Baroque concert sparkles By JEFFREY QUICK T HURSDAY night at Rackham the Ars Musica Baroqueorches- tra played, to a standing-room-only audience, the second concert of their Bach Brandenburg Concerto series. Though bedeviled by 'acts of God," it was superior to the first. And that was no easy feat. Ars Musica Baroque Orchestra Rackham Auditorium Concerto in A major .................. Telemann Brandenburg Concerto No. 5in D major . Bach Instrumental Suite ...................... Rameau Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F major ....... Bach Friedemann Immer, baroque trumpet British clarino trumpeter Don Smithers, who was scheduled to be the featured act, beginning the program with a Telemann concerto and ending it with the Second Brandenburg became seriously ill last month. His replacement, Friede- mann Immer, plays clarino, cornetto and modern piccolo trumpet, and has recorded with Collegium Aureum, a German baroquelinstrument .group. Immer saved the group from making a quite unauthentic instrumental substitution. Due to the change in soloists, the Telemann concerto originally sched- uled was replaced by Telemann's Concerto in-A major for two record- ers, two oboes, two violins and continuo. This work, in four short movements, is practically a trio sonata in which motivic fragments are passed between the pairs of instruments. Very seldom do more than two melody instruments and continuo play at once. This gives the work a pellucid texture, which was well served by the subtle phrasing and accurate intonation of the en- semble, though oboist Grant Moore sounded as if he had reed problems in his entrances throughout the even- ing.. THIS WAS followed by the best per- formance of the Fifth Brandenburg Concerto I have ever heard, except- ing, a little bad intonation in the ripieno violins. Penelope Crawford rendered her first-movement harpsi- chord cadenza with crisp elan. But Shigetoshi Yamada, violin, and Mi- chael Lynn, flute, stole the show through phrasing and dynamic con- trol, especially in the imitative se- quential passage before the second ritornello (about one-third of the way through the first movement), where the ensemble produced an unbeliev- ably eerie pianissimo. The second half of the concert began with the Instrumental Suite from "Castor et Pollux Tragedie," for flute (doubling recorders), two oboes, bassoon, and strings, by Jean Philippe Rameau. French baroque music has its own style of rhetoric, which demands such refinements as double-dotted rhythms and heavy ornamentation for its success. These things are'the purpose for Ars Musica's existance, and they do them extremely well. The strings were fine throughout, and Robert Quayle provided some tasty bassoon solos in the concluding Chaconne. The long-awaited appearance of Mr. Immer for the Second Branden- burg was a bit of a letdown. First the good points: this piece only works on Baroque trumpet. In modern per- formances the valve trumpet obliter- ates everything else, especially the recorder, a fact which encouraged Thurston Dart in his theory that the part was originally for horn, sound- ing an octave lower. Immer proved that the trumpet can be an equal partner with the violin, oboe and recorder. His tone was sweet, his intonation true - that is, when he played the right pitches. THERE WERE an inexcusable number of mistakes, especially in the first movement. True, the natural trumpet is a fiendish instrument to play, since all the notes must be made-with the lip on the upper har- monics,' which are closer together. But the most elementary require- ment in presenting a piece as the composer intended it, is to play the pitches. Neglect of this makes the search for the historical sound mean- ingless. I was also dissatisfied with the second movement. The historically "correct" detached bass line coupled with a faster than usual tempo led to a perfunctory performance. Violinist Deborah Paul added as much passion as she dared. Still, I have heard far worse performances, and this one could not ruin what was for me a most enjoyable evening. HighAn xiety' highly humorous The Michigan Daily--Saturday, February 11, 1978-Page 5 Can loud rockmusi damag,01e your ears.? By TIM YAGLE WHEN I LEFT my first and only Beach Boys concert at Pine Knob two years ago, I felt a tremendous ringing in my ears. It was almost pain- ful. I had to listen carefully to hear anybody. It did not occur to me then but as I look back on it, I ask myself could I have suffered a temporary hearing loss? Could it lead to something permanent? According to several audiological authorities who have conducted several experiments, a one-time exposure to "loud" music (I was sitting no more than 25 feet from the mammoth stageside speakers) will not lead to a permanent hearing loss. "For some reason, youlig people are little interested in what may hap- pen to their hearing in later life and are reluctant to forego a pleasure which appears to be innocent," says the West Virginia Medical Journal in a 1974 ar- ticle. "'The youth philosophy seems to be the louder the music is, the more fun they have," the article continues. A study conducted in 1974 by Dr. Ulrich, a post-doctoral fellow in the Neurology Division at Case Western University School of Medicine, and published in the Journal of Acta Otolaryngology in the same year "in- vestigated the hearing of teens who voluntarily exposed themselves to' repeated sessions of loud pop music. Hearing thresholds were measured before and 30 minutes after exposure for eight weekly sessions of listening to music with an average sound pressure'of 110-115 decibels. Significant tem- porary threshold shifts were found in all subjects, especially in high frequencies." Hearing sensitivity recovered between the sessions. PROLONGED EXPOSURE to rock music might produce threshold shif- ts and permanent cochlear damage, especially in persons unusually suscep- tible to noise. The cochlea nerve carries sound to the brain. When sound waves enter, the ear, a membrane inside the inner ear pounds at a cluster of sensitive hair cells and the cochlear nerve "like an act of destruction," as Koch put it. "It's a mechanical action." This is what creates the problem - thebeating of the: cells. In 1972, Dr. Rintelmann had subjects listen to an hour of loud live rock music under both continuous and intermittent conditions in an outdoor am- phitheatre. The hearing recovery pattern was followed up after exposure. "It was concluded that daily exposures to rock music over an extended period would be hazardous to hearing." THE PURPOSE of the experiment was "to study the temporary and possibly permanent noise-induced hearing losses in a group of teenagers ex- posed to long hours of loud and live rock and roll" (live music is usually, louder than studio recorded rock music). Of all the randomly selected young people who were willing to have their hearing tested, 14 completed the project. These included four males and 10 females between the ages of B3and 17. None had any history of ear trouble.. When pure tone test results for before and after the sessions were com- pared, the amount of temporary hearing loss at 2,000, 4,000 and.8,000 hertz was significant." "IN THE FOLLOW-UP study conducted five months later, all subjects had hearing within a normal range. The hearing sensitivity of most of the subjects had returned to original levels within five decibels," the article said. One of the places where there is a threat of a noise-induced temporary hearing loss is at discotheques. The enclosed nature of discos make the sound seem much louder and more intense that normal. Headphones are one of the most serious threats to hearing and are a potential health hazard, audiologists warn. NOW YOU ARE thinking that we know about the people who listen to it; how are the poeple who play it for a living and are exposed to it every day af- fected? Drs. Rintelmann and Borus (1968) investigated musicians who were ex- posed to loud rock as an occupational hazard and reported that only five per cent of the 42 performers had permanent hearing losses 'after long-term ex- posure. Three separate studies in the late 1960's measured shifts in hearing thresholds of performers at two minutes, 20 minutes, 40 minutes, and one hour, respectively, after exposure. Temporary hearing losses were present in almost all of the subjects and permanent losses were reported in about 25% of the musicians, says the story in the Jounalsof Acta Otolaryngology. I've been told that many bands wear ear plugs on stage. Without them, you might begin to wonder how the groups survive - especially the louder bands such as Kiss, The Who, and Ted Nugent. Nugent, I understand, is deaf in one ear. It doesn't surprise me. Koch said the ideal way to avoid any kind of hearing loss in musicians would be to have them wear ear muffs or an in- conspicuous noise controlling device hooked up to the sound system on stage so they could control the sound level. KOCH SAYS a frequent rock music listener won't feel the effects of the ' music immediately, but might feel the affects 20 years from now. According to one Medical Journal article, "... occasional listening to loud pop music did not constitute a serious hazard, but habitual exposure could result in a permanent hearing loss." Another journal reports that "concern over the harmful effects of rock music on young people's hearing appears to be unwarranted." So you see there are conflicting arguments, but it can all be narrowed down to the following theory: the more you listen to loud rock music (over 95 db,seemingly, the greater your chances are of suffering some degree of hearing loss. By MARK BEYER M EL BROOKS' latest film effort, High Anxiety displays a con- scious transition from Silent Movie'a shlocky and vulgar Mel Funn, to a more mature and sophisticated com- ic artist. High Anxiety is a parody of Alfred Hitchcock suspense thrillers. Brooks respectfully dedicates the film to the master in the first few moments, and rightfully so, as the entire film is formed around familiar (and not so familiar) Hitchcock scenes and techniques. It's easy for Brooks to poke fun at westerns and horror films, because the jokes are more loose and easier to identify. But the world of Alfred Hitchcock presents different and more complex prob- lems in the realm of mood, tone, and camera movement that Brooks isn't quite able to grasp. Hitchcock is more adult entertainment than either cowboys or monsters, and suspense techniques are also more subtle and less well-known. Brooks tries to be subtle, and loses a lot of laughs because of it. High Anxiety opens with a lengthy scene of a 747 landing in Los Angeles (where else). When we finally get our first glimpse, of Mel (cast as Dr. Richard Thorndyke), grimacing out of a jet window, it's obvious that this comedy is going to present a new and different Mel Brooks. After a very dramatic (and marginally humor- ous) airport scene, Dr. Thorndyke is picked up by his trusty, bumbling chauffeur, Brody (Ron Cary). BRODY IS THE first of many living cliches that Brooks feeds us. On the ride to Thorndyke's new residence as head of the psychologi- cal Institute for the Very, Very Nervous, Brody breathlessly unrav- els a seemingly endless plot about evil administrators, mysterious deaths, and other forms of foul play. Suspense films need complex plots, but a comedy with too much narra- tive intrigue draws the audience's attention away from the funny business. Brooks has his characters speak in forthright 1940's-style dia- logue, which indiscreetly unravels the plot and deliberately sounds like dialogue everyone's heard in a dozen other movies. The real talent of a director like Hitchcock is his ability to make absurd situations and conversations seem honest-to-God realistic. Brooks makes absurdity seem even more absurd, which is not only easier to do, but also not very funny. On arriving at the sanitarium, Thorndyke is greeted by the villainous pair of administrators, Dr. Montague and Nurse Diesel. Harvey Korman (who I'm getting a bit tired of) plays Montague in his usual slimy namby- pamby style, and Cloris Leachman (who I never get tired of) does a deli- cious portrayal of the cruel and dyke- ish Nurse Diesel. FROM THERE the movie flows rather loosely. High anxiety is the ailment Dr. Thorndyke suffers from, and it seems to amount to a fear of heights with a "funny" name. Thorn- dyke must travel to San Francisco to speak at a convention. His travels cover a as much Hitchcomedy as Brooksdcan think up, and some of it succeeds. In a room on the 17th floor of San Francisco's towering Hyatt Regency hotel, Thorndyke takes Janet Leigh's place in the shower and is brutally flogged with arolled up newspaper. Shortly thereafter, Thorndyke sits on a lonely park bench as pigeons start to gather behind him. More pigeons gather, cooing suspiciously. Thorn- dyke flees and the birds follow, bom- barding him with their white cargo. The major fault of High Anxiety is that not many people will be familiar enough with the works of Alfred Hitchcock to understand all the gags. There are countless Hitchcock in- jokes that just become a wasted effort. Why include jokes that no one will understand? THORNDYKE also encounters a mysterious lady in grey, played by Madeline Kahn. Then a psychopathic killer appears, to wreak a bit of jumpsuit, Nurse Diesel's deadly breasts, and Harvey Korman's vam- pire imitation. These throwaway bits insure a funny product, despite other flaws. One must hand it to Mel Brooks. The mere concept of making a "psycho-comedy," as he calls it, presents a vast amount of fundamen- tal problems to a comedian. Although comedy and high drama both rely heavily on suspense, a comedy based upon serious suspense is somewhat Brooks and Kahn in 'High Anxiety' havoc. A plodding sequence at the Psychiatric convention is followed by an even more unsettling scene in a nightclub, where Brooks takes over the microphone and rasps out the title song, which he also wrote. But despite the many low spots in this film, Brooks still has his forte: the off-hand sight gag, which no one can do better. High Anxiety has plenty of them, including Madeline Kahn's color coded Cadillac and Benson's new live album shows change of sound and direction contradictory. It forces the audience to wait for a killing and wait for a joke at the same time. In this manner the jokes become half as funny, and the murders half as scary. Yet, High Anxiety signifies that Brooks is running out of material. By parodying Alfred Hitchcock movies, Brooks has moved into much more exclusive territory. Far fewer people are comfortably familiar with the ins and outs of Alfred Hitchcock's cine- matic style. The only people who will fully enjoy High Anxiety, as it should be enjoyed, are fifty-year-old Hitchcock movie fans, who've been addicted to suspense films for decades. Mel Brooks is probably just such a per- son. Thenest of us will just have to get by on what we do know of Hitch- cock, like the shower and, bird scenes. BUT ALL IN ALL,;Mel Brooks is a very creative gagman, and High Anxiety, for all its rough edges, has plenty of very funny moments in it. Brooks' comic imagination is peer- less when it comes to putting funny business on the screen. People go to a Mel Brooks film to laugh, and High Anxiety will not disappoint the masses. Jog. Just fr athe health of it. Get moving, America! Physical Education Public Information American Alliance fot Health Physical. EdUcalion and Recreation 1201 16th St N W Washington D C 20036 Thompson A prtmrets furnished efficdencles 1 and 2 bedroom apartments available for Fall 1978 occupancy Locatedttcorner of William and Thompson call "5-2289 By DOUG HELLER G EORGE BENSON'S new, live two-record set, Weekend in L.A., is i-n a completely different vein than his last album, Breezin'. Weekend in L.A. sounds like very laid back nightclub music. Over-all it is mellower listening and slower paced than the jazz on Breezin'. Benson still comes on strong with Weekend in L.A. George Benson Warner Bros. ZWB 3139 many excellent lead guitar solos, but the music is not as energetic as his earlier works. The majority of tunes were written by other people. Some of the tunes are old movie soundtrack titles, such as "On Broadway." SOME OF THE songs, such as Leon Russell's "Lady Blue," succeed simply because they're good songs, and not because of any special treatment or arrangement. A single exception is "We All Remember Wes," a fast-paced Stevie Wonder piece with beautiful melodic phras- ing is reminiscent of a bootleg. But then the tune develops, and soon the audience is silently attentive. En- thusiastic outbursts of applause fol- low the tune in which Foster's piano is a key instrument. THE WORST moment on the album is during a drawn out rendi- tion of "The Greatest Love of All," which has become the first George Benson song I cannot listen to all the way through. Benson's sound is moving away from jazz, however, and into big Hollywood show tunes. They aren't jazz interpretations; they're an at- tempt to capture the big band sound in Columbia Pictures and Screen Gems movies, complete with over- dubbed strings. The LP was recorded at the Roxy Theater in Hollywood during Septem- ber and October of last year. The musicians playing with Benson this tour were Foster on keyboards, Phil Upchurch on rhythm guitar, Jorge Dalto on acoustic piano and key- . w m mr r mm mmrm rmm rm rmm - m m m boards, Stanley Banks on bass, Harvey Mason on drums, and Ralph MacDonald on percussion. After finally hitting the charts with Breezin', one would think Benson would want to cash in on its success and play somewhat similar music. But it's possible that none of that matters to George Benson, because he's going to go on playing whatever he wants to anyway. w 11 ilkl Y 1. f J Wt' COLLEGE STUDENT STUDY PROGRAM: At Hayim Greenberg College in Jerusalem for a semester or one year. Curriculum includes Hebrew Language, Literature, Bible, History, Educa- tion, Philosophy, Sociology, Talmud. Credits by leading uni- versities in the U.S. Also, tours, cultural and recreational programs. Scholarships available. UNIVERSITY SEMINARS: 6 weeks of study at Israeli universi- I m 1 I ~LA 1 0