4 Page 8-The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 24, 1989 Nigel Kennedy: A wild 'n' crazy (and talented) violinist Near miss Fat Man and Little Boy fails in its mission BY GREGORI ROACH Nigel Kennedy - this one man may be single- handedly changing the face of classical music as we know it. This past Sunday he and the Vienna Cham- ber Philharmonic shared Rackham Auditorium's stage and left a packed house in awe of an incredibly musical but startlingly different performance. First off, when the 33-year-old Kennedy took the stage you knew that something was different. Was that about three inches of spiked hair on top of his head and whoa, leppard skin shoes? Don't forget the floral vest peeking out from under the baggy silk jacket that was purchased second-hand in London's Camden Market - but by any means this wasn't a fashion show. Nigel was here to play and play he di. With tempi at times closer to vivace than to the posted (and until now adhered to) allegro sections, he brought the audience to applause after only two of Vivaldi's Four Seasons. His actual physical style of leading and conducting the ensemble while playing makes Pete Townsend's stage demeanor look calm. Bounding from one section of the orchestra to an- other and leaning over the players stands he would ,strike up a duel with other musicians and back and forth they would go until Nigel would find another "victim/cohort or just leave to take the show on his own. During the "Winter" section the orchestra played sul ponticello, a scratchy, cold-toned bowing tech- . nique that is usually reserved for more modern works that sent windy chills through the auditorium. At the least this performance could be called daring, but it was terribly effective and in all honesty more inter- esting than the standard interpretation. The first half of the concert was performed by the orchestra alone. It was marked by a wonderful ver- sion of Grieg's Holberg Suite and a youthful Bran- denburg Concerto No. 3 by Bach. Mozart's Adagio and Fugue in C minor tended to have intonation problems during the entrances of the fugue but it was a sound performance. Claudius Traunfeller, the Mu- sic Director and Conductor of the Vienna Chamber Orchestra, added a slight bit of entertainment with his lavish conducting style, although few people, if anyone at all (including the orchestra) seemed to know what his break-dancing ability had to do with the music he was conducting. But the man of the hour. was Nigel Kennedy. As encores he showed some of what he had learned as a student playing the clubs of Greenwich Village with the likes of Stan Getz and Helen Humes by covering a Miles Davis tune and a jazzed up arrangement of Sweet Georgia Somebody. A great end to a great concert. Just remeber: if you ever feel like classical music is boring and stodgy go see Nigel Kennedy sometime and be aware that he has professed an affinity for the Sex Pistols. BY MIKE KUNIAVSKY On August 6, 1945, the United States of America dropped an atomic bomb named "Little Boy" on Hi- roshima, Japan. Three days later, an- other bomb called "Fat Man" was dropped on Nagasaki. At least 200,000 people died in the two blasts. (The exact figures cannot be known since many more people died after the bombings due to severe ra- diation poisoning and cancer.) The construction of these two bombs and the human toll exacted by their cre- ation is the premise for Roland Joff6's (The Killing Fields, The Mission) latest film, appropriately titled Fat Man and Little Boy. The film begins in 1942 when General Leslie R. Groves, played by Paul Newman, is asked to assemble the top-secret Manhattan Project. His choice as the man to lead the project is young, idealistic J. Robert Oppenheimer, played by Dwight Schultz (whom you may remember as Murdoch in the apocalyptic A - Team). The two bring the best young physicists in North America together in a secret Army base at Los Alamos, New Mexico where they must both create the Bomb and keep it a secret. One of these men is Michael Merriman (John Cusack's, RECORDS Continued from page 7 Blues Leave," "The Blessing," and "Compute." The latter is a scintillat- ing example of the work that Cherry, Higgins, and Haden all have done as members of Coleman's band. Clay, a newcomer to this genre, plunges in bravely and offers a fine solo himself. Don Cherry goes full circle on Art Deco, beginning with classic Miles and ending with a free-jazz masterpiece. He makes a return to his classic roots, but one thing he doesn't have to return to is great jazz. That's something he has been putting out for some time. --Ben Aquino I I DRIVING Continued from page 7 him along with the problem of be- ing poor and Black in Atlanta, Geor- gia. The audience will see the inter- play between these two people boxed in a car with each other. The audi- ence may also be able to identify with many of the characteristics of Miss Daisy and Hoke. According to Lange, "A lot of the characteristics I saw in my grandfather I put into this character." For example, Lange de- scribed how his grandfather always put a handkerchief in his back left- hand pocket that he used for every- thing. This trait is carried along with Hoke in the play, adding a personal touch. Based on the real-life story of playwright Uhry's grandmother and her prickly relationship with her chauffeur, this play brings out not only pride and prejudice but humor and humanity as well. Driving Miss Daisy takes a blank canvas and paints a realistic picture of life in the old South between Black and white and still leaves room for the audience to create their own perspective of the spectrum of colors in between, creat- ing a picturesque representation of all that a work of art should be. DRIVING MISS DAISY will be per- formed tonight at 8 p.m. at the Michigan Theater. Student tickets are $8. Paul Newman (General Leslie Groves, right) and Dwight Schultz (J. Robert Oppenheimer, center) regard John Cusack (left) skeptically. Cusack, as physicist Michael Merriman, turns in the best performance of the film. who turns in what is arguably the all, though, the blame must be lev- best performance in the film and one elled at Joff6's direction, lackluster at, of the best in his career) who risks best and grossly heavyhanded at his life - and ultimately forfeits it worst. There is one scene where Op-- - for an ideal he's not sure he be- penheimer stands, his shadow - lieves in. Merriman falls in love cast by the mast of the tower where, with a young nurse at the camp, the scientists are about to make the, played by Laura Dern (Blue Velvet, world's first nuclear explosion - Mask), and the two of them try to stretching away from him, and asks make sense of what they are doing. "Why me? Why did he pick mee This and the Oppenheimer-Groves Neither Newman's performance (he relationship - as well as Joffd' seems to be acting like George C, own questions about the meaning of Scott in Patton even though he these events in the light of the late playing a different WWII general}) 20th century - are what the film nor Schultz's lack of energy help. focuses on. things. 71 It'ufouns Though the film ends with a Its unfortunate foroff6 that, as slow motion shot of 0ppnheimer's with a chess tournament, most of ppeotioshotrozaOnheimerwed post-Hiroshima realization followe4: the turmoil and conflict his charac- by a shot of the earth from space, we. ters face is internal, and there are few don't really understand what these ways to represent this externally events - this birth of the Atomic (unlike in The Killing Fields). Thus age from the unity of the earth-egg the film must try to make the action and the bomb-sperm - have to do more exciting, but it can't. The dia- with our Atomic middle age now k logue, written by Bruce Robinson that all of the "fathers" pictured here (again, The Killing Fields and more are dead. All that we have left is the recently How to Get Ahead in Ad- image of Merriman, the first victim;; vertising) and Joff6, ends up sound- of lethal radiation exposure, calling- ing stilted, with Groves repeating re- out in pain. Read Jim Poniewozik Every ligious references whenever destruc- tion is mentioned and cardboard G- men saying, "He kissed his brother, he's oytta he na Communist vr FAT MAN AND LITTLE BOY is now showing at Showcase Cinemas I Boo I U - 7 8Uua U d%-U1iiiu11S- V~l and Briarwood 'Congratulations' from Lucky Alana Polcyn is the lucky winner of a pair Bob Dylan tickets. She and three other fact mongers - Jeff Kasser, Jeff Pierson and Brenda Torres - °v answered every question on our tricky Dylan quiz correctly, but Alana paid us off, er, was chosen at random. Thanks to everyone who gave it a shot. Q As for the answers, my friends: you know where they are. -lTHUNDERBIRD a AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Glendale, Arizona 85306 USA A representative will be on campus TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1989 to discuss GRADUATE STUDY AT YOUR Ia - DON'T BE AFRAID TO S A E 50% ON DEAD ERCHANDISEI ONE WEEK ONLY - OCTOBER 24-31 SELECTED BOOKS, CLOTHING, AND MORE AND WHILE YOU ARE HERE...... COUNT THE CANDY PIECES AND WIN A $50 GIFT CERTIFICATE! CRADUATE SCHOOL AND IBA DAY 10:00 A.M. - 3:00 P.M. 1 ' 4 1 ' 1 1 ' I' 1 1 1 ' I1 1 1 I i I 1I 1 iI I NM 1 PHONE 1 I I 1 1 I1 i I DRINGT EHL ENSANVME t18.WNE WILLBE OTIFED Y PONE.WINER WLL E DAWN T RNDO ..r%%. i~nnrr rarr~ r ~nar i nmnr-nr-r Ir~ropo~aa }lk ~rl w. I -r