THE MICHIGAN DAILY Arts& EnertmentFriday, March 25, 1977 Page Five pop" 'Music Maii' will show next weel' By STEPHEN PICKOVER City, Iowa to sell its git zens on W HEN YOU TODDLE OFF the idea of creating a school to the Power Center some- band. The stereotyped "trav- time between March 31 and elling salesman crook", he has April 3 to see MUSKET's ver- the intention of taking the mon- sion of The Music Man, vou ey for the instrument and uni- won't see any reversed male form orders and running off to and female roles, novel musical the next town of fools. However, adaptations, or outrageous cos- he falls in love with the town tumes. You'll see The Music librarian, Marian Paroo (Sally Man - nothing more, but more Bublitz), and things change for imnortantly, nothing less. the better. Director Anthony Dodge's One aspect of MUSKET - a and 'director 1 choreographer ' UAC - snonsored organization Marcia Milgrom's hopes and - that many overlook is that it goals for the upcoming produc- is a totally student-run group. tion are set extremely high, but It is in fact one of the largest both feel they will be attained such organizations on campus, in the show. A major impetus land while students may work for this belief is that many of extremely hard and long hours, the upper echelon members of they have a lot of fun. The cast the cast and crew are complet- of Music Man, for example, is ing their careers with MUSKET. a rollicking crew of children, The show itself, of course, undergrads, grads and some deals with a makeshift profes- non-students, all of whom will sor named Harold Hill (terry be singing with a twenty piece Arment) who comes to River orchestra. SGolds tein hits 2 By DAVID KEEPS UAC, this Saturday in Rackham lesque antics Gould perfected will be screened tonight. Mar- JALLIOTT GOLDSTEIN got his Auditorium at 7:30, in local TV shows like "The lowe's shoes had previously first Broadway job as a GOULD, 39, FIRST achieved Bonny Maid Linoleum Versatile been filled by tough cookies chorusboy in a 1957 flop called theatrical success in a short- Varietiep " his porformance in like Bogart and smoothies like Rumple, by telephoning the lived musical comedy, I Can Altmans M*A*S*H, a fast-paced iJames Garner and,, believe it play's producer and imperson- Get It For You Wholesale, anti-war farce, established him or not, Dick, Powell. Altman's ating an agent who raved about which also launched the career as a screen actor of force version, a totally unique, up- an unknown actor - himself - of his ex-wife, Barbra Streisand. More importantly, Gould seem- dated detective story, returned named Elliott Gould. He originated his film role in ed to touch and sooth a raw Gould to the hard-boiled but ul- I That's typical of the man who Jules Feiffer's Little Murders nerve in the American conscious- timately likeable character who shot to stardom in Robert Alt- on Broadway in 1967. In '68 he ness, excelling in offbeat come- is always pushed to the limits man's M*A*S*H. in 1970, and hit the Hollywood scene with dies like Getting Straight. He of his dignity and the most per- has since remained an arche- a featured role in The Night also became the first American sonable intimations of a man type of the 1970s anti-hero - a They Raided Minsky's, and the actor to appear in an IngmarI who is by nature a loner. wry, neurotic symbol of an up-' folloing year, garnered an B'ergman film, The Touch - CALIFORNIA SPLIT, a third tight age. Academy Award nomination fcr regrettably, a failure. f Altman-Gould teaming, found !The star of three Altman his portrayal of a congenial IN 1973, ROBERT ALTMAN Gould in the role of a compul- films, Gould will speak in con- square in Bob and Carol and cast Gould in the role of Phillip sive gambler - a role close to junction with the Robert Alt-, Ted and Alice. Marlowe in Raymond Chand- his real one, as he was a heavy man Festival, sponsored by A far cry from the vaudevil- ler's The Lpng Goodbye, which gambler in the late 1950s. I1 U Ramns ,5SoniC By DAVID KEEPS WINTER REALLY ends next Monday night, when the shrapnel and sparks of a rock: Bruegen, Curtis excel on flute and harpsichord By ANGELA NICITA TUESDAY EVENING the University Musical Soci- 'ety presented their last con- cert of the Chamber Arts Ser- ies at . Rackham Auditorium.1 Frans Brueggen on the Ba- roque flute and recorders, and Alan Curtis on the harpsichord were the featured artists. The program consisted of three Ba- roque pieces and two Renais- sance compositions. Brueggen, who was born in Amsterdam in 1934, teaches at the Royal Conservatory there and has played in concerts worldwide. Recorder students from all over the world come tos study with him in Amsterdam. Curtis was 'also born in 1934. A professor of music at the University of California, Berke- ley, he is a musicologist and a{ widely respected specialist in was off. Still the sonata was lovely, even with the minor flaws. As the evening progressed thej two seemed to gain confidence. Their performances got suc- cessively better. The secondI piece, Partita in D major for Harpsichord, Curtis performed{ -nln Vi ,mh i istn rr much freer Renaissance style Brueggen and Curtis created and amazing web of expression and technique. A series of long fast runs flowing between the two instruments portrayed a great cooperation between the two. It was smoothly done and both artists were at their best. and roll head-on between t h e Ramones - a New York bas- ed. benzedrine-powered powder- keg - and Detroit's energy cris- is solvers, Sonic's Rendezv o u s Band, defrost Ann Arbor for -!ood in a concert that SecondI Chance bills. quite modestly, as "A New Wave Rock and Poll Ass ault." The Ramones are my. most likely candidate to start WIVVII11 and win it singlehandedly. Hail- ing from Forest Hills and head- ed for Forest Lawn. these s reet- wise blitzkriegers became fam- ous for three minute, three chord masterpieces incliding "Commando", "I Don't Wanna Walk Around With You,' and "Now I Wanna Sniff Some Johnny. Tommy. Joey and Dee Dee share the Ramone sur- name and a fierce dedication to streamlined, accelerated r}- trasonics drenched with vo-to- the-minute stereotyned Ameri- cana in lines like, "I met her at the Burger King fell in love by the soda machine." - and a comic book sense of self-de- strliction to match. A TYPICAL Ramones set may I J 'ane. tesec 1 nque was gr- geous and he showed a depth As a whale the concert was of expression that was lacking superb. All the music was per- of epresiontha waslacingformed in the style of the roer- in the first number. The rhyth- iod and one could almost feel- mic pattern was beautiful throughout and accenting was oneself transported back over done with perfect precision. 300 years in musical history. ft BRUEGGEN performed solo was an evening which left a Sonata in G minor for So- Sonaa i G inorforSo-deep impression of the rich prano Recorder and Basso Con- tinuo was the third piece. This and complicated music of the was also beautifully done. Many past.,. complicated runs were played by both artists with superb abil- - lit. 17 MONDAY, MARCH 28 3 4:00 P.M. Baroque opera. He met Brueg- in the next number, which was gen in Amsterdam where he one of the Renaissance pieces. studied harpsichord with Gustav In Two Ricercars from I Dol- Leonhardt. Tuesday night was cimelo by Virgiliano, he dem- his concert debut. onstrated fantastic breath con- THE PERFORMANCE at trol as he ran through ascend-' Rackham opened with the So- ing and descending runs and did nata in B minor for Flue and beautiful high and low thrills. Obligato Harpsichord by Bach. One section contained short ac- This was probably the least well cented staccatto notes, a diffi- done of any of the excellently cult part of the composition performed pieces. Although which Brueggen executed with both artists showed an excellent, ease. technique, their performance of The final piece was also from this piece lacked depth of ex- the Renaissance, Two Sonatas pression. They acted as though from Concerti Ecclesiastici by they weren't very sure of each Cima. This was probably the other and their harmonization highpoint of the concert. In the p A Professor Mohamed Tolbi Department of History, CERES UMAYYAD POLICY TOWARDS THE MAGHREB ROOM 200 LANE HALL Sponsored by the Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies ........... AWL U v. 5 E