Poge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 21, 1971 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 21, 1971w } -. A trip with Serrano Ecology and Poetry By DAVE FRIEDO Juan Serrano casually walked on stage Friday night at Pease Auditorium on the E a s t e r n Michigan campus and delighted the audience with two hours of superb flamenco guitar playing. Wearing a white turtle-neck sweater and tuxedo, Serrano sat down, smiled to the audience and began to play. Relaxed and confident, Serrano. took the audience in his grip and he succeeded in moving t h e m through a varied and well-pac- ed program, gently pulling the audience along, never pushing and never letting go. Granainas, his first piece, opened with brilliant, percussive chords of the beautifully rhy- thmic flamenco style. The wide variety of the program, from the fiery dance, Zapateado, to the delicate song variations, El Emigrante, demonstrated that flamenco music is a rich Span- ish heritage. Flamenco generally refers to a gypsy style of Spanish dance and dance music characterized by colorful costumes, seductive body movements And rhythmi- cal stamping of the feet. To retain the rhythm and color of the gypsy style Serrano -explos-, ively tore through the six strings of his guitar and occassionaly rapped out rhythms with his hands. The third piece on the pro- gram Farrucas, was more melo- dic and less intense than the Granainas or Zapateado. De- scribed as "traditional rhythms alternating between bold a n d tranquil moods" the piece con-. sisted of delicate melodies over lilting metalic tremelos. Tarantos was a dark and dis- sonant rendition of the songs of Spanish miners. In t h i s piece Serrano dazzled the aud- ience with brief technical dis- plays in which his left hand produced all the sound. Alegrias de Cadiz described as "gay and lively flamenco of the city of Cadiz" was just that, and the audience clapped with heightened enthusiasm and an occasional 'bravo." The powerful and driving dance, Verdiales, and the beau- tiful Arabic sounding Fantasia, lured the audience into Solear- es, amply described in the pro- gram notes as "sometimes tend- er, erupting with boundless pas- sion, this is the mother of fla- menco." So it was, and the aud- ience warmly responded. The second half of the con- cert opened with Lidia, a study composed by Mr.. Serrano for his daughter and followed by the light and delicate Romeras. El Emigrante was interesting because of the contrasting tim- bres and unusual bass line. Un- like the regular pulsating rhy- thms of the bass lines of the otlaer pieces, the base line in this piece was syncopated.' Fandangoes was simply a col- lection of Spanish fandango dances. In these Serrano achie- ved a pleasant blend of con- trasting major and minor pas- sages with driving yet some- times halting rhythms. Here Serrano once again showed off the amazing dexterity of his left hand in several cadenza- like passages where his left hand produced all the sound. Seguiriyas was a serious piece, somber in quality and portray- ing the elements of "tragedy and despair that have often been the fate of man." Mantillas de Feria was de- cidedly less emotional in qual- ity and texture and was Ser- rano's only rendition in t h e Spanish clasical style. He per- formed it very well and t h e piece provided a needed change of pace before the finale of the evening. Bulerias, a brilliant and mov- ing piece, contained the force- ful rhythms of the flamenco which the audience had grown to love under Serrano's superb control. He never let the fire of the flamenco style consume him. Juan Serrano had performed brilliantly and the audience simply did not want to let him leave. After the second encore the audience came to their feet and clapped until Serrano re- apeared, only to implore, "Just one more." By GLORIA JANE SMITH Dan Gerber and Jim Harri- son are both former teachers and Michigan State graduates in their early thirties who now write poetry. Both have trav- elled throughout the U n i t e d States giving-poetry readings at high schools and universities for the National Endowment Fund for the Arts. And both present- ed their poetry in a joint read- ing Tuesday, Harrison, who has been writ- ing for ten years, read "Na- tural World," a poem compar- ing the Blue Whale who "drags his six foot sex through icy waters" in futile search of a gradually growing extinct mate, with migrating hawks w h o "have been slaughtered w i t h pleasure." This tender interest and concern for nature endures throughout many of the poems read by Harrison, who was born and raised on a farm. In much the same vein of thought, Gerber followed with "The Last of a Species," a poem writen instead about the homo- sapien. "You are growing old," he read, 'your seeds drying in dreams of others who will not come." "The litterbug will gather lit- ter along ten miles of country road," Gerber, who has b e e n writing for eight years, r e a d from "Penal Code," a poem speaking about fitting retribu- tion. "If you don't understand," he continued, 'I love you, soar- ing in the limits of your skin." "I write this out of h a r d silence to be rid of it," Harri- son read from "American Girl," a poem speaking with the Cal- vinist notion of what a woman is. "They are confections, put- together beings," he read, "piti- ful creatures, calcined, watery, with air-brushed bodies an d brains." Harrison admitted that the poem was written about the "sensation of growing up in the fifties." "We are burning the bodies of dinosaurs," Gerber read f r o m "Dinosaurs," a poem inspired by Sinclair Oil Co.'s use of the green Dino' as their trademark. "I suddenly realized," he e x - plained, "that the gasoline pow- er in automobiles actually com- es from the decayed remains of dinosaurs." Much of the poetry read seemed to be based on the per- sonal experiences of the poets. Gerber, who had once been a sports-car racer, read "Getting to Zero," a poem which talked about racing and its groupies, who "want to be the last to love a man who may die to- morrow." In the poem, the race itself begins in blue smoke." There's no-one, I'm flying," Ger- ber read, "NO ONE." Harison read "Cowgirl," a poem about a woman with "in- decently strong thighs" who won the west." This is one, he explained, that he "tells his wife is not autobiographical." The poets read, and then it was over. It had been an inter- esting hour -- neither especially good, nor especially bad. (t ANNE SCOTT Crisis in American Values: Women" A1merican Cu/lure J Lecture Series -- Vne -.y 4 DOORS OPEN 12:45 G. MICHIGNM 603 E. Liberty DIAL Shows at 5-6290 " I.13,5, 7, Ili Maclraw "fRynOlsal I I T \ ~~FREE LISTaSUPNE SUSPENDED No Ladies Day price duriing rice duryq John Marley&RayMilland LGP Soy I CLOR A PRAOUT ITURE 4 4 NOW AT POPULAR PRICES A RAY STARK-HERBERT ROSS Pradm wn Blarbra Streisani George Segal MOMM . adhe TONIGHT at 5, 7, & 9 Tomorrow at 7 & 9 I DAILY E 1 CLASSIFIEDS BRING RESULTS-USE THEM c E4s" " ' n3 .. TIE C III , Join The Daily Staff I I I- STAT E THEATRE Corner State & DIAL OPEN 12:45 662-6264 SHOWS AT Liberty Sts. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:05 NNW A taste of strings in the air By DONALD SO SIN A few weeks ago Ann Arbor was swept by a flurry of winds. Now it looks as though t h e strings are having their turn. Friday night marked the de- but of a new instrumental group from the music school, the Michigan Chamber Players. It was formed by Prof. Paul Ma- kanowitzky, who Joined the fa- culty in September. A violinist and teacher of considerable re- putation, he has studied with Thibaud and Boulanger, in ad- dition to his lifelong associa- tion with Ivan Galamian. Be- sides his heavy teaching load in Ann Arbor, Makanowitzky commutes to Philadelphia every week, where he has pupils at the Curtis Institute. I went to talk to him about the new group, and he told me that selected students of each string teacher were invited to join, thus combining a high lev- el of musicianship with a willing attitude, somewhat different from that inrthe University Or- chestra, where participation is required and there is a conse- quently lower degree of esprit de corps. Makanowitzky said that t h e concert Friday would be a kind of trial run, so that the faculty and students could judge t h e group's viabilly and its future could be determined. One point he emphasized was that, al- though he was conducting two of the works, his word was not law and suggestions from every- one were welcome. This demo- cratic feeling was reinforced by a look at the printed program, which listed all performers in alphabetical order,, and one would have had to pick at ran- dom from among the thirty-nine to find the one faculty member if one did not know who-he was. Thurs there was a good deal of anticipation in the large crowd that turned out to hear the en- semble in Rackham Friday. The program began with Bach, and moved to Mozart and Tschai- kowsky. From the first notes of the Brandenburg Concerto No. 3, it became clear that this was go- ing to be an extraordinary con- cert. The tempo was brisk and as the work progressed one was tickled by the interchange of voices, all the more apparent because of a pared-down group of ten. Makanowitzky sat first chair and demonstrated superb control of bow and dynamics as well as blending with the oth- ers despite an altogether differ- ent tone quality. The last move- ment was equally brilliant, and at a breakneck clip that left one drained. The full ensemble, includink six wind players, then perform- ed Mozart's Symphony No. 33, K. 319. It was at this point that one began to see the shortcom- ings of the group, not in intona- tion or precision, which were at a rlevel as high as many pro- fessional orchestras, but in mat- ters of tempo and dynamics. All the movements were taken at speeds greater than they need- ed to be, and there was an in- tensity of sound that almost never let up. This was also the case in the Tsehaikowski Seren- ade; where one would have ap- preciated greater attention to the dynamic markings and a more sensitive shaping of lines. This is a detail which requires more skill with the baton than Makanowitzky seemed to exhib- it. Obviously the group was key- ed up for the concert, but their enthusiasm got out of control, and they ended up having a good time at the expense of the music. Still, the quality of the play- ers is not to be denied. W i t h refinement (and a reduction in the violins for the sake of bal- ance) this could well become a first-rate ensemble. First, how- ever, their exuberance must be harnessed, so that good music can be created as well as good sound. In other string events of the week, there was the recital by Edwin Grzesnikowski and Louis Nagel Thursday which was great fun. The musical high point was the Beethoven c minor Sonata Op. 30, No. 2, crisply if some- what unemotionally played. In this and the Pergolesi Sonata which preceded it, one listened more to Nagel, whose fine musi- cianship was always evident. In the latter part of the program the violin got its chance. From a technical standpoint, the Fi- nale of the Saint-Saens Sonata in d minor was phenomenal. A perpetual motion to end all per- petual motions, it gave Grzesni- kowski a chance to display his stunning bow control, and as the work progressed to a tempo faster than which would be in- conceivable, one could only sit back and laugh; although t h e sonata is devoid of music con- tent it was so brilliantly done that one had to enjoy it. The Wieniawski Cappricio Valse that followed would have best been left to the end, for after its naive melodies, inter- spersed with breathtaking runs and harmonics, the pieces by Vieuxtemps and Paganini which concluded the program were an anticlimax. AUDITIONS FOR ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE'S PRODUCTION OF "IN WHITE AMERICA" will be held from 7:30-10:30 P.M. MONDAY, FEB. 22 TUESDAY, FEB. 23 WEDNESDAY, FEB. 24 at Civic Theatre Bldg. 210 Mulholland Dr. Roles for 3 blacks and 3 whites ALLAN SCHRElBER-Director PERFORMANCES APRIL 21-24 AT LYDIA MENDELSSOHN The Project Community presents IKE & TINA TU1RNER REVUElu U 'Friday, March 12th j TICKETS ON SALE, Fishbowl, Union, Hill Aud. Students International $3.s0-3.0O-2.s0 2 shOWs BLOCK TICKETS (25 or mare for 7 onl 7&9:30$3 .00-2.50-2.00 I NONVIOLENCE and GENOCIDE RESPONSES TO THE HOLOCAUST DISCUSSION WITH RABBI JOWL POUPKO H I LLEL .HARRY AMERICAN FRIENDS MAN EY SERVICE COMMITTEE t. HILLEL (1429 Hill) SUN., FEB.24 p.m presents ISAAC STERN World-renowned Violinist IN RECITAL-IN HILL AUDITORIUM Sun., Feb. 21, 2:30 PROGRAM TRANSCENDENTIAL MEDITATION As Taught By' MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI INTRODUCTORY LECTURE: - ----_ - I NEW VOCATIONS RAP 35c BUFFET Sonata in B-flat, K. 454 Sonata No. 3, Op. 25. Sonata No. 1 in G, Op. 78 Divertimento. *.Mozart .. Enesco . Brahms Stravinsky LAST 3 DAYS "FuRRy, povocatilve,l ahlGcingu and somehow, very fine." -Now York Times NOON, MON., FEB. 22 COME AND TALK ABOUT the good things you're doing the good things you'd like to be doing how you live or how you'd like to live OR STOP IN OTHER TIMES: 8:30-4:30, MON.-FRI. NEW VOCATIONS GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE TICKETS: $7.00-$6.50-$6.00-$5.00-$3.50-$2.50 at The University Musical Society Burton Tower, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Office Hours: Mon. thru Fri., 9 to 4:30; Sat., 9 to 12 (Telephone 665-3717) (Also at Auditorium Box Office 1 2 hours before performance time) Wednesday evening, February 24 at 8 P.M. in Auditorium B, Angell Hall ,i ---------------- E. I HEAR Arthur Gish Pastor in Church of the Brethren, author of The New Left and Christian Radicalism, pacifist, tax resister, lecturer 1 I It 0 Sunday: 6:30 p.m.-"Radical Christianity" at University Reformed Church 8:30 p.m.-"Christianity & Revolution" I ~ ii i I ..... . :.: ..:. :. :: :;: : ,.. . ... : : . .. f I II