THE MICHIGAN DAILY A rts & Entertainm ent Tuesday, November 2, 1976 Page Five II IIMI 'pl F C Bream excels with lute and guitar By JIM STIMSON Maestro. The first tune, a Fan- tasia, was particularly piquant 1ULIAN BREAM is above all and lyrical. The five dances by; else a virtuoso. Neither com- English composer John Dowland position nor teaching seem to (1563-1626) that followed reflect- interest him in the least. ed the pomp Moreover, Bream is a virtuo- royal courts so on two instruments, the gui- French piecet tar and the lute, and ranks with which opened !the world's finest on both in- was equally struments, warmed upt Bream displayed both talents the music to and grace of the of Europe. A. by Adrian le Roy, the performance,. delightful and the audience for come. i cester (from King Lear), Romeo hope to perform it. Said Bream the trip to Ann Arbor five times and Juliet, Ariel, Ophelia, Aud- of the final section, "Oberon," since 1963. He is one of the rey and Touchstone of As You which wanders into silence, "I handful of guitarists who repre- Like It, and Oberon from A wanted it to drift away into sent the resurgence of the clas- Midsummer Night's Dream. i air." sical guitar in recent years. The music that followed was Besides the audience's skepti- Before the emergence of An- such a departure from the rest cal reception of the work, there dres Segovia and, later, John of the program that most mem- was a problem of acoustics for Williams and Bream, there was bers of the audience were left those in the rear. It is surpris- . agape. Bream described the op- ing that this huge auditorium virtually no one to carry on the ening as "bitter," and the rest was chosen for solo guitar, rath- tradition of the great ron antic of the work retained the same er than the more intimate sur- era of guitarists such as Sor, I to a full house at Hill Auditori- After an intermission, Bream i wintry vein. The chords were roundings of Rackham Auditori- um last Sunday afternoon. The made a welcome charge in the I harsh, dissonant and choppy, um. first part of the performance guitar program with the addi- where in the other pieces they But Bream surmounted the was devoted to the lute, an in- tion of The Prelude from J. S. had been smooth and graceful. difficulty with determined pro- strument common to the Ren- Bach's 1st Cello Suite. He also Bream feels Winter Musick jection, and concluded the pro- aissance and Baroque eras. The played the Prelude-from the 4th is "one of the most developed gram with La Catedral, by the second half was all guitar work. Cello Suite, bringing off both pieces ever written for con- Brazilian writer Augustin Bar-1 pieces with a flair befitting these temporary guitar. It employs rios (1885-1944). It is a moody BEFORE PLAYING, Bream fine examples of the High Ba- harmonics, slapping and knock- piece more in keeping with a explained the use of the lute roque style. Bream himself, aft- ing the guitar face flamenco classical program. to his audience. He noted that, er the show, commented that style, and an occasional silence with its 14 to 20 strings, it is he'd always liked Bach's cello to gain a different effect. THE ENCORE was another a difficult instrument to tune; suites.;pleasant surprise - the 1st this contributed to its loss of ON THE WHOLE, Royal Etude in E minor by Hector' popularity in the 18th and 19th THE NEXT PART of the pro- Winter Musick 1976 came off Villa-Lobos. This brilliant and centuries. Bream remarked gram proved a surprise to ev- sounding more like a Ralph spirited tune was beautifully that, in its time, the lute was eryone. It was a contemporary Towner (of Oregon) caprice rendered by Bream in one of known as "the queen of instru- sonata on Shakespearian char- pthan part of the repertoire the finest interpretations I have' men. aters, written by German co- a classical guitarist. One thing ever heard, missed notes not- The lute works Bream chose poser Hans Werner Henze at is certain, though: Only a gui- i withstanding. ,-- th s s ecific r resto nf' .-I-- Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Judy Collins sings as she gazes wistfully at the audience during her concert at Hill Auditorium last Friday night. for this performance were all' from the 16th and 17th cen- tuy. From the pen of Luis Mi- lan (1500 - 1561) came five! sprightly pieces, part of El' Entitled Royal Winter Musick 1976, it flicked through an ex- traordinary series of moody tig- nettes on the characters of Glou- tarist of Bream's caliber could Bream, a Londoner, has made A. LUKEWARM CONCERT: Judy Collins By MIKE NORTON voice was husky and tired, her' TT WAS particularly appropri- phrasing uneven, her pronuncia-a ate that Judy Collins should tion slurred. They ignored the L have worn a long dress of im- frequent unnecessary warblesL perial purple for her concert she threw into her vocals to: V at Hill Auditorium last Friday make them sound new. Collinsu night. She reigned over her drew wide applause on every' enthusiastic Homecoming audi- number, some of which I must ence like a queen, and could no maintain was undeserved - 1 no wrong in their eyes. ier rendition of "Farewell tos Which is not at all the same Tarwaithie", though, was an-., as saying she did not wrong. other matter altogether. As aq It has always been Collins' recorded track of whale songs strategy to plan her concerts flowed into the auditorium, onet with what she calls "hills and co'Klc) '- , a change come overe valleys", meaning moments of the pe ' 'rmer; a terrible inno-L alternating excitement a n d cence filled her eyes - the old calm. I only wish the valleys look we remember from Judy had been a little less like Collins. And when she sangv chasms; those moments of calm the song, she sang it straight. sometimes became hours of There was no experimentation boredom. this time, only purity. THE CONCERT began slow- '.'FAREWELL" blended into Iy, and continued slowly. Her "The Story of Isaac," and the rendition of "City of New Or- feeling carried over, as well. leans" was glib and cheap, the Here was a case of superior high notes at its end sharp material working its spell on enough to cause ear damage. a berformer, and Collins did it But the audience ate it up. proud. They ignored the fact that her Unfortunately, the character EISENSTEIN'S 1925 The Russian master of montage depicts the great Russian Block Sea mutiny of 1905. The "Odessa steps" sequence exemplifies Eisen- stein's dazzling editing, In 1958, international jury voted POTEMKIN the "best film in the world" by a 100 out of 117 votes. *CINEMA GUILD IS ACCEPTING MEMBERSHIP APPLICATIONS. INQUIRE AT THE TICKET DESK * WED: Bergman's WINTER LIGHTS GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. CINEY. 7:00 & 9:05 Admission $1.25 I at Hill: No magic lf the concert deteriorated once, again. With the exception of Leonard Cohen's "Take This Longing From my Heart," there was no exceptional work until the last fifteen minutes of Collins' performance. The backup band was excel- lent in quality, which may have served to accentuate the poor' quality of the vocalist. The two original instrumental composi- tions which were featured, how- ever - a quasi-jazz "Solar Dance" and a trio of Michel Le- grand - style piano waltzes - were undistinguished. Special Attractions Performing Oedipus "Nobility, Swiftness and Horror!" ! "EplosilyMoving" Nov. 5&6 8:30pm And Che la g of the Nmw "BoisterousIrrevrent, Knockabout Version" "Bsty Aoyms,&Fuu/" Nov. 7 2&8pm PowerCenter 1 kets avaiable at PTP Ticket Oft ce Me"e*ssohnTheateLobbyMon-F 1 2-5 For Information Call!764-0450 COLLINS .perked up once most of the preceding selec- again, close to the end of the tions. performance, with Jacques Ov er all, though, I cannot ad- Brel's "Mareike", possibly the mit to satisfaction with Collins' finest piece of the evening. Tl'e performance. Perhaps s h e next three compositions ("Bread should take a few days off from and Roses," "Bird on a Wire", work to lounge about and rest and "Send in the Clowns") were her voice before coming to Ann much more acceptable than Arbor again. !!} MUSKET NEEDS. DIRECTORS DESIGNERS STA FF for it's Spring Musical Her's your chance to direct or design a major Power Center production! Apply at UAC, 2nd Fl. Michigan Union by Nov. 17 FOR INFORMATION CALL 763-1107 See CAMELOT!., Nov. 4,r5, 637,I1O,'11,I12,13 I I ( Guiliani, and Tarrega. Now a wellspring of young talent has been fostered, including Chris- topher Parkening, Angel Rome- ro, Oscar Ghiglia, and others. Both Bream's guitar and lute are handmade; they look as much like works of art as they do musical instruments. And Ju- lian Bream brings out their beauty as he does the beauty of the music he plays. STHE of NORTH -AROLINA at CHAPEL HILL is now accepting appli- cations f o r 1977 -78 from outstanding stu- dents at University of Michigan for the MBA program. FOR INFORMATION WRITE TO: THE MBA PROGRAM THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION CARROLL HALL 012-A UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA 27S 14 TONIGHT AT 7 & 9 OPEN 6:45 k0 I I1vil : TICKETS 54:50. Availoble at Mich. Union Box Cffice, (10 a.m -5 p.m. l, schoolkid's Records and both Discount Records. Informaton: 7631 107 J1 HAPPENINGS I s': I Order your subscription today! Phone 764-0558 iUNiGH I Al /:UU&y:IU OPEN 6:45 WEDNESDAY NOSTALGIA NIGHT Dane to the original sounds of the IG BAND ERA 50's and 60's' Put on Your "Saddle Shoes" and "Bobbie Socks" and Hop on Over to the Blue Frogge! Have a Party with Your Friends!!! Better Yet, Come for One of Our CANDLELIGHT-SUPPERS. FREE BALLROOM DANCING LESSONS at 8 p.m. by Wendy Schacknow of Art Worlds TUESDAY-IS LADIES' NIGHT! LADIES ADMITTED FREE AM Een AfiL NEWS FROM THE MAJOR EVENTS OFFICE After an exciting week of Eagles-mania around this campus concerning their November 12th ap- pearance we thought you would be interested in hearing what shows didn't come through this season. We had hoped to be able to announce that Chicago would give a concert here in November, but they didn't want a competing show so close to the Detroit concert which hasn't been sold out. . . . Hall and Oates won't be able to perform for us this term because Hill was booked solid the week their tour came near us. We lose many of 'your favorites due to the hall availability problem. . . . Beach Boys negotia- tions came to an abrupt halt when somebody in the group got hepatitis and all dates were can- celled. . . . We were talking with Stevie Wonder's manager last week about concert possibilities. Stevie's doing to tour Europe this winter, then Eclipse Jazz presents .. . AN EVENING OF BIG BAND JAZZ, with Thad Jones/ Mel Lewis Orchestra Nov.'6, MichiganLeague Ballroom at 7:30 and 10 P.M. Tickets are $4.50 and on sale at the Michigan Union Box Office, Schoolkids Records, and, both Ann Arbor Discount Records. Inforamtion: 763- 1 107. SOPH SHOW '76 Presents a Musical Comedy, "HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING." Performances: Thur., Dec. 9; Fri., Dec. 10; Sat., Dec. 11 in Lydia , Mendelssohn Theater. Tickets go on sale Nov. 7. The event of the year! CAMELOT the most exciting theater event of the season, opens this week. Performances are the evenings of the 4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12, & 13, with a matinee on the 7th. Advance tickets sale have left the 5th, 12th, and 13th, almost sold out, so you should buy your tickets soon. As an added bonus for students, we have opened the 6th as a one-price, general admission performance. So qo over to Mendelssohn Theater from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. or until 8 p.m. the nights of the performance and get your tickets to the UAC MUSKET/MM Productions pres- entation of CAMELOT! MUSKET rneeds Directors, Designers and Staff for its Spring Musical. Here's your chance to direct or design a major Power Center oroduction! Apply at UAC, 2nd floor, Michigan Union by Wed., November17. THE PRINT SHOP- Lowest Prices on Campus! The Print Shop will make high-quality posters for you at low, low prices! $18 for 30 posters on heavy weight, colored paper, 500 mimeographed copies for $8.97. Call 763-1 107 or Andy at 994-6418 UAC T-SHIRTS The ones "Bernie" wears ... $3.50 at Michigan Union Box Office. UAC Mediatrics presents. THREE DAYS OF THE CONDOR, Fri. and Sat, night at 7 and 9:30 p.m. at the Not. Sci. Auditorium. Admis- sion: $1.25. I U I L a paramount picture 41" incobor 1(11 Ia 1, i %~ TONIGHT 7 & 9; OPEN 6:45 * . .. .. R<< 1 5 // . qf) ' ' p /Idh w 1 ~Y r r l I !i',