T ARTS The Michigan Doily Wednesday, February 10, 1988 Page 9 Bloom launches improvisations with her soprano saxophone By Mark Swartz Jane Ira Bloom's unique brand of jazz may soon be taking off to un- precedented heights via the NASA Arts program. Her music, however, is firmly rooted in the traditions of her spiritual forebearers on the sax- ophone, as she will demonstrate tonight at the Ark. * The first musician to be recruited for the Space Shuttle's team of artists, Bloom is set to compose a score at the upcoming Summer launch. The score will be used for a touring exhibition of multi-media creations based on the reusable space craft. "I'll be able to get really close to it," the Yale graduate enthuses. "It should be some experience to wit- ness." The take-off will inspire her to create a piece of improvisation, an endeavor in which she excels. A down beat magazine critics' poll winner, Bloom produces stunning soprano saxophone improvisations which are the centerpiece of her lat- est album, Modern Drama. "It's recorded live without any fancy techniques," says the artist of her self-produced album. Coventionally, electronic sound ef- fects are tacked on in post-produc- tion. For this effort, however, "live electronics" were incorporated during the actual recording sessions, which took only five days in February of last year. She explains, "We used traditional equipment in an untradi- tional way. The electronics were triggered, just like a note on an in- strument." This original procedure necessi- tated Bloom to invent some of her own equipment. One of these de- vices, affectionately dubbed "Gizzmo," is a "velocity sensor for the movement of the horn." Wires hook up the player, her sax, and "Gizzmo," creates - one imagines - a cross between Ornette Coleman and Frankenstein's monster. Coleman, the pioneering sax improviser, is obviously a strong influence on Bloom's work, as are other masters like Wayne Shorter, Sonny Rollins, and John Coltrane. "My improvising comes about be- cause I feel so impassioned by what I do," she says. Accompanying Bloom at the Ark is the same lineup'used on Modern Drama: Fred Hersch on piano, Ratzo Harris on bass, and Tom Rainey on drums. The quartet will perform album cuts including the gentle "More Than Sinatra," a whirlwind knockout called "The Race," and an ode to the pigskin pastime, "NFL." These pieces indi- cate an impressive compositional maturity as well as the aforemen- tioned improvisational passion. "The orchestration of the composi- tions is more sophisticated this time around," she maintains. Bloom also promises to preview some new ma- terial. Consider this evening a chance to catch Jane Ira Bloom before her music rockets out of the atmo- sphere. Jane Ira Bloom performs two shows Thursday night at the Ark (637 1/2 Main Street), 7:30 and 10 p.m. Tickets are $8.50. "My Improvising comes aboutabecause I feel so impassioned by what I do," says saxophonist Jane Ira Bloom. Critic is a welcome alternative to Siskel and Ebert By Scott Collins 1 , "Film criticism is a dying art,"' claims David Edelstein, and he should know. During his five-year tenure at the Village Voice, the 28- year-old reviewer has watched the moviegoing public give two big thumbs up to the vidiot savants of "gesture criticism," while the audi- ence for his own brand of thought- ful, articulate commentary has per- haps declined. "People don't like ambiguity," he said in a recent tele- phone interview. "Young readers ased to want to write like Pauline Kael, but now they just sit and watch the Siskels and Eberts. This is true decadence - people want deci- sions made for them, in politics and in art." After serving his undergraduate apprenticeship at the Harvard Crim- son (where "we did all sorts of experimental things - college is the time when you can get away with looking like an idiot"), Edelstein moved on to the Boston Phoenix, an alternative newspaper for the Bean- town bohemia. There he met and was influenced by Stephen Schiff, who later departed to assume the du- bious title of "critic-at-large" for Vanity Fair magazine, while Edel- stein took his current job with the Voice. "Stephen and I have similar perspectives; it just so happens that he writes for an upscale glossy magazine and I write for a homo- commie rag," he notes, only half- kidding. While his background and profes- sional situation might seem to place him in the middle of the East Coast intellectual current, Edelstein's highly personal approach to film dispels any such uniform assump- tions. In many ways he can be seen as an "other," steadfastly maintain- ing the rhythm of his own prejudice even as he steps out of time with those around him. For instance, he's noticed that "politically, I'm to the left of most of my friends, but probably far to the right of most of the people who work at the Voice." Then, too, Edelstein expresses a disdain for certain theoretical ap- proaches that he feels obscure con- siderations of merit in favor of ar- cane exercises. It's fine to dive into structuralism, he contends, "but just because you can play that game with a certain film doesn't mean that that film is great. I'd like to see more film schools teach Renoir, but they won't do that because you have to talk about a Renoir film like you'd talk about a great novel." Obvi- ously, Edelstein could give Voice colleague Andrew Sarris, a major film scholar in his own right, a bad name. But he won't, other than to disparage (mildly) Sarris' auteur theory: "we're stuck with it." That kind of pluralist assumption hasn't fared well in the academy; the film theorist Bill Nichols labelled the gut-response virtuosos "bourgeois subjectivists" who ignore methodology in favor of their own intelligence and verbal skill. Indeed, Edelstein frequently voices his con- viction that the film critic should know more about life than about film, and write from experience rather than education. If that type of criticism is some sort of crime, Edelstein cheerfully- fesses up. "Yes," he laughs, "I'm a bourgeois subjectivist." It might not be overstating the case to say, then, that Edelstein, along with his mentors and follow- ers, sails an ever narrowing strait through the two towering cliffs of contemporary film criticism. In re- cent years academic criticism, in- formed by structuralism and psycho- analysis, has become increasingly inaccessible even to better-informed filmgoers. Meanwhile the glib "Katzenjammer kids" have trivial- ized and levelled critical distinctions, often celebrating films that merely bear high-sounding names and noble ambitions. For his part, Edelstein is at least unconsciously aware of his awkward position. In December he penned a wickedly funny semiotic analysis of the fulsomely enthusiastic blurbs of Joel Siegel and Gene Shalit. The piece, as Edelstein pointed out, both revealed the simple-mindedness of a lot of current criticism, while paro- dying the pretensions and density of typical academic prose. While his writing is characteristically witty, lucid, and urbane, Edelstein attempts to balance style with substance. His taste in films tend toward younger directors who depict eccentric characters often at odds with the materialism of to- day's society: Jonathan Demme, See CRITIC, Page 10 ------ ---------------:---------------------------------- ----- MINORITY STUDENTS (undergraduate only) PAID SUMMER INTERNSHIPS in Health Care Management call Dr. Lichtenstein, UM School of Public Health 936-1191 Enlarged to show detail. ©J & C Ferrara Co.Inc. Have You Told Her Lately? I Are you between the ages of 18 and 24? You1 PROJECT OTZMA Smend a ear in srael.- If you haven't, here's a gifti It spells that will say it for you. may qualify for a fellowship to living-working-studying-traveling a kibbutz ulpan-Youth Aliyah village- Project Renewal neighborhoods- "adoption" by an Israeli family At a cost to you of only $750* A slide show and information about Project Otzma will be presented on Thur. Feb. 11 at 7pm In the Michigan Union Room 2209 A-B For advanced registration and more information call M 663-3336 In Michigan a project of the Jewish Welfare Federation of Detroit Funded by the United Jewish Charities of the Jewish Welfare Federation and the Jewish Agency for Israel Before you head soi get your hair de-winterized at U ND ith%, SLOV [YOU Each letter contributes to the unique design of this hand-crafted pendant by J & C Ferrara. In 14K Gold priced................... In Sterling Silver priced.................. In Vermeil priced...................................... All on matching chains $100.00 $17.50 $24.50 761-6175 - 611 E. University $2 off on all haircuts * $5 off on all perms .,