The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 19, 1978-Page 7 Fodor:Vapid showmanship By OWEN GLEIBERMAN "Ladieeees and gentlemen!" bellows the burly announcer through his megaphone. "In the center ring, presenting the amazing, stupendous Fodor, the fantastic fiddling wizard!" The crowd turns toward the figure standing nobly beneath the spotlight, ready to watch him perform a set of musical imarvels more awesome than the death-defying feats of the trapeze artist, and more intricate than the most superhuman juggling act. With the Eugene Fodor, ,'iotmnia Judith Olson, pianM Raekham A udisoriun, onaNo. in Dmjr op . . Prokofiev Tzigane ........................... Ravel Serenade melancholique Op. 26 ... Tchaikovsky Tambourin Chinois................. Kreisler Cppricis Vais.............Wieniaski La Ciochette (The Bell)............ Paganini Preaenu'dl by ira. tlnir.'rairy Musical Sncj.'ty pride of Hercules, Fodor tucks his vili Abeneath hi dchin and begins to Picture this scene without the circus paraphernalia and in the posh confines of Rackham Auditorium, and you have a fair representaition of Eugene Fodor's Ann Arbor debut Tuesday evening. For while some members of the audience came to hear music, Fodor's perfor- mance was totally dependent on the magic arts of spiccato and ricochet bowing, harmonic double-steps, and - that inevitable show-stopper - left- hand pizzicato. EUGENE FODOR is such a robotic musician that I find it inexplicable he could have won the international Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow in 1974. When he isn't tackling lightning- fast arpeggios, his playing is wholly un- spectacular and bereft of warmth and imagination. During an unplanned three-minute intermission during which ensued a search for a missing music stand, Fodor entertained the audience with the first movement of Bach's E major Partita. The, piece is virtually a non- stop progression of sixteenth notes, and Fodor seemed to go into it with the at- titude, "The faster the better." He is of the school that says playing with "feeling" should be reerved for those, slow, schmaltzy passages. FODOR'S surfacy renditions seemed inevitable from the opening strains of vibrat is urelentingl quickand nHes- vous, lending a flat sameness to every note. Fodor's performance of the Prokofiev Sonata No. 2 was terse and brittle, as if the piece's unromantic harmoniels ruled out a lush, "romantic" interpretation. Instead, he utilized various "expressive" gimmicks, -most notably proverbial little gypsy slides. Never, in pieces like Tchaikovsky's Serenade Melancolique or the Tartini Sonata, did he attain that warm, soaring quality one gets from a Stern or a Perlman. The program was basically an unin- teresting arcade of showcase pieces, the same sort of crowd-pleasers Fodor generally performs on The Tonight Show. Even his technique fell down takes a backseat to musicianship, not only for the audience but for the per- former, one is forced into protesting not merely the quality of any individual comiposition but the very conception of the whole performance. As opposed to a concert in which one number may have been flubbed but the next could be brilliant, Fodor was involved in such an all-out celebration of technique that giving the most moving performance possible obviously wasn't on his mind. A lot of people have seen F'odor on Johnny Carson, and no one is questioning his technical accomplish- ments. But shouldn't we expect something more - something of a little more substance - from such a highly touted performer?' When magicians begin passing for artists, perhaps we should rethink our priorities. Concert The Major Events Office announ- ced today that the Stephen Stills Livingston Taylor concert scheduled for Hill Auditorium Nov. 4th has been cancelled. Tickets will be refunded where they were bought. Eugene Fodor Join the Thrifty cooking: save the syrup left from watermelon pickles and pour it over home-cooked or canned sliced beets (drained). Refrigera te for sev- eral days for flavor to develop. PAN-AFRICAN Firiday SatUrday TRUEBLOOD TH EATRE Frieze Building, UofM Campus State & Washington PRESENTED BY: Troupe Ta'AmUllat Ann Arbor and KO-TH I Milwaukee, Wisconsin - Tickets Available at HUDSONS, MiCHIGAN UNION and the DOOR We specialize in Ladies' and Children's STYLISTS LIBERTY Off STATE ARBORLAND s.U.-E.U. MAPLE VILLAGE I Ann Arbor's Cornerstone of Beauty I ~SPECIALISTSi I PE RMS: Curly, Wavy, & I Relaxers I * PreiinCut I ,COLOR CORRECTiON . FACIAL & NAILS * PR ESS &CUR L This month, receive a 10% DISCOUNT on all services I (offer good only with this coupon) I ~ 311 E. Liberty I Mon-sAT 9-7 I (last appointment) upon occasion - mostly his intonation - but by and large his reading of three Paganini caprices and the same com- poser's La Clochette (a transcribed version of the third violin concerto's Rondo) were duly impressive. WHY, THEN, am I panning his con- cert? Well, when technical wizardry Simple honesty is Dixon's tool By CAROL WIERZBICKI Looking like Jack Nicholson, com- plete with receding hairline, he coughed once, took his seat, and held listeners enthralled for about an hour. TUesday evening was the second time Stephen Dixon has read in East Quad's Benzinger Library, and this 1reading proved to be an even bigger success than last year's. Dixon seemed Kmore confident in reading his works out loud, and was met with enthusiastic ap- plause at the end of each short story or excerpt. THE AUJTHOR of Work and No Relief (already popular books around cam- pus), Dixon has gone on to publish Too Late, and Quite Contrary, a collection of short stories, is due out in June.. Dixon started the evening off with a delightful story called "Gifts," which simply relates the tale of a man who sends increasingly elaborate han- Sdiworks (sonnets, jewelry, furniture), to the object of his affections. His sup- posed sweetheart, in turn, writes per- fectly charming, but condescending let- ters:- How can I ever thank y-ou? You may' be sure your gift is safe in the closet with all the reel. In the end she rejects him, having "told 'i no one where she was going and leaving no forwarding address." The story Sexaggerates, embellishes, comes to a tall-tale climax, then drops off - in jessence, parallels the real-life ex- perience of rejection. Next, Dixon read an excerpt from his novel Too Late. In the scene, a man is looking for his lost girlfriend, gets a phone call from a stranger who claims to have seen the girlfriend through his telescope, and for several pages the story takes all kinds of ludicrous turns, as the stranger keeps calling back and changing his line. STILL ANOTHER story, in a kind of take-off on the short piece, "Mac in Love," has the former lover sticking around to see what the new "fella" looks like, getting bit by the woman's ;dog, and consequently hurting the dog. He packs the dog in his valise and takes *him to a vet's office, where the dog is pronounced dead. Finally, he buries the cur in the suitcase, and ends up being refused lodging at a hotel because he has no luggage. It's this unexpected truthfulness, this constantly unresolved state. of things, that makes Dixon's writing stand out, and makes it enjoyable reading and listening. His sparse storytelling style carries complex motivations, attitudes, and events to swift and smooth ends. Dixon's sporadic obsessions with detail contribute a richer texture to the overall story - as-if it had been woven tighter in certain spots with thicker yarn. In his first books, Work and No Relief, Dixon, a native New Yorker, captured the alienation of his city through the individual dialects of his characters, as well as the study of daily routine. The result is two extremely powerful commentaries on city life in the '70s. YE T DIXON for the most part leaves his opinions out of his works. Rather, they make a simple, blatant statement: "This is the way it is." Strangely enough, this technique lends itself remarkably well to the conveyance of emotions and attitudes. Dixon doesn't parade his opinions - he allows his readers to form their own. "My stories were meant to be interpreted in dif- ferent ways by different people," Dixon explains. And therein lies their impact. How Dixon got his start in writing is an interesting story in itself. "I was an elevator operator in the News building, when one day by accident, I got to type a story, and my brother, who was a journalist there at the time, told me to get a job as a journalist." From there, he went on to become a radio and TV correspondent in Washington, D.C., and as a reporter in- terviewed Kennedy and other White House officials in the early '60s. Soon after he became an editor, Dixon sold his first story for publication, decided to quit journalism, and took up writing creatively full time. WHEN asked if journalism is a good springboard for creative writing, Dixon responded, "It's a bad place to start. There's too much regimentation, demands, deadlines, pressure." Does his reporting experience figure largely in the outcome of his stories? "Not really;" he notes. "Reporting helped me a lot with technique, with getting the right words down,, but there it en- ds." n "I'm basically a storyteller," Dixon says. "I tell it just like it is - with a few embellishments. The stuff I write comes right out of my head onto the page. Many of the stories I wrote really happened. I'll start telling a friend aboust something that happened to me during the day, and he'll say, 'You've got a short story there.' A story can be anythig - a dream, life, something you hear from someone else." The effect of Dixon's storytelling is a kind of grim, pessimistic, funny frustration that tells us, over and over, ,that' life is not like the movies. In a discussion after the reading, Dixon began formulating another story: "I'm walking down the street, see, when this dog bites me on the leg, and I look around to see who the owner is, and it's a transvestite, and (this really hap- pened!) instead of asking if I'm hurt, he says I have nice legs. . The U of M POET RY and TR ANSL A TION JOU RNA L IN T HE H opwood Room & 444 Mason or mai to 40 Mayard, 2480 Just Leave Name, Address, Phone, Year & School (Self-Addressed Stamped Envelope Necessary for Return) flMANN THEATRES Wed. Matinees . xVLGE T All seats $1.50 MA'"'"LE V"LAG SHPPNG CENTER From he ceatos ofSHOW "Murer n te OrentExpessTIMES Sot-Sun-Wed 630 9:05 SHE STOOPS Tonight at 8 p.m.! Tickets on Sale! WXed.:Sui.,( u. 18-21, -UI,( )u 2 Thic Liixvisit of Miiz I( )k'SSi( )Il U 1 11 Pe ye1l (7 CSI Aist )V( Tickets at the P.T.P. Box ( the Michigan League (313)'; and through all Hudson' To CONQUER ~ffice in. 64-0450 s Stores O 7 ' IH rshs fod ye . . adi yucm gTeua freest cfe The Ann Arbor Film Copeaive presents in AUD. A. Special Two-Day Engagement Thursday, Oct.19-7 & 9:15 LAST TANGO IN PARIS (Bernardo Bertolucci, 1973) MARL.ON BRANDO appears as a sex- ually aggressive expatriate who em- barks on a three-day affair with