The Michigan Daily-Friday, November 20, 1987- Page 9 Coming Attractions Records . . .............................. w I I Carlos Santana Blues For Salvador CBS Records Freedom, the last release by the Santana Band, was held up for months before its release last sum- mer while Carlos Santana and CBS Records locked horns over the record's content. It seems Santana's initial submission to the label for. which he has recorded for 18 years wasn't pop enough. Too ethnic. Too Latin. Not enough singing. So the battle raged. In the end Freedom, a tribute to mediocrity, was issued with much backing. Now, Carlos Santana gets his wish. Blues For Salvador is released and proves what the optimists thought all along; Santana hasn't lost a step. This album is oozing with sincerity that.hasn't been seen since the days of Abraxas. It' s mainly instrumental, more so than anything since his collaboration al- bum with John McGlaughlin It does feature Buddy Miles, former Jimi Hendrix drummer and new lead singer on Freedom, belting out some soulful sounds on "Balando/Aquatic Park," the opening track. Legendary jazz drummer Tony Williams juices up the high flying "Traine," ar- guably the best song on the album. "Hannibal," a remake of the song from Santana's 1981 Zebop, moves and grooves and closes with a tasty jazz serenade. The title track rounds out the disc with a 5 1/2 minute romp of Latin; blues in which Carlos wails, flails and jives all over his guitar just like the Carlos Santana we used to know. This album outshines anything since 1978's Inner Secrets by a long shot and is perhaps the' best record since the band's 1973 third album. After 18 years the man can still kick into high gear. The record reassures what all of us had hoped for: Carlos Santana has not mellowed out to the' .point of being some pop-rotten- wimp-shit, but rather he perseveres as the man. who's survived more band changes, more religions (well, maybe not more than Dylan), and more money-hungry record executive weasels than anyone this side of Ti- juana, and still stands tall as gui- tarist extraordinaire and king of Latin rock. Blues- For Salvador is phe- nomenal. --Akim D. Reinhardty m - -. ~m. m. - in .m~ .m. .in~ .u~ m~ m~ .u. .~ A *~R K K X K .E EN .4 'j "" """"i"""a".o""""""a " Dance and Related Arts The University dance depatrment will be presenting a 'Dance and Related Arts' concert tonight and tomorrow night in Studio A of the Dance Department Building. The concert will showcase works of advanced choreography students. Showtime is 8 p.m., with two shows on Sunday at 5 and 8- p.m. Tickets are $3. A Kevin Eubanks Young, innovative jazz guitarist Kevin Eubanks will be performing with his quartet at the Ark tonight at 8 and 10:30 p.m. Eubanks has played with Art Blakey's big band, and has collaborated with Branford and Wynton Marsalis.. T COUPON $1.50 Adult Evening Admission. i or 2 Uickets food th ru WOW00 COUPON A BRING IN THIS AD FOR A GREAT MOVIE DEAL! Obraztsova brings Russian song p Barbara Streisand NUTS(R) CARRIER* JEAN de FLORETTE (PG) By David Hoegberg The University Musical Society's Choral Union Series continues tonight with the Ann Arbor debut of the outstanding Russian mezzo-so- prano Elena Obraztsova in Hill Au- ditorium. Partnered by pianist John Wustman, a Michigan School of, Music graduate, Obraztsova will de- vote her recital to songs by two of her compatriots - Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninoff. Russia has long been known for its cultivation of great basses and mezzo-sopranos, the lower male and female voice types. Names like Obukhova, Borisenko, Doluk- hanova, and Arkhipova may mean little to Western audiences, but they constitute a century-long tradition of superb Russian mezzos characterized by rich and powerful voices. Obraztsova is by no means dwarfed by such historical comparisons. Obraztsova is one of the finest singers of the line to which she is heir, and one of the first to have a major career outside Russia. She has appeared with all the important con- ductors of our time and in every ma- jor opera house. Her Metropolitan Opera debut in 1976 was followed by a portrayal of Dalila in Saint- Saens' Samson et Dalila that was dubbed "a thrilling piece of singing in every aspect" by the New York Times. Her voice, absolutely even from top to bottom, has a mysteri- ous darkness as well as a keen cut- ting edge, making her ideally suited to such difficult roles as Amneris, Azucena, Ulrica, Dalila, and Char- lotte, all of which she has recorded. Russian composers, of course, shaped and were shaped by the great voices available to them. That is why Obraztsova's program promises to be so special. The Russian song literature is as varied, incisive, and delightful as its European counter- parts and deserves to be better known in the West. It comes into its own when sung by a native who under- stands every nuance of the words she sings, who was raised on the same musical idioms, and whose vocal training corresponds exactly to the composer's expectations. What bet- ter way to discover or rediscover the world of Russian song than to be guided by one of the great Russian singers of her day? As an added treat, you'll probably hear some more fa- miliar operatic favorites as encores. ELENA OBRAZTSOVA will sing at Hill Auditorium tonight at 8 p.m. Tickets range from $10-$24 and are available at the Burton Tower ticket office, from 9 a.m. .to 4:30 p.m. Call 764-2538 for further de- tails. l i i i A 0"es " beeeeees i AL = AIL i i i i i i i/ /' The University of Michigan SCHOOL OF MUSIC I I RTZ.!TM, at the Heidelberg - 215 N. Main, Ann Arbor - Appearing: Fri 8:30 & 11 pm Reservations Sat 8:30 & 11 pm 1995-8888 !I$ Improvisational Comedy Competition!! * A a "G ET TO KNOW US" SPECIA L Swith this ad: expeires 11/22W8 j Sun., Nov.22 Sun., Nov.22 Sun., Nov.22 Sun., Nov.22 Faculty Recital: Fredt Ormand, clarinet, Martin Katz,ypiano, and Andres ardenes, violin MusicbyHindemith, Beethoven, Schumann, and Bartok Recital Hall, School of Music, 2:00 p.m. FREE. Contemporary Directions Ensemble Richard Rosenberg, conductor George Perle: New Fanfares StefanWolpe: Piece in Two Parts George Crumb: Music for a Summer Evening McIntosh Theatre, 5:30 p.m. FREE. e g French Baroque Series Edward Parmentier, organ and harpsichord Works by Couperin, D'Anglebert, de Grigny, Dandrieu, and Bach (in the French style) Blanche Anderson Moore Hall, School ofMusic, 4:00 p.m. FREE Michi nYouth Symphony/Michigan Youth Band/ High School Chamber Singers Robert Debbaut/Donald Schleicher/David Jorlett, conductors Hill Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. FREE.. For up-to-date program information on School of Music events call the 24-Hour Music Hotline, 7634726. La Rondine' follows (Continued from Page 7) beautiful," says Lesenger. "We h it swill knock people's socks off. For Lesenger, this is all par helping the audience enter opera's special world. "Peo should be willing to be moved et tionally by the piece," he says. be caught up in the romance and beauty. Opera is first and foren about emotions, and La Rona taps some very strong human e tions." passions LA RONDINE will continue ope tonight and Saturday night at 8 p.m. in the Power Center. There will also t of be a matinee on Sunday at 2 p.m. the Tickets are $9 and $6, $4 with stu- ple dent ID., and can be purchased at the mo- Michigan League ticket office. z The Performance Network Presents Accidental Death of an Anarchist by Dario Fo N. f 1 tCalendar of Performances Th Fri sat Nov 19 20 21 27 28 Dec 3 4 5 Sun 22 29 6 country Crafts & Fine Art Show Over 100 Country Artists LADBROKE DRC Schoolcraft (1-96) & Middlebelt Livonia, Michigan November 27, 28 & 29 Friday, Noon - 9 p.m. Sat. & Sun. 10 am. - 5 p.m. ___- .STARII(ow Presented by Division of Chrysler Motors A Major Events Presentation Thursday, Friday & Saturday at 8 pm Sunday at 6:30 pm Performance Network 408 W Washington, Ann Arbor " 663-0681 I I Scott Hamilton Dorothy Hamill Y 15ilSL CHICAGO'S HOTTEST IETCJTGROUP Join these stars for the Hottest Show on Ice! " Toller Cranston . Rosalynn Sumners a Brian Pockar '*" Kathleen Schmelz o Barbara Underhill & Paul Martini . Judy Blumberg & Michael Seibert - Lea Ann Miller & William Fauver Sunday, December 6th, 1987 University of Michigan - Yost Ice Arena 7:30 p.m. IN TOWN FOR TWO SHOWS ON All Seats Reserved $15.00, $12.50, $10.00 (service charge where applicable) Limited number of special "on ice" seats available, $18.00