Wednesday, December 4, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Wednsday Deembe 4, 1974HE MCHIAN DILYPageFiv f.lliar Great musical ee ing2 By DAVID BURIIENN The publicity brochure for the Juilliard String Quartet announces that the group is "without peer or near rival among the ranking string quartets of the world." A standing room audience at Rackham Aud, last night would have little trouble in agreeing with that assessment. The Juilliard, displayed an awesome combination of superb musical taste and exquisite ensemble in performances of Mozart, Schoenberg, and Beethoven quartets. The quartet was founded in the late 1940's but the only member left from those early years is first violinist Robert Mann. Second violinist Earl Carlyss, violist Samuel Rhodes, and cellist Joel Krosnick are all younger men. The ,first work on last night's program was the Mozart Quartet in D major, K. 499, also known as the "Hoffmeister". The work is the product of a mature composer, one which shows a command of the medium and a willingness to experiment with new musical ideas. In its performance, the Juilliard displayed a sophisticated aw=reness of the work's subtlety. Mann's tone often seemed nervous and thin, but it and the rest of the quartet warmed with the music. The third movement, with its often excruciating dissonances, was a jewel. Arnold Schoenberg's Third Quartet, which dates from 1926, did not receive overwhelming audience support. The work is representative of the height of Schoenberg's twelve-tone tech- nique, and the resultant atonality put more than a few of the concert-goers into a fitful sleep. Those who napped missed the finest perform- ance of the night. The Juilliard handled this difficult quartet with almost unreal aplomb. The quartet showed both an awareness of the subtleties inherent in the work, and an aware- ness of each other's parts in producing a su- perb interpretation. But for most of the audience, the real treat of the evening came after intermission, with the performance of the Quartet in C major, Op. 59 No. 3 by Beethoven. The work contains one of the best galloping finales in quartet literature. The Juilliard took a lightening tempo, which for almost any other quartet would have made a shambles ,of any attempt to stay together. But it was all in a night's work for these professionals, who lifted the audience from their seats as they ended the movement with a breathtaking coda. One result of the speed was a definite un- eveness in tempi and an amount of scratch as the musicians strained their technique to keep up with the pace. But all in all, it came off well, and a minuet from the Mozart K. 590 quartet provided an en- core ending to a night of superlative music. Beer: I JEAN RENOIR'S 1937 GRAND ILLUSION (at 7) A story of classes and conduct in conflict durinq World War j 1. Erich von Stroheim in a great performance as a Prussian Aristocrat-General. With Jean Gabin and Pierre Fresnay. THE GORKY TRILOGY 1938 My Apprenticeship-Out in the World (at 9) ( Starting at age eight, Gorkv is shown trying to earn a living washing dishes and performing othervmenial chores. He secretly borrows books from the parents of friends. Cinema Guild $1.50 for OLD ARCH. both films AUD. uillifa rd String Quartet Members of the quartet in concert last night at Rackham Auditorium. From left to right: Rob- ert Mann, first violin, Earl Carlyss, second violin, xJoel Krosnick, cello, and Samuel Rhodes, viola. Swedish brew-h-ha? food I By MARK GOLDSMITH S TO C K H O L M (Reuter) - Swedish beer drinkers - who have just witnessed a state takeover of the nation's largest C brewery - are wondering what their favorite brew is go- ing to taste like when the gov- ernment gets through with it. In a long awaited move the state has bought up 60 per cent of the share capital in Sweden's biggest brewery, Pripps AB, and has let it be known this is only the beginning. For years powerful temper- ance groups have been pressur- ing the government to crack down on what they regard as AP Photo Sweden's biggest social problem -alcoholism. And beer lovers now fear that the state is going to take all :h produc- the fun out of drinking by s Rosine, launching a new and weaker e shown. beer ironically called "People's -- Beer" which no one except tee- totallers seem to want. At present there are three, different classes of beer sold in Sweden ranging from so called "light beer" containing about 1.8 per cent alcohol to strong with a 4.5 per cent. But the target of temper- ance groups and social reform- ers here has centered on so- called middle beer - 3.6 per cent alcohol - and the beer most Swedes drink (and can af- ford). A five-party commission ap- pointed to study the alcohol problem has unanimously come out in favor of creating a new People's Beer, which would be watered down and they say a safer version of middle beer, containing about three per cent alcohol. But in a country where a pint of domestic brew can cost as much as 40 cents, many think it is weak enough as it is. Some argue that hard liquor and not beer is thecrux of the Swedish drinking problem. When Swedish beer and wine consumption is compared with other countries one finds it is well down on the list. But when statistics on spirits consumption alone is considered Sweden and the United States share second Rare setting A female torso is used as a background for a Munic tion of Rossini's "Barber of Seville." Reri Grist, a and Clause-Kaakan Ahnsjo, as Graf Almaviva, ar Cliburn to ddre MS U comm encemo place behind Poland as the world's biggest drinkers. During the past 10 years the state through its nation-wide wine and liquor monopoly stores - has been going all out to get Swedes off spirits and on to wine. Sweden, one of Europe's larg- est wine importers, offers some of the lowest prices in the world for high quality wines. Some experts even cl im you can buy a better and cheaper bottle of French burgundy in Stockholm than you can in Paris. Even today there is still a strong social stigma attached to drinking. Many Swedes, es- pecially those of middle age, seem to have a lingering guilt about drinking instilled in them d}?ring the fierce temparance movement which raged here in the early 20s. It is quite common today to see rows of Swedes lined up to the counter of the state store shifting nervously about with heads bowed clutching their leather valises in which they secretly stash a purchase. In recent years the monopolies themselves have even got into the act by plastering store walls with posters warning Swedes about the evils of drinking. One color pamphlet put out by the monopoly entitled The FRI.-SAT. Warner Bros. Record's LEON REDBONE ABC's of Drinking offers tips *utve-ProduCBILLSHIFFRIN a..doatboNovl byWILLIAM BRADFORD HUll to partygoers on "dangerous Produced b WILLIAM ALEXANDER D.ctdbgTERNCEYOUN- drinks" to steer clear of when out on the town. The majority of the small pri- vate brewers in the country have greeted the state's entry into the beer business positive- iv. They say that with the state , e'r . .Pho now brewing beer, there will be Stanley Kubrick's less competition than before andMtenle Kub tke a more open market for their Ma terpiece of the products. Future-7-Today! G But there is concern among the private breweries that the state may eventually force . them to sell out. One of the f } chief reasons given by Pripps;".". for selling was that it was tired«' of state pressure to sell weaker beer and concerned about fu- ture profitability. Some newspapers have al- ready predicted that it is only a matter of time before Swedes will be drinking beer brewed in the same state-owned brew- Wed. at 1 :30-4:00-6:30-9:00-until 5 p.m. al seats $1.00! Thur'sday at 7:00 & 9:30 Only! HURRY! ENDS SOON ery. 4yWed. at 1-3-5-7-9 I 1 ~until 5 p.m.--all seats .r $1.00! T GUILD, . Thurs.-Fri. at7 & 9 p.m. Only De Broca's Crowning Touch! f ALAN! BATESs ~ lie IOF Sun.,Dec.8$ ; S 9 a m.3 P m. yPhiLtPPE DE BROCA COLR b DEUXETECHNISCOPE I i4p F'D%.btob ootPouo oprvm201 Hill StreetCOO: ? , Ann Arbor ti m mm e1r EAST LANSING (UPI) - Pianist Van Cliburn will deliver! the fall commencement address1 Saturday to 1,025 students grad-} uating from Michigan State Un- iversity. The undergraduate graduation ceremonies are slated for 3 p.m. in the MSU auditorium. Exer- cises for 722 graduate students receiving advanced degrees will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday. Cliburn, a graduate of Julli- ard, gained worldwide recogni- tion after winning the 1958 in- ternational Tschaikovsky com- petition in Moscow. r Ak Ann Arbor Civic Ballet presents its 1974 Christmas Party tbrb- Classified "SNOW WHITE" SUNDAY, Dec. 8-Power Center Performances at: Children $1, Adults $2 2:30 p.m. 8:00 p.m. All tickets $2.50 GROUP RATES AVAILABLE for parties of 10 or more CALL 665-9655 TICKETS: Chelsea Flower Shop, Hudson's Briarwood, Stangers, S v I v i a Studio of Dance, Willoughbv's Boot Shops 20th ANNIVERSARY PERFORMANCE Join The Daily Staff / C7 ) RAVEL MICH. UNION763-21 ~ATIN FLIGHT CALIFORNIA SPECIAL DEC. 31-JAN. 7, 1975 3CITIES ONLY $345.00 INCLUDES: Round trip airfare on American Airlines, 7 nights double accommodations as follows: 0 3 NIGHTS LOS ANGELES * 1 NIGHT SANTA CRUZ ( Novelty songs, Ragtime, blues, Jimmy Rodgers, etc. "Leon Redbone interests me. If I had a label, I'd want to record him." Bob Dylan "Amazinq. The best singer-guitarist I've heard in years." - Bonnie Raitt THURS. BENEFIT for Community For the Finest in REPERTOIRE- SERVICE CONVENIENCE A complete stock of *fl I A a an I