Wednesday, February 14, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Opens Tomorrow! The University Players PRESENT *David Rabe's THE BASIC TRAINING OF PAYLO HUMMEL Trueblood Aud. Feb. 15-17 TIME:8:00 PM TICKETS: $1.00 (Sat. $1.50) All Seats Unreserved Box Office: 12:30-5:00 Box Office Phone: 764-5387 DEPT. OF SPEECH, COMMUNICATIONS AND THEATER Miles Das.. awesome to watch' By HANK HOLOSZYC Miles Davis walked on stage at Eastern Michigan's Pease Au- ditorium last Saturday to the roaring approval of the sell-out crowd of 1,700. He motioned to his eight - piece band and the music began, and it didn't stop for an hour and forty minutes. At that point the audience was float- ing a few feet off the ground. In a word, the music was in- credible-almost a perfect cross between the driving inten- sity of Music for Jack Johnson and the complex rhythm changes and variations that characterize his latest album On the Corner. Playing music that was probably 80 per cent improvisation Miles was awesome to watch as he kept the band together, and be- lieve me, they were tight. Mi- chael Henderson (bass), James Mtume (congas and assorted percussion) and Babal Roy (tab- las) remain from the musicians who played on On the Corner and Miles has added Dave Liebman on Soprano sax, Reggie Lucas on drums, Cedric Lawson on key- boards, Al Foster on guitar and Bala Krishna on electric sitar. The band was uniformly ex- cellent with Liebman the most notable both on his own solos and on his duets with Miles on trum- pet. Mtume put together a po- tent conga solo near the end of the performancenandtLawson added some extremely choice riffs on the organ. Miles sounded fine on his horn, as well. Describing Miles' music pre- sents some obvious problems. I mean really, how do you relate an incredible rhythm change that leaves you with your mouth hanging open, or a riff that builds to a peak and then flows on gently removing your mind from your body? Quite simply, the printed word is not the best of mediums for such an explanation -you have to hear it. Visually, there's Miles (flam- boyantly attired, as usual) alter- nating between solos, duets with Liebman, and moving around the stage keep the sounds to- gether; its a big gig, but there's no one better at it than Miles. He demands perfection and he comes pretty damn close. Every once in a while the music would become just a bit disjointed, such as on a Liebman solo I re- call which almost degenerated to random noise. Quickly Miles ges- tures to Liebman, then to Mtume and Lucas and suddenly the riff has been simplified, the rhythm consolidates and the band is to- gether again - just unbeliev- able. The entire concert consisted of one "composition" and consider- ing the fact that it lasted for over an hour and a half its co- herence was particularly note- worthy. Basically the band is one monster rhythm section with only Liebman and Miles as soloists. Others would occasion- ally take short solos but rhythm was by far the dominant force, and the changes they produced were thoroughly mindboggling. Often the sound would be so smooth that it was exceedingly difficult to isolate some of the individual instruments. When the performance ended I estimated that they had been playing for maybe 45 minutes, but then I looked at my watch. After the concert someone told Miles that he sounded better than he had in a couple of years. Miles replied: "You don't have to tell me I sounded good, man I know I sounded good." The man knows. Percussion ensemble. shows extraordinary musicianship By DONALD SOSIN BLACKEARTH PERCUSSION GROUP; Christopher B r a u n, Garry Kvistad, Richard Kvis- tad, Allen Otte in the Contem- porary Direction Series, spon- sored by the Composition De- partment. Sat., Feb. 10, 8 p.m. Rackham Auditorium. Quartet Variations - Edward Miller; Les Moutons de Pan- urge-Frederick Rzewski; Four Feathers - Barney Childs; Godfather gets 11 Oscar nominations "One of the best movies in years! A rare gem!" -Aaron Schindler - Max von Sydow ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE "Best Actress"-"Best Picture" Liv Lmam The Eig t Today at 1 :00-3:30-6:05-8:45 HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences showed respect. The Godfather, already the big- gest moneymaker in the history of the movies, was an offer that could not be refused at Oscar- nomination time. It got 11. The runnerup was Cabaret, which occupied 10 spaces on the list of nominations announced Monday for the 45th annual Aca- demy Awards. The Oscars will be presented, with the traditional pomp a n d ceremony, Mar. 27. The Godfather was nominated for best picture. Marlon Brando, playing the patriarch of one mob- ster's family in it, was nominat- ed as best actor for the sixth time in his career. Al Pacino, James Caan and Ro- bert Duvall were nominated for best supporting actor. Oscars for playing the godfather's sons, ed son and counselor, Tom. Michael and Sonny, and his adop- Francis Ford Coppola w a s nominated as best director, and with Mario Puzo - who wrote the best seller that was the basis for the movie - for best screen- play using material from anoth- er medium. The Godfather was also nom- inated in the costume design, film editing, dramatic s c o r e and sound categories. Other nominees for b'est pic- ture were Cabaret, Sounder, The Emigrants and Deliverance. Liza Minnelli, star of Cabaret a musical set in Berlin as the Nazis were coming into power, was nominated for best actress. Joel Grey, who played the cab- aret's master of ceremonies, was nominated for best supporting ac- tor and Bob Fosse was nominat- ed for his direction. Imagind Quarter - Sydney Hodkinson; Amores - J o h n Cage; Take That -W i11 i a m Albright. The Blackearth Percussion Group are four young, ambitious musicians who have given up good symphony jobs to devote themselves to playing new mus- ic. In residence at Northern Il- linois University in Dekalb, they have the rare opportunity to teach while being permitted, even encouraged, to tour as much as they can. This may not be the greatest set-up for their students, but it is wonderful for everyone else, especially t h e audiences who will be hearing fabulous concerts such as Satur- day's in Rackham. What was perhaps most sur- prising about the evening w a s the combined surorise of hear- ing six works for percussion that were far from monoton- ous, and that were all outstand- ing pieces of music. What was more remarkable was the ex- traordinary high level of music- ianship and taste these four men exhibited, and a tightness of en- semble that one would suppose came from years of group ef- fort. Yet they have only been together for five months. Casually dressed, they made no formal entrance either, but leap- ed onstage from the audience and moved quickly among the vast array of every conceivable type of percussion instrument which overflowed the stage. The score for the Miller piece was then projected on a screen, so that both performers and aud- ience could read along. In a simple graphic notation the shape of the piece was outlined, with small wavy lines which became slide whistle glissandi, big black dots that were transformed into bass drum booms or tam-tam crashes. Decisions of pitch, timbre and to a lesser extent, duration, were left up to the musicians, and it was here that their imagination could best be appreciated, as a remarkable diversity of instru- ments were juxtaposed: these included water gongs, all kinds of drums, keyboard instruments, gongs, wood blocks and bells. The result was a beautiful col- lage of sound colors, with the form always clearly perceptible. Played twice through without a break, parts were exchanged the second time, and so the effect was like putting apples or plums into a blueberry cake recipe: the form is the same but the ingred- ients, and thus the flavors, change. Frederick Rzewski's Les Mou- tons de Panurge bore a super- ficial resemblance to the pop- ular In C by Terry Riley, but was far more interesting. An exercise in technical and mne- monic virtuosity, the piece is a 1:30 2 Movie "Road to Bali" (1952) 3:00 2 It's Your Bet 3:30 2 News wcbn listings 9-12 The Morning After 12-4 Progressive Rock 4-7 Folk 7-8 Talk Back 8-11 Rhythm and Blues 11-3 Progressive Rock 65-note melody which is perform- ed by playing the first note, then the first two, then three, and so on until all 65 are reached, then by subtracting one ,by one, until only the last notes remain. The four players began in unison on piano, vibes, marimba and xylo- phone, but soon drifted apart (on purpose) and the Riley-esque blur began. Unlike many pieces of this kind, the work held inter- est consistently, mainly due to the carefhl shading of dynamic levels, the occasional switch in timbres (from piano to toy piano, for instance, or shifting registers on one instrument), and the shifting accentuation of differ- ent parts. The overall harmonic frame moved from F minor to F major; as the transition grew the music seemed to glow until the end, where, three players having finished and vamping on a C, the fourth approached the end with increasing tension as the phrases grew shorter with each repetition. The moment of arrival was stunning and the ap- plause a testimony to the genius of the idea and the virtuosity of the musicians. Barney Childs' piece was pre- ceded by a brief introduction of the group during which one sud- denly became aware that t h e piece had actually started, as biographical information turned into a discourse on drumming and was rapidly drowned out by noise from a tape, followed by a mad dash for instruments, then assorted zaniness from all four. The University composers were represented after intermission, Sydney Hodkinson and William Albright. Hodkinson's Imagind Quarter explored different tim- bral groups: wood, keyboard, tambourine and gong sounds, in conjunction with the group's pre- recorded tape of the piece; it wound up, like the Rzewski work, on one repeated note. Albright's Take That used 16 bass drums in an imaginative fashion, as a steady beat persisted under drum rolls,-and syncopated rhy- thms. It had, too, flashes of Albright's characteristic humor in one passage where a steady fortissimo pounding abruptly stopped as the players beat thin air with 'their sticks before re- turning to the drums. This and other visual effects played a large part in the suc- cess of the aforementioned piec- es, and make a good case for the assured continuance of live per- formance as opposed to record- ings. The most sublime work on the known for his audacious theater program, from a composer known for his audacious theatre pieces, contained no real visual elements but only expertly 'chos- en sounds: Amores, a 1943 work by John Cage. Two solos for pre- pared piano framed trios for tom-toms and pod rattle, and wood blocks. All required careful listening, which was rewarded by admission into a soft, fragile sound world, with apparently simple rules of rhythm but a wide variety of results. Change a molecule in a substance and you have something utterly dif- ferent. On Cage's reduced scale, small variations made an im- mense difference; the individual sounds on the prepared piano were so beautiful that one was grateful for their frequent repe- tition. Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK Mr. Capra Goes to Class Movie director Frank Capra makes his last Ann Arbor appearance yesterday in Prof. Marvin Felheim's film class. The event closed the week-long Capra Film Festival brought to campus by The Daily's own critic, Richard Glatzer. &i $2.00 a to, 0 6:00 2 4 7 News 9Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 Operation Second Chance 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7ABC News 9 I Dream of Jeannie 50 Gilligans Island 56 Making Things Grow BUIL WED. THE BIGAMIST dir. by IDA LUPINO, who also stars. With Joan Fontaine and Edmund O'Brien. 1953 THURS. VIGO Zero for conduct ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7 & 9 P.M. $1.00 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 56 Zoom 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Festival of Family Classics 7 Wild Kingdom 9 Irish Rovers 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Consumer Game 8:00 2 Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour 4 Adam-12 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 2 Medical Center 9 News 56 Eye to Eye 9:30 9 Sloane Affair. 56 Ask the Lawyer 10:00 2 Cannon 4 Search 7 Owen Marshall 50 Perry Mason 56 Soul! 10:30 9 This Land 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBS News 50 One Step Beyond 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "Doctor, You've Got to Be Kidding!" 4 Johnny Carson 7 Screaming Skull 50 Movie "Yellow Sky" (1948) 12:00 9 Movie "Winchester .73" (1967) 1:00 4 7 News X ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE AUDITIONS Feb. 12, 13, 14 7:30-10:30 PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE ROLES: 3 WOMEN, ages 30-50 4 GIRLS, ages 14-19 3 MEN, ages variable Many non-speaking roles for girls of all ages 201 Mulholland (off W. Washington) ARTS. cULruRE CALENDWAR FILM-AA Film Co-op shows DeBroca's The King of Hearts at 7 and 9 tonight, Aud. A; Cinema Guild presents Lupi- no's The Bigamist at 7 and 9:05, Arch. Aud.; New Morning Films shows Nabokov's Laughter in the Dark at 7 and 9 in the MLB. 0 al I Return of a Campus Cult Smash! Wil d, Raffish Satire! ALAN BATES in THE KING F HEARTS (FRENCH DIALOGUE-ENGLISH SUBTITLES) Directed by Phillippe deBroca. A British private scouting discovers a town abandon- ed by the Germans, who have left a time bomb in the town clock, except for the inmates of the local asylum, who he lets loose, thinking they are the townspeople, AND THE FUN BEGINS. The normalcy of insanity! TONIGHT!-February 14th -ONLY!-35 mm color 7 & 9 p.m. THURSDAY-FEB. 15 NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP -presents-- ( If you like, instead of depositing the coupon at the Michigan Daily, you can zip it over to WCBN (in the basement of the S.A.B.). There you can trade /i'%''rdle lpv* - ..\/ 15-~ iN 91