Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday} November 22, 1970 1 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 22, 1 97Q4 music i 'Directions of the moment TONITE-ONE NIGHT ONLY! ACADEMY AWARD By JOE PEHRSON The second concerti of the Contemporary Directions series was presented last night in Rackham Aud. The program, for the most part, was quite good although temperatures ex- ceeding the melting threshold seemed to dampen the enthusi- asm of the audience. Upon entering the auditorium one was greeted by piano rags which issued from a player piano behind which William Al- bright, the ghost for this me- chanism, was seated. Note for aspiring creators- a friend of mine has suggested that a player piano be arranged so that each key, when depress- ed, will illuminate. This on a darkened stage would produce a respect for the mechanical pro- cess that was missing in this performance. One has to be able to see the keys in motion-a definite part of the interest. The first piece on the pro- gram was "From the Steeple and the Mountains" by Charles Ives. C h i m e s were placed throughout the audience, pro- ducing an ethereal effect. To contrast toethis, Ives has de- signed brass parts which rise over this general mist of sound. (Reminiscent, in some ways, of "The Unanswered Question.") Unfortunately, some of the en- trances were imprecise - the brass performers were certainly not as together as they might have been. The piece, despite this performance flaw, was still quite beautiful. I finally understand "Animus I-for Trombone and Electronic Tape" by Jacob Drickman. The attitude of this piece may be summed up in one gesture of the performer on stage: At one point in the piece, the trom- bonist disrespectfully throws one of the mutes he is using to the floor and leaves. This probably should be the attitude of an intelligent mein- ber of the audience. At any rate, this piece successfully evokes a total "camp" or "off the cuff" (something like that) lack of interest. For this consistence, the piece should receive some accolade. Some moments in the tape were worth mentioning - par- ticularly the relationship be- tween various electronic wave- forms - particularly one saw- tooth phrase-and mutes avail- able to the performer. So much for this piece. "Remembrances", by J oh n Hawkins, is not really too co- herent. Russell Peck's perform- ancs greatly outweighed the in- terest any of the other per- formers had in what they were doing. Most of this piece was cliche: One instance of this was t he mass migration of the perform- ers to the piano at wh i c h tor at least at the sounding board of which) sounds were di- rected. The piano, then, was left free to resonate. Someone said this reminded him of a young boy doing something in a pond - but I can't quite re- member what. Some really great sounds, though, were produced by harp glissando. It's too bad some- one doesn't write a piece for two hours of this! Karleinz Stockhausen's "R e - frain" is an excellent piece. The performance was fantastic, but then again with both Russell Peck and Kurt Carpenter on ce- leste and piano keyboards, re- spectively, this was to be expect- ed. '(Ong of the most precise and fantastically together p e r- formances I have heard in a long time). Daily Official Bulletin SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22 Day Calendar Degree Recital: Walter Schwede, vio- lin, Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 2:30 Degree Recital: Robert Armstrong, baritone, Sch. of Music Recital Hall,I 4:30 p.m. Degree Recital: Ronald Green, clari- net, Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m. (Continued on Page 8) This is really late Stockhau- sen. In fact, only a few sections near the end remind one of his piano pieces or the particular Germanic "klang" or "Momen- te" In this piece, Stockhausen fo- cuses attention on the sounds themselves and while the attack is similar to the attack he em- ploys in some of his earlier works, the sounds have been giv- en plenty of space in which they may be heard. Fantastically ab- stract Stockhausen - separate sounds punctuated by occasional enthusiastic grunts from the performers. The orchestration also should be mentioned. Stockhausen is working in a range of sound between vibraphone, piano, and celeste - all percussive sounds, but each with separate charac- teristics. These relationships are explored fully. I don't feel like mentioning much about the Hiller piece "An Avalanche." This is a theatre piece in which everything and nothing is happening. It' uses the cliche of cultural commen- tatorm (in the guise of political speaker) and various soprano antics. Some of the spacial mo- tions were nice, and the piece was sort of fun to watch, but it seemed like this had been seen before. Now to one of the most beau- tiful pieces ever to be heard anywhere. Beatific, I believe Cage would call this type of experience, and this was his piece-"String Quartet in Four Parts." One of Cage's avocations is mycology, the study of the mushroom. Various mushrooms were projected on a screen above the performers, and Cage's par- tially oriental sound set the_ atmosphere-an atmosphere of calm and reflection, for the ob- servation of these really beau- tiful natural objects. Cage understands the climax of everything. When one sees the world as all climax, there is no climax. Cage has no climax, but cre- ates really beautiful music, and the appreciation of a moment. I can't speak for the rest of the audience, but this music made me really happy. (And there seems to be little of more Importance). JOSEPH MIKE NI( LAWREN ,.eu,,ma WINNER BEST DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHOLS E. LEVINE CHOLS ICE TURMAN, THE -GRADUATE AN AVCO EMBASSY FILM TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* .. AVCO £M6ASSY PICTuAiS 4 4 II NATIONALOE.-MMAL 375 N. MAPLE RD. NOW SHOWING Mon.-Fri. 7:00-9:15 Sat.-Sun. 1:00-3:00 5:00-7:00-9:15 ParawumoP" presents WUSA -- e CJQ is good news' By CLIFF SLOA NE While I was selling tickets to last night's Contemporary Jazz. Quintet (CJQ) concert-which was quite good-a couple of days ago, someone approached me and declared that jazz was dead, y and the clubs as profit seeking exploiters, have killed it. He cited examples - Birdland and the Gate in New York and many clubs in his hometown of Bos- ton. This troubled me greatly, es- pecially when I realized that not only clubs but also record com- panies are guilty of this im- pending manslaughter. Witness Blue Note and its disastrous promotional campaign (lack of it is more like it) of the CJQ's two records. Even the musician's unions are riddled with bossism and prodigious greed, as Nat Hentoff has observed in his ar- ticles and books on jazz. In retaliation to this, a group of musicians, artists, and dj's have organized and taken the power out of the hands of the agents, saloon owners and entre- preneurs. Led by Charles Moore, Kenny Cox and their Contemporary Jazz Quintet, the - Strata Cor- poration has been formed-and their reputation has spread like wildfire throughout the music world. Theirs is an organization that gives the artist complete freedom, unhampered by record- ing deadlines or profit consider- ations. Herbie Hancock's sextet will be appearing at their concert gallery from Nov. 30 to Dec. 2, showing that New York had heard the "good news," so to speak.) We can only hope that such cooperative ventures will ap- pear elsewhere. Which brings to mind another serious point. As last night's concert proved to an enthusiastic crowd of about 600, good jazz is by no means limited to New York. Why then is all jazz pre- judged as bad if it doesn't come from New York? Why do so many musicians flock there in the first place? Strata is an im- portant step towards decentral- izing jazz. After all, jazz is being victimized to barbarous extents, so why stay there? About the concert itself: They were really great! Although the sound was a bit muddy, it was good enough to show the audi- ence what their music was all about. Their feeling of ensemble playing and the incredible co- hesivness more than made up for a slight deficiency in tech- nical proficiency (after all, a machine can play fast, too). Characterizing their music re- pudiates their individuality as musicians, and denies the group their identity. They all worked quite well together-Drummer Archie Taylor was a little slow in picking up his cues, but this is because he has only been with the group a few months-yet maintained the freedom that is essential to modern jazz. All in all, it was an extremely reward- ing concert, both in terms of their music and the fantastic attendance. At the end of the second set, pianist Kenny Cox said, "We're not Miles Davis, or Herbie Han- cock," at which point, someone yelled out, "You're great!" Which sums it all up quite well . Program Information 662-6264 At State & Liberty Sts. 2ND WEEK IN STEREO SOUNDI OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1:15-3:45 6:15 & 8:45 RATED G THE ULTIMATE TRIP f Ctl 6Q OA a4 F L 1 1 .a r. L err. I I I, Sunday, Nov. 22 ,\ 'The Apu Trilg dir. SATYAGIT RAY (1956-60) If you missed any of the films, or missed them all, come tonight. 7 Panther Pancholi (1956) 9 Aparjito (1958) 11 The World of Apu (1960) Only 75c ARCHITECTURE 662-8811 AUDITORIUM AUDITORIUM A-ANGELL HALL SHOWN at 6:00, 8:00, & 10:00 Admission 90c r: .f.:. "": '::2:*tsi}. 'i :: tinelropng plai baep .g an oadlne We wll ailthi 2e foot Arificia Tre anywhere7i (alo rvl ous#' {:{ Yit} foz,.:?rHositals: . ., ur;,sing Homes and Clssic Tree & rim Twn of KALAMAZOO, MICH. CAL L ANN AR BOR-662-7101 NOW! SUBSC rIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY.:}.:"" ' : {.; : yh% AUDITIONS for the Ann Arbor Civic Theater production of "IN THE MARKETPLACE" a one-act Christmas play 10 7:30 P.M. Monday, Nov. 23 at the AACT building, 201 Mulholland Roles available for 5 people TED HEUSEL, director performance dates Dec. 10-12, 8 P.M. abserde ie& ,1ib ca ae I Stephen Stills . .75 Jesus Christ Superstar . . . .7 Miles Davis at Fillmore . . . $375 Issac Hayes to be continued . $315 Judy Collins whales & nightingales $375 at the peoyde recorid,4 torPe 'ti! 7hat k494ing Student's International Store 330 MAYNARD 603 E. Liberty DIAL 5-6290 "ONE OF THE BEST AMERICAN FILMS OF THE YEARI" - Newsday I I HOURS: Mon., Thurs., Fri. 10-9 Tues., Wed., Sat. 10-6 OUR REGULAR PRICES: 4.98's for 3.29 9.96's for 6.99 5.98's for 3.99 1 1.96's for 7.99 6.98's for 4.99 r a I{ " i "THE FUNNIEST MOVIE I'VE SEEN THIS YEARI THIS KIND OF MOVIE A REVIEWER SHOULD PAY TO SEE! JUST GO, RUN, TO SEE IT!" New York Post %j A U~ .~. ~ ~ JJIVE E 'C'L,J - I