Tbursddy, Qctob r 24, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY %ge Five Thursday, October 24, 1974 THE MiCHIGAN DAILY P~i§e Five Bruckner, Mahler glow in Gewandhaus' Hill concert POETRY READINGS Thurs., Oct. 24-730 p.m. with Sion Press, David Tucker, and Joe Salerno reading from their works By CHARLES SMITH A Hill Auditorium audience was treated to a veritable orgy of German late-Romanticism last night in a concert by the, Gewandhaus Orchestra o f Leipzig. Although hampered in spots by bad intonation and some sloppy brass playing, the or- chestra and conductor Karl Ma- sur made a convincing case for, a repertoire which a lesser or- chestra could have utterly de- stroyed. The concert, presented by the University Musical Society, fea-1 tured works by Mahler, Bruck- I ner, and Reger, plus a Wagner encore. Ever since it was noticed by someone that they both wrote long symphonies, Bruckner and Mahler have been associateda with one another. In fact, how- ever, they are only superficial-, ly similar, and musically are worlds apart. Bruckner was influenced pri- marily by the chromaticism of; Wagner, while Mahler received his most potent inspiration from Brahms, especially the special kind of Brahmsian chromati- cism resulting from the novel; Jones: usage of traditional vices. tonal de- Bruckner's pieces never seem to reconcile the complexity of the individual harmonies with harmonic structure of the whole, always sounding too long for the amount of material they contain. When the larger struc- ture of the whole piece is re- vealed, it turns out to be coher- ently and simply organized, but not enough happens over the shorter time-spans to sustain in- terest for that long a time. Mahler also has the diffi- culty of reconciling the large with the small, but for the op- posite reason. His music is never uninteresting - there is always a wealth of detail, strik- ing orchestral textures, contra- puntal lines suddenly revealed to be crucial, etc. In his long works, however, he often loses control of the relationships of all of this detail over the whole piece - it becomes a string ofj fascinating moments ratherk than a coherently unified whole. Mahler is at his best in short pieces like the early Songs of a Wayfarer. Here the conductor's problem of projecting a coher- ent structure while not obscur-I ing the details by over-inter- preting is minimized. Masur controlled the orches- tra well in this piece. Both the players and the baritone, Sieg- fried Lorenz, are to be con- gratulated for subjugating their personalities to the demands of the music. A very fine perform- ance. Bruckner's Seventh Sympho- ny, on the other hand, begs for some sort of interpretation to provide interesting ways of get- ting from bar to bar, while not obscuring the overall shape of the piece. This piece received the weakest performance of the evening. Except in the slow movement, which is the strong- est movement musically, Masur never found any way to make the music compellingly interest- ing. The opening piece on the pro- gram was the Reger Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Moz- art. What can you say about Reger? People either adore him or can't stand him. I must confess to a sneaking fondness for his music, while recognizing that the man was probably quite mad. The Ge- wandhaus made the best case I can imagine for a strange and problematic piece of music. GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe I - Daily Photo by KEN FINK Leipzig orchestra shiines Conductor Karl Masur leads the Gewandhau s Orchestra of Leipzig during last night's con- cert at Hill Auditorium. The performance featured German late-Romanticism, as exhibited in Bruckner and Mahler. Sweet country tunes Shows Every Day at 1 -3-5-7-9 p.m., Open at 1 2:45 p.m. it's the Some Guv-But a Whole New Ball Game By MARNIE HEYN and Bluegrass Festival last boutique) and organized a series religious preference) heard a weekend. of special events to generate lot of wonderful music and had Special To The Daily ! The Jones townspeople are funds, civic pride, and survival, a fine uncomplicated time there. JONES, Michigan-This sleepy doing their darnedest to avoid Everybody will drink to that; In the American Legion and town 10 miles west of Three backwater extinction and, worse, and, if the folkbluegrass extra- Community Hall with sample Rivers, nestled in the heart of outside "development." United vaganza is any indication, Jones' bingo cards hanging from the the southwestern part of the under the auspices of Jones Is prospects look very good. ceiling, a smokey fresnel spot- state where everything closes Back, Inc., they have spruced Everybody in the audience light, and a very impressive on Saturday night, sponsored !up the main drag (which looks (which spanned every conceiv- sound system. Amateur it may The First Annual Jones Folk no kitschier than your average able hair length and shade of have been, but certainly not sloppy; and the talent was strictly top-drawer. Ralph McGinnis and the Sunnysiders from Detroit open- ed up the festivities, pounding out good-time hoedown music and steaming up the unheated hall in general. They were fol- lowed by Stagmire and Sai- mone, who hail from Grand Rapids and played a lot of blues (mostly misogynist) and the nicest "Delia" I've heard in a long time. The Sweet Corn String Band ';from Kalamazoo came on like this decade's answer to the Kingston Trio, singing, plucking, and strumming old favorites in sweet harmony and with great virtuosity. During the second berjack and a hammered dulci- mer and tickled the crowd with P bG EL "Oh, Them Golden Slippers" and "Marching to Boston." The Tap City Revelers, out of Ann Arbor and Elkhart, Id., N ;4.played elegant, intricate fiddle band tues that set feet tapping. Sour Mash ("Our name is really e Raggedy Ass Rangers, but they .won't let us use it.") featured y x : IBobby Jones on banjo playing country hits through the ages. And the Pine Grove Ramblers, ssto54by G ARYtEETwho ordinarily back up Nathan P is hoato yGR L Abhsar, broadened the musical Pato S eetC onl u n ig nestWtyhorizons with some fine Cajun F c tdance tunes. JOIN THE DAILY STAFF A Reading by EMERY GEORGE HOMECOMING '74 ACTIVITIES Mon., 28th, at 2 pI Thursday, Oct. 24 From his 2 new books L : Sponsored by Sigma Ch Pi a Phi and from his unpub- PPR LY pnoe ySg aC i& P eaPi lished works Starts at 8:30 p.m. at 548 S. State - There Will Be an at Ethology Hanging Contest With a Trophy for he Winner! Plus Noted Speakers. Friday, Oct. 25 * THE OZONE PARADE: Starts at 300 pm. * SOUTHER- HILLMAN -FURAY BAND & DAVID BROM- BERG: 8:30, Hill Auditorium Friday, Oct. 25 & Saturday, Oct. 26 " MEDIATRICS: "The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean, OUR PRICES Nat. Sci. Aud.; 7:30 & 9:30, Admission Free ARE NOT SALE PRICES, I Saturday, Oct. 26 THEY'RE * MUD BOWL: Sponsored by Sigma Alpha Epsilon at 1408 LOWER / Washtenaw; Begins at 10 a.m. INCLUDING: I I Stadium; Kickoff at 1 :30 p.m. "The Whole j IT"S SURVIVAL AND THE FIENEST. PARAMOUNT PICTURS PRESENTS AN ALBERT &RUDDY PRODUCTION BURT REYNOL q "THE LONGEST YARD ' . PRODuCEDBY ALBERTS.RUDDY DEREC7EDBY ROBERT ALDRICH SCREENPLAYBY TRACT K[NAN WYNN STORY BY ALBERT S. RUDDYr£ ¢ MUSIC SCORED 8Y FRANK DI VOL pASCAEPOUE LNPHRWT COLOR ByTECNNIJCOLOR y:fi4 A PARAMOUNT PICTURE ' kENDS TONITE I 251 so s a eMoms Mobley in STARTS TOMORROW! Ohen you can't scream anymo6re! PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESFNTS~ y ;rAN l tO EDPRODUCTION TECHNICOLOR* s a PARMOUNT PICTURE PU NIN " GTonit & FrisaatA7 9 p.m. I' tOpen a6:5 p.m. Weekend Show t 1-3-5-7-9 Opena12:45 2nd Fabuos Week! A 1934 CARTOON CLASSIC! , MICKEY MOUSE IN > s "SHANGHAAI ED" - From,"AN AMERICAN .RHAPSODY," (Gershwin) Ballet weekend An exciting weekend of ballet is in store for dance lovers when the Pennsylvania Ballet once again comes to Ann Arbor for three varied performances. This com- pany of thirty dancers with its own orchestra, pre.- sents favorite classics, along with new productions, in the following combinations, all in the Power Center for the Performing Arts: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26 AT 8:00 Serenode-Bnlaonchine/Tcho ikovsk The. Moor's Pavone-Limon/Purcell Grandie Pas Espapnole-Horkorvv/Moskowski American Rhapsody-Rodham/Gershwin SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27 AT 3:00 Eight Movements in Rapped Time-Jone/Joplin Serenade-Bol $nchine/Tcho ikovsk Ame rican Rhapsody-Rodhom/Gershwin SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27 AT 8:b0 Concerto Borocco-Balanchine/Bach After Eden-Bu.tler/Hoibv Zip Zoo--Lubovitch/Strovinsky Eight Movements in Rapped Time-Jone/Joplin Tickets are available from $4 to $8.50. A free lecture- demonstration will be held Friday evening, October 26 at 8:00, also in the Power Center. &MSICAL 8OCIET Ii Weekda Burton Tower, Ann Arbor 4:30, Sat. 9-12 Phone 665-3717 lys 9-, CINEMA Ann Arbor Film 11 in assciation with Cooperative presents Ann Arbor Premiere Bernadette LaFont * Jean-Pierre Leaud Francoise Lebrun "Jean Eustache shows the influences not only of Bertolucci and Rohmer but also of Godard and Warhol in a work that is nevertheless very much his own. There's a stark beauty and honesty. His leading players are impeccable in their revelation of self!" --JUDITH CRIST, New York Magazine JEAN EUSTACHE'S ANDT {; , r ;: gff