I w ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, October 14, 1980 Page 5 Catch ti By MICHAEL KREMEN You can eliminate some of the con- fusion that surrounds the "Two-Tone" bands (The Specials, The Selecter, Madness and The Beat) simply by ap- proaching them as the pop.groups that they are. In the manner of pop bands of the last twenty years-from. The Beatles and Stones to The Buzzcocks and The Clash-The Beat, following the lead of The Specials, have synthesized various pop musical elements, specifically, ska, rock, soul and reggae, to create yet another modern pop sound. And a very good and very danceable music it is! Now consisting of two guitarists (one of whom serves as co- lead vocalist), keyboards, saxophone, bass, drums, and another main vocalist, The.Beat is solid at all points. The guitars and keyboards occasionally provide lead melody but their prime function is percussive. Like its Jamaican sources, the bass is mixed to' the front and periodically emerges as a lead voice. Saxa, who appears to be old enough to have been involved in the original ska explosion (1963-69), provides sonic color with his swinging -- " us Beat two men's differing vocal styles con- trast effectively when they sing on the same tune. The songs performed this Sunday, with the exception of a slower piece that featured lots of echo and was identified as "Psychedelic Rockers" (remember this is a pop band and England is in the midst of nascent psychedelic revivalism), were from The Beat's superb debut LP, "I Just Can't Stop It." The club performances were a satisfac- tory "live" rendering of the recorded material. While many of the songs were played as . they appear on the album, "Tough Rider" and "Twist and Crawl" were extended and elaborated, the lat- ter featuring a heavily echoed bass part that created a dub-like effect, although faster than in classic reggae style. The Beat, in existence for less than two years, still don't seem to have suf- ficient performance-ready material. Called back for a deserved second en- core, they replayed tunes from earlier in the evening. Considering the superior treatment they give to Smokey and the Miracles' "Tears of a Clown", I would hope that they would select a couple oldies the vaults of Studio One or Motown and give it a Beat treatment. MSTISLA V R OS TR OPO VICH Living up to a reputation By ED PRINCE Ann Arbor is frequently honored by the visits of important political figures and great musical artists, but less frequent are visits by persons who can claim both distinctions. Last Sunday, October 12, cellist Mstislav Rostropovich played to a full house at. Hill Auditorium and though it mat- tered little to most of his enraptured audience, he fits that description on both counts. As a musician his virtuosity is un- disputed. Mr. Rostropovich has won consistent critical acclaim not only as a cellist, but also as an accompanist and as a conductor of both opera and the symphonic repetoire. He was the music director of the National Symphony Or- chestra from 1977 to 1978, and he has, received over thirty awards and honors from univ.ersities, musical organizations and countries around the world. ding musically. Mr. Rostropovich played the third suite in C major, meeting the piece's demands with no problems and giving an expressive and dramatic interpretation. This he achieved through the use of a wide dynamic range; especially in the Praeludium where the juxtapostion of loud and soft passages proved to be ex- traordinarily effective. AFTER THE BACH came a work with much less to recommend it; the Arpeggione Sonata of Franz Schubert. Schubert originally wrote it for Vincenz Schuster (the inventor of the musical instrument that the sonata is named af- ter) and according to Maurice Brown, a Schubert biographer, the composer did not take the instrument or the sonata form seriously. The work is slight but contains some nice melodies which both father and daughter played with an appropriately ilting touch. Following the Schubert oddity was akin to the styles of Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninoff. Rostropovich was quite at home here and brought out the soulful melody effortlessly. The second and fourth movements provided some excitement and interestingeffects, but taie real high point of the sonata was the third movement, Largo, which was filled with grief.Rostropovich gave -a tremendously powerful and convincing performance, and this more than any- thing else confirms his stature as an artist. Besides being a great artist, he also knows how to keep his audience happy, as he concluded with two short fanciful encores. The first, a transcription of the song "Apres un Reve" by Faure, had a beautiful melody which received a warm and loving treatment, and the second was a delightful bit of virtuoso fluff by David Popper called "Dance of the Elves" which brought the house down and finished off a wonderfully rewar- ding evening of music with a thrill. r1 Russian expatriate and virtuoso cellist Mstislav Rostropovich shown here in 'a casual moment during rehearsal for his extremely well-received recital this past Sunday at Hill Auditorium. IN HIS NATIVE Russia he was awarded the State Prize in 1951, the Lenin Prize in 1964, and most recently he was named People's Artist of the USSR, the highest possible award for an artist in the Soviet Union. All these official plaudits meant nothing in 1970 after he sheltered the dissident author Alexander Solzhenitsyn in his home. Thex Soviet "government banned the cellist's name from publications and prohibited hih'from performing out- side of Russia for three years. In 1974 Mr. Rostropovich left the Soviet Union, pledging not to return until he could pur- sue his professional life without gover- nmental restraint. In 1978 he was stripped of his Soviet citizenship. Political bravery, does not, however, bring in capacity audiences, which is something else Mr. Rostropovich has a knack for. What his audience came to hear was the playing of a cellist many, describe as the finest in the world, and they were not disappointed as he presented a program of works ranging from Bach to Shostakovich. Accom- panying him was his daughter Elena, a student of the great pianist Rudolph Serkin, who proved to be a sensitive and accomplished musician. Elena did not appear in the first piece, though, which was predictably enough a Suite for Unaccompanied Cello by Bach. Bach's six cello suites rank among the greatest pieces written for that instrument, and apart from the not-inconsiderable technical dif- ficulties, they are extremely deman- DeBussy's Cello Sonata in D minor, a work written during the first World War which seems to reflect the grim times into which it was born. There is a feeling of tension and anxiety in the work conveyed through irregular, jum- py rhythms and constantly changing moods, and this aspect was emphasized in the 'Rostropovichs' performance. The artists handled an opening passage dramatically as the cello, playing low, repeated notes, was partially obscured by the piano to produce an ominous and forbidding atmosphere. The work which followed was of even greater emotional impact, and not sur- prisingly as it was by Dmitri Shostakovich, who was until his death in 1972 the greatest living Soviet com- poser. Many important composers have written works for Rostropovich (in- cluding Benjamin Britten, Walter Piston, Leonard Bernstein and Aram Khatchaturian) and Shostakovich con- tributed two cello concertos to that list of works. Shostakovich was the cellist's orchestration professor at the Moscow Conservatory, and suffered much of his life from the same sort of intimidation and deprivations that the Soviet gover- nment imposed upon Rostropovich. It was only natural then that the cellist should' conclude with Shostakovich's Cello Sonata in D Minor, opus 40, a work which reaches a truly tragic emotional level in its slow movement. The first movement presents Shostakovich at his most Russian with a melancholy Slavic melody somewhat MANN THEATRES DAILY DISCOUNT MATINEES VILLAGE 4 All seats $2.00 'til 5:30 375 N. MAPLE Mon-Sat, 'til 2:00 on Sundays 'rE 0 DOUBLE FEATURE Coast to Coast (PG) BE NJIMIN 3:30 7:15 1:15 3:15 5:15 Caddyshack (R) ® J7:30 9:45 1:45 5:15 9:00 DOUBLE FEATURE Why Would Honeysuckle\Rose (PG) 1:45 7:00 Willie & Phil (R)130 530 4:00 9:15 330 7:30 9:30 CINEMA II PRESENTS Kuhle Warmpe (Slatan Dudow, 1932)} Bertolt Brecht wrote the screenplay for this film, the first ever fr-omn Germany to express a communist viewpoint. Its plot concerns the sor- rows of an unemployed worker and his family, but within this dramatic context lies a complex cinematic rendition of the proletarian /bourgeois struggle. A film of historic, political, and aesthetic interest. German, with subtitles. (80 min.) Tuesday, Oct. 14 MLB 3 7 & 9 $2.00 Bing Long's Traveling All Stars (John Bodham, 1976) James Earl Jones, Richard Pryor, and Billy Dee Williams star in this hilarious comedy of, baseball when it was really baseball-the 20's, before there were such things as free agents and designated hitters. The humor is as fast and furious as Satchel Paige's fast ball and just as lethal. (111 min.) Friday, Oct. 17 Aud. A 7 & 9 $2.00 This Weekend: THE BLACK STALLION (Watch For Our Special Matinees) DODES' KA-DEN Series tickets still available-l0 shows/$15 Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY Ranking Roger, one of two lead vocalists with 'ska/pop/rock/reggae band the English Beat, stretches out a bit here during the band's Sunday night perfor- mance before a typically packed Bookie's Club in Detroit. and lighthearted tenor work. He brings a carnival-fiesta feel to the many tunes on which he is featured. FURTHER variety is achieved by using two lead vocalists. Dave Wakeling, who also plays guitar, has a cool and precise style, while Ranking Roger has a more animated, emotional style. Roger also does the occasional "toast" (Jamaican D.J. style rap that inspired The Sugarhill Gang and Kurtis Blow) and serves as the band's visual focus. The World' S old The Beat is already a commercial success in England with several top ten singles and a best-selling LP to their credit. Given the current state of the American music business and the (related) hostility to new music that commercial radio displays, it's im- possible to predict the Beat's ultimate success in the music marketplace. Their rythmically potent distillation of pop styles makes a strong case for suc- cess. est Beatle fan of the 1963 guitar during a private demonstration for the Beatles on Feb. 8, 1964, t day before the group made its U.S. t evision debut on the Ed Sullivan show. The Beatles didn't buy the instrument but Saks did, for $479.50, according to his story. Later that year, he had the Beatles autograph the in- strument in gold leaf. He now has it in- sured for $50,000, he said. NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)-Beatles fans may want to hold A.D. Saks' hand after they find out who has held his guitar. Saks' prized possession is a 1963- model electric guitar signed by all four members of the disbanded British rock Sgroup. More than a beloved artifact, this guitar: It's a meal ticket. Saks traveled to the third annual New England Beatles Convention at Southern Connecticut State College over the weekend to sell picks that have strummed the guitar and charge a fee to photograph Beatles fans holding the precious instrument. "I'm probably the oldest living Beatles maniac, and I'm proud of it," says Saks, a 71-year-old music teacher from Norfolk, Va. Saks represented the manufacturer the ann arbor 7 film cooperative Tonight THE BICYCLE THIEF Tonight One of the first Italian neo-realist films. A man and his son search for the father's bicycle which is essential to his livelihood, since the only job he can find is that of deliverynkan. Both father and son learn about each other by how they react during the crisis. 7:00 & 9:05. Wednesday: FOOTLIGHT PARADE Thursday: THE MARRIED WOMAN CINEMA GUILD-Lorch Hall Auditorium 0 MORE D.R.E.A.D. SGOLD CARD DISCOUNTS: TONIGHT TONIGHT PRESENTS LUIS BUNUEL NIGHT THAT OBSCURE