The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, July 26, 1978-Page 5 Burton: Is 'pleasant' enough? By R. J. SMITH Along with a couple of other "new things" going on in the 1960s, a lineage of almost exclusively white jazz players began swallowing up whole chunks of classical technique into their music. By doing things like shunning traditional song patterns, and approaches to many familiar chordal progressions in im- provisations, and incorporating a pastiche of strongly unswinging ethnic and folk melodies into their solos and arrangements, artists like Paul Winter, Don Ellis, and Gary Burton did a couple of things. For one, they gave the music a daz- zling richness, a sense of introspection and even poetry that hadn't been totally brought out before. At its best this music is engrossing and warm. But at its worst, its frequent lack of real swing can regularly lead to the construction of plodding, heavy-handed music. It can be dull, and is often lapped up by the smart set for its assumed intellectual nature: unfortunately, it has alienated blacks, and has often become background music with an avowed spiritual slant for college students. OBVIOUSLY, IT is a dangerous music to play - it can be uplifting, but it can be boring and exclusive. It was thus Monday evening that Gary Burton delivered a late-evening set at the Earle, straddling between these two far points. If he was never crashingly dull, the music sometimes struggled to rise above "pleasant." And if he only briefly created anything of memorable beauty, he always played professionally. Starting out the show, the band whip- ped through a version of Chick Corea's song "Open Your Eyes, You Can Fly." It was uptempo, and had Corea's paten- ted breathtaking chord progressions, but it still maintained an overall feel of relaxedness. Drummer Bob Moses pushed the group, with powerful spacious drumming concentrated on his snares and bass drum. See BURTON, Pages8 Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Jazz vibraphonist Gary Burton appeared with his quartet at the Earle jazz night- club Monday night. Szeryng, Sandor a flawless duo By OWEN GLEIBERMAN Beethoven compositions more notable ease of a master. Here was a perfor- as Sandor, especially, was a Monday evening's performance by for their thoughtful simplicity than for mance where perfect control, a sense heavy throughout, and both p Henryk Szeryng and Gyorgy Sandor, the supreme lyrical and harmonic that every note had its place, was so seemed to have a bit of trouble though virtually without flaw, failed to complexities of the composer's later overwhelmingly present that even the taming a steady pace. Ye leave anyone gasping for more. Doub- works. Hearing these three in a row most difficult passages were fluid and movement was followed by a ha tless, this can largely be attributed to was something less than inspirational, graceful. Szeryng and Sandor worked Andante, with edgy chromatic the qualities of the works themselves. and it was only the duo's near-perfect marvelously together; their musical that gave its mysterious, almost The performance was the first of three rendering of each that gave the per- understanding and compatability were feeling. devoted to the complete cycle .of formance its life. obvious, as they attacked more The moment that the first, Beethoven sonatas for violin and piano. SZERYNG, WHO IS teaching master rigorous passages in unison and swayed strains of the C minor Sonata, Of the four performed on Monday, classes this week at the University, Hewryezeryog, vioInes' paled by comparison. Next to th three were Opus twelve, early played every note with the consummate GyorgySandorpianist bros works this Sonata is str Rackham Auditorium thewoktisSnaistr ot NoRakor. complex and emotionally i Op. 2, No..... ............Beethoven combining rapid shifts in mos SonataaNo. 2in A major, concise, often sparse hat Op.12, No.2.... . . Beethoven motives. u ff rUsS SonataNo.3inE-fatmajor, C MINOR has always Sa e r s sa n s S h a tn e r oao.3... .........Beethoven especially well-suited to Beetk Op. 30,No.2...........Beethoven more brooding and intense By STEPHEN PICKOVER Presented by the university positions; aside from the Fifth It is rare that Meadow Brook finds itself in a position to include a second Musical society phony, the Pathetique Sonat performance of any group, much less a third, due to masses of people delicately through lyrical sections with opening movements of the Third clamoring for tickets. But, such was the case with "Starship Encounters," a complimentary feelings for tone color Concerto and String Quartet, ( musical conglomeration of themes from the latest craze of the American and rhythmic emphasis. No. 2, all seem to derive public, science fiction, manifesting itself in movies with incredible special The opening movement of the first deliberate power largely from t effects and a preoccupation with Vulcans and the Force. sonata displayed this mutual command in which they were conceived The idea for this musical'bonanza has been around for a while, making amply. Szeryng gave his marked triple- violin and piano sonata has the its debut in the Hollywood.Bowl last year with the Los Angeles Philharmonic stops an authoritory gustoestablishing sweeping, dynamic lyricism. Th and Laserium, a laser light show which designers artistically mold to fit the motives cleanly and drawing power movement's rapid -modulations music. from particularly rhythmic passages. major to minor cut much deept MEADOW BROOK had even greater plans, scheduling, at first, Leonard The slow second movement, like all the the sweeter sounds of the ev Nimoy, Star Trek's introspective Vulcan, to "narrate" the performance, slower movements, was highlighted by earlier works. then William Shatner, the Captain of the Enterprise, both of whom failed to wonderfully vibrant passages in which And this performance was abs show. People had bought tickets at least a month in advance, and there was Szeryng, high on the D string, sung swathed in intensity. There was nary an announcement in the papers or radio that Shatner was not ap- sweetly but was always forceful and Szeryng's attacks, and raging1 pearing. While I doubt if Jim Launce, the eventual narrater, did any less of a alive, in the bittersweet lyric sections job than Shatner would have done, the irresponsibility of the management THE FIRST movement of the A last piece was any indication, th was the cause of many an angry mother, with crestfallen children holding Major Sonata was the only performan- duo's remaining two concerts, back the tears. Needless to say, the disappointment did not get the show off ce that fell down, even slightly. This held tonight and Friday at Ra to the excited and feverish pitch it should have had. Allegro Con Spirito needed more spirito, might well be worth your time. trifle layers main- t this unting scales Slavic harsh Op. 30 concert e other ikingly ature, d with rmonic seemed ioven's com- h Sym- a, and d Piano Op. 18, their he key d. This e same e third s from er than ening's olutely fire in passion . If the hen this , to be ckham, Richard Hayman, master arranger, notably of muzak, conducted the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. He opened the program with the initial theme from Strauss' Thus Spake Zarathustra, more commonly known as the theme from 2001, orange drink, aspirin, and numerous other products. THE SYMPHONY was amplified, of course, which gave it a huge, awe- inspiring sound during its forte and double forte passages throughout the evening, but removed all warmth of sound, especially from the strings and woodwinds. As the piece climaxed, the words "Detroit Symphony" unjum- bled their way onto the screen that was set up behind the orchestra, by way of laser lights. The following two numbers, "I Feel the Earth Move" and the Star T k .eme were-both:arjngedby yman It, was.here especially "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown" based on "Peanuts" by Charles M. Schulz presented by Ann Arbor Civic Theatre July 26-29 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Tickets: CURTAIN8 om $4.00 Weds. & Thurs. $4.50 Fri. & Sat. Children 16 and under who are accompanied by an adult are $1.00 off the regular price. Weds., July 26 Sex Office (inthe thare lobtby) tillbe op Man. July24 through Tues..July25 Sa ..oJ 9 I