THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, February 13, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, February 13, 1971 records A pointy head story on record By FARGONE BERMAN Nilsson fans beware! If you must buy his album The Point! 'RCA LSP-4417) be aware that it is from the soundtrack of an ani- mated film production recently shown on TV. I do not know if he did the narration for the TV presentation, but Nilsson rer- forms a weakly-interested sound- ing narration for the album. He is also responsible for writing the story and producing and sing- ing the songs. The album alternates tracks of narration with songs. Dig: The town of Point has points everywhere, e v e n on everyone's heads. Oblio is a kid born without a point on his head and for nefarious reasons a wick- ed Count orders him put on trial. The kindly king and a good townsfolk hate to have Oblio ban- ished, but the law is the law and the Point people are good law- abiding citizens and bye-bye Cblio. O.K. so far an educational a_- bum for the kiddies, true to life, etc. And the music, lushly or- chestrated affairs with jaunty Nilsson vocals, is just dandy. But after numerous adventures during their exile in the Point- less Forest, Oblio and his doggie Arrow return to town, whereupon the points upon the buildings and upon the peoples' heads begin to melt and disappear. !'he evil Count's point does not disappear, it merely wilts-fine, some phal- lic symbolism-and when he takes Oblio's hat off his head it is discovered that Oblio has grown a point, which can only mean that Oblio is the only non- castrated person in town. I had gone up to the last two songs assuming that this album was designed for chronologically young children, but "P.O.V. Waltz" mentions drinking and "Are You Sleeping" has two peo- ple sleeping with each other. Well, the story is not intriguing enough for the older people, but the music is pleasant tnd at least the more experience - trodden folks will not be swallowed by the fairy-tale line. The wee tots? There is only one chance for kids growing up in Amerika today. Give them Fire- sign Theatre albums and give the kids the head start they need. How to review those promotion- al albums with about one cut given to each artist from the spectrum of talent of a parent record company's collection? Looney Tunes-Merrie Melodies (Warner Bros. PRO 423). Three albums. Two hours, one minute, three seconds of music. 34 cuts. 33 lifferent artists or groups. 64:25 good music, 39:53 fair mu- sic, 16:45 bad music. Hype liner notes pushing albums. Best part of the entire production is the Elmer Fudd as Pig cartoon cover and notice the Warner Brother's emblem on his hat. Available by mail order only from Warner Brothers, 4000 Warner Blvd., Burbank, Cal. 91505. Largely rock artists (Faces, Alice Coop- er, Beefheart), some nouveau folk (Ry Cooder, Randy New- man, James Taylor), with all of side six devoted to Jesus type songs. Almost no women per- formers included. $3.00. FREE FOLK CONCERT LARRY GROCE Sings hymns and folk music MICHIGAN LEAGUE SNACK BAR TONIGHT 7-9 P.M. Sponsored by Christian Science Org. IIi - ---------- .. . ...... ... CoIlegia - -- ---_ _ , 7,71 ate Sorosis ol li OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14 3-5 p.m. 1501 WASHTENAW * Snodgrass and Hopwoods iT one-man show B y GLORIA JANE SMITH By KENNETH C. GAERTNER Centicore Gallery, 336 May- nard, is presenting an exhibition of Mark Sedgeman's painting and sculpture, Feb. 1 through Feb. 19. Although Sedgeman has previously shown his work at Forsythe Gallery in 1969, his Centicore exhibition has so ad- vanced beyond that initial show- ing as to give the illusion of be- *ing the work of an artist new to the area. His work, in a typical artistic illusion, has seemed to mature overnight. The energetic, but groping, early work, has been superseded by lucid, con- fident colors that are ' brushed upon the canvas with all the as- surance of sunlight falling upon a hill. The rigid logic of geometric forms is made to rest with color in a series of paintings that uti- lize squares and rectangles to achieve their formal design. In some the paint is subdued in tone, in others aggressively bright, but always the brush stroke is mute and confident, and always the colors uplift and uphold the forms, color giving them at once their weight and their buoyancy. There is another series of paintings of what can be best de- scribed an indeterminate dreams; indeterminate as to re- cognizable forms, but rich in re- cognition, as we sometimes recognize with amusement and horror, that a nightmare was really funny. Thoughts seem to peek from the edges of paint, re- fusing to define themselves; small, unidentifiable monsters do terrible acts, indifferently and cheerfully. And the paintings are so successful that one wants to join them in their terrible acts. and do them just as cheerfully. The 'limitations of the gallery. which is also a bookstore. present a viewer's problem for the large canvases. The 'perspective is all wrong. The paintings need lateral viewing, with a chance for the viewer to find their best distance to be studied. But in Centicore Gallery they are hung eight feet above the ground; bookshelves don't enable the viewer to estab- lish a proper distance, so that canvases 5' tall and 3' wide are dwarfed by 18' high ceilings, and the block of huge space in which the viewer is left standing. In these large canvases energy dominates, an energy that con- centrates itself in the center of the painting, gathering force from the outer edges of the can- Michigan Daily Arts Page is looking for MOVIE REVIEWERS vas and spending itself in depth, and not in a lateral movement across the canvas. It's regrettable that a better perspective couldn't be found for these paintings. The largeness of the canvas, which serves its own artistic function, is not al- lowed to do its work, and much that is in the painting is un- doubtedly lost. Several pen and ink drawings are shown, and they are the least successful exhibits of the show. The form seems to intrude too heavily on coherence and bal- ance. The drawings seem too heavy. But the criticism imme- diately draws attention to their merit-weight, an almost physical heaviness that makes the hand want to reach out and weigh the drawing. Although several handsome pieces of sculpture are exhibited, four ceramics, an oak carving, and an alabaster, polished, and partly painted blue, the piece that drew the most attention was on display by photograph. A piece needing a minimcm of 40 square feet to be displayed, it is constructed of wood, plastic, ala- baster, rope, polished quartz on velvet, steel, and painted bril- liantly in primary colors. And the piece is as whimsical and in-, volve'd as the litany of materials suggests. One wants to ride it, have a picnic in it, hire a band to play in it, at any rate invent something happy to do in it. Which seems to capsulize the whole exhibition-an artist's de- light in his own energy and pro- ficiency. I- - - -- - - It was a very good year.. 1926. Robert Bly was born. Allen Ginsberg was born. And J. D. Snodgrass was born. Last year, I sat in Stockwell Hall listening to Robert B 1 y , last semester, I sat in Canter- bury House listening to A 11 e n Ginsberg, and yesterday after- noon, I sat in Rackham Amphi- theater listening to J. D. Snog- grass. In that respect, 1970-71 have likewise been very g o o d years. Snodgrass' reading preceeded the presentation of the Under- classmen Hopwood Awards, a tradition begun by Avery Hop- wood. Hopwood was a 1905 graduate of the University, who typifies the American legend of "poor boy makes good." Born in Cleve- land, Ohio, he worked his way through college firing furnaces, and after graduation went to New York to become involved with light theatre. He became a millionaire while still in his thirties. Hopwood died a young man in his early forties, and willed one fifth of his estate to the Re- gents to establish the Hopwood Literary Awards at the Uni- versity. Although the first awards were given in 1931, yesterday was only the fifth time that they have been awarded in the Un- derclassmen Contest. Of the 37 manuscripts t h a t were entered, professors Carlton F. Wells and Robert F. Haugh, who judged the contest, gave awards to seven underclassmen totalling $700. Eucene H. Robinson, A&D '74, was the only winner in the Es- say Division for "Recollections of Obscurity." Winners in the Fiction Divi- sion were LSA sophomores Jon Reed Luoma for "Act Five," and Arthur Joslyn Patten RC '73 for "The Devil and Flash GQr- don." Patten also received an award in the Poetry Division for "Six Poems," along with John Fred- rick Welzenbach, LSA '74, for "Poetry." RC sophomore James R. Guthrie for "Prognostica- tions," and LSA sophomore Dav- id Weintraub for "Ten Poems." When Snodgrass began to read his poems, the podium gradually became instead a stage, with this Pulitzer Prize- winning poet drifting from solil- oquies to dual-character p r e- sentations. In one poem, there were two voices, that of the Jewish phil- osopher Spinoza and that of a man in Snodgrass' past, a naval officer during WW II who had instructed Snodgrass in s e 1 f- defense; in how to "blind a man with his bare hands." "Put your fingers in kind of a V' for victory," and "Jam the eyes of the enemy," said the voice of the navy official. "Novirtue is greater thanto preserve ones being," said t h e voice of Spinoza, "Rip off the facial mask," said the voice of the naval official. The frightening point of the poem was the similarity between what the two voices said. As Snodgrass explained, "It doesn't make any difference what we believe; what matters is how we react to everyday life." In other words, he demanded, "Don't tell me that you're a Christian, what I want to know is have you quit beating your wife?" Snodgrass explained that he once had a "mouse-like" sister who at the age of 25 had not yet had a date, and who awoke on July 4 of that year and died. At this point the poet seemed to be returning, at least in his own mind, to that time in his life and his face saddened. Many of the poems he then read centered around her death and those who survived the tragedy. 'Love is possible," he read, "We have to try." Snodgrass expressed amuse- ment that Columbia's Phi Beta Kappa had once asked him to write and read a poem for them. He had explained that he had responded with a critique on education involving men in "long black robes" who used sil- ver saws and strings to demas- culate, to deform the brain and to destroy the wings of a half- man, half-bird subject who was strapped down before them. He will learn to "fly no high- er than his superiors fly," Snod- grass read, "He is one of ours." It was a poem, Snodgrass ex- plained, "against the forces of any large organization, not only universities." Snodgrass spent as much time talking about himself and his poetry as he did reading. We not only saw an accomplished poet on stage, but we met a man who lives out in the woods of Syracuse. It was a very personal hour. And J. D. Snodgrass, a poet who enjoys music, tennis and the deep resonant call of owls, left with us a part of him- self. Kiowbblutz Utop ia vs. Reality Ann Arbor Beit Midrash Seminar Wednesday, February 17 8:30 p.m.-SHALOM HOUSE 1429 Hll St. SPEAKERS: Israeli kibbutz couple QUESTIONS AFTERWARDS For anyone interested in kibbutz program come on February 17 or write to Kibbutz Aliya Desk, Suite 1301, 200 Park Ave. South, N.Y., N.Y. 10003. What you should know about diamond when you know it's for keeps '* V. ,I,- .. . OMM" rA!IIGhT DOORS OPEN AT 12:45 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. I. DIAL 8-6416 NOW L!WINNER OF "A Joy To Watch. Ghislaine D'Orsay excels every 9 other performance , have seen in recent move INTERNATIONAL -Roger Greenspun, N.Y. Time TAWARDS DIARY OF A SCHIZOPHRENIC I NATIONAL GENERAL'S 375N.MAPLE RD. 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