ARTS Tuesday, November 2, 1982, The Michigan Daily tr Star soprano Page7 iumphs but Blegen is an uncommon perfortn d in many ways. The last two encores were Grieg's Solvejg's Song and a slightly abridged version of Mozart's Exultate Jubilate. Both were virtuoso performances by what may be the most gracious and charming woman in opera today. gh By Jane Carl S TAGE PRESENCE is an innate part of public performance, but all too often many of the biggest names in classical music lack charm and graciousness when onstage. Whether it is a character flaw or mere snobbery is dependent upon the individual, but the Saturday evening -recital of soprano Judith Blegen in Hill Auditorium con- tained no snobbery or flaws of any sort. From the moment she stepped on- stage to her final encore,-Blegen was poised, charming, and a consummate artist. Her first selection was 10 excer- pts from Wolf's Italienisches Lieder- buch. Although Blegen has often been criticized for singing only lighter works, as most of her program was, she brought incredible charm and artistry to the simplest piece. Ich ;hub in Penna einen Liebsten whonen from Italienisches Liederbuck is the tale of a woman with many lovers in various locations around Italy. As she described her bountiful amount of lovers, Blegen became so pleased with herself that the audience burst into a pleased chuckle and furious ap- plause. Blegen's operatic acting was present throughout the evening, but it never overshadowed her pure, resonant voice. Her next selection featured four songs by Brahms. In Lerchengeseng, Op. 70, No. 2, one became aware of the care Blegen prepares her recitals with. Every note was treated with the utmost delicacy and handed to the audience as if she were giving them a present. The second half opened with four songs by Milhaud entitled Chansons de Ronsard. These were typical virtuositic French pieces that gave Blegen a better opportunity to show off her exquisite technique and eloquent phrasing. This was followed by When Love is Kind, an old English folk song that was simple beyond belief, and from many other singers would have been trite. However, Blegen's marvelous execution of every musical element precluded any possibe triteness throughout the evening. Menotti's lovely Monica Aria was the high point of the evening. The charming waltz tells the story of a servant who has fallen in love with his princess. Ac- companist Martin Katz could not have served Blegen better on this work. His sensitivity lent the piece the breezy, coquettish air it demanded. Blegen was at the height of expressivity both in telling the story and in making music. Blegen was called back by the audience for three encores, before which she thanked the audience for their attentiveness and appreciation. This gratitude was a rare occurrence among performers of her magnitude, i Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Iggy Pop performs at his 15th anniversary Halloween bash at the Michigan Theatre last Saturday night. Iggy' s 'Hailoween madness I By Rob Weisberg GGY POP played at the Michigan Theatre on Saturday night. It wasn't anything special, really-not very gruesome or necromantic or anything-but it wasn't that bad. As bng as Ig can keep that sense of humor, it's hard not to like him. The whole thing, complete with bet- ween-sets costume contest, was over by eleven. That's my biggest gripe- customers had to pay $11.50 for under two hours of music. I guess the over half-empty house spoke for itself on that issue, though. Someday local en- trepeneurs will begin to discover that it's more fun and, more realistically in their terms, more profitable to charge a fair price and pack the house than to rip off a select few diehards. Enough of that. Nash the Slash, Toronto's native son, started the show. Nash, who was accompanied by nobody besides a few machines, came out dressed in a bloodied white medical- looking gown with white mask and con- struction helmet. He was holding a glistening white violin from which "sprang forth (with the accompaniment of rhythm box and, presumably, tapes) an apocalyptic heavy-metalish building dirge that verified his presence. It was pretty good, I've got to admit. It really caught the attention of the folks who were there which I'm sure is all that Nash could ask for. Nash did another less impressive one on violin and then switched over to guitar. He did some syntho-dancy stuff, some more of the dirgier stuff, and an interesting rendition of "Deadman's Curve" (the old Jan & Dean tune) com- plete with extended audio-visual crashup. Apparently Nash likes to throw in at least one warped oldy per set to help baffle the audience. He left after just six songs, while I was still trying to figure out what to make of it. Despite my cynicism towar- ds live shows that aren't really live, I've got to admit some of the music was really catchy and that's what pop music is about. Everybody got a kick out of it too, so give him some points. After Nash there was the costume thing, where another blow was struck for sexism (ironically) as a Playboy Bunny of all creative things took third. Some blob-guy with a big head won, though, which was okay. They gave him a big bag of money. Then Iggy came out. My first im- pression, after he took off his executioner's hood, was that he looked old. He is thirty-five, which has something to with it. And when he star- ted singing, he didn't sound half bad. He was wearing an Iggy shirt-this bothered me, especially considering the quality of the shirt. All in the game. He came out in the midst of a taped introduction-it reminded me a bit of Nash, at least in intended purpose. It had some mysterious music and Iggy saying a lot of things about boxes; big boxes, little boxes. His voice kept get- ting angrier and angrier: "Even your best friends are boxes," until he finally pranced onstage. It was a very diverse set. Iggy alter- nated the customary hard-rocking oldies with his new stuff, which is almost synthpop without synths-yet with an edge performed live that syn- thesized music just can't produce. The band sounded good to me; very professional but not invisible. The drummer in particular did quite a job of recreating the sound that you thought only comes from rhythm boxes. Indeed, they rocked out pretty well on upbeat numbers like the opening "Eat or be Eaten," or "The Villagers." Iggy was pretty calm most of the time, though, only showing signs of his old self during the encores and oc- casionally when he hit the floor or something. He was smiling and joking with the crowd-not a sign of the old an- tagonism remained in his act. If you didn't let little nostalgic things like that bother you, and just took the music at face value, it wasn't bad. But it cer- tainly didn't have any special energy to it; it was just a nice show, doing the stuff pretty much as it is on the albums, doing the oldies, going home. Maybe Iggy's trying to make a point with hi,. new music and his new less- antagonistic stance. He's trying to stay original; he's always tried not to be trendy and possibly he's pointing this out by doing a musical (but not lyrical, because that would be too blunt and stupid) parody on the latest thing. After all, he's still got his tongue in cheek- he always has. Or maybe he figures he's too old to act mean any more so he's lightening up, and to symbolize this closing of the book on his past he put out his biography and radically changed his music. Whatever it is, what it produced on Saturday was enough to keep you interested but didn't get you excited. After all, that's life. Records The Look-'Look Again' Another recording of the "Don't worry about the music, just have fun" Seventies philosophy from what most local people prefer to forget is originally an Ann Arbor band. Joe "King" Carrasco and the Crowns do sing background on "You Can't Sit Down," the opening song, but they can't teach a borrowed genre new hooks. Similarly, the "sh-doop-wah" background for "Needle in a Haystack," while the best part of the piece, remains an almost shameless plagiarism which loses spirit in the transition. Someday the Look is bound to stum- ble on a bland Casey Casum hit, and then we can dislikethem even more for an undeserved popularity (that an equally bland audience deserves). This is more music purporting to be about middle-class realism and fun-making the best of a difficult situation-just specious enough to warrant the retitling, "Look Away (Again)." -Ben Ticho Dear Merchant. Did you know that Daily readers spend over $125 million on items you sell?__ __ GET YOUR AD! CALL. 764-0554 R.Ce MINI-COURSE MIGRANTS, MONOPOLIES, & MACHINES The plight of the migrant farmworker Mon, Wed, Thurs,-Nov. 8-18-8:00-10:00 p.m. (one credit) Contact John, Brian, or Uriel at 764-1146 MARIAH* xSHOWCASE JAZZ PROUDLY PRESENTS 0 V Ralph Towner Paul McCandless Glen Moore Collin Walcott Thursday Nov.4th,1982 Fairchild Theater MSU 7:30 pm And 10:00pm General Admission $7.50-Advance $8.50 -Door -TICKETS AVAILABLE AT- Warehouse RecordsII/Campus Corners I{ Flat, Black and Circular/Marshall Music School Kids-A. Arbor/Full Moon- Mt.Pleast: FlipsideRecords-Kalamazoo 1181 .rmrr.^e r n. *..r..u ? ~n v IU Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Iggy does his pop magic for all his fans. The Amos Tuck School of Business Administration Dartmouth College " Hanover, N.H. Men and Women Seeking Graduate Education for Management are invited to discuss the FORESTRY ... You're Needed All Over the 1World. Ask Peace Corps Foresters why they travel half way around the world to Africa, Asia and Latin America .. . Ask other volunteers why they work with the local people to help them with forest management, erosion control, and watershed preservation . .. why they learn and speak their neighbors' language and adapt to a new culture. Ask them why Peace Corps is the toughest job you'll ever love. ',' i ,I