Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 19, 1912 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 19, 1972 Classical disc By DON SOSIN New releases from Columbia (which seems to be 'the only label we get classical discs from anymore; I guess the others are either not interested in us, or broke) include orchestral works by Bruckner, Copland, and Rav- el. (M 30828) Leonard Bernstein conducts the New York Philhar- monic in Bruckner's Symphony No. 9. This is Bruckner's last work, and unfinished at that. Like the last symphonies of Mahler, this one represents the composer's struggle to finish his work be- fore death closes in. It is cur- ious that the symphony e n d s serenely in E major, instead of the d minor it began in. This is mere chance, for Bruckner would undoubtedly have gone on to finish the work heroically. But before the serenity there is a great deal of anxiousness and disturbed emotion. Bernstein has not really captured all of this; I am left dissatisfied and with ,the feeling that much has been glossed over. The orchestra sounds technically proficient, but lacks inspiration. Listen to Bruno Walter instead. * * * (M 30651) Pierre Boulez con- ducts the Cleveland Orchestra in works of Ravel: Daphnis and Chloe Suite No. 2, Rapsodia Es- pagnole, Alborada del Gracioso, Pavane for a Dead Princess. Boulez has tight control over the group, whose playing is ex- traordinarily good; the p e r- formances are supple and have that fine French quality (except that of Daphnis, where the Cleve- land Orchestra Chorus is a dis- appointment. The works are so overplayed, however, that ano- ther addition to the already too long list of recordings seems pointless. Furthermore, putting all four of these works together gives a very one-sided impres- sion of Ravel - as an orchestral. wizard. I appreciate his genius in this respect, but would pre- fer listening to works of more subtlety, the Trio, his many songs, chamber music and piano works. But do not let this deter you. It's a good recording (al- though I caught one very obvious splice in Daphnis) and the Pa- vane is particularly beautiful. Latest in the series "Copland conducts Copland," (M 30649) contains Fanfare for the Com- mon Man, Lincoln Portrait, and Appalachian Spring. That Cop- land is a fine conductor has been demonstrated on the previous albums. Here, with the London Symphony, he gives an eloquent renditionofFanfare. Someone told me Ormandy's was also good, so I compared the two. Or- mandy may have a better brass section, but evidently has the more common man in mind. Copland's version has great dig- nity and comes out ahead. The Lincoln Portrait has never been a favorite of mine, and t h i s feeling is not helped by hav- ing to listen to Henry Fonda mouth the President's immortal words. Appalachian Spring is a chestnut like the others, but re- mains one of Copland's most poignant scores, and is treated well here. It would, have been good of Columbia, however, to inform us, that this is not the complete ballet, but the suite, which is basically the same, but omits one rather large section. * * * In the re-issue department, Columbia offers elilo by Berlioz. (M 30588). Pierre Boulez con- ducts the London Symphony Chorus and Orchestra with Jean- s: Note, Louis Barrault as narrator. This, recording was originally put out by CBS together with Symphonie Fantastic, of which it is the con- tinuation. The work is made up of bits and pieces composed at various times in Berlioz' life, and lacks any real musical unity. The cohesion comes from the nar- ration, in which the composer, alias Lelio, voices his thoughts about the Symphonie and makes plans for a fantasy on Shake- speare's "Tempest." Both music and text convey the image of the idealistic romantic composer who seems to work better the more he suffers. The L o n d o n Symphony plays superbly under Boulez, and the choir is quite good. John Shirley-Quirk, t h e baritone, does a better job than John Mitchinson, the tenor, who sounds strained in singing t h e setting of Goethe's Le Pecheur. But most of the credit belongs to Barrault, whose French is de- licious to listen to, and who con- veys the tormented feelings of the composer with much success. Barrault played Berlioz in a film during the 40's, so one is not surprisedhat4his sure interpre- tation. All in all, this is an in- teresting album and worth hear- ing. (M 30081) Rudolf Serkin plays Beethoven's Sonata in B flat, Op. 106, "Hammerklavier." I admire Serkin as, a pianist, but I do not like this recording. He is cer- tainly able to control the piece, and his interpretation is polish- ed. But Serkin has a very per- cussive sound, which, Hammerk- lavier or not, sounds too harsh too much of the time. The first and last movements are not bad, but the second movement is too un- feeling in all its heroics. T h e hymnlike Adagio is marred by Serkin's heavy breathing, a n d concentration on the music is almost impossible. (At least he's not humming to himself, as he. did during a performance of the Chopin preludes I once saw. It may have helped him, but the audience wasn't particularly pleased.) If one can put up with these eccentricities, then t h e solid performance will be enjoy- ble. Otherwise, look elsewhere. To Vladimir Ashkenazy, for in- stance. * * * Those who saw Garrick Ohls- son perform here this summer may be in terested to know that his first recordings have just been released on the Connois- seur Society label. Ohlsson won first prize in the Chopin Inter- on diversity national Piano Competition in Warsaw a year ago, and on these recordings are live performances from the competition. On the one I listened to (CS 2029), he plays the b minor sonata, the Etude in A flat Op. 10 no. 10, the Polonaise in f sharp minor, and the rarely heard E major Scherzo. Having heard him per- form all of these works numer- ous times, I can only say that while his playing here is indeed excellent, it has improved enor- mously since last October. The engineering is not all that good -many places sounded tinny. The Sonata, which takes up Side One, seems to have been re- corded at a higher level than the other pieces, so that one has to readjust in'playing the other side. One curious item: why does Louis Biancolli say in his notes that there are only two piano sonatas by the composer? The other record features the minor, a nocturne $.l Piano Concerto No. 1 in e minor, a nocturne and some mazurkas. The tapes that I heard of the concerto's performance w e r e phenomenal; he really does a terrific job. But be warned: the orchestral introduction has been cut to a few bars, if I recall, and there is the possibility that the engineering here, too, is not the best. PRESENTS MR. D.W. GRI FFITH'S THE BIRTH OF A NATION Cinema Guild's annual tribute to the birth of the narrative film. To be appreciated, The Birth of a Nation must be thought of in its historical con- text. Behind the overtones of racism and the 57 years of wear on the print lie narrative innovations (parallel cutting, revealing camera movements, and so on) which stunned the film-going world in 1915. These innovations gave the cinema some of its first moments of breath-taking excitement. Pres- ident Woodrow Wilson described the film by saying: "it's like writing, history in lightning.". Birth of a Nation stars the great Lillian Gish (Mae Marsh also has a role). It will be shown at 7 and 9 p.m. on Tuesday and Wednesday nights in ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 75c Program Information 8-6416 JANE FONDA in kiute, *AND* PAUL NEWMAN in COOL HAND LUKE -THURSDAY- "AN ABSOLUTELY STUNNING FILM! A TOPNOTCH THRILLER! " -JUDITH CRIST, d~NEW YORK MAGAZINE FREE! Modify Your Maladaplive Behaviours 4 4 If you want to: 1. Lose weight 2. Stop cigarette smoking, 3. Increase study skills 4. Stop biting fingernails 5. Exercise more frequently 6. 7. Meet more people Change other minor maladaptive behaviours Students of Psychology 414 (Advanced Lab in Be- havioural Modification) will work with you on changing your undesireable behaviours. We do not handle deep, emotional problems, but will be happy to try to help you make simple changes in your habits. NO GUARANTEES NO CHARGE For more information call: DON POWELL-769-2742 DR. JAMES McCONNELL--764-4224 Join The Daily I Clint Eastwi cood ! -~Ilk- Is #-L Dirty Harry "It's a Si: and. _. .3 "ONE OF THE. 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The concert, which is c o m- pletely sold out, will be given under the auspices of the Uni- versity Musical Society. Segovia appeared here previously in 1960, 1965, 1967 and 1970., Now 78, he has seen the guitar gain acceptance in many of the world's leading conservatories and has been- the inspiration for innumerable works added to the guitar literature. Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad (J~i HOT COMBO Extra features like a built-in condenser microphone and a backspace review button make the new CF-300 the finest Cassette-Corder AM/FM Radio Combination you can buy. FEATURES: Recorder 0 Built-In Condenser Microphone * Sonymnatic Recording Control *Record Interlock = Microphone and Auxiliary Inputs * Record Level and Battery Strength Indicator Speaker Monitor Capability Radio 9 AM and FM Bands 9 Telescopic FM Antenna 9 Built-In Ferrite Bar AM Antenna 0 AFC with Defeat Switch Genera I * Built-In Recharging Circuit for Optional Nickel-Cadmium Lifetime Battery Pack s119.95 E M . 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