THE MICHIGAN DAILY A rts Enterta inm ent Wednesday, March 17, 1976 Page Five " Lfchitz shines with new works By TOM GODELL solo piano. As is well known, this madness. Long uauies elap- fleeting the composer's admira- THE MUSIC was dramatic the Faust legend was an enor- sed between phrases, as if Lif- tion for Bela Bartok and Cl iude and arresting, as is the vast ma- NOT judge a composi-|mously popular topic among chitz was hunting desperately DeBussy. (Both Volumes I & III jority of George Crumb's out- Lion on a first hearing; composers of the romantic era' for the next phrase. Too, t h e have been issued in stunning put. Magnlificent and beautiful that which pleases most at first (having been set by Schumann, music was rather over 'ong for performances on the Nonesudh Isonorities were produced in ihe is not always the best." So said Gounod, Liszt, Boito, Busoni, the amount of material. label.) ;piano by 'utilizing inside-the- Robert Schumann, and with that ! and Mahler to name just a few). Like the first set, the work is piano techniques which Crumb sobering thought in mind, I will In his version, Pousseur in- FOLLOWING intermission, the divided into twelve pieces, has made his trademark - piz- report my first impression o corporates numerous selections major work on the progr im was which are then grouped in'., zicati, muted tones, and har- which were heard in Rackham from these 19th century settings. presented - the Ann Arbor pre- three parts of four pieces eacn. monics, to mention some of the Auditoriu Monay even a s In addition, the direction of the mier of Makrokosmos Volume II The first in each group employs more prominent. Pianist Lifchitz Auditorium Monday eveni g as opera's plot is determined by (1973), subtitled "Twelve Fan-" a special external device to easily cleared these technical performed rb Max Lifchitz. t a majority vote of the memnbers tasy-Pieces after the Zodiac for modify the sound of the instru- hurdles, to give a breatiitaking The concert obegan with the of the audience, taken during in- Amplified Piano" by George ment - paper sheets placed performance of one of he truly aaced com IV of Luianom Berio, termissions. 'Crumb, U-M Music School grad- over certain strings in numbers great masterworks of our time. There are tn eatn seven c S fate. This is the second portion 1 and 9, and ordinary w a e r aqire atlerassevensuch THESE features are carried' of a large series of works re- glasses which are run up and ' The image of death predonin- Sequenzi in Berio' s catalogue, ..- - down the stringsa in number 5 in Taheplrn he ioa ag vrt h iaosoe r -ae rmge soreah red~in eachexploringthtot eover to the piano score. rradi- oden to sprngsum Am ates Crumb's score, as reflected of expresive possibilies o r tionalmusic at times alternates DR. STUDIED WEAK order to produceglissaadi. Am- in the titles of various move- ossoonsrm ts futwith 20th century idioms and, AORTIC WALL CASES p iiaio seployed not to ments: Rain Death Variations, ionas solo instruments: flute, ;et:Ri et aitos in addition, the performer is al- modify the sound of tae instru- GhostNocturne, Litany of t h e obie, trombone, viola, human lowed to arrange the pages of CHICAGO (P) - Survival ment, but rather to expand its G lactic Bells, and Agnus Dei. Sequenza IV, consisting of one the score in any order that he should be the rule rather than dynamic range. This last may suggest the Mass relatively short movement, pits i wishes. the exception when the aortic A good deal of hissing w a s for the Dead, and this, t >o, is two contrasting lines against one In soite of the introduction of artery wall weakens and heard during the uerforirjance, reflected in the music. The sec- another - long sustained tones this aleatoric element, the mu- I threatens to burst, Dr. Con- yet none of it came from the tion titled "A Prophecy- of Nos- in the bass, and rapid staccato sic has an inner logic and sense stantine E. Anagnostopoulos audience. It was instead the re- tradamis" quotes the well- notes in the higher registers. The of forward motion that the Herio University of Chicago heart stilt of an extremely poor om- known Dies Irae, not in the performance by Lifchitz was a lacks. (This was perhaps due surgeon, believes. wlification system which nitect! satirical manner of Liszt or flawless display of virtuoso tech- to the tremendous musiianship R ed white noise into even rota- Berlioz, but i total earnest. As nique and sympathetic approach of its Rupture of the aorta is the tively loud passages, which was the piece draws to serene con- interpreter.) most common cause of death in irritating. As a result of this clsion, the soloist chants, such cases, he says. But early noise, many delicate eccts were "Dona nobis pacem." The music UNFORTUNATELY the mu- The opening section of the and correct diagnosis and treat- lost or distorted. does indeed give peace. sic was unintresting. The tech- suite, far and away the b e s t ado cdg int t-s r____os de vpc gniquen-i dM-i- r --I i- - - - -- - - Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Hello, Power. As "Hello, Dolly!" moves into its last weeks of rehearsal, the cast of the UAC Musket pro- duction strut their stuff. The show opens next week at Power Center. .11 BRIJJIE Counting p0oilts- mark, of the expert By MARK FRIEDLANDER New U.S. Supreme Court Jus- tice John Stevens of Chicago' once acted asthe attorney for Charley Finley, owner of the Oakland As baseball team. Radio broadcaster and colum- nist Red Barber believes the late Larry MacPhail deserves to be elected to baseball's Hall of Fame. Insects are the most abundant animals in the world today. nique derives from Messiaen, I and most interesting portion of death. but sounds like nothing m o r e the work, ranges in m )d from than imitation. Coloristic devic- ethereal beauty to powerful and Dr. Anagnosto es, like tone clusters produced dramatic clusters of notes. TIhe written a book, by the palm of the hand, broght res'ilt was colorful and exciting. Dissections," revi no relief. The music, with i t s This was followed iwv a tradi- erature on the "electronic" sound, was frag- tional treatment of a potooorri records of 36 pati mentary, giving the impression of themes from the other Fansts. condition whom he of a senseless progression of The final portion of C'1e work during the past events. was an attempt to fuse these and the experienc The second work on the pro- dis'mrate eliments zther into with 549 cases. gram was a 1964 composition of a coherent whole. Sadly, the at- Henri Pousseur, entitled Miroir temnt failed. Bars of traditional Of 969 patients de Votre Faust. The music mnsic alternated with modern no medical or st forms a suite from the compos- Wbrases. However, thee seem- ment for the con er's opera Faust, arranged for ed to be no method whatever to cent died within a imes prevent opoulos has. 'Acute Aortic ewing the lit- subject, the ents with the e has followed seven years. e of surgeons who received urgical treat- dition, 90 per year. NOW SHOWING SHOWS TODAY AT 1:00,.3:00, 500, 7:00, 9:00 OPEN AT 12:45 TODAY-all seats $1.00 till 5:00 West S A 8 4 H A J D109 CQ J South 1 NT 2S North S K J10 3 H Q 9 8 t D532 C CK109 7 8 62 South S Q 752 H654 DAKQJ C A 4 East S96 H K 10 3 2 D764 C8753 West SK H Q J 8 3 D A J98 CQ642 West 1D All pass North S52 H 9 6 4 2 D 7 6,2 East C K 9 5 3 S 10863 H 1075 D K 104 South C1087 S A Q J9.74 HAK D Q 53 C A J .. ,., r. _ .,. _.__ _ "_ . .A.._ ., ... ...._ ., . ,,. s . . . . . . . r ,; a ' 'W;:',QYa "' ' :7,' , . e$. ". '' _:y ' ' k :." K ,t. hs. r p" rF, c, . ; b j . , j ajX nu.: pr " g 'Y R "Breakaway funny.' Jay Cocks, Time PAUL MAZURSKY's West pass pass North East 2C pass j 4S All pass North E'ast pass pass South 4S Opening lead: 10 of diamonds The palooka sitting West thought he -had everything pret- ty well worked out. He had lead the ten of diamonds to avoid compromising his honor holdings in the other suits. South had won and played a spade to dummy and anotherI spade, West winning. The open- ing lead had showed that East had nothing in diamonds, so the palopka knew .he had cash three more tricks to beat the contract, and that they had to come from hearts or clubs.j He reasoned that he could play his partner for either the ace of clubs, in which case he would. lead the queen to take two club tricks and a heart, or else he could play his partner for the king and ten of hearts with one or two small hearts so that he- could take three fast heart tricks Reasoning that his partner was more like- ly to have one specific card than to have two or more, the palooka le1 the queen ofeclubs. Alas! Declarer won the ace and made his contract by even- tually pitching a heart on the diamonds. "Sorry, partner, I misguessed!" The expert would have: guessed correctly. He would} have added all the outstanding points. South must have sixteen to open one notrump plus,West's twelve and dummy's nine is thirty-seven, leaving East with at most three. He could notj have the ace of clubs. The ex- pert would therefore have cash- ed the ace of hearts and lead! the jack to take' three heart tricks and beat the contract. Opening lead: 2 of clubs The palooka didn't like his contract. In addition to three' almost certain diamond losers, he had to pick up the spade4 suit. Seeing no reason to post- pone the trump finesse, the pa- looka won the club lead in dum- my and played a trump to the queen, hoping against hope that East had the doubleton king. He didn't, and the palooka went down two. Experts rarely "hope against hope." An expert would have used all the available clues and again counted points. But the first thing he would have no- ticed is the strange opening lead. Why would West have led a club when he probably has a diamond suit headed by the ace-king? The answer is sim- ple when you think about it: he wouldn't have. So he can- not have both the ace and king of diamonds, and East 'must have one. But if East has at least the king of diamonds, he cannot have the king of spades! With two kings he would not have passed his partner's opening bid. Therefore West has the king of shades, and the only way to pick up the entire spade suit is to drop the singleton king and finesse against-East's ten-spot. The expert wouldl only then play a card from dummy and, win the opening lead in his ownj nand with the ace, not the jack. Then he would cash the ace ofj spades, feeling glad that he is a pious man when the king falls. The jack of clubs would be over- taken by the king to finesse East out of his ten-spot in trumps to claim the contract. Small wonder that experts "misguess" less! 6th SMASH WEEK! SHOWS TODAY AT 1:00, 3:05, 5:15, 7:25, 9:40 OPEN AT 12:45 T9 Weds.-all seats $1.00 till 5:00 Nominated for 4 ACADEMY AWARDS BEST Screenplay, Editing, Art Direction, Costumes [ini, 1. WO t Seal Oonndno lollm el Cam OrS o PIrPluMffis I John nHust OW Mo i m F oeia ilmoD z SENSATIONAL!! l ESHOWN TODAY AT 1-3-5-7-9:00 OPEN AT 12:45 All seats $1.00 till 5:00 ot hing is wrong If it feels god.l THE ALL NEW Emmanuelle The Jog ofWontan . cNCoLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE *. NO DR41 UNOC t1AOnMt. STARTS FRIDAY! "I was swept away by the volcanic, slam-bang performances of its two Stars." -Gene Shalit, NBC-TV i' Preservation Hall Jazz Band Great New Orleans Jazz! Saturday, March 20 at 8:30, in Hill Akd. Free, spirited, original, and spontaneous is the music of this greatest of the New Orleans Jazz Bands, with roots in tribal African dances ... Creole Quadrilles . . . funeral marches and Mardi Gras Parades . . . blues and sunny picnics. Last season's sold-out Ann Arbor performance attests to the popu- larity of this group, so get your tickets now, which are still available at $3, $4, $5, and $6. GAI3LE ant played by JAMES BROUN and JILL CLAYBURGHR I a A SIDNEY I fURIfFILM "A HARRY KlRS~A lIJI'4kS "il A Suing' M IRULIN II ICIAYR8 ANFN GARfIRlD RII IUNS WilIef by RARIY Al I R M byh M11AHII iRAI reiIed by SIIY I1 11111 Piked by RARRY KDSIAK A UNIMISAI IIURF I N n'., I F 1" AMAION -7a~l '.V dd b T7H[ A711E. 1+ <: ri