ARTS Wednesday, October 4, 1989 The Michigan Daily Page 7 Ecuador: Fragile Democracy by David Corkill and David Cubitt Latin America Bureau (1988) $7.50/paper Introducing their brief study of Ecuadoran history and politics, au- thors David Corkill and David Cubitt make their bid for under- statement of the century as they ob- serve that "Ecuador seldom makes the headlines in the world's press." Most U.S. residents, when they think of South America at all, do so in connection with Argentina and Brazil,-Chile and Colombia. Ecuador hardly merits a blip. Corkill and Cubitt give it much more, arguing that Ecuador's very lack of notoriety is paradoxically what makes it worth examining. Like the geographical dividing line between north and south upon which it rests and from which it derives its name, Ecuador, claim the authors, continually emerges as the "median case," the country between extremes where one finds a cross section of "Latin America as a whole." 'But Corkill and Cubitt fail to draw the analogies that might forge useful comparisons between Ecuador and the countries for which it osten- sibly serves as an archetype. As they discuss the country's regional and ra- cial divisions or its tradition of per- sonalist and populist politics, they never demonstrate how these reflect or help explain similar patterns in the South American cone. Most of the time, as they march relentlessly through five centuries of Ecuadoran history in slightly over 100 pages, they have a hard enough time offer- ing explanations in relation to Ecuador itself for the patterns they dutifully track: The tracking itself is done mas- terfully. The authors offer a convinc- ing, sobering portrait of a country that has never developed ideologi- cally distinct political parties and consequently never created a political culture in which ideas matter more than individuals - and institutions matter enough to preserve them. The military has frequently abrogated civilian rule, and civilian presidents such as Velasco Ibarra and Febres Cordero demonstrated little respect for the institutions they were pledged to uphold. Ecuador's politicians are not the only ones who place themselves first; as the authors make clear, its bourgeoisie has never been very pro- gressive either. Time and again, Corkill and Cubitt explain how tra- ditional landed interests and their al- lies in the export industry success- fully squash land reform measures and import-substitution programs that might have nurtured home- grown industry. Hence the authors' lugubrious tale of how Ecuador's apparent elixir, the discovery of oil, led to foreign domination and proliferating debt. Both their chapter on "The Petroleum Generals" - in which they play with the bitter paradox of a military more progressive than the The authors offer a con- vincing, sobering por- trait of a country that has never developed ideo- logically distinct political parties and conse- quently never created a political culture in which ideas matter more than individuals - and insti- tutions matter enough to preserve them. The mili- tary has frequently ab- rogated civilian rule, and civilian presidents such as Velasco lbarra and Febres Cordero demon- strated little respect for the institutions they were pledged to uphold... Malnutrition affects 57 percent of the popula- tion; 80 percent of Ecuadorans work for less than the minimum wage; 90 percent of Ecuadorans have no sewage. capitalists it tries to nurture - as well as their grim concluding chapter on "Andean Thatcherism" under Febres, who traded away what little control Ecuador still had of its oil fields, provide adequate case studies of just what the Ecuadoran -elites' failure to modernize has cost their country. Most of all, though, this failure has hurt Ecuador's people, and Corkill and Cubitt are at their best in their chapter "The Forgotten Majority," where damning photos of Ecuadoran slums complement the authors' equally stark look at what the statistics behind those photos are - as well as what they mean for Ecuador's future. Malnutrition af- fects 57 percent of the population; 80 percent of Ecuadorans work for less than the minimum wage; 90 percent of Ecuadorans have no sewage. Perhaps the one bright spot in this otherwise grim picture consists in the way a historically apolitical population has become increasingly organized in an effort to expand what few rights it has. Corkill and Cubitt offer detailed portraits - in a book with all too few of them - of women organizing for basic services in the slums of Guayaquil and of indigenous peoples successfully re- sisting encroaching oil explorers and plantation builders in the remote Pastaza region. But with these few exceptions, Ecuador: Fragile Democracy is rel- atively unsatisfying, and not because it paints a grim picture. The authors' fundamental failure is their inability to offer a geneaology for that failure, either in Ecuador's own past or by relation to the bitter annals of Latin American history as a whole. What explains the fundamental shortcom- ings which the book traces so ruth- lessly? Has the United States - not surprisingly a pervasive presence throughout the book - exacerbated these flaws, and if so, how? Most importantly, given their reading of the past, what prognosis can Corkill and Cubitt offer us for Ecuador's fu- ture? With rare exceptions, these ques- tions are never addressed, let alone answered. The survey that Corkill and Cubitt instead offer at least has the merit of helping its readers for- mulate such questions, which is no mean feat for an introduction to a country few of those readers will know well. Hence even if Ecuador: Fragile Democracy ultimately of- fers only a fragile foundation in Ecuadoran history, it can serve as a valuable road map introducing an ex- tremely complicated and relatively unknown terrain. --Mike Fischer Lacking flamboyance, Gunther Herbig nonetheless ably conducted the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in a performance of Shostakovich's Fourth Symphony last Sunday. Galway frolicked with magic flute on SUiday BY SHERRILL L. BENNETT I Some old favorites graced Hill Auditorium last Sunday at the University Musical Society's season opening concert. Maestro Gunther Herbig made his third Ann Arbor appearance, flutist James Galway re- turned for his seventh, and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra for their 62nd. Mozart got a working over, and all the forces of the orchestra joined to create Shostakovich's Fourth Symphony. The Overture to the Abduction from the Straglio opened the concert with a swirling cascade of strings grasping all the fire and intricacy of Mozart. Herbig was emphatic, but did not add much imagination to the performance. That was not the last of Mozart for the evening. Galway also chose Mozart, the popular Con- certo in G Major, and milked it with his shimmering gold instrument. His rich sound and too-cute improvs were a little embarrassing for the slow movement of the concerto - it was like adding a layer of chocolate frosting to double-fudge brownies. But his impeccable technique and sincere European charm held the audience captive for the entire performance. An Irish folk tune served as an enchanting encore by Galway, who first intoned the gigue-like melody. With a subtle sweep from Herbig, the strings joined in pizzicato one by one and then disappeared again until the solo flute was left. Very effective - it was like being told an old Irish fairy tale. Although his Fourth Symphony was completed in 1936, Shostakovich postponed its premiere for 25 years. While he claims that the delay was caused by ex- tensive artistic revision, some critics alege it may have been related to the Soviet musical/political cli- mate of the time which'demanded uncompromising pa- triotism. Whatever the case, it's hard to imagine that a work of such physical and emotional magnitude could be suppressed for so many years - and the:Detroit Symphony Orchestra won't let you. The collage of musical identities present in the first movement was brought to life by the DSO from the melancholy Russian tunes to the rigid march-like rhythms. Herbig's interpretation was neither flashy nor original. His musical instincts, though ladking pas- sion, were genuine. He's not an upstager or a show- stopper - he's delightfully average. The second movement was like built-in comic relief sandwiched in between two intense dramas. During the wit and brevity of this movement, the DSO lost some enthusiasm and consequently some of the momentum of the piece. The finale was a rebirth of energy. The brasses soared violently to the very top of Hill's ceiling, threatening every crack and crevice in its structure. The juxtaposition of those high points and the subtle nu- ances of the chamber-like sections create the drama of the piece as a whole, a drama that was alive and well in the heart of the DSO. No recording can quite compare to the earth-shattering impact captured in a live perfor- mance of this masterful, but neglected,°symphony. 000000000 p Psst, theater freaks: Boogie Down Produc- tions Ghetto Music: The Blueprint of Hip Hop Jive KRS-One still has a lot to say; this is quite obvious from the title alone. Ghetto Music, his third al- bum, is easily the most intelligent and radically direct rap record to date since Public Enemy's Nation of Millions. The current rap move- ment, up to par with KRS' own "Stop the Violence," stresses rap's shaky position as Black America's truest and purest source of informa- tion and social commentary. Rap music is, at times, the only perspec- tive that challenges the views of the media, the news, and the majority. That alone makes it a valid and rele- vant source, as well as entertain- ment. However, amid much "street knowledge" from rappers N.W.A. and D.O.C., only a few rappers re- ally inform, without half-stepping. I That's where BDP comes in. "Why is That?" could easily be the rap single of the year. Tough, brilliant, radical and provocative, it challenges the listener to question information: religious iconography, forcing white religious figures upon the Black community; the schools' choice in teaching American history to Blacks rather than African-Ameri- can history. KRS ponders, "It's like teaching dogs to be a cat/ you don't teach white kids to be Black/ but ask yourself homeboy, why is that?" over churning, dense bass that pounds through you in triplets while an ominous piano line vamps un- derneath and a sampled voice stut- ters, "The government you have elected is inoperative." Musically, the pseudo-reggae that dominated "The P is Free," "Illegal Business," and the majority of BDP records dominates here and even overshadows the rap side at times. KRS works with a real band of mu- sicians and singers on this one, with mixed results. He gets points for originality, lots of points. Rap needs to stop stealing from other genres before it collapses into total andl ab- solute creative bankruptcy. Many hardcore followers didn't agree with me on "Bo! Bo! Bo!" a song about racism and police brutal- ity, with reggae overtones. They think it's silly, but I tend to dis- agree. The real percussion and trum- pet blares are hyped up. KRS de- scribes with vivid detail of being at- tacked by the NYPD with violence and dealing with them in kind. The "Bo! Bo!" that he's referring to is the sound of gunfire on the New York streets. Perhaps the musical diversity of rap might be moving too quickly for its audience. "You Must Learn" is excellent. The song boasts a catchy calypso beat, while KRS defines his position on the urban consciousness. The samples on this and other jams "The Blueprint" and "Ghetto Music" are very funky; they conjure images of Rudy Ray Moore, Aunt Ester, Dolomite and Mister Hot Buttered Soul, Isaac Hayes. In comparison, cuts "Breath Control," "Gimme Dat," and "Rap Music" fall by the wayside. His biggest problem on these seems to be delivery. The con- cept is always satisfying, but at times, such as on "Who Protects Us From You?" he comes off like fifth- year/generation Gil-Scott Heron. The reason for KRS' newfound funk and musical energy seems to stem from his insistence on ghetto music and ghetto consciousness over commercial aspirations for the pop charts. In the liner notes, he explains that because Blacks are responsible for almost every form of musical in- novation - from rap to jazz and through reggae, rock, funk and blues - only by centering oneself in the Ghetto consciousness can one help music take a new direction. Hence the title Ghetto Music is as ambi- tious as anything released this year. Some of it is quite bad, but other parts are excellent by both commer- cial and rap standards. Word. -Forrest Green III You wanna buy a letter C? Sorry. 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