THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fridav F hrienru, 121 ,171 4 - y, 1 Vf u1y I L, 1 J I 1 music 1970 plus improvement -Da1y-David Wender Ann Arbor Drama Festival: A great way to pass time By DONALD SOSIN Jerome Jelinek, cellist of the Stanley Quartet, gave a recital with pianist Rhea Kish in Rack- ham last night that, if it was worthwhile, the worthiness was due to his fine playing m-o r e than his partner's efforts. It was somewhat disappoint- ing, to hear in Kish the s a m e type of playing that one heard last year when the two per- formed the Beethoven sonatas. At that time, despite some faul- ty intonation in the cello, there was no question as to who was the better musician. Last night, the intonation had improved considerably, b u t Kish's play- ing remained unsatisfying. Her touch is rather uneven, and has a tendency to be brittle, espec- ially in the left hand. Further- more, one does not get the feel- ing that she is a performer as one does with Jelinek. Her man- ner at the keyboard can be dis- tracting in its tentativeness, and a sense that she is worrying about notes rather than music. Jelinek has a rich tone, which has sounded larger on other ac- casions (then, too, he was some- times overpowered by the piano). His technique is solid and impressive and his musical decisions were generally valid. His playing would have bee n more effective, though, if the works performed were not so dependent on the piano, for the sense bf true balance was lack- ing, and the two performers were not always in agreement about some questions of color and dynamics. The program opened with the Bach Sonata No. 3 in g minor, originally written for viola da gamba, and now played either on cello or viola. The first move- ment, is somewhat of a perpet- ual motion, yet even in such mo- tion there must be nuances of tempo change rather than the often mechanical rhythm o n e heard. Better can be said of the warm Adagio and the Alle- gro, a fugue which was played with certainty to the finish. The Sonata (1948) by Poulenc followed. The composer very as- tutely admitted that it was not one of his better works. While the style reveals it to be noth- ing but Poulenc, there is fre- quent doubt about what particu- lar style he is using. His themes come from the music hall; one hears echoes of pure romanti- cism in other places. But in his desire to write some warm, ex- pressive music, he has gone over- board and does not seem fully at ease with his material. The open- ing march is followed by a lyri- cal Cavatine, which was on the heavy side as far as perform- ance goes. The third movement, a bubbly Ballabile, has a marve- lous ending but does not offer much up to that point. One gets the feeling that Poulenc was out of his milieu in writing string music, and the frequent pizzica- tos and other effects tend to sound as token stringism instead of contributing to the overall idea of the music. The Finale begins with a schmaltzy Largo which re- appears at the conclusion, brack- eting some awfully mediocre writing, some of which did not sound like Poulenc at all. The most interesting part of the program was Leslie Bassett's Music for Cello and Piano (1966). Music is an apt title, for it con- tained more real musical value than the Poulenc or -the Chopin Sonata which followed. The first movement presents a long line in the cello with a pointillistic accompaniment. The Invention and Variation are refreshing, with the exception of frequent trilling, which can quickly be- come a cliche. The last move- ment ends quite poignantly after some effects on the piano strings which seemed a' bit out of place. The Chopin Sonata Op. 65, lay dormant for a long time, and was finally brought out in 1845-6. Like the Poulenc, it is not very inspired, and its performance lacked the grandeur that would have made it worthwhile listen- ing to at all. ALICE'S PRESENTS the horrendously spine-tingling Fall of the House of Usher starring VINCENT PRICE FRIDAY: 8, 10, 12 p.m. 50c or 2 99c ALICE LLOYD-763-0795 FREE!! Buck Rogers serial-Wednesday nights 'I 4 V i 9P.M. Admission 0c Saturday: GERMAN NIGHT I' I E' i Collegiate Sorosius OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14 3-5 p.m i II I 'II 15C )1 WASH TEN) AW - - - - - -I rhis NwKI $1.50 *n ANDY Folk Singer DICK JENNINGS from Hamiltcn Road Alpine Club Friday at RIVE GAUCHE il; COHEN By JAQUES Well, the thaw has finally come -- that excuse is gone. You can go farther out at night now than just around the corner for coffee or down to the end of the block for a pizza de- livery. Thatkpaper you've been putting off will wait another couple of days and there aren't any mid-terms on Saturday. It's time you broke out of your us- ual mid-winter rut and made the scene at Canterbury House. What it's all about is the Ann Arbor Drama Festival. Yeah, I know festivals, stuffy smokers for culture vultures, s t r a i g h t trumpets and all that rot. Well, it's not. The Festival is refresh- ingly at the other end of the scale. Greg Jarboe and many, many others have pulled to- gether a large collection of peo- ple who work in the theatre out- side the established groups. This is the third'of four weeks and the weekend will have two dif- ferent programs. The one I saw 'last evening will be repeated, tonight. Saturday and Sunday will'offer a Mime by Clive Syk- es and the Improvisation Group. The first half of the double bill for tonight is the Pioneer Laboratory Theater. Seventeen students from Pioneer High un- der the direction of A 11 a n Schreiber present a collection of vignettes improvised from out of their current "educational" experience. The format consists of an opening mime of an exam, complete with coded answer- passing and loud yawns. T h e post mortem in the hallway out- side sets up the major frame- work' for 'the sketches, a very clever action-mime of an edu- cation machine. The title: Ma- chine Tooled and Precision Crafted. After the mime pat- tern is established across t h e back wall, the actors break off from it in twos and threes to play short scenes on the fore- stage. Several of the scenes con- sist of reading from v a r i o u s school publications, verbatim we are led to believe. This is at once funny and horrifying - they really do say that! But unfortunatelyitdoesn't always sustain. Too many of the read- ings are just readings with no clear attitude. Are we watching the reader or the person w h o wrote' them? This could be even better, given the material if a more definite position had been taken. Much better are the scenes taken around the school offices, classrooms, and bath- rooms. They should be required viewing for all members of this or any other faculty. There is the poor girl trying to work a schedule change through a lech- erous counsellor and her friend who has finally given up try- ing to follow the run around over scheduling out of "Mrs. Kookoochi's" English c l a s s. She just won't go and a "little problem" develops. Another as- sistant principal can't handle the complaint from a girl w h o has had a quarter taken from her in the john, because the assailant is black. The performances are a little uneven, but some are excellent, especially a few of the men. I could have wished that the too frequent distraction of removing hair from the face had been elim- inated, and it might have been more effective if the machine had frozen in place during the skits. But the general level is high and the performance sustains itself as a whole throughout. The Cry of Vietnam is quite a different form with quite a dif- ferent intent. The title itself sounds overworked, but when it is written across a wall in orien- tal callography, it's much better. The program consists of a collec- tion of poems by Thich Nat Hanh, a Vietnamese monk. Read singly and antiphonally by mem- bers of the Weststock group, they move to a deeper, more com- passionate viewpoint of the war as it is seen by the people them- selves. More than just a reading. the staging by Le Anh Tuan ef- ATIONA fectively reinforces the verbal writing." The cast of seven is dressed in loose black coats and pants suggesting the garb of a Vietnamese monastery. They cover the bodies completeiy, so one's attention is: continually brought back to the faces of the speakers and the poetry itself. We hear the fragments of a life where agony and joy live side by side; the agony is inescapable so the joy must be there if life itself is to be maintained. The evening closes with three songs which the audience is in- vited to join in singing. This ret- resents a Vietnamese tradition-- to close a poetry reading with songs of joy. This contradiction will allow man to go on in life which is itself a contradiction in Vietnam. For me, themost effec- tive aspect of the evening was that it was not a political but a human statement. As such it goes well with the plea. from the Pio- neer students to be educated like humans not tooled like macnines. Ragtime Barrelhouse Blues CINEMA IH A VALENTINE SPECIAL "KING OF HEARTS" with Alan Bates, Genevieve Bujold FRIDAY & SATURDAY 7 & 9:05 p.m. PLUS "A TASTE OF HONEY" with Rita Tushingham FRIDAY & SATURDAY-1I p.m. SUNDAY--1 & 3 p.m. February 1 2, 13, 14 Auditorium A, Angell Hall--75e SEPARATE ADMISSION FOR EACH SHOWING NEXT WEEK: "Birthday Party" Screenplay by Harold Pinter f . accompanied by ANDY ROGERS, Fiddle University of ic MV hinan Film Soe*tefv (ARM), nresQnts I i THE LAST HURRAH Spq encer Tracy Pat O'Brien 7 &9p.m.--FRI., FEB.12 Room 100, LAW SCHOOL Admission 50c another fantastic dollar double bill THE ROARING 20"is Humphrey Bogart, James Cagney in a mannered classic of bootlegging, violence and romance 9:00 p.m. VILLAGE of the DAMNED British thriller: children freak out on nuclear family 7:30, 10:45 p.m. FRIDAY, FEB. 12 1st Presbyterian Church WASHTENAW AVE. NEAR S. UN IV. arr. courtesy Ecumenical Campus Center r RC PLAYERS presents THE FROGS an original play for children SAT., Feb. 13-10 A.M. & 2 P.M. SUN., Feb. 14-2 P.M. East Quad Aud. Admission 50c The Michigan Daily, edited and man- I aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. Delta Sigma Delta Dental Fraternity "OPEN" AND" FRI., FEB. 12 6-9 pEM 1502- HILL STREET 375 N. MAPLE RD. 769-1300 _-, MON.-FRI. 7:15-9:00 SAT.-SUN.-2:00-3:40 5:25-7:15-9:10 GilbCOLR.Fom~umbAcur INDIVIDUAL TICKET SALES MENDELSSOHN BOX OFFICE February 10-20 "'LveStoy'Is aPhenomenon!I There has been nothing like it in a generation! And nothing like its star, Ali McGraw, to remind the world of the kind of stars that used to glisten in Hollywood! Her appeal-and that of 'LOVE STORY'-is strong enough to counter gravity !" TIME MAGAZINE, Cover Story "'LOVE STORY' is probably as sophisticated as any commercial American movie ever made! It is beautiful! And Romantic !" VINCENT CANBY, N.Y. Times "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" WANDA HALE, N.Y. Daily News All Mac~raw " Ryan O'Neal _< :..The Year's Best Seller A HOWARD G.MINSKY- ARTHUR HILLER Production Join Marlev& Ray Milland ERICH SEGAL ARTHUR HILLER Is i . 3 i "Roadsides on a Merry-Go-Round" deals with the philosophies of Dietrich Bonhoef- fer, Teilhard de Chardin and Martin Buber Sunday at 6:45 NEWMAN CENTER 331 Thompson _i 1 1 ------------ ,, r ::; :.:; i2J1'TE E -