The Michigan Daily-Friday, November 18, 1977-Page 7 Campus Orch. pleasant Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Visitors examine "Behind Closed Doors", a Japanese arty exhibition which will close this Monday. Priceless Japanese artwork being displayed at 'U' museum By SUSAN BARRY T HE FALL semester concert of the University Campus Orchestra Tuesday evening included three pieces that were brief but textually rich and technically varied. The selections. spanned two centuries of musical inno- vation and presented many interesting contrasts in style and tone. The first piece was Concerto in D Major by Handel. It begins with a "Lar- go," a stately introduction in the strings that soon shifts to the horns. This sec- tion was performed with a sweetness that was most remarkable in its con- trast to the lightness of the trills. The "Allegro" begins with a dance melody in the strings and with trills echoed in the cello and horns. Although there were some slight difficulty with the violins jumping beats, this section brought out the considerable musician- ship of the group, particularly in the ef- fectiveness of the dynamics. THE SECOND "Allegro" demanded the difficult technique of rapidly jump- ing strings in the violins, which was achieved with accuracy and unifor- mity. The dynamics were carefully built and the intensity controlled. The next piece, by Rimsky- Korsakoff, was as dramatic and capricious as its title suggested. The Capriccio Espagnol is a series of musical vignettes with .a Spanish theme. It opens with a reveille in the horns, the "Alborada," a Spanish dawn. The flutes have the melody orig- inally, and then pass it on to the strings. As the violins began a pizzacato, which could have been a little tighter, Concert Master Tor Shwayder performed a dif- ficult solo,, lightly skipping strings and bowing chords neatly. This was followed by the "Variazioni," a slow variation movement that includes a graceful harmony in the cello with a swanlike melody in the horns, accompanied by hesitating arpeggios in the violin. The minor melody was passed through the orchestra with an effect of serene reflection, however the violins did have some difficulty with the extremely high tones. This movement ended with soft trills in the flute, and was followed by a return to the "Alborada" and another solo by Shwayder. A DRUM ROLL led into the gypsy song of the following movement. This had a rather modernistic sound as snatches of melody echoed and rum- bled through each section of the orches- tra. The harmony was halting and dis- connected, as the movement ended with a furious violin melody. The last movement was an Asturian dance that sounded faintly eastern with its delicately sororous tones. David University Campus Orchestra Hill A uditoriumn Novem er 15, 1977 Charles J. Gabrion, conductor Handel/Ormandy.......... Concerto for Orchestra in D Major Rimsky-Korsakoff............Capriccio Espagnol Respighi ....................... The Pines of Rome Bartus performed a cello solo quite ad- mirably followed by a crescendo that finished the piece with spirited flam boyance. The next selection, Respighi's The Pines of Rome, brought the time period of the music into the twentieth century and capped the excursion in musical imagery from England to Spain to Rome. This piece presented its own unique series of images. Beginning with a movement that cap- tured the scene of the Borghese villa, the splendid palace of the Roman family which inspired the sculpture of Bernini and other artists, a playful melody in the horns resulted in a jing- ling bell-like effect. The notes became more chaotic and led abruptly into the next movement. THE SECOND movement took the theme of a catacomb, and reflected this eeriness in a dark cello melody with shimmering strings in the background. This movement also included a horn solo. The following movement, "I Pini del Gianicolo," continued the dark melody in the cello, which slowly built in intensity. It ended in a minor key with the soft echo of the melody in the cello and horns. The final movement, "I Pini del Via Appia," begins with a lovely oboe solo. Its ethereal tones brought forth the image of a silent, snow-covered moun- tain, and was answered by sweetly discordant strains in the violin. The image built with chimes like a waterfall and bird sounds. This last movement gave the orches- tra its full play of intensity, and the resonance and maintenance of pitch were highly commendable. This earned the orchestra, and conductor Charles Gabrion, a resounding ovation from the audience as the concert concluded. By DAVID LEWIS It took two years to bring Behind Closed Doors: Western Influence on Japanese Art to the University of Michigan art museum, but for Japa- nese art expert Cal French it was a labor of love. "I've looked at these paintings for 20 years," the trim, bearded French ex- 'plained. "They're like old friends." French, who organized the exhibit jointly with Meadow Brook Gallery di- rector Kiichi Usui, wrote his disserta- tion on Shiba Kokan, one of the most prominent artists in the show. Shiba Kokan was one of a small group of Japanese painters who took up the ar- tistic challenge of the West. Though never in the mainstream of Japanese art, they kept alive a passionate in- terest in the themes and techniques of Western painting over Japan's two- hundred years of self-imposed isolation, 1639-1835. Known as "komo-ga" (red-hair paint- ings), after the contemporary stereo- type of red-haired, big-nosed foreign- ers, their works chronicle the dramatic confrontation between a creative artis- tic temperament and a new, completely unknown aesthetic. "You can say, 'they didn't know how to do this,'" observed French, after pointing out Tani Buncho's immense "Flowers and Birds," -where a' flower vase can never quite decide which side of an arch it is on. "But you shouldn't try to compare it to the art of the West. It reflects another aspect of the Japanese aesthetic. You can see in it a Japanese sense of taste that makes it beautiful." While there are books and exhibitions of "komo-ga" in Japan, French said the genre is never mentioned in Western books. This is the first time any of it has been out of the country. Kiichi Usui first thought of doing the show as a bicen- tennial special, emphasizing American influences. "I didn't like the bicentennial jazz," French explained. The 89 pieces on show here and at the Meadow Brook Gallery focus on earlier material, and when the show goes on to Denver the American-influenced material will be added. But the art supplied by Japan's Kobe City Museum of Namban (early West- ern-influenced) Art hardly needs im- proving. From Kawahara Keiga's standing screen of Nagasaki Harbor, designated a national treasure by the Japanese government, to the oldest world -map and the first oil painting ever done in Japan, it is a priceless and powerful display. Behind Closed Doors will be on dis- play at the U of M art museum and Oak- land University's Meadow Brook Gal- lery through November 21. the anni arbor film cooperative TONIGHT Friday, November 18 MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL (Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones, 1975) 7 & 10:15-MLD 4 MONTY PYTHON'S first film was so deliciously silly, even Anita Bryant liked it. Now the lads of the Circus mess about with King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. Sidesplitting visual spoof of chivalry,, courtly love, INGMAR BERGMAN, and the Hollywood epic. Friday, November 18 START THE REVOLUTION WITHOUT ME (Bud Yorkin, 1970) 3:40 ONLY-MLB4 GENE WILDER'S funniest role in this spoof of swashbucklers. Wilder and DONALD SUTHERLAND ploy dual roles as two sets of twins mixed up at birth. One set grows up peasant, the other aristocrat. Their accidental but simultaneous presence at the court of Louis XVI years later causes such riotous confusion that the French Revolution is almost averted! "A mad, affec- tionate tribute to every historical mIodrama anybody ever saw. Wilder and Sutherland perform magically."-L.A. Times. With BILLY WHITELAW AND ORSON WELLES. Single admission $1.50, double feature $2.50 FELLINI 1970 Live Santana LP fiery SATYRICON Fellini's most sensual film is based on the remaining fragments of the oldest extant novel, Petronius' Chronicles of the Court of Nero. The film follows the adventures of two handsome Romans, creating a stunning decadent universe inhabited by albino hermaphrodites, elephantine prostitutes, lascivious matrons, beautiful nymphomaniacs and homosexual youths. One of Fellini's most controversial views of human self corruption. In a full- sized color cinemascope version. Sat: THE MALTESE FALCON By KEITH TOSOLT M OONFLOWERS" (Columbia 34914) is a collection of 11 live cuts recorded in Europe and nine stu- dio songs from Devadip Carlos Santana and band. This double album set offers a wide range to satisfy almost anyone with popular music tastes. It includes the progres- sive Latin rock compositions that are Santana's trademark, fusion jazz and a rock oldie from the 60's. Moonflower avoids strictly com- mercial adventurism. The/inclusion of new material on this album gives it artistic credibility as opposed to the blatant commercialism of cashing in on old songs and recycled hits. Santana is one of the true "artists" in rock, as far as the aesthetic meaning of that word goes, in comparison to pop commodities like Frampton. Of the live cuts, there are only two that can be called "old" in the scope of Santana's career. These two are "Black Magic Woman" and "Soul 'Sacrifice," which can be considered as two of Santana's greatest hits. "Black Magic Woman", which was actually penned by former Fleet- wood Mac guitarist Peter Green in an earlier era of that band, is probably the definitive example of the Santana style of guitar playing. The live version is filled with the amplifier- induced distortion and sustain which typifies the Latinized heavy metal sound of the early Santana. THE OTHER live tracks are material off Festival and Amigos, Santana's last two albums. "Let the Children Play" and "Dance Sister Dance" are performed very tightly and true to the studio versions. My favorite is "Europa," one of those Latin rock instrumentals with jazz feel. Now we come to the studio compo- sitionsvon Moonflower. Santana real- ly moves deeply into the realm of fusion in his new material. "Zulu" is one such fusion cut, containing a funky, punctuated Stanley Clarke style bass line by Dave Margine and trade-offs between Santana's guitar and Tom Coster's synthesizer. "I'll Be Waiting" is one of the new songs which is being exposed on the airwaves. It features the incredibly smooth vocals of Greg Walker. The jazzy mood of the melody gets Carlos inspired to play some speedy runs and traditional jazz octaves. . THE SONG I find most interesting is Santana's version of "She's Not There", which was originally a hit for Rod Argent and the Zombies back in 1965. The song really gets the heavy metal treatment from Carlos which makes it the tune that rocks the hardest on Moonflower. Carlos really cuts loose on "She's Not There" in a way in which he hasn't in a long time on record. The cranked-up wah wah lead is so intense and intentionally loud that it seems as if Santana is indulging in a little bit of excess. Moonflower, on the whole, is a very balanced album, with the hard rock of "She's Not There" and "Black Magic Woman" counterposed with the jazz fusion material. It finally surfaces completely in the new cuts on Moonflower. Carlos is broadening the scope of his music into jazz, while still retaining the energy of the heavy metal guitar on which his technique is, and hopefully will re- main, based. Cinema Guild TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:15 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1 .50 CINEMA II ANGELL HALL, AUD. A Friday, November 18 IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT Director-FRANK CAPRA (1934) - The romantic encounter of a runaway heiress (CLAUDETTE COLBERT) and a wandering journalist (CLARK GABLE) provides the plot for one of the most popular films of the 30's. First and probably the best of the screwball comedies, it won all the major Academy Awards. "He flies through the air with the greatest of ease ..." 78 9p.m. $1.50 Mediatrics WEEKEND SCHEDULE DELIVERANCE This film, based on a novel by James Dickey, is a tense drama. A peaceful canoe trip turns into murder and death in the whitewater rapids. Starring JON VOIGHT and BURT REYNOLDS. FRI., NOV. 18 7:30 and 9:30