ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, February 18, 1986 Page 5 "Exception' as rule By Peter Batacan SHUNNING the more conventional *Jflatteries and panderings of Valentine's Day, the Brecht Company set out to conquer the audience with their heartfelt performance of the parable, The Exception and the Rule. Urging not love of one's sweetheart, but of truth and wisdom, they arrested the audience in a truly Brechtian "dialectical" fashion. Whose wisdom and whose truth? Brecht propounds no formulaic an- swer. Laid in the wilderness of Outer Mongolia, and the Gobi desert, the play presents a situation that is universal. The austerity and distance of the setting provides a context in which anything is possible-the moral philosopher's laboratory. The main action of the play, a familiar tale of oppression, is "estranged" in the Brechtian sense; an imperialist merchant kills his coolie in a mad oil-seeking expedition across the "uninhabited desert of Yahi." A trial ensues, a kangaroo court presiding, and the merchant is exonerated. Justice is served, the coolie's hapless survivor's disserved. Or so it seems. Brecht portrays the patina of a moral system which is fraught with inconsistency and sophistry. The play exposes the complex motives behind human action, the self-deceptions and rationalizations. The coolie, one of the more sympathetic characters in the play does a kindness to the tyran- nical merchant, not out of magnanimity, but mere expedience. The merchant, a gonzo Social Dar- winist, harps on the moral significant of the struggle to discover his precious oil, yet is incapable of coun- tenancing his own motivations. He slays the coolie out of an ambiguous complex of motives-fear, anxiety, pride and caprice. Bob Brown, the director, explains that Brecht "sublimates character to situation," and the company so or- dered their interpretation. The players used several clever devices to universalize character. They swit- ched roles at the beginning of each new act. Behind anonymous choral masks, they assumed the universal roles of oppressor and oppressed. Distinctions were deliberately blurred. True to the title of the play, the team-playing anonymity of the cast flouted the audience's expectations of who was an "exception" and who, a "rule." Adding much to the spectacle were the Pakistani costumes and the score by Peter W. Ferran. They provided a nice conjunction of oriental mystery with the strident boldness of Dixieland Jazz-estranging overall. In this dialectical parable the players held their cards close, each maneuvering to out-trump the other. Brect leaves the audience with a murder, and a sequence of punative explanations, a moralist's algorithm, as it were, without providing a closing statement. The choral epilogue brought all the actors on stage to exhort the audience to arrive at their own conclusions: "But we ask you: Even if it's not very strange, find it estranging Even if it is not usual, find it hard to explain Where here is common should astonish you What here's the rule, recognize as an abuse And where you have recognized an abuse Provide a remedy!" An innovative post-performance in- formal discussion, the players engaged the audience in a rehashing of the events of the play. We were disabused by the "instant reply" of complex actions in the play. The discussion was every bit as in- teresting as the play, a congruity that would have, no doubt, pleased Brecht. In one of his poems on the theatre, Brecht encouraged his actors to "make the experience of struggle the property of all and transform justice into a passion." The Guarneri String Quartet returns tonight playing the full cycle of Beethoven String Quartets. Beeth oven returns Exh ibit celebrates BlackHistory By Alan Paul PERCEPTIONS and Expressions, a Black Art Exhibit in celebration of Black History Month, is on display at the Union. The exhibit has two parts: Exhibit 1, featuring the work of Ann Arbor artists Terry Glenn and Earl Jackson, will be on display in the University Club throughout the mon- th; the second exhibit, in the Union's Pond Room, containing the work of six University students, will end today. Glenn's work is abstract - 4' by 4' pieces made of sand and acrylic. Jackson, 37, has been utilizing African themes in his paintings for almost fif- teen years. 'His seven exhibited works, done over the last five years, include "Giants of Jazz," a charcoal tribute to black American musicians, and six "African pieces." Jackson has had his work exhibited in the Afro-American Museum of the History of Art in Detroit, the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, and the First International Art Con- ference in Dakar, Senegal, in 1983. "That conference (in Dakar) was unbelievable - very exciting. Going to Africa had a profound effect on my work. Now, I want to try and shift my focus to Afro-American themes. It's time to draw on some of my experien- ces," Jackson said. "I think it's very important that Af- ro- Americans understand their history. That's why I prefer the term to 'blacks,' " Jackson continued. "Afro-American indicates what part of the world we come from. 'Black' was a stepping stone like colored or negro." Jackson's works include "Stolen 0 Legacy," an oil painting based on an- cient Egyptian philosophy and religion and how the Greeks who went to Egypt to study, essentially stole Egyptian ideas, which the Europeans were credited for. Another Jackson oil work is "The Rainbow Legacy." This piece .is trying to create a myth about how the rainbow was created. It's a joyous, upbeat picture with a huge festival taking place on the ground and the colors of the rainbow falling from the sky," Jackson said. Exhibit B features the work of Alaiyo Bradshaw, Pedra Chaffers, Colin Chase, Portia Hampton, Dorian Moore, and Monique Strothers. All six are graduate and undergraduate students. The works range from Bradshaw's watercolors and pencil sketches to Chase's steel sculptures and Chaffers' silk screens. By Mike Gallan tin F THE Guarneri String Quartet is not a familiar group of perfor- mers to Ann Arbor's audience by now, they never will be. Tuesday's performance will mark their 20th Ann Arbor appearance and their fourth in a series of six as they per- form the complete cycle of the Beethoven string quartets. There is little need to sing the praises of the Beethoven string quartets. As a whole they represent the pinnacle of classical music and chamber music in particular. They say as much about the development of music from the classical to the romantic period as they do about the extraordinary life of Beethoven himself. A great deal of commen- tary considers the quartets in much the same light as Rembrandt's self portraits are seen. If broken down into the three major periods of com- position, one may trace a picture which paints a thinly-disguised autobiographical portrait of Beethoven's spiritual and creative development. The Beethoven quartets have always been favorites with perfor- mers as well as audiences, although they inspire as much fear as ad- miration. Many consider them Beethoven's crowning achievement with all else he had accomplished before being but a preparation for the consummate artistry of the later quartets. Tuesday's performance will feature two middle quartets and one early work. The middle works are the "Harp" quartet in E-flat major op. 74 and the middle Rasumowsky quartet in E minor, opus 59 No. 2 while the early work is in A major op. 18 No. 5. Quartet No. X in E-flat major was written only two years after op. 59; nevertheless it reveals a fundamen- tal change of thought as well as form. Here we find none of the out- ward brilliance of effect, the deliberate objectivity and the pure technical beauty of the three earlier Rasumowsky quartets. Rather, one sees mirrored in the music the dark places of the artist's soul which foreshadowed the late quartets' mood. With the realization of what life henceforward has to offer, Beethoven's uncertainty disappears and at this spiritual crisis he accepts without flinching the inevitable struggle that was always to be his part. The middle Rasumowski quartet in E minor is a. profound work that also foreshadows in a stylistic fashion some of the characteristics ofthe late quartets. Direct influences of Mozart and Hayden permeate the six early quartets in their rigid adherence to form and balance and No. 5 in A major is no exception. The Guarneri quartet are well-known for their precision and impeccable musician- ship which makes even light-hearted and more superficial works sound mature and filled with meaning. For more information on Tuesday's concert at 8:00 at Rackham auditorium contact the University Musical Society at 665- 3717. _ $10000 REWARD FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO THE SAFE RETURN OF THE CHIKUTO JAPANESE SCROLL WHICH WAS RECENTLY TAKEN FROM FROM THE UM MUSEUM OF ART. Informants may contact the UM Dept. of Public Safety anonymously if desired. CALL (313) 763-3434 'Sco & Co. a fierce Ensemble By arwulfarwulf R OSCOE MITCHELL. PiNotal point in the New Tradition of Creative Improvised Music, thir- ty-year veteran of countless ensem- bles, and full-time enigma. I say pivot because the entire scene spun with him when he first showed up in the mid-1960's. He's Chicago. His stylings have become a trademark of the Chicago scene, and he stands at the very origins of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians in Chicago. Most of us have become aware of this man through his cardinal in- volvement in the Art Ensemble of Chicago. A little scrutiny, however, reveals a career which has touched upon nearly every important in- dividual in Creative Black Music since 1965. This quiet, mysterious man in courdoroys came through Detroit last Friday evening, and I wish you'd have been there. The Sound Ensemble is made of contrasting ions, lining up guitarist A. Spencer Barefield with the rhythm section of the Griot Galaxy; Jaribu Shahid and Tani Tabbal. Alongside Sco stood Michael Philip Mossman, young spark of the trumpet who recently shone at the Ark with the Out Of The Blue Band. His presence made for some tremendous interaction with the leader, and it seemed to be a nice change of pace for the oft-straight- haead Mossman. There were some fierce textures that evening, Tani using tabla drums as well as the standard drum kit, and Sco blowing flute, alto and soprano saxophones. The soprano is perhaps his most frightening horn, more menacing even than some of the contrabass monstrosities he has toted in the past. For it is with the soprano that Sco delivers a spiral of circular breathing which can keep itself afloat for an indefinite stretch, literally thousands of notes pasting us out loud. I was impressed with Barefield's ability to toss in a perfectly ap- propriate chord in the midst of a wry cacophony which might have derailed a lesser guitarist. Apparently this ensemble has several LPs in print, and I am currently seeking these out in order to give you a report on their wax. If they've managed to capture the in- credible energies we caught in con- cert, you'll need to obtain some of this fine stuff for your own daily con- sumption. 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