The Michigan Daily ARTS Wednesday, December 12, 1984 4 * * 1,' Page 6 Page 6 Vienna Choir Boys: Young at heart, but not in talent By Neil Gallanter The Vienna Boys performed Sunday after- noon at Hill Auditorium and it was something else. It's absolutely amazing when you see a group of young children walk on stage in a nice orderly fashion all dressed in quasi "sailor suits", and then begin to sing an adult program of choral repetoire which includes all possible types of music from Palestrina to Christmas Carols. Beginning with selections by Eybler and Palestrina the boys demonstrated a very silken vocal timbre with plenty of sweet suppleness. The two major items on the first half of the program were a set of selections from Ben- jamin Britten's Christmas Favorite "A Ceremony of Carols" and a mini operetta "Monsieur et Madame Denis" by Offenbach. These two selections resulted in what was some of the most enjoyable music throughout the program. The Britten was full of spirit and ef- fervescence in the lively sections and in the pieces which were slower, the boys performed the difficult high pitched melodic lined material with a fairly decent amount of con- trol. This control in turn led to singing which did not sound the least bit scratchy or grating to ones ears. The problem is sometimes evident and typical of boys choirs when the music lies in a very high vocal tessitura, however the boys' musical development and training have prevented them from falling into that trap. After a short pause, the stage was rearranged and set up for the mini operetta by Offenbach. This was quite an amusing produc- tion to say the least. The first thing we were treated to was one of the choir boys waltzing onto the stage, costumed as a lady maid in a dress, happily dusting away with a duster. It was quite a sight to see and the rest of the operetta proved the same, as the boys sang musical numbers, and acted out their lines, which included a pot- pourri of English slang lines in their German accents. Although this small staged production was not on the same par as a Shakespeare produc- tion at Stratford, it was still terribly enjoyable and entertaining to see these young children staging their own production and singing the various vocal numbers. They of course could not have done any of this without the fine training and assistance from their extremely competent leader and conductor: Peter Marschik. Maestro Marschik conducted and played the piano, accompanying the boys throughout the whole program when accompaniments were necessary. His playing more than took care of this necessity, however, as it was fine musicianship as well, although he could have played a bit sof- ter at times because he overpowered the boys at certain points in the music. Small boys' voices are not overly powerful, and that is why the piano could and did easily overpower them. The last half of the program was devoted to folksongs and Christmas Carols, which were especially pleasant and peacefully relaxing. "0 Come all Ye Faithful," sung in German was gorgeous, every note meltingly beautiful and thus setting the stage for a very merry and joyous holiday season. They also performed folksongs by Schubert and Schumann a capella, (without piano) which also were effec- tive, integrating their harmonies well and producing musically satisfying results. As for folksongs, they graced us with "O! My Darling Clementine" and the very popular "On the Beautiful Blue Danube" by Johann Strauss, one of the choir boys also performed a sweet and docile piece entitled, "Pueri Concinite" by J.V. Herbeck. To me, it seemed as if the Vienne Choir Boys were much more effective when singing a capella rather than with piano accompaniment because they didn't have to struggle as much to bring their parts out. With the piano, on the other hand, they needed to work a little bit har- der to put themselves in complete "gover- nment". The concert, of course, could not have been complete without "Silent Night", which they also sang in German as "Stille Nacht". "Stille Nacht" was inspirational, as they performed each verse delicately and deliberately with ex- troverted expression. "Silent Night" put the finality on things and it rounded the concert out to being an enjoyably spent Sunday afternoon. The Vienna Choir Boys is a group of very talented youngsters. Many of them certainly will continue to develop and grow into even greater musicians in their later lives. Records-.. o M-0 Oft ofto M-0 lam Siam-Talk to Me (Columbia 12" single) lam Siam is pegged as one of the year's most "controversial" new ban- ds-i.e. they may prove one of the silliest and/or most pretentious. Ap- parently they base their image and music on both the "teachings of I- Ching" and the "myth of Lamoria," a lost civilization akin to Atlantia, whose inhabitants were renowned for their spirituality and mysical powers." Sounds pretty foolish to me, though maybe the upcoming album will flesh out the concept a bit more fully than TONIGHT NN FICTION at The Blind Pig $1.00 off cover with this ad. this initial single release or its accom- panying video. The video is visually in- triguing, and was shot in the jungles of Brazil by Ray Guerra; who directed the feature Erendira; but behind its offbeat visual surface movie look lurks a 'plot' that's pure Hollywood-costume-pic hokum (hero rescues the girl from tribal 'marriage sacrifice ritual') and a marketing strategy that's no more than a dead-serious version of Bow Wow Wow and Duran Duran's "Hungry Like the Wolf" pseudo-primitive ex- ploitation. Offering no less than four versions of the single-a "dance mix," a "dub," a "single" and an "album version," none of them awfully different from one another-this 12-incher offers about as much of one thing as anyone could stand. The song itself, "Talk to Me ( I Can Hear You Now)," is an acceptable beat-heavy dance number with xylephonish frills, lyrics of a vaguely mystical bent, and rather undistinctive male vocals-a more unique vocalist might lend Iam Siam some of the spaced-out credibility that their heavily conceptual nature needs. Fine for a spin on the dancefloor, but hardly of staggering promise. -Dennis Harvey Flipper - Gone Fishin' (Subterranean) Flipper's long (well, by some) awaited second LP is initially disap- pointing, despite superlative cover/sleeve artwork - a cutout diarama for constructing Flipper's van and members at one-tenth life-size scale. But the album mellows with a bit of turntable aging. The kings of San Francisco hardcore art-noise have had lots of time on their hands but have storedupsurprisingly little intensity since their belated '82 debut Generic Flipper. On this record they ably trip over various musical forms like a trash-fast-hard-rock sibling of the Residents, equally parodistic in lyrical content and nearly as farout instrumen- tally - if only that crunchy guitar could be exchanged for electronicsuf- focation, the comparison would be complete. But then that wouldn't be Flipper, and Flipper, a modern-day essential, is already a slightly outdated one. There's certainly nothing here to equal the classic art-farce-horror effec- ts of "Sex Bomb" or "Brainwash," but there are pllenty of sublime moments -"Survivors of the Plague," "Sacri- fice" and "In Life *My Friends" are especially entertaining. Flipper has got the modern-day dirge scene cornered. They have definitely unadorned statements of social observation (Everybody's life is so dull/They spend their time living someone elses') plus a big-noise musical inten- sity that is rare and deservedly en- dangered. Not quite hardcore, this is still definitely hard something. Flip- per can function as a convenient tran- sition from hardcore and early punk to just about everything since - art music, punk-funk, post-Iggyisms, garage revival, plsychedelia, et al. Vague blood inheritors of the Strawberry Alarm Clock, Flipper works from the spacier outward fringe to make all underground music a bit more accessible. Gone Fishin' may, as the title indicates, have a bit of a lackadaisical quality to it, but Flipper is still too complicatedly good a concept to be boring. -Dennis Harvey Hajime Tachibani - Hm (Ralph Records) Former lead songwriter for the short- but-sweet-lived Japanese B-52's imitation The Plastics, Tachibani has a terrific array of Japanese new music talent at his disposal for this instrumen- tal effort-Isao Tomita (lately of the highly amusing Space Walk on RCA), and Yukihiro Takahashi (of Japan and assorted perfectly cool session sit-ins). The record is entirely nonvocal, but highly entertaining, but extreme Philip Glass pillaging ("Piano Pillow Going Abstract") and equally extreme wood- winds-only sad mortuary jazz ("This Is. . . !!!Death Video"), melding well with viciously precise camp cruelty ("Theme From 'Sexy Symbol Strikes Back'"). There's a lot of entirely non- derivative pleasure here as well, -Dennis Harvey A defense against cancer can be cooked up in your kitchen. Everyone knew what Jeffrey should do with his life. Everyone was wrong. There is evidence that diet and cancer are related. Some foods may promote cancer, while others may protect you from it. Foods related to lower- ing the risk of cancer of the larynx and esophagus all have \ high amounts of carotene, r a form of Vitamin A which is in cantaloupes, peaches, broccoli, spinach, all dark green leafy vegetables, sweet potatoes, carrots, pumpkin, . winter squash and tomatoes,. citrus fruits and brussels sprouts. Fruits, vegetables, and whole- grain cereals such as oatmeal, bran and wheat may help lower the risk of colorectal cancer. Foods high in fats, salt- or nitrite-cured foods like ham, and fish and types of sausages smoked by tradi- tional methods should be eaten in moderation. Be moderate in consumption of alco- hol also. A good rule of thumb is cut down on fat and don't be fat. Weight reduction may lower cancer risk. Our 12- year study of nearly a million Americans uncovered high cancer risks particularly among people 40% or more overweight. Now, more than ever, we know you can cook up your own defense against cancer. X T - . - c - - - - - - - - - -.:,~ -a f - y 9r r. .t '4 "nB S i Syp 4 2,Ae o A legend in his own neighborhood. Foods that may help reduce the risk of gastrointestinal and respiratory tract cancer are ABC Motion Pictures presents a MERCURY ENTERTAINMENT PRODUCTION of a GARRY MARSHALL Film "THE FLAMINGO KID" Starring MATT DILLON RICHARD CRENNA HECTOR ELIZONDO JESSICA WALTER Story by NEAL MARSHALL Screenplay by NEAL MARSHALL and GARRY MARSHALL Produced by MICHAEL PHILLIPS Released by T-, entieth Century Fox/ Or-ial Sonrcail.aleAlEimDsrbtr Directed L / ADDV S°°"°" S Directed by GARRY MARSHALLdo |*' MOTION Ed---oo - 'm' m'Anb aP' fi crc"n uder onVore"e Sarabande oI1 J~ ,... ang w . +c ,,,, ~Spr. at oM a e nap y n at. to. atoo q creene Q Records ond Cossettes r' _ ._ ., ';