l Arts & Entertainment THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, February 3, 1976 Page Five with lass Daily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER Guitarist Christopher Parkening, hailed as the protege of Andre Segovia, performs be- fore an enthusiastic audience last Friday at the Power Center. Parkeningf short of high tons By KEVIN COUNIHAN l]RAWING on a diverse repertoire of music spanning several centuries, guitarist Chris- topher Parkening presented a well - received recital Friday night at the Power Center. Parkening first drew attention as the much- publicized protege of Andre Segovia and his technique shows the influence of such an aus- picious mentor. Yet despite his obvious profic- iency, Parkening's performance was uneven and occasionally revealed weak harmonics and missed notes. This was especially disappointing as Parken- ing was clearly capable of giving a first-rate performance. He showed a thorough under- standing of the instrument and was especially impressive in his command of tone color, ex- tending from a velvet-like softness in the mid- dle strings to metallic sharpness when plucking the strings near the soundboard. DESPITE these flaws, Parkening played a satisfying program, made even more so by his interesting selection of works. The first half featured several notable transcriptions of the Baroque era as in a serabunde and minute by Handel and selected movements from three of Bach's famous suites for unaccompanied cello. Both of these compositions were exquisitely performed and displayed a superb sense of tone and phrasing. The Bach selections were the most appealing, and, of the three movements, the Courante from the third cello spite was particularly effective. The Courante with its lively, dance-like rhythms demands exceptional accuracy and Parkening gave a knowledgeable reading of it. The set ended with compositions by Leopold Weiss and Fernando Sor whose "Variations on a sixteenth-note runs and sudden dynamic chang- es. Parkening took advantage of closing with a virtuoso work and the audience warmly re- spended to it. THE SECOND part of the program high- lighted works from the 20th century. Opening with transcriptions from three prominent French composers, Parkening played a medley of Debussy's "Girl with the Flaxen Hair", Sa- tie's "Gymnopedie" (no. 3), and Ravel's "Pa- vane of the Sleeping Beauty, Empress of the Pagodas". Marred only by an inhibitve interpretation of meter in the Satie work, the triology was a beautifully refined expression of post-Romantic sentiment. Parkening somehow assimilated the imagistic characteristics of the harp and pro- duced a sensual study of three masterpieces of the early French school. The final works were four uninterrupted selections from the contemporary style of Span- ish and South American gutiar music. Joaquin Turina's well-known work "Soleares No. 2" was performed with deserving elegance by slighted by occasionally weak chord changes. The "Fan- danguillo" movement from Frederico Moreno- Torroba's Suite Castellana allowed Parkening; to demonstrate a polished flamenco technique. Mr. Parkening ended with the expressive "Pri- mavera" from Platero and I by Mario Castel- nuovo-Tedesco. A THOROUGHLY enjoyable evening was suit- ably capped with two encore pieces, "An Afro- Cuban Lullaby" and Bach's Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring." The enthusiastic reaction by the au- dience at the completion of these works was proof that Mr. Parkening is welcome back at any time. THREE YEARS ago, she started out on the cross-country tour which, released with her monumental f i r s t album, brought her instant fame. Two years ago, with the release of her second (and somehave said, inferior) album, she em- barked upon another tour, ap- nearing at the Masonic in De- troit along the way. Then, suddenly, she dropped out of sight. Strange rumors drifted around the record indus- try, each month proclaiming tlia coming of a new Bette Mid- ler album, but somehow News- week always ran photos of her dancing at any new Riviera dis- cotheque with someone's titled son and the record never was cut. It seemed as though she had dumped her career. This rumor was fueled by the re- lease of a fraudulent grade-Z movie called "The Divine Mr. J" which featured Bette Mid- ler in a small part. Her fans gave up hope. She appeared on a special with Elton John and Cher, and rumors began to fly again. In the meanwhile, her longtime mentor and friend, Barry Mani- low, had struck out on his own, and she was cast adrift with- out a musical arranger or di- rector. Bette had hit - the pits. PUT THEN, Bette Midler's triumphant return was an- nounced. The Divine Miss M was returning to the Minskoff Theater in New York City with her "Clams on the Half-Shell" revue. The future looked bright. The critics loved it, the public loved it - Bette was a star again. Bette Midler incorporated a lot of her "Half-Shell" mater- ial into the show at Masonic Friday. It revealed two things; first, that she had broadened her anpeal to the middle-of-the- roaders as well as the scream- ing meemies, and secondly, that in so doing she had lost a great deal of her original kinky charm. She has become harder, slick-1 er - less the vulnerable littlei girl you want to hug as well1 as the bitchy performer oft 1940's hits. She still does the hits, and the three-o'clock-in- the-morning jokes, but her ac-t cessibility has been lost to Paris. Before her sabbatical, she had never rubbed elbowsr with the Rothschilds - now, that she has, and she seems thek worse off for it. SHE OPENED the concert with that timeworn hit,. "Friends," performed within the framework of a vapid hos- pital bed pantomime. The ap- plause carried it, but the fans of Detroit were so starved tot see her that they ignored this. She steppedr p to the micro- nhone afterwards, with her band pulsating in the back- ground and s-id, "Did von miss me, Detroit?" The response must have been, to say the least, reassuring. The first act consisted of a compilation of her old hits and some delightful new material. To assauge the fans, she per- formed ably,rthough without her best spirit, in "Do You Wanna Dance?" and others. But when Midler trots out the olies, it's rather like Judy Garl'nd running through that rainbow thing one too many times: she's doing it for the aldience, but her heart is with the new. The new material included a stunning number by Neil Young, "Fly Away," and one song, from her new album (which she in- cessantly plugged, by name of Songs for the New Depression), about ships and sailing away. The mood is lyrical and love- ly - it is as if she was trying to recapture the best of her past. THE COSTUMES did nothing to dispel the image of pure tackiness. She aoneared at first in a ragdoll outfit reminiscent of Liza Doolittle, then switched to the silver glitter outfit made esneci 41v for her to wear on the Cher special - here she wore it as a parody in his skit satirizing bad niahtclub singers, and one in particular named Vickie Evdie Act I ended with her per- formance of "Lullaby of Broad-; way", while dangling from the outstretched hand of a stage prop-King Kong, replete with Empire State Building on the; backdrop. The Harlettes (her three backup women vocalists) provided contrast as they per- formed a Busby Berkeley rou- tine on the stage, while Midler swung from the gorilla's paw. Act II began with a truly startling rendition of "Delta Dawn", and ended in as appro- priate a fashion, with "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy", that old Midler standby, stashing be- tween other numbers such as "In The Mood," an example of what Midler calls "hubba-hub- ba", or 1940's swing music. BUT THE true joy of seeing Bette Midler, when not revel- ing in her music, is her abso- lute graps of filthy humor, though not often spiced with an awareness of when and where such jokes ought to be told. The jokes about Detroit were rife. She referred to the city as "the land that time forgot," and while the audience was still gig- gling over that one, she added smugly, "1967 was such a good year," UNDENIABLY her best jokes of the evening were old rou- tines from the repertoire of Sonhie Tucker. Midler spoke of how she'd like to be a true vul- garian in the style of Tucker, bht with a heart of gold; then she proceeded to tell some of the smn'ttiest jokes these re- 'newers have heard since they were in knee-pants. With the last of these, she in- angurated a tr!ly novel prac- tice. In the stvle of Mitch Mil- ler, Midler conducted what she THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PROFESSIONAL T HEAT RE PROGRAM GUEST ARTIST SERIES in the POWER CENTER termed1 an "obscene joke- along" whereby the audience repeated the joke, phrase by phrase, in heavy panting rhy- thm. Decency forbids that we repeat it; suffice it to say that an audience of three thousand was swaying and chanting "Get off my back!" She ended the concert in pos- sibly the most offensive and hysterically funny manner pos- sible: dressed in the Statue of Liberty outfit, she sang a free- style version of Emma Gold- man's classic sonnet "Give me vour tired, your poor, etc.", and then, as if we couldn't possibly expect it (believe me, we did), she ended it all with a noisy and somewhat enthusiastic rendi- tion of "Friends." It may be that Midler is no tonger one with her audience, and it may be that she has lost some of her vulnerable appeal, and it may be that you don't w-'n-t to hug her anymore, but let's face it: Bette Midler is a star. SAVING OIL IN INDUSTRY NEW YORK (AP) - According to Factory Magazine, if indus- try is to convert from oil to coal to reduce America's de- pendence on foreign oil, about 42,000 steam plants in factories will have to be replaced be- cause they cannot be'converted to burn coal. This would cost 68 billion over the next 10 years but wold save about two million barrels of oil per day. The magazine suggests a less expensive alternative: replac- ing only the largest installa- tions at a cost of S11 billion, whirh would save 1.6 barrels of oil ner day. Toniaht at 7 & 9:00 Ooen 6:45 JfO4* "Purlie Victorious by Os'ie Davis TUES-SAT FEB. 17-21 Advance sales through PTP Ticket Offic located in lobby of Mendelssohn Theatre Building. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-1 p.m., 2-5 p.m. Professional Theatre Proqram Ticket Office (313) 764-0450 tickets available at HUDSON'S I S_______ _ __ .. .. !! FRESH PEOPLE!! Theme by Mozart" was stirring Arts .Briefs NEW YORK (AP) - Dorothy Kirsten, who first sang at the Metropolitan Opera Dec. 1, 1945, in Puccini's "La Boheme," made a real prima donna's fare- well to the Met on New Year'sa Eve, singing Floria Tosca, the prima donna in Puccini's "Tos- ca." Miss Kirsten leaves the MetI still getting rave reviews for her singing - and not out of kindness, but because she sings well - looking radiant and vi- brant, with a wealth of memo- ries and muchdfor which she's rightfully proud. She'll still sing, A "Girl of the Golden West" in Honolulu and "Tosca" in Cincinnati plus concerts are coming up. But she'll be able to spend more time painting, playing golf and it i its extended, TONIGHT-2 films by John Ford! TUESDAY, FEB. 3 STAGECOACH (John Ford, 1939) AUD. A-7 only A simple parable told with few flourishes; a stagecoach with human misfits inches across the desert. The con- trasting characters receive a central movinq force with the arrival of the Ringo Kid who shelters them through Indian attacks. problems, and personal conflicts. John Wayne, Claire Trevor, John Corradine. YOUNG MR. LINCOLN (John Ford, 1939) AUD. A-9 only Early career of Lincoln frcm storekeeper to first big law case is based on real and conjectured incidents, all woven into a storv of vounq Abe's defense of two younq men accused of a murder. Eise.nstein's all-time favorite Ameri- can film. Henry Fonda. in AUD. A, ANGELL HALL $1.25 single show $2.00 double feature If you have not picked up your Freshman Record. There are still and soft cover editions available at the UAC offices, SecondI Michigan Union. hard Floor UAC MUSKET announces "DOLLY" is Coming! Get ready to say "HELLO" to "DOLLY," the most entertaining musical to hit Ann Arbor! MARCH 25-28 DON'T miss it. INGMAR BERGMAN'S 1957 (AT 7) An old man (Victor Seastrom) takes a journey through his past as he travels to receive an award from a university. Incredible images. RUDOLPH VAL ENTINO in 1926 )j SON OF THE SHEIK (AT 9:05) The great silent screen lover in the desert ad- venture that made him tamous. "Romance and conflict on the shifting sands.'" BOTH SHOWS OLD ARCH. AUD. FOR $2.00 Admission $1.25 COMEDY PREMIERES! THE PROFESSIONAL THEATRE COMPANY THE ACTING COMPANY premieres in their repertoire UAC Concert Co-op SHAWN PHILLIPS BOB SEGER and and STEVE GOODMAN FOGHAT Saturday. Feb. 7 8:00 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 11 8:00 p.m. Hill Audi. Tickets $4.50 and $4.00 Crisler Arena Tickets $5.00 and $6.00 Tickets for both these concerts on sale now at UAC/Michioan Union Box Office. Open Monday thru Friday 11:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. For more info call 763-2071 MEDIATRICS MURDER ON THE ORIENT Shakespeare Cinema EXPRESS THRONE OF BLOOD NAT. SCI AUDI. MLB AUDI. 4 FEB. 6 and 7 Price $1.25 FEB. 8 Price $1.00 Times: 7:00 and 9:15 Times: 7:00 and 9:30 FUTURE WORLDS presents today at Hill Aud. at 3:00 p.m. ROLLO MAY speaking on "Changing Values in Future Society" Next Week: JONATHON KOZOL speaking on "Alternate Use of Education" UAC TICKET CENTRAL now located IN Hill Audi. HAIR-FEB. 5 Open Mondav thru Friday 1 1:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. For more info call 764-8350 CONGR EVE'S -ae 2 W . .e AaL tXL2m1A WMffAW Ff UfKtk:I I-KUM NtYY TUKK (-I IT ilff ( I