Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September 24, 1971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September 24, 1971 Going Baroque with Ars Musica --l"Im-mmmn 9(M By DAVE FRIEDO How about a little Telemann, Bach or Vivaldi chamber music? Or if you are a real devotee you may be interested in some of their contemporaries such as Sammartini, Quantz or Marais. In any case, if you enjoy Baroque chamber music or would like to get to know it, the performances this year of Ars Musica will -in- terest you. Ars Musica, w h i c h simply means "art music," is the brain- child of Lyndon Lawless, 26, a 1967 graduate of the School of Music. In the fall of 1970 he formed the 15-member chamber ensemble, which performed eight regular concerts its first year. most of which were in the Ann Arbor area. Ars Musica also per- formed two small concerts-one at the Alley and one this past summer at the Art Fair. Five Ann Arbor concerts are planned for the coming season and are scheduled to be held at St. Clare's Episcopal Church. 2309 Packard. The first concert will be at 8 p.m., Sunday' Oct. 10. Lawless, who has very deii-. nite and creative ideas on per- forming Baroque chamber music and trying to gain audience in- terest, plans to keep the con- certs to a comfortable one and a half hours of music. He has gone to great expense and currently is spending all his time on build- ing the group, acquiring music, studying performance practices, and doing his own publicity. The theme for the posters this year is "Go Baroque." "I had to learn how to do my own art work," Lawless said. "I didn't know anything about silk- - At corner of SState &Liberty DIAL 662-6264 f screening until I had to start thinking about how to make pos- ters." Lawless s t a r t e d from the ground up. One of the main. in- struments in a Baroque ensem- ble is the harpsichord; so Law- less went out and bought a harpsichord kit, put it together and then taught himself how to play it. (His main instrument in college was the clarinet.) The results of his efforts is a Iresh approach to the performance and enjoyment of Baroque cham- ber nusic. Lawless, who is a soft-spoken and sports a goatee, explained his philosophy behind the f'r- mation of Ars Musica: "My idea is to provide a re- laxed, human, spontaneous type of affair rather than the slick, pompous atmosphere of most concerts. My goal is to try to get the audience closer to the music. Before the concerts, for example, the musicians mingle with the audience. And during the concert we try to get the people to sit as close as possible to the musicians. Being close, the people can then see what is happening - the facial expres- sions, and the interactions be- tween the performers." -Daily-Jim Judkis 'Guitar Player' Bocther's lines invite All the music on this year's concert schedule ranges from 1664 to 1773, and another of Lav - less' goals is to try to perform the music the way in which it was intended. "We are going to try co re- capture a lost tradition of per- formance. Many of the embell- ishments, for example, which_ were intended to be played are not notated in the music because it was natural for the perform- ers of the time to fill them in. Today, most groups don't do this because they are steeped in a 19th century style of performance practice." Ars Musica rehearses in Law- less' basement and the musicians who range in age from 19 to 26 are paid a token amount. The group is patterned after Con- centus Musicus Vienna, a very successful European B a r o q u e ensemble which will be coming to Ann Arbor on Nov. 6. But even though Ars Musica may not be ready to record for Tele- funken, as does their European counterpart, these musicians of Ann Arbor - students and ama- teurs -were received last year with the enthusiasm of capacity -TONIGHT- JEFFERSON AIRPLANE Eldridge Cleovver Tom Hayden in a fiction-documen- tary of the new American Revolution." "1 PM" GODARD/PENN EBAKER MIDWEST PREMIERE ARM/Michigan Film Society Ecumenical Campus Ctr. 1st Presbyterian Church 1432 Washtenaw (off S. Univ.) 761-7849 audiences and encouraging re- viewers. As a final note, one thing has changed since last year and that's the price of admission. Ironically, by charging $1.75, it is Ars Musica itself which will, you might say, try to keep from "going broke." Only you can prevent forest fires. s - -Saturday- Sept. 25 See You at Mao -and- PRAVDA the first and latest films by Dziga-Vertov collective of God- ard and Jean - Pierre Gorin. "Pravda is Godard's best and clearest film."-Village. Voice NAT. SCL. AUD. double-bills 7 & 9 p.m. $1.50 ARM/UM Film Society The motion onctw that made great international stars PETER O'TOOL! end OMAR SHARI Fri., Mon., at 7:3C ONLY o FILM AND SLIDES .FROM MAINLAND CHINA Ann and Uldis Kruze, just back from a month's stay in the People's Republic of China, are showing a film and slides of their trip and want to talk about their experiences. FRIDAY, SEPT. 24-8 P.M. Natural Science Auditorium DONATION: $1.00 Sponsored by Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars .. ' U N A N IM O U S LY C L A M EiA AC' CLAIMED AS * "ONE OF THE ALL TIME GREAT FILMS I' WINNER OF 7 ACADEMY AWARDS s of- "F =' SAT. & SUN. AT T P.M., 4:15 Tues. _ & 7:30 01 ON WASHTENAW AVE. 1A 1 miles east f Arborland-U.S. 23 Theatre Cleared After Each Show ON SUNDAY imaginative viewers By CYNTHIA THOMAS The upstairs gallery at Bor- ders Book Shop, located at 518 East William, offers several ab- sorbing pen and ink drawings by Swiss artist Roland Bucher. Al- though many incorporate flat water color and collage, line dominates over any element of his mixed media. The fairly small drawings break up the surface in a cubis- tic manner, and bring to mind Salvador Dali's habit of hiding figures and objects from the once-over-lightly viewer. For example, only after close study can the twenty faces in "The Highwayman" be f o u n d; - throughout all the drawings are curious combinations of the na- tural world demanding careful scrutiny. "Guitar Player," in pen and ink, minces up guitar and play- er as they take on each other's characteristics: fingers remind one of carved wooden pipes; Art fair set On the first Sunday of every month, S t u d e n t Government Council, University Activities Center, and the Office of Spe- cial Services and Programs will sponsor an art fair. From April to September the fair will be held on East University Ave.. and from October to March, the fair will be located in the Mich- igan Union Ballroom. The fair is open to all Uni- versity and Ann Arbor artists interested in selling or display- ing their crafts. Because of the costs involved in putting on the fair, all artists will be charged a fee of $2 for their table. In addition to the artists el- ing or displaying their crafts, the sponsors plan to provide a variety of entertainment at the fair. Because of space limita- tion, only the first 50 artists can be accepted, so be sure to re- turn the registration form to Room 240, Michigan Union as soon 'as possible. Artists, entertainers, workers, and anyone wishing to sell food are all needed. Interested per- sons should contact Vic Gutman, Room 238, Michigan Union, or call 764-7409. TV & Air Conditioner RENTALS Hi Fi Studio 121 W. Washington NO 8-7942 fingernails look like clarinet reeds; parts of the guitar be- come humanoid. Another drawing, "945", uses the checkerboard motif found in much of Bucher's work. While it was pure pattern in "Guitar Player," it becomes a linoleum floor in this one. 945 refers to the number on the door of a room which is. easily recognized as a prison cell. A small likeness of Rodin's "Thinker" sits on a low table, surrounded by visions of thehun- fulfilled dreams which haunt him in his incarceration: a dis- jointed nude woman, a tobacco pipe, a fork, and a beef steak. The complexity of meaning is matched by a complexity of form. Underneath the profuse surface textures and lines, large blocks of tone, shaped like tri- angles and trapezoids, add over- all unity. The subtlety of these tonal blocks, whether in color or shades of gray, provides effective contrastnwith the power of Bu- cher's lines. The enigmatic quality of his work persuades 'the viewer to explore its depth and gain a calm sense of satisfaction. For the student body: LEVI'S "A MASTERPIECE OF POWER AND BEAUTY!" -Cue "EXTRAORDINARILY BEAUTIFUL-!" -Rex Reec "STUNNING!" -Playboy "REMARKABLE!" --New York CORDUROY Slim Fits ... (All Colors) $6.98 Bells ......$8.50 iV i I I I I U OPEN 12:45 P.M. Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. 6OD HELP BOBBYAND HELEN .. U Ur I r Mb DENIM Bush Jeans . $10.00 Bells ....... $8.00 Boot Jeans . $7.50 Pre-Shrunk . $7.50 Super Slims . $7.00 CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty THE CELEBRATED STORY OF A MAN OBSESSED BY IDEAL BEAUTY. 7:30& 9:15 $1.25 benefit for new paper Michigan SURREALIST .. . . .... M DIAL 5-6290 ANNA CALDER-MARSHALL TIMOTHY DALTON acarry as heashtc# I I CINEMA II FRIDAY and SATURDAY SOME LIKE IT HOT with MARILYN MONROE TONY CURTIS JACK LEMMON Andy Warhol Calls This His Inspiration for Trash 7 & 9 75c Aud. A WINNER GRAND PRIX CANNES 25th ANNIVERSARY AWARD WARNER BROS. PR,ENTS A FILM BY LUCHINO VISCONTI ARR D;RK BOGARDE DEATH IN VENICE" / BURNS I ANDRESEN SA SILVANA MANGANO / TEC~vMCOR / S REENLA rB vISCONTI BADALUCCO FROM THE NOEL BY MA aNE POUE 'QYIT /ASOATEEUTEPtOI CUAV ""/ REE LUCHINO VISCONT I I / ROSERTGORDONE0116 x ECUTWE PROOUCER- MARIO GALLO / FROM WARNER EROS .A K:NEY LE.SIRE SERVE GP WARNER BROS PRESENTS A FILM BY LUG-liN O N 0 O FIFTH Forum RFTH AVENUE AlT LIBERTY DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR INFORMATION 761-9700 SHOWN 6:45 & 9 P.M. _. z i I I I I 71 ATTENTION: SEN IORS CLASS OF 72 4 THE ALLEY 330 Maynard 4i I ..fir. zti; ::;::$ . ' ,3'1 '?yr AGLURf UbyIV.i.JLLAO -N An American International Picture WE 90 Americus Internatio al Picturen. bw. SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. Ssissp i THE $CNA GILD PRESENTS Sergei Eisenstein's IVAN THE TERRIBLE Thursday and Friday-Part I Saturday and Sunday-Part II Directed by Sergei Eisenstein between 1941 and 1946. Music by Prokofiev. I FRI.-SAT.-2 SHOWS 7:30 and 10:00 Tickets All Shows $2.00 I. l- ...IS THE SYMBOL FOR TAUREANS :.but this is no bull. Sign up now for your YEARBOOK _ PORTRAITS A I I