0 ARTS Page 6 Thursday, March 17, 1983 The Michigan Daily Opera star makes area debut 1 By George Shepherd S OPRANO KATHLEEN BATTLE, has sung in the world's major opera houses and at concerts with some of the most famous singers. At age 34 she is virtually an international star. With a voice which Zubin Mehta described in People magazine as "one of the loveliest...I know of," she certainly produces wonderful lyrical sounds. Yet Battle, who makes her Ann Arbor debut with the Chamber Orchestra this Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in the Michigan Theater, has two other assests which have been central to her success: a concise intelligence and a disarming, spunky manner. A slender, striking, black woman, Battle said in a recent phone interview that their are many factors which influence a singer's career. "A lot of it is talent; discipline and timing - what some might call lucky breaks - are also important. But a singer's personality is of crucial, crucial importance." Battle was born and raised in Por- tsmouth, Ohio in a family she describes as "musically talented without being musicians." Battle went to high school with Ann Arbor Chamber Orchestra's music director Carl Daehler in Por- tsmouth. She started voice lessons at 16 but says, "I didn't know that I wanted to do classical music as a career until I was well out of college with a master's degree in music education." Battle taught music in a Cincinnatti elementary school for several years and while in Cincinnatti, she was discovered by Thomas Schippers. Shor- tly afterwards she met James Levine, the Metropolitan Opera's music direc- tor. Levine has been an important fac- tor in arranging Battle's frequent Met appearances, including last year's role as the maid in Cosi fan tutte a part she played with charmingly unservile liveliness. Battle refers to Levine, who also accompanied her in her sold-out Alice Tully Hall recital, as "a close friend and my mentor." Asked why many singers feel com- pelled to train and to start careers in Europe, Battle proudly replies, "I am an American product, born and trained in America. I'm an example of someone who didn't need to go abroad to start a career. And I'm unique in that way." Battle is pleased now to have achieved some stability in her professional life. "I am fortunate to be able to call the Met my operatic home in America. Though I travel out to do concerts in many other cities, I'm in New York at least six months of the year. Unlike many singers who are constantly on the road and have even sold their New York apartments, I don't feel that I'm living out of a suitcase." The opera star likes a wide variety of music. "I grew up on the Motown sound and the Temptations. And Stevie Won- der is one of my favorite, favorite musicians." She recently performed a Duke Ellington song in a tribute to the jazzman on public television. Battle has no plans to sing pop music as Placido Domingo recently did in his "cross-over" album with John Denver. "Denver just doesn't interest me ar- tistically," she says with a giggle. But Battle reacts more favorably to other areas of a singer's art. Upon hearing that Metropolitan Opera baritone Sherrill Milnes (as a young singer) performed on Schaefer Beer commercials, she said, "I wasn't lucky enough to do that. That's a great job." Battle believes that, in America, opera should be done only in English, except for in the Metropolitan opera. "At the Met,. which is a national1 treasure and national institution, we must use the original language becavse people come from all around the wox~d to hear performances there.' She enjoys concert and opera singing equally, but approaches them differen- tly. "With opera you have to be more flexible and ready for anything. Wpo knows if a prop is going to be thte when it's supposed to be?" She fin is recitals the most challenging, "Tpe only variables are oneself, the piarnist, and the flow between you and your audience. You must concentrate bn creating an evening of moods." In Ann Arbor Battle will join tpe Chamber Orchestra in Mozart's " sultate, Jubilate" and in two arias fryn Handel's opera Alcina. The orchestra will play Haydn's "Hunt" symphony no.73 and Lars Eric Larsson's "Diver- timento." For information call 996-0046. Books- 'The Winds of Change' by Isaac Asimov Doubleday, 288 p., $15.95 With 262 books to his credit, Isaac Asimov has impressed the reading public with the extent of his knowledge ft. I Now we can detect a breast cancer smaller than this dot. At such an early stage, your chances of living a long, healthy life are ex- cellent. But we need your help. The only proven way to detect a cancer this small is with a mammogram. A mam- mogram is a low-radia- tion x-ray of the breast capable of detecting a cancer long before a lump can be felt. If youre over 50. a mam- mogram is recommend- ed every year. If you're between 40 and 50. or have a family history of breast cancer, consult your doctor In addition. of course, continue your regular self-examina- T ions d This space contributed as a public service in almost any field imaginable. His latest volume, The Winds of Change, takes him back to his roots, the science fiction short story. Released in conjun- ction with the best-selling Foundation's Edge, it can hardly fail to sell well it- self. Whether or not it deserves to sell well is a moot point. As usual, Asimov gives each story a small prelude in which he tells the reader of the circumstances surroun- ding its creation. The author is as genial as ever, but never has he been so self effacing. He seems eager to point out that his stories are not always ac- cepted by publishers, that all of his ideas don't work out and even that a story is dated or flawed. Unfortunately his modesty is quite fitting. All of Asimov's well deserved laurels aside, this collection is a dismaying mish-mash of old fashioned and unim- pressive tales. As a whole the stories are characteristically well constructed and told in Asimov's compact, enter- taining style. But, if his delivery is as precise as ever, the subject matter has declined considerably. Tucked between the larger pieces are several shorter tales that are actually little more than overblown bad jokes. Asimov encourages the reader to groan at the conclusions and I found myself obliging, but probably not for the reasons intended. The short pieces, usually ending with a carefully crafted pun, struck me as particularly labored and unfunny. Like all other jokes, these can only be heard and enjoyed only on- ce, if at all. Among the accompanying stories they seem surprisingly like filler material. Even at their best the longer stories fare little better. Asimov writes in the traditional format of the old pulp magazines with which he began his career. Stories are often centered around a discovery, such as a new machine, a new wonder drug or a mysterious alien organism. Don't get me wrong, I love the unleashed imagination of the original golden age stuff, but Asimov's attempts now seem forced. The central idea that the story is con- structed around is all too frequently unoriginal and unexciting. Even Asimov cannot squeeze any Sense of Wonder out of a retread. And as ex- treme as this criticism may sound, it is true. "Fair Exchange?" is a good exam- ple. In this uninspired tale the protagonist travels back in time in or- der to acquire the missing first play of Gilbert and Sullivan. Once in the past he tries to obtain it, almost succeds, and guess what happens upon his return to the present? Right. He finds that it has been inalterably changed for the worse. In fooling around with the past he has ruined his own future. Somehow he has altered the sequence of things so that in the new present his wife has died in a car accident. This entire concept was handled in a much superior fashion when Ray Bradbury wrote A Sound of 'Thunder more than 30 years ago._ In "It is Coming" we have a tale in which a super-computer that controls the world's economy is modified to communicate with an approaching alien spacecraft. The modifications make it intelligent and it ends up joining the Galatic Federation of Com- puters. We humans can only marvel that the aliens turned out to be com- puters themselves, while we are regulated, for the thousandth time, to the status of "pets" of the superior machine. The triumph of machine over man never sounded so mundane. In addition to these stories we have a trendy piece called "The Last Shuttle", which carries the last people off of ear- th and into space. The reason for such a stupendous migration is never made clear. And in the Twilight Zone genre of "it-was-all-a-government-test" we have a tale of simulated moon flight called "Ideas Die Hard." Asimoy ad- mits that the last is dated and that "science can race ahead of even a I Asim- ... writes more sci-fi cultivated imagination." It didn't have to go too fast in this case. Hard-core Asimov fans should note, however, that not all the stories in this collection are as bland as these. Somne are acceptable entertainment that will doubtlessly be appreciated by the en- thusiasts. "The Last Answer" stands as an original and thought provoking look at the possible nature of God, and "Nothing for Nothing" provides an in- teresting flight of rationalized fancy in which aliens who arrive on earth during the ice age encounter art for the first time, on the walls of our ancest6r's caves. These last two stories indicate tiat Asimov is still a capable writer' of imaginative fiction and the low quality of the rest hardly endangers the author's position as one of the masters of SF. What is disturbing is that a master would allow such an unbalanded collection to be published. Perhaps pf- ter 262 books one more doesn't make any difference. -Chris Hoekifr HURRY HURRY! Nme Address This is the last week to place your Sublet ad __ _ 1Phone 1 in our special Summer Sublet Issue _ It is impossible to accept any ad 1 1 after March 18, this Friday!j 1 1 .Summer Sublet Supplement I Mail or Bring in Person with payment to 1I 420 MAYNARD STREET MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO: THE MICHIGAN DAILY I 1 ~eCT. ___'IUR