double-Feature LIFE OF EMIL ZOLA The brilliant biography of the crusading French novelist and Dreyfuss Defender, PAUL MUNI received an Oscar for best actor in this film. "It is at once the finest historical film ever made and the greatest screen biography . . . there is not enough space for a full inventory of its assets."--NY Times. With GALE SONDERGAARD. 7 ONLY MRS. MINIVER GREER GARSON and WALTER PIDGEON star in this film about the growing effects of World War 11 on the tranquil lives of the people in a small English town. Ms. Garson received a well-deserved Oscar for her title role per- formance. "Every episode is made a full experience, with rich and vibrant overtones. The pulse of real humanity beats strong throughout the tilm."--NY Times. 9 ONLY. Elvin Jones RECENTLY, JONES has done a good deal of touring both in the States and broad. He has completed two live recardings in Japan, as well as an album on the German MPS label which will be distributed by Capital Records in the U.S. His style is one of the most unique to be found among jazz drummers today. This characteristic sound is due in part to the huge cymbals he uses, as well as the way he plays them, striking them with the butt end of the drumstick. But it is the complexity of the rhythms that first catches one. Juxtaposing various counter-rhythms, switching between cross rhythms and straight ahead beats, Jones creater a whirlwind of sound. He places emphasis on the left hand for maintaining the beat -ra definite departure from the traditional jazz mode in which drummers primarily use their left hand for spare accents. With his right hand he accentuates the first and third beats of a four-beat bar, while his feet often act in counterpoint to the snare. Finally, there is the unique way his torn-toms are turned - lower than anyone else, and barely muffled, causing them to create a thunderous roar. AMIDST ALL this, Jones somehow manages to maintain a continuous flow, providing support for his group: Pat LaBarbera on sax, Roland Prince on guitar, and Andy McCloud on bass. On stage they act as a single vessel, with Elvin at the helm. He is a majestic figure, a physically imposing man, who throws himself into his playing with palpable obsession. If one has never had the opportunity to hear him before, it would be worth one's while to stop down at the Earle and hear Elvin Jones, the father of avant-garde jazz drumming. WED-Yves Robert's ALEXANDER TONITE AT T&9 ANGELL HALL AUD. "A" CINEMA I One Show-$1.30 Doubl.-$2.50 'jjIVEISITY CfUSICAL OCIETY In its 86th year, fitting climax to seasons in the M The Philadelphi and six internati make each conC apaiL S Soprano Victoria de los Angeles joins Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra for an evening of Bartok, Ravel, Hindemith, Mozart,- Rossini and Wagner. apaiL L27. Pianist Alicia de Larrocha, Riccardo Muti and the Philadelphia Orchestra present an all- Beethoven evening: Symphony #6 (Pastoral), Piano Concerto #3, and Overture to "Leonore" No. 3. pLus In honor of the Musical Society's 100th Season, May Festival series subscribers will receive tickets for a bonus concert on Monday, April 23rd. Victoria de los Angeles and A licia de Larrocha will perform, in joint recital, music -presen ts Rest baLI 1 May Festival, 1979 will be a one of the most brilliant fusical Society's history. a Orchestra, the conductors ionally renowned soloists ert an evening to remember. 1979 Riccardo Muti, Principal Guest Conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra makes his Ann Arbor debut conducting Mendelssohn's Symphony #3 and Tchaikovsky's Symphony #S. api L 98 Eugne Ormandy, the Philadelphia Orchestra and the University Choral Union close the Festival with the "Manzoni" Requiem of Verdi. Featured soloists are Bulgarian mezzo A lexandrina Milcheva; American soprano Alma Jean Smith; Soviet tenor Zurab Sotkilava; and Finnish bass Martti Talvela. I I I I I I 1II ... _ iI