Tuesday, Jdriutary 21, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Tuesday, January 21, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five 8~"' SO O vC 1 stropo i By DXVID BURHENN After intermission, Oliver Messiaen's "Long- : Soviet cell st Mstislaiv R strapovi .h is not i 1g for th° Eternity of Jesus" was performed known to possess any spe ial magical powers. in place of a Leonard Bernstein selec tin from But his brilliant recital Sunday afterno:i 'Mass." at Hill Auditorium held 4000 persons spellbounid The Messiaen was nicely done, most of it in with a display of dazling technique and super the instrument's upper-register. The mystic musicality. qualities of the composition were brought out in The program of Bach, Chopin Brahms, Mes- Rostropovitch's clean tone and attention to the siaen, and Shostakovitch was pleasingly diverse, color of he work. and offered a wide-angle view of Rostropovich's The afternoon's showpiece was a breathtak- considerable talent. ing performiance of Dmitri Shostakovitch's Son- The artist, ably accompanied by nianist Sam- ata in D Minor, Op. 40. ual Sanders, began the recital with a short The sonata, a romantic work written during Bach adagio. From the start, Rotsropovich fil- the composer's early period is one of drama- led the hugh hall with his tone. That sound, con- tically opposed mood and color. tered, full, and yet precise, did not lose its The second movement was especially fun for intensity in pianissimo passages. bot artist and audience alike. Rostropovich Rostropovich dedicated the Chopin Etude No. launched into a series of barbarous repetitive 7 to the memory of the late conductor Thor figures with abandon, as the movement opened. Johnson, with whom the cellist had appeared The artist dealt with the enormous technical before. The memorial was beautifully apt, an demands of the sonata without problem, and elegaic work with alyrical character. intonation was consistently accurate. Rostropovich then leaped into the Brahms' Rostropovich drew his bow off the strings like Sonata in F Major, Op. 99. "Leaped" is a good a calvary colonel unsheathing his sabre when description of the dramatic way in which the the work ended, and the audience jumped to work was approached. The scene of 1_fe and their feet in a thunderous standing ovation. spirit in this sonata, considered a capstone of Rostropovich and Sanders were not allowed the cello literature, was well expressed in Ros- to rest until two encores were performed. The tropovich's interpretation. second work, David Popper's "Elves Dance,' The second movement was particu-xarly me- is a work of little artistic value, but amaz- morable. Sanders was attentive to the fluid ing technical difficulty. A faultless perfornance give-and-take of the Brahms, and the enoemble of this little encore brought a marvelous recital between cello and piano was superb. to a stunning conclusion. rusts sell i i i r ,{1 i 3 i thsveek D~ailv Photo by IKAREN K.AMAUSKI Mstislac Rosiropouwich I- Jazzmusicians play in faculty concert By BOB TAUB They sit at the piano, work- ing on a new line, and groov- ing on it - one starts something on the piano, with the other coming in on trumpet. It's start- ing to happen - its jazz. It will all come together Sun- day at Rackham when jazzmen Louis Smith, Robert Elliot, Ron- ald Brooks, and Carl Alexius will present "Five Jazz Clas- sics". The free performance, part of the Faculty Chamber Series, should offer some seri- ous, emotional statements from men who make music their lives. Alexius, who keeps body and so'il together teaching classi, cal composition for the School of Music, becomes animated when talk turns to jazz, "It's emotion, pure and simple - we're jist going to get up there and play -- we don't know how it's going to sound, but it is going to be a direct reflec- tion of wher ever our heads and hearts are at the moment." Louis Smith, relaxed and pos- sibly grooving on some new melody cooking in his head, chides in, "They call it be- bop - the jazz of the 50's and 60's - Miles Davis before he' went electric, John Coltrane, Charlie Parker. It's music with all the stops pulled out - you go out there and stretch a chord as far as it will go. And then if you're John Coltrane, you keep on going . ." Bob Elliot is a big man, very serious. When he talks about his music he avoids the cliches, he avoids what you might want him to say. He doesn't rattle off the usual names, many of the jazz cats he has played with he knows you probably haven't heard of. "I don't go and say Miles Davis is the best trumpeter around. What does that mean?" There is a trace of impatience in his voice. "I've seen Miles in Detroit when he ws just awful - I mean aw- Elliot shifts, turns, he finds it hard to put something like jazz into pat words, narrow definitions. "You see," he tries to explain, "I don't call music bad or good, I just say whether I liked it or not, I mean jazz is where you are at at the giv- en moment. It's not what you did last year in the studio . .." Alexius responds to a ques- tion on electrics and rock in today's jazz with a dismissing sweep of the hand, "Some so- called jazz groups are just hand- ig their audiences so much crup--so much superficial emo- tion. The kids want to get riled up so they rile them up. Vol- ume doesn't create emotion, doesn't create something real- it's there or it isn't." Elliot wants to talk about the volume thing too. "You know, nothing can quite muddy up a rhythm section like an electric instrument, you just don't get the precise note, you get a heavy, longer sound out of it. Volume can be distortion." El- liot admits to playing electric bass at certain gigs, but claims only because he doesn't have the "strength in his hands" 'to play the acoustic, standup va- riety. i ;, x . i ; , - ) Daily Photo by KEN FINK Carl Alexius, Bob Elliot (nd Louis Smith (l. to r.) lCons tadt coldbe last UAC concert at HlAuiorium The gentlemen rambled on a bit - memories of boredom on the road, playing junk music at nightclub dives, cutting ses- sions with the greats like Chambers, Blakey, Silvers, and other names that never made it out of the self-enclosed world of a smoke-filled club. They're glad they can still play, they have steady jobs paying the bills, so they can do what real- ly counts - make the music. They politely beg off questions, they want to get back to that pianohand work on that line they had going... i x G i f I I I f { i I x s i t M t E i i i t Jan. 24, 25 TONIGHT! LINDA RONSTADT HILL AUD.-8 P.M. RESERVED SEATS $4-5-6 AND PLEASE: Remember to observe the no smoking" signs. FREE MOVIE! "JAMAICA HOLIDAY" THURS., JAN. 23-8 p.m Michigan Unison Assembly Hall sponsored by UAC TRAVEL MEDIATRICS presents HAROLD &MAUDE rurri s ei ww i 7, 8:45, and 10 p.m. By IRA MONDRY Those buying tickets for to- night's Linda Ronstadt concert are requested by UAC-Concert Coop not to smoke, drink alco- holic beverages, or vomit on the seats in Hill Auditorium. A sign displayed at the tic- ket, counter in the Union tells patrons, that due to past abuses in the Auditorium Linda Ron- stadt may well be the last popular singer to grace the stage at Hill. The University has agreed to this contract solely on the faith that the audience could; be brought to understand their responsibility as concert goers, and not ruim the 60 year old structure. UAC - Concert Coop is ask- ing people who cannot abide by these regulations not to buy tic- kets. They are willing to lose revenue now, and preserve the auditorium, and their relation with the University, for future concerts. A major effect of the situa- tion has been to narrow down the choice of possible concerts. The only concert which UAC- Concert Coop, produced in Hill during the fall semester was Souther, Hillman, and Furay with David Bromberg, unsuc- cessful financially and, by most accounts, artistically as well. Several future shows are in the serious negotiation stage, including Jackson Browne and Maria Muldaur. However, these negotiations cannot proceed un- til after the Ronstadt concert has proved a success as regards violitions of the buidling. The Ronstadt concert is im- portant in this sense, but it is not a test case. If future shows are booked into Hill, the re- sponsibility of audiences will be an ongoing process. Authorities both at the Uni- versity and the Concert Coop realize that only a small mi- nority are violating the regula- tions. This does not change the situation, however, and the fate of Hill is in the entire audi- ence's hands. Tickets are still available at the Union box office and at Hill Aud. prior to the concert. 21 st, 22nd, 23rd IMIXED LEAGUESI ! LAST CALL I Michigan Daily , I UNIVERSITY THEATRE SHOWCASE 37'' INSP'ECTOR 11 HOUND ' A PLAY BY TOM STOPPARD JANUARY 19 211915 / ARENA THEATRE ' TICKET INFORMATION CALL:764-0450 A WEDNESDAY SHOW ADDED, JAN. 22 8 P.M 1 I . i i i x s i t t E i i i t STILL ONLY $1 UAC TRAVEL presents JAMAICA MARCH 1-8 DEADLINE TO SIGN-UP: JAN. 24 SKI UTAH MARCH 1-8 DEADLINE TO SIGN-UP: FEB. 5 Also, student flights to New York, L.A., San Francisco and Dallas during Spring Break. Special rates on all flights Call the UAC Travel Office (763-2147) for more info. FUTURE WORLDS presents AL LITHMAN "Auroville," an evolving alternative future Next MON., JAN. 27 Hill Aud. Sign-up for the Future Worlds course at the Geog. Dept. French Pianist PASCAL ROGE Detroit Debut of 23-Year-Old Star in Program of LISZT and RAVEL THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS Founders Concert Series: Edith J. Freeman, Chairman AUDITORIUM, FRI., JAN. 24, 8:30 P.M. Art institute Ticket Office (832-2730), All Hudson's $6, $5. $4 ann arbor aud. a, angel hal fil ............ ".... "...{.::: .... .....;.. :.. ..... :?''. i.. f":a :j{:Y :a.ll co-op.'~i $''x~ ..;"'7.>'} Linda I , Sign Up Now Ron. lac t UNION LANES CENTER FOR THE COORDINATION OF ANCIENT AND MODERN STUDIES, PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM, THE RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE PRESENT The Marionette Theatre OF i ,4TFSe ' YD 1R r" AACT