w w w w w w w w w w w w T 1 U wI T T T xfg;> rte::,.; ,,+. :: f t iyf::.r'";'?,.?': <' r:;;;:r >:"; :;.r ix;}:z; :t:;+h;;:;r ".'y.::: ; :. ::. Sax du monde The World Saxaphone Quartet Eclipse Jazz Rackham 8 p.m., Saturday, November 12 U' vi:::i .:.:::::.::::rj5. .;:''. ..:. . . :. .....:..,;.....;.;";::. . ...... . . . . . . ..L."iL~:i i{: " ?i~i: LL;{ tiGi ;: . .............. . . .... . ........r":::":".........:.:v "::.::.. .::::. .:::.y::::. .::..::.. . . . . . . . ..,..{:iS iY""frfi:i:-ii:-s ii~ "::. By C. . Krell W ITHOUT SOUND Quickening amplification. Will Someone Queue? Well Steven Quietly. W.S.Q. WSQ. Rackham Auditorium, 8 p.m. November 12. World Saxophone Quar- tet. David Murray, saxophone. Oliver Lake, saxophone. Julius Hemphill, saxophone. Hamiet Bluiett saxophone. Saxophones, men, audience. Whipping Sound Quorum.- What happens when four Surely aware and Qualified men who, without ever stepping anywhere near each other, would still blow great bombs of curved and sexy space into vinyl. And do. All of the members of the World Saxophone Quartet have their own quite private careers, dedications, visions, mouths; they make records on their own with other luminaries and dignitaries and fairies of the jazz age that we live in. But forget it, it is impor- tant in this contextual mass to take them at their face, or rather, letter value, so that is what will be done. Let- ter value. W. W stands for World. It's obvious that the World Saxophone Quartet can- not speak for or to an entire world, at least not all at once. But World in the sense that little corners of their ghetto streets and bars and Serengeti plain and The World Saxophone Quartet: Four play Vienna concert halls. A piece of Man, capital M, which in half a sense makes no sense, but the name says World. Representing humans far and near to spread fear, fear, to jeer steer. Humans. World. S: S stands for Saxophone. Metal tubes with valve disease. Reeds and Deeds. Mouths touching earth and spit- ting globs and flicks and whispers of sky. Pressure drop through fingers and minds and hearts and souls and guts and all those things that make up every, single stupid saying that has ever been written only in this case it's played on an instrument. Someone once said that every great statement, or all the greatest statements, or at least something real neat has been said by black men on saxophones. S stands for saxophone. Q: Q stands for Quartet. Now, as has been mentioned, all the members of this quartet have their own little groups and orchestras and session and sometimes they play together, or by themselves. Yet even so, it might seem to the chicken-hearted that four saxophones, no matter how neat, do not a group, at least a together one, make. Wrong. Through the course of a bunch o' albums, the Quartet has demonstrated an ability to ascend orchestral spreads and walls of sounds and rhythm and beat and harmonymelodycounterpoint andcontrapuntal and you can hum the tunes. The Quartet sing in unison or solo apart or break together. Lots of fun things on four huge saxophones and that's it. Only words though. Better yet to go to Rackham and see and hear and see. Again, the only volume to be heard will be lungular; microphones will not be used. c, a Frye: Appeases protesters lunch, this Monday is no exception. He is saved from starvation by one associate who anticipated the problem and purchased a hamburger and fries at the Union for him. But before he gets two bites into his hamberger or two minutes into the meeting, about 40 ac- tivist students file into the office lobby singing a localized version of "If he only had a brain," from the movie, The Wizard of Oz. "Oh, it's Billy Frye's solution/to stage an execution/and chop the 'U' apart/But, he could make his mind up/to become a little kinder/if he only had a heart." Frye at first reacts by shutting the conference room door and trying to continue the staff meeting. But after milling around the office for several minutes with signs protesting budget cuts, the students knock on the office door. This is not the first time he has met these students. Last spring, when the fear of budget cuts was running higher, the same group dropped in for lunch and stayed the night to protest the University's five-year plan. Tempers ran a bit higher then. The 5-year plan: A pain in the back says L much i by cor 'make i then s proced delays. of those Ever hardest have 1 arguin public, "Not says A "but It been r these r BAC mi Univer part of athleti known souther misses "I w was ve Michig become but for of The 1 to be tl desire I even tf soever Ther it is on accordi fighting counts "Des arise," one yea help y spectiv therefo the Uni are or Univer the inte times v Spi editot -n a I C 3 Cello pudding Mstislav Rostroprovich University Musical Society Hill Auditorium 8:00 p.m., Wednesday, November 16 By Robin Jones '' 0 BE ONE of the world's greatest and most loved cellists is not an easy job. Getting to hear one of the world's greatest and most loved cellists perform is not always easy, either. Fortunately for Ann Arbor audiences, the Unversity Musical Society has conquered this problem by presenting cellist Mstislav Rostroprovich, in con- cert, Wednesday evening at Hill Auditorium. Rostropovich, or "Slava," has an im- pressive history. He began his study of the cello at age eight with his father at the Children's Music School in Moscow. Rostropovich continued at the Moscow Conservatory, where he studied both' cello and composition under several well-known, composers, including Shostakovich.Fe participated in three major international competitions where he received first prize - Prague (twice) and Budapest. Rostropovich first concertized out- side the Soviet Union in 1947, and since that time has appeared in recital and with leading orchestras throughout the world. In Russia he was awarded the Lenin and Stalin Prizes, and the nation's highest honor, the People's Ar- tist of the U.S.S.R. The government has yet to rescind the latter prize even though it stripped Rostropovich and his wife of their citizenships in 1978. Maestro Rostropovich made his United States conducting debut with the. National Symphony in 1975, and h s led such famed orchestras as the Chicago Symphony, London Philharmonic, and Berlin Philharmonic. Rostropovich conducted his first opera in the United States in the fall of 1975 at the San Francisco Opera. His wife, soprano Galina Vishnevskaya, was lead. Rostropovich now devotes almost all of his time and energy to the National Symphony Orchestra in Washington. He acts as the symphony's musical director. The Orchestra has received critical acclaim in recent years. It has been compared to some of the world's best orchestras, especially in its treat- ment of Russian symphonic literature that Rostropovich knows so well. Wednesday's concert will open with Adagio by Benedetto Marcello, variations on "Ein Madchen oder Weibchen," from Die Zauberflote, Op. See CELLO, Page 6 students were a touch belligerent, and Frye a bit shaken by the adamance of their opposition to his plan. But he seems to have gotten to know them then, because things go rather smoothly today. Almost as if they were invited he welcomes them, and proceeds to field questions for twenty minutes. Satisfied at least for the moment, the students politely thank him and file out of the of- fice. These students are not the only ones who have complaints about the budget cutting process. Last spring, when the three largest budget reviews were reaching their final stages Frye found himself at the center of a whole storm of controversy. While working 14 hour days to keep the review going, he found the very foundations of his academic and scholarly values being questioned. He was accused of being a scheming vureaucrat, of being manipulative, and of concealing important information. One high level administrator, who would only talk if his name was withheld, speaks of a "comfortable level" of responsibility and control which Frye demands in every decision. "He is a person who doesn't delegate authority. He sometimes delegates tasks, but rarely ever authority . . When you see this kind of pattern, it is a difficult judgment as to whether it arises from someone who wants responsibility or needs to have that con- trol." "It's not difficult for me to see how people see him as manipulative. He has an ability to handle himself with a sureness and purposefulness that people walk away with a feeling that there must be some huge planning in- frastructure behind it - but that is the farthest thing from the truth. What you have is little planning and crisis behavior." Those who work closest with Frye, however, defend him vigerously. This is an unfair view says Richard Kennedy, the University vice president for state relations. "There are those who believe there is some Machiavellian intent behind the things we are doing, that we run around making all those decisions without telling people, that we just create a public charade to justify the things we have already decided on," he says. "But Billy Frye has worried about doing just the opposite more than anyone. I don't know who has worked harder and agonized more over the out- come of this process. I don't know who. has been more honest and more fair in trying to reach a concensus, and I don't know if concensus is possible when you are cutting budgets." Many people close to Frye, both those who were involved in budget cut and those who weren't, say the problems with the budget process came from the other direction: Too much publicity, too much open debate, too many attempts to reach consensus in a situation where a concensus will never exist. "Vice President Frye, in contrast to me, likes to talk things out and see if we can come to some sort of a solution," MsUsav Kostroprovich: "Slava" to his friends Billy: Where's my skunk? &WeOo !t!/ =mbes14 4083 MM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~-----