ARTS Tuesday, November 13, 1984 The Michigan Daily Page 5 The elegance of Viktoria Mullova and her violin *, B Neil Galanter A fter having walked out on stage in an elegant blue evening gown, Viktoria Mullova began an equally elegant violin recital. To start things off for the evening, she offered a flavorful performance of Mozart's Sonata in B Flat K378 with playing that was notably in the ap- propriate style with all the appropriate spirit, bubbliness, and verve necessary for an effective Mozart performance. Mullova reached all the climax points in the score with grace and lilting charm which created a good musical tension which added to the overall ef- fect of the piece. She could have played with a bit more docility in the middle sostenuto and cantabile movement. She didn't abandon her big, sumptous tone for the more laid-back approach necessary at this point in the Sonata. Her pianist, Charles Abramovic had the right idea, but she did not. Mullova was right back on target, though, in the last movement, providing for all the grace and agility necessary for a lively rondo movement. Her precise control of the running notes at the end of the rondo was most impressive. Next came the Brahms G Major Sonata, which Mullova played with a certain stateliness and gradeur that befits the piece. The playing was tasteful and well tempered. Abramovic reaffirmed his fine artistry not only as an accompanist but also as a pianist in this piece. Too often good pianist/ac- companists are neglected. Abramovic put in a marvelous performance throughout the entire program-a major contributing factor to the suc- cess of the recital. Mullova followed intermission with a fiery performance of Prokofiev's D Major Sonata. She outlined all the sharp Russian Prokofiev melodies with great fervor. She always seemed most effective in the fast paced sections, and again her playing in the less fiery areas. of the piece might have fared better with a more passive and meeker ap- proach. Mullova chose a most resourceful showpiece to closer her program: La Campanella from the b minor concerto of Paganini. There really is not a wealth of musical depth to the Paganini Concerti, which is perhaps the reason why they aren't performed a whole lot. Mullova, however, certainly made it enjoyable to say the least. She created an art gallery of pictures, one after another with the many dif- ferent tricks Paganini hid up his sleeve when he wrote it. Her ease in handling all the amazingly difficult aspects of "La Campanella" was unbelievable. One thing Viktoria Mullova doesn't have any trouble with is technique. This was evident in her second encore of the evening: "A Spanish Dance" by Sarasate. She fluffed this one off in a seemingly effortless fasion as well. Her first encore was a beautiful arrangement of Gershwin's "It Ain't Necessarily So" by Jascha Heifetz. She played this with all heartfelt ex- pressiveness and it certainly made my heart thump. Mullova is a violinist of formidable quality and, in my estimation, she will go far. I look forward to hearing her again. England's The Cure, here not seen in live concert at the Michigan Theater on Saturday night. The ost-punk event of the year By Dennis Harvey T HE CURE'S Saturday night set at the Michigan Theatre was un- doubtedly the social/cultural event of the year among the area's wavin' cool set, and ultimately it more than met the crowd's high expectations and already-sold adulation. One of the first and best of British postpunk bands, the Cure has always, like Joy Division, Siouxsie and the Banshees and others emerging from basically the same era, had a relentlessly serious, fain- tly academic approach to pop, art, and dance music styles, saved from pretension (sometimes just barely) by the all-encompassing cloud of emotional ambiguity. Despite their ability to write neat, hummable lit- tle tunes like anybody else on oc- casion, the Cure manages to cast a lost shadow of evasive atmospherics over everything they do-even the run of pop successes they've had lately, like "Let's Go to Bed," seem somehow clouded over by a bemused detachment. Such exquisite distancing allows the audience to be acknowledged in passing, if at all, and during the far- thest reaches of their middle art- gloom period (Pornography), the Cure seemed perversely determined to alienate even the staunchest fans-not to mention their record label. It's been with astutely calculated halfsteps, then, that they've slipped back toward ac- cessibility with several suprisingly catchy singles. This year's generally excellent LP The Top defines the "new" Cure approach-guarded yet irresistible artpop in which even the most delightful songs ("The Cater- pillar," "Birdmad Girl") leave a slightly discordant aftertaste of in- trospection. The Michigan Theatre set displayed the Cure in a manner that was both inevitable and ideal. This is obviously a band too cool to indulge in any standard theatricality (like moving around the stage at all), so the visual excitement has to happen to rather than through them. The fog of ambiguity the Cure creates on record was, appropriately enough, a literal cloud of dry-ice fog that frequently enveloped the stage and wafted toward the balcony. ' And this show was-without the least hint of trad blitzbomb Big Rock Spectacle vulgarity-probably the most impressive job of lighting I've ever seen at a concert. Frequently violent color contrasts between lighting projected on the players and on the huge blank screen behind them gave the impression of physical action where there really wasn't any. The master stroke was projection of looming silhouettes of the band members and their equip- ment, which changed in perspective to superimpose multiple images in a manner so psyche-out dazzling that one could frequently forget entirely about the comparatively inert humans beneath. The terrific variety in coloring made it easy to fail noticing how consistently dark most of the lighting was-making it (intentionally, of course) all the harder to get a halfway decent stare at the center of attention, lead singer/guitarist Robert Smith, who buries himself in the microphone with nearly as view-frustrating an intensity as R.E.M.'s Michael Stipe. The Event status of the evening was due largely to the Cure's not having toured the U.S. in several years, and the set dutifully covered a lot of ground. The majority of moodier middle-period material was scattered throughout the hour-long official set, with earlier tunes and poppier stuff dominating later on. Currently a five-piece outfit, with alternation between a three guitar/one keyboard and two guitar/two keyboard sound, the Cure came up with a highly im- pressive if not staggeringly varied wall of sound. The aural density filled out the simpler, more melodic tunes, and lent songs with seemingly doubtful live promise the necessary - dirgey-yet-well-defined effect. Robert Smith's. distinctive voice, that nearly-but-not-quite annoying compromise between wail and croon (generally leaning toward the for- mer)was consistently strong, and at times came up with surprisingly delicate variations on his recorded approach. If an encore rendition of "Boys Don't Cry" seemed rather in- different both vocally and in- strumentally, there was the com- pensation of the unusually relaxed, even jazzily playful vocal perfor- mance of the even bigger hit "Let's Go to Bed," whose blantant 'single' appeal even the band itself has ex- pressed some distaste for. More typical during the basic set was the enveloping forward drive of Faith's "Primary," the ominously commanding big beat of the opening "Shake Dog Shake" from The Top, and the obsessive power of Seven- teen seconds' "A Forest." A funky version of "The Walk" signalled a gradual turn toward lighter songs, which solidified during the three en- cores. All three leaned heavily toward favorite material from their U.K. debut Three Imaginary Boys and the U.S. singles compilation Boys Don't Cry, climaxing with a very intense "Killing an Arab." It would have felt like a bit of a sellout, though, if the Cure had finished up with all these radio faves. Fortunately, the mystique was restored with a hauntingly beautiful eight-minute closing deluge number that no one seemed to be able to identify. The band and the evening simply faded with this last flash of the cape into a haze of saxophone wails and the inevitable final belch of dry ice. After a curt thank-you-very-much, the mood was destroyed with an oddly appropriate f.-you-all abruptedness by ob- noxiously cheerful Disney songs pumped loud over the P.A. system. It's not as easy a thing as it might appear to wrap oneself in a cloak of evasive mystery and get away with it, as the Cure did. The audience was obviously presold, carrying about the same sort of we're-honored-to- be-here awe that one felt, for instan- ce, at last year's Bowie tour dates. But the unusual amount of encore- begging hysteria proved that they Cure earned the reverence they court. The show may have been less song-to-song great than a blur of at- mosphere, but it was a magnetic blur. Chilean pianist A rrau and the DSO By Neil Galan ter WHAT A phenomenon for a man that is over 80 years old to be still playing over 80 concerts and recitals a year! The legendary artist and Chilean pianist Claudio Arrau has been perfor- ming for more than 70 or so of those 80 years and he has become one of the most sought-after concert artists in the world. This fact is certainly understan- dable as Thursday evening he perfor- med, what was for the most part, an controlled and highly moving and sen- sitie performance of Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 4 in G, with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra under the direc- tion of guest conductor Hiroshi Wakasugi. Due to Arrau's age at times his per- formance suffered from a lack of the real big, gradiose sound he played with in his younger days. HIs performance never failed though to create highly in- tellectual and, cerebral musical thoughts and ideas which resulted in a deeply emotional performance, and there was a considerable amount of youthful freshness and vigor to the cadenzas in both the first and last movements. Arrau has that knack for consistent smooth phrasing in which the ends of his phrases are always trimmed as neatly as a pin or tapered off evenly and lovingly. This is most complimentary to the music, especially in a piece like Beethoven's Fourth Piano Concerto, and it provides the listener with the ability to listen and digest what he has to say with the utmost ease and relaxation. There were some parts in which he blurred certain passages with the pedal but otherwise his playing had extraor- dinary control, such as in the soft passages of the concerto. Here his playing was extremely lucid and clear, which contributed to the truly masterful performance perfor- med bynoneofrthe greatest masters of the piano ever to live. The orchestra provided good strong support for Arrau and Wakasugi followed him every step of the way thus proving himself an ex- tremely sympathetic accompanist as well as an excellent conductor. After intermission the orchestra was joined by Reri Grist, soprano; Anne Fournet, narrator; Kathleen Segar, mezzo-soprano; Kathleen Eberle, mez- zo soprano; and the Kenneth Jewell Chorale, for a performance of Claude Debussy's "Le Martyre de Saint- Sebastien". This piece is based upon the test of the mystery play by Gabrielle D'Annunzio and it is divided into five acts scored for orchestra with narrative, chorus and vocal solos. The orchestra played stunningly with all the lush, impressionistic dreamy and exciting qualities typical of Debussy's music. Wakasugi led a tightly controlled performance with the orchestra responding consistently well. There were a few parts in which the brass was not always quite together, but the strings held everything together skillfully, especially the violins and the celli. Con- certmaster Gordon Staples played at his usual high quality level and notably so in some of the sections where the violin plays along with the narrative. Fournet's performance of the narritive was at many points spellbin- ding. Her clear, elucidating style of speaking the dramatic prose in French of D'Annuzio's was a combination of pure drama and heartwarming ex- pressiveness. Also playing major and most impressive roles were Reri Grist, whose consistent polished singing ad- ded to the success of the Debussy as well as Kathleen Segar and Katherine Eberle who also sang respectfully well and very musically satisfying in their respective roles. Segar is a University School of Music Alumnus, and Eberle is currently working towards her doc- torate here in the School of Music, where she also has a teaching assistan- tship. The chorus performed well most of the time except for some points where the balance of the many voices was uneven, creating somewhat of a murkiness. For the most part however the chorus did well in enhancing the overall dramatic effect of the Debussy. I-. _ -s 300 COUPON __ ! THIS ENTIRE AD GOOD FOR TWO $3.00 TICKETS t N ppN N l ilNN "s v 'rtwn I- e " " e e e " " " Z " DANNY DeVITO MICHAEL DOUGLAS KATHLEEN TURNER .= a fabulous adventure... Romancing The STONE TWENTIETH ®CENTURY-FOX The Sexiest Movie of the Year! GENEVIEVE KEITH BUOLD * CARRADINE CHOOSE ME * I Record: C DAILY 1:00, 7:00, 9:00 DAILY 1:00, 7:20, 9:30 i!!!!!N!!!N!!N!!!!NlNNNN!!!!"!!!!N!!Nl . a- Delightful lumping-together of cuts supposedly recorded before even R. & the L.'s official debut Songs for Swinging Larvae, and even closer to Residents cloniness, with rampant Tweedley-dee vocals and assorted scariness. The Ralph label has always specialized in a sort of gurgling-underwater semi- inexplicable experimentation that could lead equally to viewer con- vulsions, revelations, or smug indif- ference. Allegedly laid to rest on tape in 1979 (questionable if only because the unknown I.D.'s of both Reisdents and Renaldo makes any "facts" suspicious), Struve and Sneff is post- acid-age music for the well prepared;others may have a wee fright. There are a few hits here for the already-converted - "Kimbolton Gnome Man" can be recalled from the "Songs for Swining Larvae" short, possibly the best 'music video' (albeit shot on film) ever made. And there are some lovingly covered oldies for you trads. Julie Andrews gets a workout on the extensive revamps of The Sound of Music's "16 Going on 17" and, with some inspired new lyrics, "My Favorite Things." The lyrics of "The Meanings of W.E.I.R.D." define the general level of absurdity: "Walk energetically in rubber dungarees/Whisper English intone religious -Dutch/Wigwam especially is rusty dusty/These are some meanings of W.E.I.R.D." Extremely funny until they get too scary (but don't let them), Renaldo and the Loaf are-to put it in terms far sim- pler than they deserve-a sort of purely musical Monty Python troupe. -Dennis Harvey L hAZ dT C j4 m