THE MICHIGAN DAILY A r s &Et rta itr n Tuesday, January 20, i1975 Page Five Ilrf Five conductors combine 'Bridegroom- A disappointment" By JAMES BURN warh orses,,' '(/'(e JS- ,(NE OF the most difficult challenges that faces orchestras is that of adjust- ing to the idiosyncrasies of different con- ductors and their styles. In their concert Friday night, the Uni- versity Philharmonia Orchestra rose to the occasion by responding carefully to the gamut of directing fashions presented by five guest conductors. THE PROGRAM opened with what can be called a "warcolt" (a piece that is played often but not yet deemed a full warhorse), Mendelssohn's "Hebrides Over- ture." 3 Conductor Jeremy Balmuth used Bern- stein-like gyrations to, produce an excel- lent blending of upper and lower strings and the richness of wind playing so neces- sary to {proper evocation of Mendelssohn's music. Although the brass seemed to ignore Belmuth's eattempts to lower their I consistently fortissimo entrances, the over- all impact of the piece was impressive. James Harrer proved a much less vig- orous conductor in his direction of Dal- lapiccola's "Piccolo Musica Notturna," which helped to bring out the subtleties 'in this irregular modern composition. ONE OF the great problems in reviewing atonal, nonrhythmic works is telling wheth- er or not the strange noises coming from the stage are correct or not. Particularly, pretentious reviewers often praise such pieces as "revitalizing the musical universe." But when the strings sopnd perpetually lacking in any sort of intonation and every entrance sounds as if orchestra members threw dice to decide when to begin playing, then there is simply no way to assign credit or blame as to how well the performers are transmitting some sort of meaningful musical message. In a nice change of pace, David Urquhart-Jones led the Philharmonia in Sibelius' "Karelia Suite," inspired by the Finnish national epic poem "Kalevala." WHILE THE brass generally avoided the overplaying present in the Mendels- sohn, instead achieving a strong well- balanced martial sound, the strings were not so skillful. Unable to hide behind the atonality of Dallapiccola, the violins re- vealed themselves as out-of-tune as they had earlier sounded. When playing counterpoint, the lower and upper strings sounded as if they were playing on separate stages or were unable to see the conductor. Try as he might, Urquhart-Jones was unable to resolve this problem; consequently, the strings sounded acceptable only in unison passages. Is there a lover of classical music who hasn't heard "Cappricio Italien" at least once? Although a genuine warhorse, it is not a simple work to perform. The open- ing trumpet call began and ended unsurely, possibly due to the nervousness of both t By ANDREW ZERMAN I hold an audience's attention for E GOOD news first: The long with an anecdote. CeoingR ompanyfrt:lhIe FOUND the musical both Acting Company, formally' *l trumpeter Craig Knepp and conductor known ash the City Center Acting too simple and too complica:ed. Liviu Blumenthal. Company, is back in Ann Arbor Too simple because it fails to . ~give the characters any dimren- THE FOLLOWING few minutes of this for its fith appearhedirectionsion or reality and because it Tchaikovsky standard were generally of Jh gouunert ient- railskto convey a sense of what wel- paye, yt te o por i-ofJohn Houseman, is an out- well-played, yet the plague of poor in- growth of the Julliard School's makes legendary Mississippi dif- tonation spread from the violins to the Drama Division and is, to my ferent from legendary anynere else. double reeds and trumpets. Suddenly, half- knowledge, the only repertory It is simultaneously too com- way through, the entire mood of the stage theatre in the country that is, plicated (because there are ex- changed-Blumenthal gained confidence first and foremost, a "touring traneous characters) and un- company." . neos charcte. and on which spread to the orchestra. -.*~ necessarily intricate. Twists of Improved intonation provided a better; atmosphere in which to perform the rest of the work, and the passages where the, entire Philharmonia played showed the whole to be greater than the sum of its- parts. To close the program, Clark Suttle, proved to be the liveliest conductor since Balmuth when he led the group in Weber's "Overture to Die Freischutz." Like all overtures, it had no constant development I of any one theme but rather bits and pieces of several. THE RECOVERY heard in the latter half of the Tchaikovsky continued through- out this work, providing the audience with a favorable final impression. While demonstrating their adaptability to the varying musical and conducting demands placed upon them, the Philhar- monia also revealed they require further rehearsal time to solve the problem of! intonation that separates them from achieving clearly attainable first-classj status. The bad news is that their first production, a new musical. called The Robber Bridegroom, was a disappointment. The show impressed me as being juvenile, -as grumpy as that adjectilve makes me sound. ALFRED UHRY, who wrote the book and lyrics, and Robert Weldman, the music, have adapted Bridegroom from Eu- dora Welty's novella which is set in "legendary Mississippi. Not having readt the book, I can't say whether the problem is this particular adaptation or the material's inherent lack of adaptability. Probably it's both. Perhaps a more inspired team than Uhry, Weldman and direc- tor Gerald Freedman, none of whom has any distinguished musical theatre credits, cot'ld have conceived a richer, more. poetic and less broadly slap- stick approach to the novella. But-the story of Bridegroom is really nothing more than an anecdote and it's not easy to plot don't make the show any more interesting-just more con- fusing. Furthermore, it's all been buried under busy and sophis- ticated staging.sAll the tricks and gimmicks of trendy en- semble theatre (which, when used well, can be not tricky but inspired) are put into play here. But they can't compensa:e for (Story finished in 1st column below) Daily Photo by KEN FINK fJwkl(4Jgj ig s Hhs' 'iares Novelist John Hawkes autographs copies of his own works at Centicore Book Store yesterday before he appeared at the Hopwood Underclass Writing Awards ceremony in Rackham Lecture Hall. Cowboy shows set to ride into sunset? H 0 L L Y W 0 0 D, (Reu- Watergate scandal. THE UNIVERSITY DE IMiRFrGN PROFESSK)NAL T HEATRE PROGRAM THIS, AN ACTOR'S TRUNK has gone in and out of 92 cities across the U.S. Now, it returns to Ann Arbor! I 1 The Acting, Company JUAN a2225 POWER CENTER ; ter) - Are the last of the screen cowboys riding off into their ultimate sunsets? Cowboy series, once a tele- vision staple, have disappeared completely from network tele- vision and the few western mo- vies being made have not prov- ed popular at the box office. BUT OLDTIME western ac- tors like James Stewart and singing cowboy Roy Rogers be- lieve the present slump is just part of a cycle and the west-; erns will come back. Author Daryl Ponicsan, writ- er of a recently published biog- raphy on possibly the greatest Hollywood cowboy ever, Tom Mix, agrees it could be a cy- cle but still finds the present dearth of western production incredible. "Gunsmoke" and Marshall Dillon disappeared from CBS television last year after twenty years on the screen. NBC's ''Bo- nanza" finally closed down in 1973 after 14 years in produc- tion. "THERE really is nothing left on television," Ponicsan; says. "I remember on any giv- en night you could watch cow- boys continuously. You could tune in at 7:30 and watch cow- boys until 11:30." Onethe movie side, John Wayne, the giant of modern screen cowboys, this year dis- appeared from the list of top ten box office stars for the first time in 2S years. Wayne's latest western "Roo- ster Cogburn", in which he re- played the role of the one-eyed cowboy which won him the academy award in 1969,' was not a box office success. DESPITE this setback Wayne, now 68, has just begun anoth- er western, "The Shootist", in which he plays a cowboy fight- ing his last battle against can-, cer. Coincidentally, Wayne sur- vived an attack of lung cancer in the late sixties. Ponicsan, author of a number of successful novels about sail- ors including "Cinderella Liber- tv" and "The Last Detail" both of which were filmed, chose Mix when he decided to write a book about an authentic Ameri- can hero at the height of the MORE ABOUT BRIDEGROOM (Continued from column 8 above) the fact that Bridegroom is fun- damentally vacuous. WELDMAN'S music couldn't fill that vacuum; it was static and, worse than that, pre- recorded. Amplification in live musicals is irritating enoign; canned music is perhaas for- His book "Tom Mix Died for Your Sins" is to be made into a film by 20th-Century Fox Stu- dio. "I DON'T know why I picked Tom Mix," he says. "He died when I was two years old. My conclusion is somehow he was in my subconscious and I felt if he was in my subconscious he must be in the collective subconscious." In his book Ponicsan traces the ups and downs of Mix's lifej from his early days with rodeo shows to his success in Holly-' wood and his death, penniless, after he lost all his money in a cowboy show. "It's a sad story when you end up your life with your en- tire estate in your pockets aft- er you've made millions and your body's been battered and bruised and you feel you're at the end of your powers," he says. "BUT IT'S healthy to find out our heroes are pretty much like the rest of us. There's noth- ing discouraging in that." Mix founded the figure of the western cowboy in a white hat who rides into town and solvesI all its problems, then rides right on out again without waiting to be thanked. Ponicsan believes that when singing cowboys like Gene Au- trey and Roy Rogers became popular in the thirties it serf- ously hurt the image Mix had created. .s.s Pianst Pressler sparkles in Beaux Arts Trio concert By RICHARD JAMES He seemed withdrawn throughout the con possibly still angry from a pre-concert disa jM OST FIRST-RATE chamber music concerts ment with Cohen. Although he played quite leave the audience with the feeling that he occasionally put forth insufficient effort one piece really stood out above the other missed things technically and stylistically. features of the concert. The Beaux Arts Trio, however, left Friday Completing the first half was Shostakov evening's Rackham Auditorium audience with "TCom p . 67.Th sfr oveha ofbwaso k the strongest impression, among many good "Trio, Op. 67." This proved to be a work thesongthe sheerexseionemongtsmangoo. *the Russian composer's characteristic blei ones, of the sheer excellence of its pianist. almost cold, haunting material and contras MENAHEM PRESSLER seemed to be doing boisterous folk elements. anything but concentrating on an exacting per- formance. He was almost constantly swaying, Particularly effective was the opening o lunging and jumping exuberantly while watching work which featured false harmonics by the other two musicians far more than his own cellist and muted violin. The performanc music. this work seemed a bit less polished than i Despite this, his performance was flawless program opener and their interpretation o and the interpretation of each piece was both "Largo" was a bit too warm for my tast exciting and subtle. It was clear that he spite of this, I found the work to be the scarcely needed his score, interesting of the evening. FORTUNATELY, for the sake of the ensemble THE SECOND half of the concert wa as a whole, Pressler wasn't the only top-notch voted to Dvorak's "Trio in F minor, Op. performer on stage. Violinist Isidore Cohen was The members of the Beaux Arts Trio perfo also captivating as well as being very much on this work with all the requisite fire and pa top of his interpretations, of late romantic chamber music. The Only cellist Bernard Greenhouse proved dis- Adagio movement was particularly sublim appointing, especially since his fine work as a the cleverly drawn-out close of the trio recording artist (primarily of 20th century a delight. The striking Andante moveme music) has received such justifiably high ac- Dvorak's "Dumky" Trio was presented claim. wel ldervede - SERGEI EISENSTEIN'S 1944 IVAN THE TERRIBLE (Part I) (AT 7:00) The first part of Eisenstein's unfinished Trilogy on the infamous Russian Czar. Filled with experiments in com- position. and cuttina. this film is his magnum opus. PART ncert, 1 WILL BE SHOWN NEXT WEEK. gee- D.W. GRIFFITH'S 1915 and BIRTH OF A NATION (AT 9:05) Griffith's aroundbreakina epic that made film an art vich's form and a bia commercial industry. This great look at Ithe Civil War is further enhanced by our tinted high with " atality print which aives the modern viewer a goad idea nd of' what silents were really like sting, CINEMA OLD ARCH. GUIShows AUD. for $2.00 Admission $1.25 f the..- y the _ ce of" n the of the e. In! most Art s de- 65.". armed assion '. Poco. e and was ent of. as az} i i i i vt'Gtl U'G.'fGl YGU 'Gll'GViC. NEW MUSEUMS BOGOTA, Colombia (UPI) - Colcultura, the Colombian State Culture Institute, will open four new museums in 1976 in the town of Guadas and Floresta in the central Andes mountains, Si- bundoy in the south and Cucuta on the Venezuelan boarder. The museums will exhibit the work of local artisans. -i UNIVERSITY CAMPUS ORCHESTRA The UCO membership and sightread- ing rehearsal has been postponed, due to the snow last Tuesday, to TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 7:30 P.M. in the RE- HEARSAL HALL OF THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC. TONIGHT- AKIRA KUROSAWA'S MASTERPIECE THE SEVEN SAMURAI (1954) The rarely shown, long uncut version, will be presented TONIGHT ONLY at 7:30 only in AUD. A, ANGELL HALL. Starring Toshiro Mi- fune A film classic. $1.25 OUR SCHEDULE HAS COME OUT! PICK UP A COPY AT THE SHOwING - - - - - -- - - - m - original works of graphic art-etchings, lithographs,-- by leading 20th century artists: Pablo Picasso Johnny Friedlaender Marc Chagall Salvador Dali, Alexander Calder Joan Miro Georges Rouault Victor Vasarely and others. ALL NEW ART! 1ST SHOW OF SEASON! THIS SUNDAY, Jan. 25th at 3:00 p.m. MARRIOTT INN-BALLROOM US 23 at Plymouth Rd. EXHIBITION: 1:00-3:00. Mod. prices-Free admission Presented by Meridian Gallery Bank Chq. Cards acpt. Ii All interested students, faculty, and staff are invited. Auditioning information will be handed out at that time. Auditions will be held on ' January 27th. Eastern Michigan University OFFICE OF STUDENT LIFE PRESENTS Les McCann ALSO FEATURED: DECADE OF DECISION Jan. 22nd-7:30 p.m. Pease Auditorium Advanced Tickets $4.00 TONIGHT AT 7 & 9 OPEN 6:45 z 3s CAMHERME cXENV "1Us A RoBurtProduton inColor AParamountPcture 77 t ^ ' The Frozen Revolution (MEXICO) Documentary of the political reality of Mexi- can history. I m