Page 4-Satorday, July 22, 1978-The Michigan Daily SIX TEN EHRLING' A T MEADO WBROOK: DSO beats humidity and Ravel By JEFRKEY SELST The directors of the Detroit Sym- phony Orchestra have made a list of mistakes over the past years which would have crippled any lesser group. To err is human, and they are very DetroitSymphony Orchestra Sinten Ehrling, cnductor Eugene Istomen, Pianist Euranthe Overture ......................Weber PianoConcertoNo.3in C minor .........................Beethoven Death and Transfiguration ............. Strauss La valse.................................Ravel Prntd hY he Meadow human. One stupid thing they did was let Maestro Sixten Ehrling go from his duties as music director a few years back. Hiring Aldo No-Talent Ceccato nearly wrecked the whole works. Ehrling was back Thursday night at Meadow Brook, the festival he helped found, with three stunning performan- ces and one which wasn't so great. THE WEBER Euranthe Overture was well-played, though it is essentially an empty work, devoid of even the tunefulness possessed by its spiritual peers (works like the Thomas Mignon Overture or Harold's Zampa Over- ture). It is filled with orchestral swoops and great bombastic Germanic Romantic phrases, all hearkening back to one rather simple-minded motif. But well-done. Eugene Istomin was the soloist in the Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 3, and this was where Ehrling really showed his talents. This work is a cross bet- ween periods for Beethoven. One can still smell Classical tendencies within the Romantic drama of the first movement. That is, the structure is classical; the mood is romantic. ISTOMIN'S PLAYING was crisp, which was surprising, because the humidity was fierce, and the strings were clearly suffering somewhat through no fault of their own. Water in the air is absorbed into the wooden por- tions of the instruments, and the proportions are changed, resulting in a heavier, more leaden resonance. Pianos are subject to this as well, particularly in the soundboard. That Istomin's playing was as crisp as it was is a tribute totwo things - first, the great precision for which he is known, the perfect sense of timing, and second, the fact that the piano must have been tuned about two minutes before Istomin played it. UNFORTUNATELY, some of the subtlety built into the music was thereby lost with the great technical difficulties. Some of the slight gradations of tone color and dynamic were muffled under these circumstan- ces. But what was not lost was Ehrling's brilliant sense of timing, his unerring feel for the when of the music. With Beethoven, this can be of overriding importance. In the second half of the program, Ehrling presented something of a lackluster Death and Transfiguration. Richard Strauss' tone poem is a curious mixture of serious pomposity and self- mockery. Ehrling captured the mockery nicely in his use of ac- celerated tempi. But in the grander passages he failed to realize Strauss' own ambivalence to the work. He sin- cerely meant both of his attitudes, and Ehrling couldn't capture the solemnity inherent. Particularly, the major five- note motif C-D-E-E(octave)-D, which ends on a leading tone, and implies the "transfiguration" of the title. Ravel's La Valse is a truly boring work, a work of such stunning self- importance that the grandiosity of the Strauss pales in comparison. It is dif- ficult to enjoy music when you know that the composer frequently laid down the pen during the composition and remarked (to a friend, or possibly into a mirror) "gad, how clever!" and "that little dissonance ought to just slay 'em, by gum!" (or more appropriately, "sacre bleu!"). It is a light work, lightly done, and empty (as is the Weber) but insidious (unlike the Weber). But it is here that Ehrling is in his element, with the French composers of that period: Ravel, Debussy, and the later ones as well: Milhaud, Auric, etc. The music was well-performed, though perhaps irritating. Ehrling should never, never, NEVER have been fired. Summer Arts Staff OWEN GLEIBERMAN A rts Editor STAFF WRITERS: Michael Baadke, Karen Bornstein, Peter Manis, Stephen Pickover, Christopher Potter, Eric Smith, R. J. Smith, Sgt. Burns AP Photo George Burns, the grand old geezer of American comedy, arrives with Lisa Miller at New York's Radio City Music Hall Thursday for the world premeire of the rock musiVa;4UP ' Sgt: Lep''s Daey Hearts Chulbaid