--m-l 7W } .'..+ . . c t. .sm . . "w " f . w1' ' . _KV a' 5 " ' Vj -I 4 In Step cotton t-shirt, $20; rubber belt with dark grey pouch from Streets Ahead, $28; wooden bangles, $5 ea; jeans, $38; jacket, $64 (left). Deux pan- ts, $45; and top, $52; leather belt, $28; accented with two brass bangles, $15; and a zebra comb in wood, $6; and a leather safari purse, $18. Available at Vintage to Vogue. Background: Lorch Hall Courtyard. 0 0 N 3i -J vi n -o vi ci O 0 v -C Q} N x 1S 4 Single-breasted wool suit with pleated trousers by Canali, Italy, $650; cotton striped shirt by Daniel Schagen, W. Germany, $90; silk bowtie, by Prochownick, Italy, $25. Available at Renaissance. Background: Escoffier's. Chilling cello Yo-Yo Ma University Musical Society Hill Auditorium 8:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 4 By Anne Valdespino W HO IS the only cellist ever to appear on the cover of Harvard Magazine? - Yo-Yo Ma, of course. A graduate of Harvard University who reads, speaks and writes French and Chinese, Ma also devotes time to com- posing music of his own when he is not busy performing on the international circuit. Since his 1963 appearance in the nationally televised "The American Pageant of the Arts" conducted by Leonard Bernstein, Ma's career has blossomed. He has performed as guest soloist with major orchestras throughout the world; Berlin Philhar- monic, Chicago Symphony, Israel Philharmonic, London Symphony, and the New York Philharmonic to cite a few. In these engagements he has had the opportunity to work with the world's prominent conductors, Claudio Abbado, Sergiu Comissiona, Herbert von Karajan, Lorin Maazel. Zubin Mehta Wmston from Page 26 Winston will typically base a piece on a simple musical statement, perhaps only five or six notes. He'll repeat the phrase, altering and playing with it, exploring its tonal and color possibilities. A melody slowly forms, evolving in complexity. It will chase af- ter itself in short; rapid circles, or split into two overlapping melodies that play tag with one another, to merge again, pause to reflect on itself, and gracefully dissolve when it's exhausted its poten- Iift §onteone s §pilt Balloons for you Winner of Best Smal et 0- ~3bb 0 d 0 d t .l e n Y s t s ,1 d a d s , n a and Seiji Ozawa. Many of his tours include solo and chamber music recitals. In this medium, Ma has appeared with the best; cellist Leonard rose, violinists Yehudi Menuhin, and Pinchas Zucker- man, and pianist Emanuel Ax as well as many others. Part of Yo-Yo Ma's wide appeal is due to his astounding versatility. In a time when musicians are under pressure to become more specialized, Ma remains one of the few artists who is comfortable performing music of any century. His repertoire includes Romantic tial. Winston is also fond of enhancing a piece with occassional technical tricks, like trilling the last notes of a passage, letting them spiral off into thin air, or he'll slow down a melody, so that the slow reverberations and gaps of silence between the notes are every bit as ef- fective as a furiously pounding crescendo. The techniques commonly achieved through a mixing console, he arrives at accoustically. George Winston is a modern com- poser for an audience who appreciates modern music that is humanistic and poetic, free of dry mathematics. His performance promises to be a high point in this year's local so far relatively anorexic concert calendar. l works like the Brahms Double Concer- to, and 20th century literature like the Kabalevsky'or Shostakovich Solo Con- certos. But Ma also has a predilection for Bach; he has performed and recor- ded the Suites for Gamba (a 17th cen- tury stringed instrument) and Har- psichord, and his interpretation of the Bach Suites for solo Cellos is in con- stant demand, playing to sold-out houses in New York's Alice Tully Hall and in a series of European engagements at London, Munich and Berlin. Ma is also a popular commodity in the record industry. His debut disc for Deuts von sessi to CB recor Saens trans Capr At have recor Emar Yo= Hill A ce to Yo-Yo Ma: To be jamming Wednesday m ,A 5 a C t Y - AN1 Oecio University Flower Shop, Inc. Phones 665-6037 0 668-8096 7 Nickels Arcade Ann Arbor, Michigan . y. O. G0 J( a y C a LL -O 0 u -oy c 0 Oca Pcfi{hot, 1.Iilable at Hudson's. Background: Angell Hall. lest Restaurant Award *The best freshly-r quality sandwich on campus " Fast, personalizes " Daily specials- oriental lunch bo * Delicious egg roll made ies ,d service ax s ............ Perry Ellis rainslicker, $230; pants, $70; and hand- knit sweater, $220. Available at Ayla for Men. Handwoven wrap skirt, $36; top, $17.10; necklace, $4.50; bracelet, $7.99; scarf, $9.99. Available at Fashion-n-Things. Background: First Congregational Church. 14 Weekend/Friday, March AO, 1984 27 Wi