. THE MICHIGAN DAILY A rts ~~~Tuesday Octoer t r anety 12, 1976 U '5 Page Five U' Philharmonia lively BEETHOVEN SERIES OPENER By KAREN PAUL IQ ESPONDING to their new conductor, Clark Suttle, the University Philharmonia Orchestra last Thursday performed with more enthusiasm than it has in years. Though the orchestra is made up of the School of Music's less experienced players, their spirit and musicality made up for their lack of exacting technique. The lively program in Hill Auditorium be- gan with Wagner's Prelude to Die Meister- singer Von Nurnberg. The brass and string sections pliyed with surprising unity. The concertmaster could have used more sup- port from his violin section, however. The orchestra responded to Suttle's baton with proper lightness for Haydn's Symphony No. 92. The strings had some ensemble prob- lems, but played earnestly. A full, clear horn sound and mellow bassoon tone en- hanced the performance. SUTTLE'S artistry was evident in his ren- dition of Rimsky - Korsakov's Capriccio Ees- pagnol. The vigorous opening displayed the orchestra's ability to play with a strong, united sound. The many soloists featured throughout the colorful work - clarinet, flute, harp, violin, horn and English horn - per formed with agility and beautiful tones. A delightful Spanish flavor was provided by a precise percussion section, and the violins sang melodiously, The main problem Suttle had was in keeping the orchestra together in fast, tech- nical passages. Because this was the first concert of the season, however, the prob- lem can be solved. Suttle, who conducted the entire concert from memory, modestly replied to compli- ments after the concert, "I hope the rest of the concerts go as well." A good guess is that they will. Guareri By SUSAN BARRY others, invoked many c spiritual implications of HE G U A R N E R I Quar- fact. tet opened its series of The Scherzando vivace Beethoven's string quartets Sat- plified Beethoven's mast urday night at Rackham with the scherzo. The animate( an absolutely flawless perform- quality was attained % ance of three of Beethoven's lightness that was not su most diverse compositions. with the introductionc The quartet, consisting of vio-more somber episode i lihists Arnold Steinhardt and movement. John Daley, violist Michael In the Finale the melod Tree, and cellist David Soyer emerged distinctly as i distinguished each piece with a casually echoed back and disparate interpretation which among the various instru emphasized their own versatili- This brought the firstd ty as well as their complete to a smooth and unified mastery of the. ensemble form. THE SECOND quartet,I T'e rnrst quarret, Op. 127 in No. 3 in D Major, prese E-flat major, was the most high- contrast with its simple l-stylized and interpretatively more poetic texture. The difficult of the three, as it was ing Allegro was elegantl one of the last five of Bee- ple with a bittersweet n thoven's string quartets. In the line that was like a lon opening Maestoso - Allegro, the poem. Guarneri achieved all the as- If the Allegro was a tounding precision that the vig- poem, then the followingE orous movement required. The te con moto was an eleg timing was particularly precise, phrasing flowed as sr while yet retaining a fairly spon- and richly as an image taneous quality. Tennvson's "In Memn EMU AUDIENCE ENTHUSED: Quartet:o of the sidered one of his greatest gressio f that works, at the time it was first not un performed the piece demonstra- ary the exem- ted great promise for the de- The, ery of veloping composer. er and itha ry THE FINAL performance, Op. early ubdued 59 in E minor, No. 2 varied from o of the the first two mainly in tonality THE in the' and intensity. The Allegro was Presto much more somber than it was ly pun ic line inthepprevious, quartets and it it, was was punctuated by the dynam- Altho Sforth s i staccato chords that are often quarte oth 3associated with Beethoven'stservat quartet Ninth Symphony. The second hardly close theme was more melodic and by to . the repeated contrasts evened conven nted a out into a rounded binary form. Beetho r and In the Molto adagio, several tive ge open- distinct individual melodies, By1 y sim- ! played simultaneously, were ~ nelodic melted together so expertly that tg love. this movement most beautifully love emphasized the Guarneri's per- Andan- fection of blend. The juxtaposi- y. The tion of irregular chromatic pro- zoothly from r riam.F U CAN DRIVE s were their ACAR ed and 4 mati YOU COULD SAVE as ex- YOUR FRIEND'S closingL E rapid LIFE. ments. of the t writ- For freeinformationwrite to close DRUNK DRIVER .Box 2345 y. Al- -Rockvile Maryland 20852 y icon- ons produced a texture like that if a contempor- eme. Allegretto was a bit light- the liveliness of the trio transcended the darkness first theme. FINALE was a spirited' with a strong and sharp-' ctuated rhythm. ough the quality of thisj t was questioned by con-' ives of the period, it could be described as radical, day's standards. Further-1 it is this deviance from tional standards that set oven apart as an innova- enius. playing three such dis-' tinctly different quartets from separate periods of Beethoven's career, the Guarneri Quartet achieved a disunity that was interesting in its contrasting forms. This pattern will be repeated in the next concert which will be presented Friday, November 5. Although this concert has been sold out there is an en- core performance scheduled for November 6, which will feature Op. 18, No. 5, Op. 59, No. 1 and Op. 130 with Grosse Fuge. And if the excellent degree of musicianship presented in Sat- urday night's concert is to be maintained, the next perform- ance should be well worth at- tending. Versatile Sege. By JIM SHAHIN ROCK 'N ROLL return Michigan Friday Bob Seger came home. Unrestrained and on hi turf, Seger tumbled Ez Michigan University's E Field House on its ear. L sudden explosion, he an Silver Bullet Band hit-an over rock's pretentions. N ter, no smoke, no extrav costuming, no painted spe Seges performance der ed judgement on its own t From Natbush to Ka du, Seger's brand of D City - Ann Arbor rock i and finally becoming rec ed as the' honest and ex expression it always has About time. A decadec bums behind him, and the Music Awards nominates as "best 'new talent." BOB SEGER took a command following an a ture in boredom by a thir Kiss-type band called Leather - enamored mac with all the threat of a Sabbath burp, Starz rem even the forces of doom, they no doubt mancy selves patterned after. "Natbush City Limits" menced Seger's part o show with a strength showcased the impressive led to night; s own astern comes home ability of this dedicated per- ments, if any, leaving love, and former. Grabbing the crowd even leaving self. "Turn the with an unbridled energy, "Nat- Page," with its shadowy music bush" was riveting. It pounded and the quiet refrain "There I and thrashed, not letting go, go again" reveals an inner Se- until everybody was up and ger to us, and it haunts him. Bowen clapping in time to the song. Concluding his set with the ike Muddled at first, the soundmotor - running "Katmandu," d his became more clear as the night Seger returned with a no-brakes ad-ran went on. Seger's set was rep- version of "Rosalee," and "Let o glit- resentative of his lineage. it Rock," which highlighted the 'agantW featring a fevtunes hardest hitting rock 'n roll gui- akers off his yet to be released tar work since Dick Wagner mand- NightbMoves LP, he also dipped and Steve Hunter's collabora- terms.sway back for rollickin' rendi- tion on the intro to "Sweet tman- tions of ,Heavy Music," and Jane" off Lou Reed's Rock 'n; etroit Ramblin', Gamblin' Man."All Roll Animal album. Incessant s fast were done in the finest tradi- and biting with the sharpened ogni-on of good-time, shake-yer- fangs of total absorption, it ogi-ass rock 'n roll.naldtenrstoheai. citing SEGER didn't disappoint; 'he nailed the nerves to the nadir. been. laved what the audience came Well, you can't just dump Rock to bear. "Travellin' Man" slid peaking rockers, so Seger was hiR into "Beautiful Loser" the srme obligated to return once again way it does on his recent live to center stage. His second en- release. Although "Loser" suf- core was a credible, if anti- stage fered from over-work -- it lack- climatic "Lucifer." adven- ed snontaneity and sounded Looking back, it was a most '-tevarni~hpwd - "Travelin' Man" okn'ak twsams ~d-rate aihri- TaenMn welcome homecoming. Starz. so"jnd'' tke he meant it. Con-w mig. hismo 5str ±' ""'ren't too tight on it, Black 91"' '- music a little room eaned to str "h out. We have it which "Turn the Page" had the them- feeling of an echo. As though all together! Seger was listening to himself com- while he sang. Seger's composi- P1N BALL, f the tion's revolve around the idea: BILLIARDS that of mobility: leaving restraints, dur- making short-time committ- Bo L NG TUE ADAGIO that followed flowed extremely smoothly and was softly emphasized with a lightness that characterized the Guarneri's interpretations of the more challenging passages' throughout the evening. The subtle tone inflections in the theme variations of this move- ment were particularly remark- able in that the composer was totally deaf at the time he con- ceived of the piece. This move- ment, more than any of the The musicians themselves thoroughly engrossed in performance as they dipp( nodded with each drr punctuation. The second Allegro w tremely brief and thec Presto was much more than the preceding move This quartet, the briefest three, was one of the firs ten by Beethoven at the of the eighteenth centur though it is not generall TICKETS GO ON SALE THURS., OCT. 14 In cooperation with Major Events Office and'UAC. TICKETS $5.50, $4.50, $3.50 at Michigan Union Box Office 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Schoolkids and both Discount Records. ') NFORMATION 763-1107.I -I Oct. 123 Hill Add Late comers will not be seated during performance, r ir y 1 1 ir , I F L Why not join the DAILY? THE DAILY IS A GREAT PLACE TO: * meet other good people f drink 5c Cokes 0 write stories * see your name in print 0 earn a little money Come on down to 420 Maynard anytime and join the business, news, sports or photography staffs! BETTE DAVIS in LITTLE FOXES Davis and Herbert Marshall star in this fasci- natingly morbid account of inter-family treach- ery and ugly greed in a small southern town about 1900. William Wyler's restless camera, Davis' taut acting, and Dorothy Parker all add to the film's powerful impact. WED: Bergman's ALL THESE WOMEN CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT at OLD.ARCH. AUD. 7:00 & 9:05 Admission $1.25 93 T T T T T T T T T T T T f 1 f 1 1 A. f 1 l J. l . .i . I . f l .ri. At the UNION the university of michigan artists and craftsmen guild invites you to an exhibition and sale of ceramics, fibers, graphics, jewelry, paintings, and sculpture by 75 guild members saturday, oct. 16 8 am to 6 pm sunday, oct. 17 12 noon to 6 pm grounds of community high school, across from the farmers market-In ann orbor -TONIGHT!- DAVID ESSEX and RINGO STARR ROCK-N-ROLL DOUBLE THAT'LL BE THE DAY (Claude Whatham, 1974) 7 ONLY Highly-acclaimedfilm based onthetrue story of the rise to fame of a British Rock group, here called the Stray Cats with super-guitarist Jim Maclaine played by real-life rock star David Essex. "The sonudtrack uses '60's music the way AMERICAN GRAFITTI dide. THAT'LL BE THE DAY has the feeling of rock ballad."-Allen Howard, Hollywood Reporter, With Bingo Starr, Rosemary Leach, Keith Moon, Billy Fury. STARDUST (Mchael Apted, 1974) 9 ONLY This sequel to THAT'LL BE THE DAY continues the adven- tures of Jim Maclaine. The songs, mannerisms and events swirling around him are vastly similar to a Beatles biography. "stands glitteringly on its own as a requiem to the rocking '64's. It is an ambitious and engrossing movie."-Charles Champlin, L.A. Times. David Essex, Keith Moon, Adam Faith, Larry Hagman., $1.25, DOUBLE FEATURE $2.00I AUD. A ANGELL HALL - - - - - - - -_ .- - sponsored by the Office of Ethics and Religion and Canterbury House LAST LECTURES Several Michigan Professors have been asked to prepare a lecture as if it were the last lecture they would give - to consider what they feel would be most I i important to say. m Wednesday, October 13th PROF. ALFRED MEYER POLITICAL SCIENCE Wednesdays, 4 to 5 p.m. Auditorium A, Angell Hall NEXT WEEK: PROF. HENRY K. SKOLIMOWSKI WEDNESDAY, October 20th It Pays to Advertise in The Daily Put the DAILY NEWS FROM THE MAJOR EVENTS OFFICE Hope all the survivors of the Steve Goodman! Vassar Clements concert have recovered from that fantastic evening of music. Steve Goodman's ver- satility, personality and talent combined to create a stunning performance that left the sold out Power Center audience standing and cheering for more. Steve returned with Vassar Clements and his band and then thrilled an ecstatic aIudience by bringing on his good friend John Prine who was passing through on 'his way. to Massey Hall in Toronto. Everybody was having such a fine old time that we moved right on to Mr. Flood's Party where proprietor Ned Duke hosted the party and later it all moved on to the Pretzel Bell where Vassar and his band were jamming with The RFD Boys. Linda and David Sigland, operators of The ARK, joined us with Michael Cooney who had finished up at The ARK, and it was old home week with John and Steve who were first intro- duced in Ann Arbor by The ARK. One of the hottest acts in the country, George Benson, blazes into Hill Aud. tomorrow night for a concert. Opening the program at 8 p.m. will be David Pomeranz, and good seats are still avail- able at the Michigan Union Box Office from 11:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. and at the door beginning at 6:30. Folks nearly wore down the tile in the Michigan Union Lobby queing up for Judy Collins tickets last week. We give alot of thought and attention to expediting things so people can move right along once the tickets go on sale. If you ever have any ideas on ways to improve the opera- tion, feel free to ring us up or come by and discuss it with us. TAMA PERSON! BW, STAPLE. M NANY "' WAYII" /f 'r I 00VMOXY "Mercury Recording Artists" L -PLUS- LADIES NIGHT r-I ALL LADIES GET FREE ADMISSION Why wait until the afternoon to catch up on what's happening in the world when the i