LAST TWO The Stage Coy'm ARTS Q°QP .r LAST TWO PERFORMANCES ERi The Michigan Daily Glass" By MARK DIGHTON Eclipse Jazz brought a very unusual type of music-both for Eclipse and Ann Arbor-to Rackham Auditorium Thursday night. Philip Glass is perhaps America's premier modern composer. He is certainly one of our most talked- about musical influences. His impact on the work of Brian Eno and David Bowie is already well-documented. His opera, Einstein on the Beach, received critical acclaim and public attention unparalleled in its field. It was an un- deniably unique opportunity to see Glass perform with his Philip Glass Ensemble in Ann Arbor-an oppor- tunity that will probably not come again soon.. if ever. Glass' strengths as a composer were especially apparent in contrast to the works of George Cacioppo, an Ann Ar- bor composer who opened the show at RIckham. Cacioppo is a respectable conposer in his field, and the two gen- tlemen who performed his work (Robert Morris and William Albright, the latter from the U of M School of Music) were exceptional, but their per- formance was just "interesting" in a very uninvolving sort of, way. I felt alienated from Cacioppo's work very' early in their set. His compositions seem to be experimenting with techniques and theories that only music students could appreciate, A major exception must be made, h6wever, for Cacioppo's final piece, a second version of his opening com- position, the "score" of which is printed elsewhere on this page. The major change made to the advantage of "Cassiopeia" in its second "realization" was the distribution of eight additional musicians around the auditorium. The multi-textured and multi-directional sound created by all ten musicians and Cacioppo himself at the mixing board added a mysterious and occasionally startling air to what had been a somewhat dry piece the first time around. In spite of any reservation I might have about Cacioppo's style, it } was an important and laudable step for Eclipse Jazz to see fit to allow an Ann Arbor audience the chance to ap- preciate the work of a composer working right in our community. PHILIP GLASS is able to avoid the fatal "in-joke" elitism of most other modern composers, however, though I am somewhat at a loss to explain exac- A folk s By PHIL DESCHAINE "Yes, I was in an auto accident, and yes, just as I was about to go back to work I had to go back into the hospital to have a couple of brain operations, but no, I didn't have three-quarters of my, brain removed and now all I can play is bluegrass." Michael Cooney returned to Ann Ar- bor Friday night, and aside from the above comment halfway through 'the performance, one would hardly know that a year ago this man survived a head-on collision, two brain operations, and a paralyzing stroke. SUCH FACTS were' largely gratuitous, however, and except for a couple of lapses when lines from some songs escaped him, he was almost the same folk singer who has been playing at the Ark for a decade. Almost, that is, because although healthy, he's changed. Cooney's scrape with death has softened him up-he now relies less on the actual songs and more on his deft wit and sense of humor to carry the show. When, in fact, in his second set, Cooney relied entirely on the music it- self. his evelids got heavy, and half-way through one song he seemed to momen- tarily leave the audience, sedated by his own fifty or sixty-line ballads. By his own admission, Cooney's talents as a singer and musician do not stand Sunday, November 9, 1980 Page 5 music for waterfalls Join Arts Staff tly how. I believe that the key lies in the fact that although Glass' compositions are exceedingly repetitious and almost painfully precise, they still manage to maintain a sense of flow and spon- taneity. This fact is brought home by the realization that although the En- semble plays in such tight formation that their music almost sounds pre- programmed, there is still a tangible aspect of immediacy and improvisation to, their playing. Although Glass employed a limited range of sound Thursday night-utilizing keyboards, wind in- distinguishable manner in an obser- vable period of time. Glass' com- positions move in cycles, but the themes we revisit never sound quite the same. If it is possible to move forward linearly in a circle, then Glass has ac- complished it. Through this progressive repetition, the Ensemble builds an accumulated momentum that is nothing less than astounding: The abrupt ending of each piece threw members of the audience forward in their seats, almost as if they had physically internalized the momen- made any past faults nearly forget- table. "The Spaceship" is notable in that it is one of the most memorable pieces on the eight-album set from the opera, Einstein on the Beach. Its bassline is reminiscent of a church organ fugue, but the overall effect is one of unusual subtlety and pleasan- tness for a Philip Glass composition. The most phenomenal aspect of "The Spaceship," however, is that it has something that is almost unheard of in a Philip Glass composition-an honest- to-god climax. This event took place when all six musicians suddenly slipped from their out-of-sync, interlocking rif- fs into a united progression. In that moment, several things were star- tlingly clear-the momentum that the Ensemble-had gathered, the precision with which each of them was playing, and the sheer power of their sound. That realization accomplished, there was nothing left to do but end the piece, which they promptly did. But that couple of bars seemed a perfect cap to the whole evening-one short climax to over an hour of eventful, enlightening, and entertaining build-up. NOV. 6-9-$PM Ndv. 9 Matinee Sunday 2PM CANTERBURY LOFT bbs-60 =Mimi f i e m 4 8 v r'aiona 'C sF 6. codngt h rga oesfrF ia ih' fome ntrpes}hems.. 'struments, and a solitary voice ex- clusively-and though his compositions always experiment within a relatively narrow style characterized by in- terlocking scale-like progression played rep'etitively at an impossibly fast pace, Glass' work never ceases to amaze. It is in constant flux on an almost imperceptible level, creating a curious ebb and flow of sound. The best comparison, although an unlikely one, is to a waterfall. First of all, a sheer wall of sound that is at first quite overwhelming soon reveals itself as a multitude of infinitely divisible sounds each worthy of close inspection. Also, the sound of Glass' music is con- stantly progressing, though very few of the actual changes are noticeable. Glass views change as a process, not an event. The riffs played by the various musicians clearly alter over the course of a piece, but rarely in any tum of the music and had been unex- pectedly and almost brutally halted. GLASS' CHOICE of pieces to perform was also faultless. "Dance No. 3" from IDance began the show as a goodexaample of this current stage of development. It was a good deal more thematic and melodious than the following piece, "First Dance" from Einstein on the Beach, which harkens back to his earlier work (i.e., Music in Similar Motion, Music in Changing Parts). Because of this, "First Dance" is a much less readily accessible piece, but ultimately more rewarding in its rhythmic ensconcing of gem-like themes. The first piece after intermission was rather long-winded, but for only one out of four pieces (all clocking in at over fif- teen minutes) to be of noticeable length is pretty surprising. And the last com- position of the show, "The Spaceship," MONDAY is PIZZAI NIGHT at 1140 South University 668-8411 toryteller returns alone. Rather, he owes his national popularity to his unending anecdotes and one-liners. What makes them so en- tertaining is that when paired with his straight face, he tricks you into believing that he is iust trvina to make his way through his periferal stuff to finally get at the songs themselves. But of course he's not, for it is just such periferal repartee and deflections that make his shows so enjoyable. The traditional folk music that Cooney performs with him consists of simple words, put to standard-length lines help together in rhymed couplets, The number of stanzas in his songs is often so great that one hasn't a hope to follow each one and feels lucky to com- prehend the general plot. The lyrics do stand on their own on the written page, and can be taken descriptively or read into. "Three legged ladder, wobbly as hell Reaching for an apple- whoaa-almost fell Get a twenty-pound sack hanging 'round my neck And there's three more apples that I can't get." Common in most of the songs in his repertoire of 500 is a rural or country setting, with simple characters of a less complicated time. His act plays off the pastoral yearnings of the usually urban audiences that Cooney plays before. VERY EARLY into his first set at the Ark Cooney gave a brief definition of folk music. There is the "Well-I've- never-heard-a-horse-sing," all- inclusive sense of the term. Cooney adheres to a more conservative I 2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave. at Liberty 761-9700 THE VILLAGE October 15, 1980 Bloody Beauty Stuart *Byron The School of Music presents THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN POWER CENTER NOVEMBER 14 and 15 at 8:00pm AmC M D C D 'R"o -a: OFAn it Julian Bream isx a great musicalP interpreter of our time. He should not be missed! The New York Times Passacaille and Gigue in D .. . . Sylvius Feiss Sonata No. 1.... J. S. Bach Fantasia Opus 30 . . .. Fernand: Sor Tonadilla: La Maja de Goya , . . squ Granados Danza Espanola No. 10 .... Eniquc Granados Fantasia (1957) .... R~oberto Gerhard Invocation et Danse (1961) .. .. Joaquin Rodrigo Cordoba .... Isaac Albeniz Torre Bermeja . ... Isaac Albeniz M,,nr_1rc ic 1 I THWACK! A bloody arm hits the floor. Thwack! Now a leg, Thwack! An ear! By the end of the scene, the samurai has been dismembered by a group of sword-wielding women. The movie is part of a so- called "babycart" series about a discredited samurai who wanders the Japanese countryside wreaking ven- geance, on his enemies, all the while toting his young son in a wooden baby carriage. Shotgun Assassin could become the first new thing in the exploitation field since Halloween, and if, as suspected, the knifewielding- killer-of-teenage-girls movies have just about run their course, Japanese mutilation pictures could be arriving just in time. Moreover, like Halloween, Shotgun Assassin could prove very popular among t hip followers of the bizarre. All I know is that at a recent screening, I was riveted. Blood does not spurt in Shotgun Assassin-it gushes and volleys in poetic rivers across the screen in a manner that makes Peckinpah pale. Swords enter bodies in imaginative ways that manage kto be beautiful and horri- fying. There's a scene of blood spreading across sand from wounded warriors hidden under- ground that is as visually com- pellingdas anything I've seen all year. And there's a scene near the 0 vl i guo-tv", - I I I m I