Thulrsday, February Z4, 11)75 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Thursd0y, February 20, 1 ~75 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rci~e Five Flute master Rampal weaves musical spell 8 Debuts NEW YORK " -The Concert Artists Guild, whose objective is to provide young{ artists with high-level perform- an ce opportunities, has given eight awards - to provide Car- negie Recital Hall debuts next season. Auditions in April and May had 277 entrants. Winners are pianists Robin McCabe, 25, Pu- yallup, Wash.; David North- ington, 26, Macon, Ga.; Gary Steigerwalt, 23, Slatington, Pa., and Alan Weiss, 24, Waterbury,' promnised Con. Guitarist Manuel Barruco, 21, Newark; cellist Emanuel Gru- ber, 27, Roumania; mezzo-so- prano Karen Johnson, 26, Ar- nold, Pa.. and the Arioso Wind Quintet The latter are Nadine Asin, 24, Silver Springs, Md.; Anne Leck, 19, Duluth; Gary McGee, 22, Portland, Ore.; D a v i d Wakefield, 22, Durant, Okla., and Daniel Worley, 23, Canton, Ga. By BETH NISSEN Place a flute, a piano and harpsichord, Jean- Pierre Rampal, and Robert Veyron-Lacroix on a stage and the result is pure, crystal music. RaMpal, undisputedly one of the greatest living flutists, and Veyron-Lacroix, a reigning master of the harpsichord, enthralled a ca- pacity audience Tuesday night in Rackham Auditorium. Rampal and Veyron-Lacroix are musical Siamese twins; they play in exact metronomi- cal coordination, moving together with the music as if they were expert dancing partners. Rampal seems exempt from the possibility of technical error. He played frantic triplets, flashing sixteenth notes and instant grace notes flawlessly, his fingers flowing liquidly over the keys of his golden flute. Veyron-Lacroix accompanied Rampal as he has for nearly thirty years, with practiced precision and exact synchronization. Rampal, a specialist in Baroque soloism, showcased his magical talent in Handel's "So- 'ata in B Minor" and tongued beautifully through Michel de la Barre's "Sonata in G major" and Bach's "Sonata in G minor". 1Rampal's famous crystalline tone and incred- ible breath control were evident in her per- formance of Copland's erratically moody and temperamental "Duo for Flute and Piano". Proving their versatility, Rampal and Vey- rono-Lacroix strolled, ran and leaped through Prokofieff's "Sonata in D major, Op. 94" alter- nating grace, breathless speed and beautifully arched soaring between octaves. Both Rampal and Veyron-Lacroix are tech- nical wizards; it is the shared musical soul of the mlutist and pianist/harpsichordist that makes the pair one of the most recorded and most concert demanded instrumentalist teams. Rampal's flute whispers, sings, mourns, calls, skips 'playfully over intervals, springs to stel- lar heights with a sweeter and smoother tone than the clearest, purest soprano voice. Rampal can change the mood of his playing as quickly and easily as he changes the ex- pression on his gentle face. His ability to trans- late inked notes on a musical staff into mov- ing, physical expression accounts for his re- ception by marveling and adoring crowds. Those admirers gathered Tuesday night were richly rewarded with a superb perform- ance and four lilting and beautiful encore pieces. BURSLEY HALL Presents WALK TOGETHER SOULFUL PEOPLE TAKE IV Herbie is Comin-Are You? Saturday, Feb. 22, 1975 SHOWTIME 11:30 P.M Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Concert flutist Jean-Pierre Rampal Tickets: Michigan Union Lobby $4.00 couple, $2.50 single CAMPUS FLICKS Records in review OHN MAYALL WAS ONE of the most important figures in A lle n( the British blues movement of about six years ago, and he is still going strong. He is perhaps the only figure left from that movement who is still playing consistent blues. His recently released album, New Year, New Band, New Company (ABC Blue Thumb BTSD-6019), presents no astonish- ing changes; but must rate as one of his strongest albums in By JAMES VALKs recent years. Recalling the genuinely funny' Mayall moved permanently to Los Angeles about four years films of the last few yeas can ago, and the California climate has been working slow changes prove a mind-boggling task. on his sound. This album completes the change; it is pure Cali- When one sifts througha list of fornia.the popular films of the seven- fornia' ties, the fact emerges that, His new line-up features a woman co-vocalist, an electric omitting Woody Allen acid Mel piano-player, Rick Vito on guitar, and Sugarcane Harris on vio- Brooks, there has not been any lin. All the musicians are superlative and the interaction be- degreehof comedic consistencyI tween them is skilfully subtle. throughout. There is little that is new here, but the music is infectious Excluding "black" comedies thehigestdegee f usiianhip Jon My-such as Dr. Strangelove and I and played with the highest degree of musicianship. John May- Little Murders, there is a no-, all is one of the finest musicians still playing today, and the ticeable void of straight-forward fact that he and his new band are in excellent shape bodes well comedy in film. During the '20sr for the future. and '30s, films by Keroi and, -Harry Hammitt Chaplin were in the limelight,e ! ! ! while the Marx Brothers., Key-c T THESE INFLATIONARY TIMES, bargain bins are begin- stone Cops and even Chaplin TN himself kept the audiences in ning to look more and more inviting. One of the best records the aisles.t to make an appearance there recently is The Best of the Ani- The '70s have produced little mals (Scepter CTN 18026). It is not a greatest hits album, to glare at with the strained re-S but a live album recorded when the Animals played with Sonny creations of the past era. For Boy Williamson in Britain in the mid-'60s. Pete's Sake, What's Up Doc? The album consists almost entirely of rock 'n' roll and up- and the infinitesimally dismal tempo blues played in the racuous style that was always as- bFreebthe torchearBean h co sociated with the Stones. But the Animals were among the edy outside the exclusive circle. foremost practitioners of the form, and they were perhaps the of Allen and Brooks, whicht best, as this album shows. leads us to the comedy duo ofI The focal point of the band was always the keyboards, only the '70s.1 organ here, played by Alan Price or Dave Rowberry. Hilton It is almost ludicrous to even: Valentine on guitar was always undistinguished but on this al- approach contemporary cmedyt bum he sounds quite adequate. inf B out ling Alleo and Brooks, as a list of two All the power of the music was filtered through Eric Bur- Barbra Streisand movies and don who is certainly close to being the best singer to come out one Richard Rush disaster is; of Britain in the rock 'n' roll idiom. Here he is in fine shape, hardly any comedic Hall of his voice growing gruffer and more throaty as the performance Fame. continues. With minor exceptions, Allenj con mues.has virtually held a molopolv There is no way to get around it - this album is superb, on the market since the laotpe both as music and history, and at the reduced price it is more '60s with his Take the Money than a bargain- and Run, although he nas been nd Brooks: Rasing of cinematic comedy as 1965. With the co um rcial, success of Bananas, Allen es- tablished himself as the pre- miere comedian of the '70s. 1 Riding his popularity, which; seems to rise with each proceed-< ing film, Allen mad: Sleeper,I and from that work h; fallen' into favor with such hart nose critics as Pauline Kael and Vin- cent Canby. Mel Brooks, in comparison, has been a late-bloomn r, a]-! thoughhe has developed sme- what of a cult following with his' early films. Starting apprz.xi- mately the same time as Allenj (in film) with his 1968 The Pro- ducers, Brooks suffered from cinematic anonymity, and thus had difficulty in bring~'ig The Twelve Chairs, his se.g nd film, to commercial distribution. # It was not until the success of last year's Blazing Saddles, an off-key tribute to the Warner Brothers' West, that B ron:s elevated his status as a tine-1 matic comedian. As much as the two have1 in common, their names, in their individual humor and ap-! proach, are not interchangeaole. Both have wavered from their original style after succiss had been established, but nether have crossed into the other's ex- of humor to run rampan. clusive domain. Brooks is at his best when Allen's early films, in th reeking with bad taste Blazing theoretical context, were little Saddles, which has been accus more than vaguely co inected ed of going overboard in that series of vignettes that allowed denartment, has more crude the director forum for his ha- guffaws per minutes than any of mor. his other works, but departs Both Take the Money ond Run from being a sustained comedic and Bananas left the audiencejwok limp with laughtertthrougi- Straining for laughs that are len's endless progreis*of of simply not there, the fil7i comn- visuaI one-liners but both were es off insanely funny at times, VIOUCII vuc-isiicia, l vriw i highly uncinematic events. Everything You Always WantedI to Know About Sex . . . was dependent on outrageous visual gags that were extenledl into seventor eight larger vignettes that attempted to attan some degree of coherency.j With Sleeper, Allen has plac- ed a claim as a more "classi- cal" film director, creatin>, a work that attempts to su ;tain a consistent level throughout. Brooks' style has wavered! throughout his career. The Pro-! ducers, based on an outrageous premise of overselling a sur- flop play by 25,000 per cen' , i.= 1 perhaps his most su -cesful1 work, with the vehicle allowing an absurd framework to pass as legitimate content, thus per- mitting Brooks' warpaJ ense while being uncomfortah'y ted- io-s at others. With Young Frankenstein Brooks has returned t t h e theatre of intent, pursui tg a re- fined work of both cinematic intelligence and comedic integ- rity. Sacrificing the hard-core vrcks that marked Blazing Sad- dies, Young Frankenstein is Brooks realized by Bro fks him- self: a film that allows con- trolled insanity to prevail with- in the cinematic structure that is strictly maintained througn- out. It appears that bo> Alien and Brooks have a blaru check to total directorial freedom 'n the future. But while Brooks has discovered his ultimate vehicle for humor, Allen is wandering away from his. Allen's humor is best in short spurts, a well set up joke that hits and ruis. Allen's sustenance tends to linger, thus depriving hi-n of the necessary structure needed to maintain the most effec+;ve use of his wit. Where Brooks works best within the longevity of an idea, Allen, as director, is most successful waen aban- doning strict cinematic con- formity. While Sleeper was his most critcially successful work, it was hardly his wittiest. It at- tempted to exist as a conerent piece of film, but 'n the pro- cess lost the edge of Allen's humor. Striving for cinematic sophistication, the film ulti- mately compromised Alien's comedic potential. It is, admittedly, unfair to strictly label each individual work as 'good" or "had'. But Allen and Brooks rossess dif- ferent types of humor,, each lending itself best to a differing cinematic mode. --Harry Hammitt in front of the camera as early. PRE-INVENTORY Paperback Department BOOK SALE ALL BOOKS on the MEZZANINE NOW 30% off AT FOLL1ETT'S MICHIGAN GOOK STORE STATE STREET End of the Diag THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN STUDENT LABORATORY THEATRE PRESENTS A Free Afternoon of Theatre Contribution by TED SHINE ARENA THEATRE FRIEZE BUILDING 4:10 p.m. FEB. 19 & 20, 1975 A Black Theatre Workshop Production the t " "r i cooperative; TONIGHT ONLY! THURS., FEB. 20 ZABRISKI E POINT Antonioni's lyrical masterpiece in Professional 35mm wide screen! AUD. A, ANGELL HALL 7:00& 9:00 $1.25 -TONIGHT ONLY- Ann Arbor Indochina Peace Campaign Presents Fil the last concerts of Bill Graham's legendary Rock Pallace. GROUPS INCLUDE: Ai AJI Ile" The Grateful Dead Jefferson Airplane Santana Topmorrow: THE LAST DETAIL MLB 3 7&9 Hot Tuna Quicksiler Messenger Service Cold Blood Natural Science Auditorium 7:30 & 9:30 NICHOLAS RAY NIGHT On this and next Thursday, we are presenting double feature showings of four films of Nicholas Ray, a fine director of the 40's and 50's. JAMES DEAN in DRRI IWIT14'IIT A CAIC (nt '7) - iq ( I Feb. 20 Thursday Only $1.25 FRIDAY & SATURDAY February 21 & 22, 1975 -COMING--- 8: 00 P.M. I