. Friday, August 23, 1974 THEMCIGAN DAILY Page Five Two new record sets commemorate the Charles Ives Centennial By CHARLES SMITH Charles Ives is at the moment one of the world's most controversial compos- ers. Everyone either loves Ives or hates him - almost no one is indifferent to the man and his music. This passionate in- tensity which Ives arouses in the world around him is, in fact, actually a reflec- tion of the man's own passion for life and the pursuit of music. As a personality, Ives is immediately appealing to most musicians. He was one of his generation's most successful insur- ance executives and could have made himself a spectacularly wealthy man. In- stead he lived plainly and unostenta- tiously, devoting his private life to his deeply felt convictions about music. Although he composed almost nothing in the last 30 years of his life, the num- ber of his surviving pieces is large; yet he never made any money off of his mu- sic, as he wished his music to be freely available to anyone who wanted it, and donated any royalties he did receive to new music groups. The opinions on Ives the composer are more divided. His musical style could be described as eclectic, although that may be too generous a term. His pieces are often a grab-bag of diverse techniques,. with snatches of hymn tunes and pa- triotic songs, unresolved dissonances, tone clusters, traditional fugal counter- point, bizarre instrumental colors, and so on - strange bedfellows, all forcibly held together by his exuberance and en- thusiasm. The New England Transcendentalists, Emerson and Thoreau, strongly influ- enced his musical outlook, as well as did his memories of his childhood in a small New England. town. He felt that music should be a reflection of the way the world really was, confused and exciting, rather than a pretty picture of the way the world should be. All of his life, Ives despised his teachers and many of his contemporaries, all of whom he felt were painters of "pretty pictures". Unfortunately, with so many diverse elements being thrown into his pieces, the results were often less than success- ful. Even Ives' better pieces are some- times marred by an unevenness -- they are long on imagination and daring, but short on musical logic and coherence. His music can sound, to me at any rate, too much like a series of interesting ideas strung together without much care or planning. Of course, Ives would have been dis- gusted by such criticism, since he al- ways felt that he was not composing "masterpieces", but was just "making music". Now and then he did manage to listen to it. It is one of the few pieces by Ives with explicit instructions with regard to tempi, rhythms, and dynamics, presenting two distinct orchestral groups playing in different tempi but with spe- cific indications of their interrelations. Leonard Bernstein apparently has little regard for the integrity of this piece, and delivers a performance in which these relationships are haphazard at best; thus a great deal of the subtle details of this piece are lost in this recording. The second record in the set is a selec- tion of choral works, including the first recording of the full-length oratoria, The Celestial Country, an interesting if not wholly satisfying piece. The third record is a collection of 25 songs for voice and piano, performed by soprano Helen Boatwright and pianist John Kirkpatrick. Some of these pieces may be worth getting to know, but these performances are so sad it is hard to tell. This kind of wooden, shaky, often off-key performance makes a very poor case for even the best music. The last record in the set contains re- cordings from the 30's of Ives himself on the piano. While of interest to the specialist, these recordings do not pre- sent the best way of becoming acquaint- ed with Ives. The other new release is a two-record set of the complete Sonatas for Violin and Piano (Nonesuch HB-73025), played by Paul Zukovsky (violin) and Gilbert Kalish (piano). All four of the publish- ed sonatas are included, as well as one movement from an early work (the "Pre-First Sonata"). This issue is particularly welcome as a first recording of some of Ives' best music. The contrast with some of the poorer pieces on the Columbia set is en- lightening. Rather than trying to over- whelm the listener by throwing every- thing he can think of into the music, Ives structures these pieces around a limited number of ideas, no less original and daring, but more coherently organiz- ed. All four of the Sonatas are worth knowing. I would recommend in partic- ular the Fourth, especially the slow movement, a setting of "Jesus Loves Me, This I Know" in an elaborate atonal style. The performances on this record are competent without being brilliant. Zu- kovsky and Kalish give mostly accurate renderings of these pieces, while making an enthusiastic case for their musical worth. If more such competent record- ings of Ives' best music were available, he might be less of a figure of contro- versy, and appreciated more for his ability to project novel and interesting musical ideas. 'ourtesy o Columbia Records channel his spectacular imagination into a carefully worked-out composition which can stand up to the most search- ing musical examination. More often, however, his music-making resulted in a musical autobiographical sketch of a fas- cinating man. October 20, 1974 will be the 100th anni- versary of Charles Ives' birth. This sum- mer two new record sets have appeared in preparation for this event. Together they present an almost complete pic- ture of Ives the composer. Here one can find, side by side, some pieces which are the best he ever wrote with others which are so bad it's embarrassing. Charles Ives, the 100th Anniversary (Columbia M4 32504) isa four-record set, with a bonus record containing recorded reminiscences by acquaintances of Ives. Columbia Records has long been a cham- pion of the music of Ives, but unfortun- ately this set is not their most successful release. It will be of interest, in part at least, to the Ives specialist, but poor performances and above all poor editor- ial planning undermine whatever value it might have had to the person who is searching for an introduction to the man's music. The first record, titled "The Many Faces of Charles Ives", is a collection of previously released recordings of short- er pieces for various mediums. It con- tains, among other pieces, The Fourth of July and The Unanswered Question for orchestra, The Pond for chamber or- chestra, the Variations on America for organ, and some songs for chorus and soloists. All of these recordings have been re- leased before by Columbia, usually with- in more coherent contexts, such as on a record devoted solely to choral works, etc., so that the only real value of this record is as a potpourri of Ives' diverse styles. Yet there are no symphony move- ments or chamber pieces included, and with one exception the pieces anthologiz- ed here are not representative of Ives at his best. The Unanswered Question is one of Ives' masterpieces, a piece which be- comes better and better the more you SRecords in rev Eric Clapton is back after an absence of o His new album, 461 Ocean Boulevard (RSO Rec necessarily going to be an event. But it is als a lot of expectations if people aren't ready changes of those years. There is no "Layla" on this album. In a noticible de-emphasis of lead guitar solos t though Clapton's playing has never been better voice is pronounced and turns out to be the bes any of his albums. He is backed by ex-Jesus vocalist Yvonne Elliman, who turns in a surpris herself. Put together in Miami in three weeks, this al excellent version of Elmore James' "I Can't] an equally fine Robert Johnson tune (Clapton claims), "Steady Rollin' Man". Together with blues, Clapton has written mellow songs - "Let It Grow" is the best. makes this release the most relaxed - or what and delicate" - of his career. After his long absence and bout with heroin laxed album is not one that most people ares Clapton is always ahead of the music scene, w is considered one of the best. This album may not be a commercial success. Clapton has succeeded in puling together all the se his musical past, from JMin Mayall to Derek an and has made a statement of the present. e W 'U' play hard to swallow ver three years. By BOB SCHETTER of the audience. Direct allusions to the present ords SO 4801), is "People Are Better Off In Zoos", an intellect- however proved bombastic and eventually boring. o going to blow ual exercise in banality, opened at the Univer- The play is not believable. Albeit, there might for the musical sity Theater Program's Arena Theater last night, have been yoga and Chinese egg rolls in 19th and I only wish that the author, too, was behind century Paris, but even so the play fails because fact, there is bars. in those times people did not speak nor behave in hroughout, even The play, set during the time of the Paris the ways presented by this Zoo story. . This time, his Commune of 1871, concerns an artist, Jean- Incidentally, there are definite parallels to Al- t vocalization of Baptiste Lemonde (translated: The World) and bee's "Zoo Story". In both author's work, each Christ Superstar his reactions to the bizarrities outside his Paris action and spoken word is meant as something ing performance studio. The earth shaking analogy of humans to beyond itself, something which is intrinsic to the animals (in the pejoritive sense) gives the play meaning of the plays. In this Albee is the master. bum includes an its title and inanity. This inanity is furthered Witwer, a buffoon. Hold Out," plus by J. B.'s attraction to tits, honey bears, Chinese The acting and staging did nothing to bolster 's guru, an he egg rolls, cookies, debasing women, and to pass- even the "finer points" of the play. Portrayals ing as many snide remarks in one line as possi- continually were trite, with the actors showing some e ble. All of these are supposed to be significant little motivation and emotional realism for even The combinati to the play's understanding. They are nOt- commonplace incidences as smiling or as trau- he calls "quiet Eventually, the play does end with the crush- matic events as the death of a friend. The entire ing of the Commune. I say eventually because cast was guilty of this lack of feeling for roles, there is no plot. Just a constant flux of charac- although performances by Ken Steinman as ters on and off the stage, each trying to give his waiting for. But own twisted view of life and attempting to prove Pierre and Thom Van Aken as old Lemonde, did Vhich is why he the animalistic nature of man. Most of them measure up to professional standards. get shot-except for Jean-Baptiste, the most like- Even granting that a crazy script, such as But artistically, ly candidate for the honor. "Better ., .It Zoos," is unmanageable, I would eparate pieces of The play is Intended to be serious. The author, Bste r nainaaeaylt,:I wo- d the Dominoes, Andrew Witwer, tries crowding as many of hi still pres for a renaming of the play to: "Pee views in 2% hours as possible, succeeding only in e Are Better Off Not Cosing ..." --VIki Bankey championing at least one cause for each member The play runs to Aug. 24. r-