ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, April 19, 1989 Page9 Classics, not blues, for St. Louis BY TONY SILBER S T. Louis is known more for the blues than for classical music, but Leonard Slatkin is trying to do something about that. He is the music director and conductor of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, a group of musicians who have soared to the top of the American orchestral heap in the last ten years. In the ten years Slatkin and the Orchestra have been matched, Slatkin has won prestigious awards, as has the SLSO and their record- ings. With this recent celebrity sta- tus and fame, Slatkin and Co. come into Ann Arbor tomorrow night as a prestigious, established talent. This is their 10th season together, so why not have a tour? That's what they do best, anyway. When one thinks of major Amer- ican orchestras, New York, Chicago, and Boston come to mind first, but St. Louis can now be considered a member of this elite club. They are group one of the premier ensembles in the Midwest, taking that distinction from the Detroit Symphony who, after their glory days in the '70s un- der Antal Dorati, have fallen on hard times. As far as touring goes, Slatkin is a true frequent flyer. This year alone, he has traveled throughout the entire nation. In addition, he has appeared in London, Vienna, Copenhagen, Monte Carlo, Stockholm, Tel Aviv, Berlin, Rotterdam, and Tokyo. And that's only the fall-winter season. This summer, he hits the road again. But that's not surprising; Slatkin's future was built with music in mind. His father was a conductor and a violinist. His mother was a cellist. Together they founded the Holly- wood String Quartet. Young Leonard quickly got into the act, studying piano among other instruments and learning composition under the great Walter Susskind. He took Carnegie Hall at age 22, and from there his career blossomed, See St. Louis, Page 10 Elvis Costello: His aim is still true BY MARK SWARTZ "'WRITING about music is like dancing about architecture." -Elvis Costello (Sorry, Elvis.) Elvis Costello isn't just the greatest songwriter alive. He's a walking, talking contradiction, a conundrum of unimaginable intricacy. Under Costello's disarming gaze, the distinction between high and low Art gets hopelessly blurred: He's a rock singer but he's a poet, too. That's not just to say his lyrics are packed with images - which they are - or flower with unusually decorative language - which they don't. Per- haps only Bob (Marley or Dylan, you choose) before him wrote accessible tunes with such stirring, intelligent conviction. Costello writes his songs the way John Donne wrote poems 350 years ago. The Norton Anthology of English Literature praises the English Re- naissance minister's verses for their "restless, searching energy that scorns the easy platitude and the smooth, vacant phrase; that is vivid, immediate, troubling." It goes on to say that his poetry "demands imaginative effort of the reader, and absorbs him in a tense, complex experience." Ask Elvis, he'll be the first to tell you that Mr. Norton could have been writing about him. Like Donne, he's got a huge ego. Like Donne's, it is counterbalanced by an equally sizeable sense of humor. Unlike the work of any Renaissance quill-pusher, you can dance to Costello. From "(The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes" from his 1977 debut to the effervescent "Veronica" on the new release, Spike, there's never been any question that this is music for the kids. Next to the Big Chill soundtrack, there is no better cassette to pop into the boombox at the beach than The Best of Elvis Costello. See Elvis, Page 12 LATE NIGHT AT SOUT H U Fridy, April 21 Leonard Slatkin, conductor of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, will stay with the ensemble despite rumors to the contrary. V i South U is having a special street-wide sale. Most merchants open until 11 PM Register at participating stores for prizes TheSchool of the Art Institute of Chicago at BUIN S SR IE GRADUATING SENIORS YOUR HEALTH INSURANCE MAY SOON BE CANCELLED! CHECK WITH THE U of M STUDENT ASSEMBLY at 763- 3214 or F.P.M, Inc. (author- ized local agent) at 665- 3179 FOR A BROCHURE ON SHORT TERM MAJOR MEDICAL COVERAGE ANNOUNCEMVENTS THANKS FOR THE AD AGAINST CIR- CUMCISION. I feel violated and robbed of choice. Prevention does not require cutting. VICTORIAN FOLK ART SHOW EDDIE EDGAR SPORTS ARENA Lyndon at Farmington Rd. North of Schoolcraft in Livonia APRIL 21, 22, 23 FRIDAY 3pm7-9pm SAT.&SUNDA1 am-6pm One of Michigan's largest shows. Over 100 Craftsmen selling charming reproductions of Country and Victorian Heirlooms. 291-1934 I HOMOSEXUALITY IS NEITHER IMMORAL NOR A MATTER OF CHOICE: IT IS AN ORIENTATION to Anne Dalton, 1989-90 Classified Manager and Laura Bernard, 1989-90 Classified Assisant Manager HUMAN SEXUALITY IS EXTREMELY COMPLEX: THE ATITUDE THAT SEXUAL ORIENTATION CAN BE CHANGED BY MERELY EXERCIZING CHOICE OR BY A SIMPLE EFFORT OF WILL IS AT BEST MISLEADING, AND AT WORST IT REINFORCES AND INTENSIFIES HOMOPHOBIA AND DISCRIMINATION BASED ON SEXUAL ORIENTATION SAUGATUCK, MICHIGAN June 4-August 29 1, 2, and 3 week workshops y ' Painting and Drawing . . . C e r a m i c s U mm u muGlassblowing Printmaking ****.. Bookbinding '**....Performance Instruction available in beginning, intermediate, and advanced levels. Work scholarships are available. For more information please call 312. 443-3777. After June 4, you can also call 616. 857-5811. or write: Publications Office The School of the Art Institute of Chicago 37 South Wabash, Tenth Floor, Box MD39 Chicago, Illinois 60603 CALL THE LESBIAN-GAY MALE PROGRAMS OFFICE AT 763-4186 FOR INFORMATION OR HELP WITH THESE ISSUES. I Vongaurvs I1 F76 i+D lC+1F 1 7t Ft I Q ? lhk.N1Fi[4 E )I.....' r I CA MPUSI R $2.00 OFF AM I