THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five PROFILE Makarskt' dedica ted An in tense and young viollnis t By MARY LONG BEHIND MICHAEL Bistrit- sky's thick black fifocals, his eyes shine with warmth. He has played violin with the great or- chestras of Europe, and now teaches intensive music theory classes in Detroit. On this day, a couple of years back, he is staring as a promo- tional piece for an upcoming chamber music concert, featuring distinguished virtuosos, members of the Detroit Symphony, and a girl of 16 - a girl with enor- mous round, dark eyes and a poised, inteligent expression. "Ah, Makarski!", he whsp- ers. "She was a student of mine long ago. Such a violinist! To hear her play - this girl is so) extraordinary . . Michelle Markarski, currently a School of Music sophomore, has performed as a soloist with the World Youth Symphony, the In- ternational Youth Symphony and served as concertmaster for the renowned Interlochen Arts Aca- demy Orchestra throughout high school. A participating irtist in the Marlboro Music Festival, she toured the country, the youngest of a highly exclusive and distin- guished group. She has engaged in a paper wad battle with Ru- dolph Serkin and chatted with a t-shirted Leonard Bernstein. EN MICHELLE learned of Bistritsky's comment recent- ly, her response was characteris- tically warm, "I love that man," she said. "I was playing in the All-City Orchestra at that time. He was our conducter and would say to me, "Michelle, Moart must be"played like pearls - like pearls!"'r The life, however, isn't always easy. "You see"' she says, speak- ing slowly, "Musicians have such a problem just being human. They get so wrapped up in them- selves and then, whenever they find they need someone else to turn to, there's no one there. ----m CLIP AND SAVE _--_n Phn Numer ** * I I Cirulaion ~ I I 74455Vl' I U f ! S Phone Numbers a Circulai on 764-0558 * I Classified Adv. 764-0557 I I Sprt I I e 764-0554 - SNews 764-0562 - C I ! ._na CLIP AND SAVE "_____! "There's a period of time when you feel you have only acquaint- ances and no friends at all. And these acquaintances" sh, sighed, "they fall all over you . a n d claim friendship . . bW: when it comes down to it, they're un- willing or even afraid." She pulls a short brown braid of hair over one shoulder for a moment. "I suppose it' be- cause of the lack of time we spend in social situations" s h e decided. "You're so busy work- ing, discipling yourself . . But then, brightening, s h e smiled. "That's why chamber music is so wonderful! You can play with people you really love. Its not the 'big anonymous mass of a symphony orches ra. It's so intimate. Gustave Rousseels, one of the Music School p'rofessors, says that playing in a quartet with someone is like being mar- ried to them." the time. I've always had the inclination. What I may lack theoretically, I try to make up in curiosity. BUT NOT all her interests could share priority, a n d early on Michelle's focus became clear. She credits her father, a conservationist and string teach- er in the Detroit public s.hoof system, with being "the deciding influence in my becoming a musician". He was her f i r s t teacher and made certain that her musical education w a s thorough, insisting on supplemen- tal piano lessons and regiilor practice. "It's pretty common that most musicians have a fairly abnorni- al childhood. If they are at all successful during their youti, that is. You just don't toddle off and play a lot. I can remember children calling for me and my "You see, musicians have such a problem just being human. They get so wrapped up in themselves and then, whenever they find they need some- one else to tourn to, there's no one there." als and young people. Groups se- lect their own music. One veter- an is assigned to each gro-Ip and he helps us along as a leader of sorts. It's a learning exper- ience for all of us though -the pro benefits from our fresh ideas as well." Rudolph Serkin was named ar- tistic director of Marlboro after the death of Pablo Casals. "And that man is so - sly!" she exclaimed. "At dinner one of my first niglhts there, I saw him look carefully around, scratch his neck so as not to apear obvious, and then fling a paper wad at Ron Copes, a xio- linist from Oberlin who sat next to me at table. I was no:rified when I saw Ron wadding up pap- er to fling back at him. I al- most shouted at Ron I didn't know there is a virtual initiation of paper wads at Marlboro".. "My life has been filled with all these older people who have had tremendous influences ar oth- er types who were very serious individuals. I've never been in contact much with people my own age until now. "A MUSICIAN knows so much earlier what they wan: to do withdtheir life" Micheile em- phasized. "They know far a- head of everyone. You attach yourself to an instrument and its forever, a lifelong thing. No one takes a fifth grader w h o wants to be a lawyer too ser- iously, but if a child is a tal- ented musician, people say, "Yes -go! Go practice!". "The student-teacher .elation- ship makes us quite comfortable around older people and profes- sionals. We get used to tyrants. It must be faced for what it is, and the music world is a mon- archy. It's a dictatorship." Michelle admits Leonard Bern- stein was "a childhod heio , but it was the gen e ce&ist EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY MAJOR EVENTS COMMITTEE PRESENTS BLACK SAB BATH WITH BEDLAM SAT., Feb. 23-8 p.m. Pablo Casals wno mspirea ner most of all. "Casals was both a numanitar- ian and a musician - but a hu- manitarian foremost. He was peace loving when all the other music people were still only con- cerned with making as much money as possible, from concert performances." Michelle currently itudies with Professor Paul Makanowitsky. She leaves her campus apart- ment before eightin the marn- mng and stays at the Music School until "whenever", often taking yogurt for sue .' "[HAT I'D like to do is be able to play in a really fine chamber music ensemble" she said. "I want to have enough of a reputation to give recitals and. be lucky enough to play con- certos with orchestras occasion- ally." Michelle is charming and mo- dest in talking about her work. There is no apparent sense of hungry, ugly ambition. "You know, I used to oe pow- er-hungry once" she said. Tier face rested in her sleader cup- per hand. "I would think _- 11 be like Heifetz, I'll be in the limelight. People everywhere will hold receptions for me. "I had this image of myself in my 20's, flouncing into re- hearsal". She gestured grandly about her. "My Mercedes would be parked at the curb, I'd be wearing an exquisite Sals gown, with two Afghan hounds beside me and a Stradivarius under my arm". "Now, I could care less about the clothes, the Mercedes. All I could possibly still want from that vision are the wo ddogs. What I want is an old house, someplace where it would be dead quiet . . . a hausa I could "It's pretty common that most musicians have a fairly abnormal childhood. If they are at all successful during their youth, that is. I can remember children calling for me and my parents telling them I was practicing and couldn't go outside." do absolutely anything I wanted with". "AND WHEN I think to my- self: "Michelle, you're in music, you're going to be in poverty all your life', somehow it doesn't bother me anymore". Mary Long is a staff for The Daily. writer SDT SPAGHETTI DINNER FEB. 17 5:00-8:00 MICHELLE MISSED the begin- ning of winter semester term because of the tour with the Marlboro Music Festival. "I have asked myself about dis- rupting. the flow of my education like that" she admitted. "I de- cided that this tour was as im- portant - or more important- than day-to-day class work. This is, after' all, the performance experience. You have to be on your toes - there's no choice. And there is a tremendous chal- lenge to keep the music from go- ing stale on you". Nonetheless -she doesn't fol- low the pattern of many artists who know their craft and not much else. "I'm not willing to slough off my studies and be only a violia- ist" she says emphatically. "I can't see excluding anything. love literature. I love animals - if I weren't a musician; I more than likely would have become a veterinarian. And, for exam- ple, if I were a vet, I'd try to be as well-versed in the arts as possible. "I refused to go to JulLard, Curtis or to any conservatory for my undergraduate work. I End then stagnant environments.' "Musicians seem to be either math-science or arts-humanttie3 oriented. Rarely are they both. I'm art-humanities, I thiak. I have a lacking in math. The problem is that I've never had parents telling them that I was practicing and couldn't go out- side." She' went through the sequence of Detroilt's finest string teach- ers and by the age of 12 was performing with such lo .al or- chestras as the International Youth Symphony. She was nam- ed concertmaster of the Inter- lochen Arts Academy Orchestra in her' sophomore year of higi school. More recently, Michelle per- formed in the Marlboro Music Festival, which, according to one critic, "has the highest concen- tration of artistic activity in tne United States .and possibly the world." "YOU PRACTICE in four sep- arate two hour periods every day" Michelle explains. "Intensely, to say the lean. There's a mixture of profes sion- $1.75 ticket Proceeds go to U of M Speech and Hearing Camp-Shady Trails 1405 HILL BAGELS FOR BRUNCH BUNCH PRESENTS LOXS & BAGEL and PROF. RAYMOND TANTER Dept. of Political Science, U of M Topic: "Israel and oil"' SUN., Feb. 17, 11 a.m.- HILLEL, 1429 Hill JOAN MATH EWS PAINTINGS Feb. 19 through March 2 at the UNIONGALLER located on the 1st floor of the Michigan Union Reception for the artist Sunday, Feb. 24 from 3-5 p.m SGalleryHours:ues. through Sat., 10a.m to 5P.m. , STUDY IN GUADALAJARA, MEXICO F u II y accredited University of Arizona GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL offers July 1-August 10. 1974 courses in ESL, bilingual edu- cation, Spanish, anthropology, art, folk dance and folk music, geog- raphy, government and history. Tuition $170; room and board in Mexican home $215. For brochure write: International Programs. 413 New Psychology, University of Ari- zona, Tucson, Arizona 85721. Bowen Fieldimouse Purpose o Third World Solildarity Conference People of color, the time of our solidarity is here. We must no longer be apathetic, when our mere existance stands in jeopardy. There has been a general disorientation and alienation among minority students in a neglect of the needs and problemrrs of Third World Students. This University has not, and will not direct itself to the problems of minority people, until forced to do so. We can no longer sit and wait for solutions to OUR problems, because the answers must come from us if they are to fulfill our needs in their entirety. We must not allow this University to continue to keep us divided and ignoring each others needs. WE ARE ALL IN THE SAME BOAT! The success or failure of our effort rests solely on the unity we aim to aquire during this conference. You have this opportunity to come together as the Vanguard against racism and oppression. Do not under any circumstances allow yourself to miss this oppor- tunity. I TICKETS: $6 reserved $5, $4 general admission Available at: McKenny Union, Huckleberry Party Store, Ann Arbor Music Mart, J.L. 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