Wednesday, July 7, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five arts "Top Hit" classical record clubs vie for undiscriminating buyers -Daily-Jim Judklis No matter what shape ... Shteba's liberated belly moves to create an art By ANITA CRONE swaying regardless of where the Special to The Daily rest of her body is moving. DETROIT - While most teen- Sheba usually performs at The age girls were learning the latest Cedars in Detroit. Unlike belly popular dances or listening to the dancers of ten years ago, Sheba sounds of the popular musicians primarily works at her home of the day, one 24-year old Ameri- club, although she has gone on can of Lebanese extraction was tour. "Today," Sheba explains, preparing for a career in show "a belly dancer is not in as much business. And Sheba, one of De- demand as she was five years troit's more famous belly dancers ago." But in spite of that, Sheba is definitely showing. is not as willing to go on tour looking for better jobs . She Wearing slightly more than a doesn't like living out of a suit- bikini, Sheba entertained the case, even though her average crowds that had come to Detroit salary of $300 per week could be for the annual Greektown week. increased as much as $150 by the Sheba, whose real name is Patti move. Sassine, has been belly dancing In a sense, helly dancing is put- professionally since she was 8. ting yourself on display, as is On stage, it looks like she has any professional dancing. Sheba been doing it all her life. Sheba has to contend with the men who shakes and wiggles muscles that try to pick her up. "I'm not like most women are not even aware that. I'm dancing because I like of. Abdominal muscles that had to dance. I like to move my body been trained since Sheba was 10 in time to the music. When men years old seem to have a mind try to pick me up, I tell them of their own, and gyrate in time that I have a heavy date right + to music provided by the Rho- afterwards. That's usually all it dins, a local instrumental and takes." vocal group. While women of While Sheba has some favor- America try to lose their abdomi- able things to say about women's nal muscles, Sheba has trained See LIBERATED, Page 6 hers to move in time to music, -- --- - The Michigan Daty, edited and man- SHA GS FOR MEN aged by students at the University of N Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by M carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday Call 662-4431 through Saturday morning. Subscrip- for appointment Stion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. By JOHN HARVITH In the February 1971 issue of Stereo Review both m u s i c critics and recording executives wring their hands over the poor sales of classical discs. Mean- while, these "concerned" pro- mo men of the recording in- dustry continue to grind out the same tired pablum to crucial audiences in mid-America via major label "record clubs." In recent months the post- man has stuffed my mailbox with record club "get acquaint- ed" offers from two of the na- tion's largest record firms. The only classical selections their ad men could come up with as bait were such immort- al albums as "Ormandy's Greatest Hits, Vol. 4," "The Best of Arthur Fiedler," "Cli- burn's Favorite Chopin" a n d, for those heady listeners able to grapple with inscrutable eso- terica, Tchaikovsky's "Pathe- tique" and Dvorak's "New World" Symphonies. Not exact- ly the fuel to fire a public re- naissance of interest in classi- cal disc-buying. As a further wrongheaded so- lution to the gnawing problem of recruiting a new classical listening audience, Columbia is in the process of launching its series of composers' "Great- est Hits," whose latest victims are Bernstein, Rossini, Liszt, Brahms and Berlioz (M 30304/7 and 30384, respectively). It wouldn't be so bad if these releases were just cheap samp- lers of Columbia albums fea- turing snippets of complete works by Berlioz, Brahms et al., yet pointing in the liner notes to where the listener can acquire the unexpurgated edi- tion should he be titillated enough to desire "the real The place to meet INTERESTING people presents THREE BACH SONATAS FOR FLUTE AND PIANO No. 3 in A major, No. 4 in C major, No. 5 in E minor Performed by Lanita Arcengeli and Greg Zelman Spanish Rice Served after the program s THURS., JULY 8-8 P.M. S. Quad West Lounge EVERYONE invited. Musical knowledge REALLY not necessary Further Info: 761-3931 thing." But no, instead of get- ting the consumer so worked up that he can't rest until buy- ing the complete Brahm's Third, the jacket's reverse side blatantly illustrates other full- priced "Greatest Hits" albums. This is like telling the p r o - spective buyer that the door to musical culture is now wide open - just purchase this ser- ies of "Greatest Hits" and you need investigate no further, for all that is worthwhile in classical music is at your fin- gertips. Why wade through all that worthless junk, like the first three movements of Brahm's First Symphony, when all you really wanted to hear- the gorgeous finale with the pilgrims chorus - is right on this one disc, together with a scrumptuous orchestration of the "Lullaby," so much more effective than the music-box version Grandma used to have. I'm sure that Columbia's merchandising men will accuse me of being short-sighted, snobbish, etc., but I maintain that what Columbia has done is analogous to what a publish- er would be perpetrating should he come out with a full-priced tome entitled "Shakespeare's Greatest Hits: Sleepwalking Scene, Hamlet's Soliloquies, An- thony's Eulogy for Caesar, and more!," which in addition would offer no hint of plot lines, making it impossible for the reader to put the excerpts into any logical dramatic context. While it is conceivable t h at the publisher's scheme might convert some readers to full- fledged Shakespeare fans, it isn't likely. Just as in the case of the Columbia "Greatest Hits" listener, the "Shake- speare's Greatest Hits" reader will tend to smugly assume that he now knows all he needs to know as a master's output, and has it all over those other pre- tentious snobs who have been wasting all their time absorbing the whole work when all they really got out of it were the "highlights" anyway. This is a pernicious theory of art springing from a utilitarian society which prizes short-cuts above all else. A symphony of Brahms, just as a play by Shakespeare or a Hemingway novel, has been carefully thought through as a whole. It is just as artistically worthless when dismembered as a great edifice built from the archi- tectural plans of a Bernini is functionally worthless when it starts crumbling due to a See ARTS, Page 6 Program Information 434-1782 Now Open Doily at 12:45 SHOWS EVERY DAY 3020 wasNTEMAW h one 434-178a AT On Washtenaw Ave. 1, 3, 5, 7 & 9 P.M. 11/2 Miles East of U.S. 23 WORTHY OF ITS ANCESTORS!-T.M.K. First Planet.then Beneath.now... E STARTS TODAY! "A DAZZLING MOVIE. A Superior film. The most striking and baroque images you're ever likely to see. A rich, poetic, cine- atic style." VINCENT CANBY, New York Times INC +. T V"W JEAN LOUIS TRINTIGNANT STEFANIA SANDRELLI the conformist GASTONE MOSCHIN DOMINIQUE SANDA PIERRE CLEMENTI SrPTH Porum SHOWN F$FTH AVENUE15AT-LI9E:3TY INFRMTIO 71-E00 7:15-9:30