The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 1,1990- Page 7 ippin schooled in BreCtian mode What's so funny 'bout peace, love and Koyaanisqatsi ? by Beth Colquitt M ost current musicals (epitomized by the Andrew Lloyd Webber style) are lush, grand drama. They have a novel-like plot, rich music, and beautiful costumes. Going to them is 'an all-consuming and emotional evening. This is not to say that pippin doesn't have these things, but the show employs the same items in an entirely different way. Imagine Brechtian theater theater created by the early 20th- century German dramatic artist that is meant to distance the viewer from the beginning to end of a show, employing various de- vices which remind the audience that they are seeing a show which is in no way real. It is a represen- tation of an idea shown for a pur- pose. Not his well known The Threepenny Opera, but plays like The Good Person of Szetuan and Mother Courage are fitting examples. Many of Brecht's plays are profound but dour and depress- ing. If, however, the man had written comedy - not satire or farce, but simple, frivolous, fairy- tale comedy - he might have come up with something like Stephen Schwartz's Pippin. Although he is the son of Charlemagne, Pippin is a charac- ter with whom most modern-day college students can identify. At. the opening of the show he has just graduated from the University of Padua and has come home to" search for a purpose in life. "He reflects the average University Joe," says co-producer Michol Sherman. "You could almost say it is something like therapy... we're all worried about what hap- pens after graduation."' Pippin feels that he is extraordinary and must do extraordinary things, yet everything he tries eventually bores him. The nature of- the show is cabaret-like, another resemblance to Brechtian theater. There is a narrator who introduces the scenes and leads the audience through Pippin's efforts to find himself. The cast is constantly acknowl- edging the presence of the orches- tra and the audience. The props, as in cabaret shows, are not in- tended to convey a sense of the Middle Ages, since the show is not attached to any particular his- torical moment. It is clearly something that could take place at any time. The most profound message of Pippin exists in Pippin's failure to find anything that satisfies his taste for the extraordinary. Al- though the show is extremely frivolous in both style and plot, it demonstrates to the idealistic young the reasons why older adults have lost their curiosity about life. The finale is an excel- lent piece of work which strips away the glamour the young at- tach to the future and emphasizes the pleasures that are available in the uneventful present, seeking to reconcile young idealism with older experience and accepting what is given. PIPPIN plays at the Power Center Thursday through Sunday. Tickets are available at the Union Ticket Office. by Michael Paul Fischer "It's 1991, for God's sake!" ex- claims Philip Glass, expressing a sense of disbelief at how the rele- vance of Koyaanisqatsi - the com- poser's landmark 1983 collaboration with filmmaker Godfrey Reggio - is only now being generally.recog- nized, amidst an 11th-hour fit of en- vironmental awareness. A cinematic symphony of inte- grated images and sounds, Koy-- aanisqatsi used the arresting, repeti- tive patterns of avant-garde pioneer Glass' score to set off the eerie ten- sion between nature and technology - the film's title is a Hopi phrase meaning "life out of balance" - in a manner unlike any mere documen- tary. Still, according to Glass, a lot of people "thought it was a hippie movie, really." This may explain why Glass and his Ensemble, eight years after the film's release, are embarking on not just the first, but their second 17- city tour to present Koyaanisqatsi: along with a live soundtrack. "We're- trying to get people interested,' says Glass, and for this reason the tour is' visiting different cities than the last time, although Ann Arbor is once again included. Before the first time around, back in 1987, some might have scratched their heads at the idea of paying an extra $15 to see a movie, with the only extra feature being music ema- nating from a darkened orchestra pit. The answer, during his popular Michigan Theater performance, was provided through the power of Glass' audience-quaking amplification (the structured, compositional nature of Glass' work may fit the rubric of "classical" music, but his genre- breaking reputation does not). The sheer challenge of coordinating their collective playing to the celluloid pushed Glass' Ensemble to heights - of intensity which magnified Koy- - aanisqatsi's apocalyptic urgency. Out of the trio of seminal "minimalists" to emerge in the - 1960s - Terry Riley, Glass and Steve Reich - Glass is the most widely recognized, and in no small The Voyage, designed to commemo- rate the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus - set to premiere in 1992. Insofar as De Gama explored the Orient, Glass suggests, his two new works make kind of an "East/West" set. Koyaanisqatsi itself was just the first in the projected trilogy of "Qatsi" movies which, Glass says, Godfrey Reggio pursues with a sin- gular sense of mission. The second, Powaqqatsi , which dealt with the clash of development within Third- World culture, was also scored by Glass, and released in late 1987. The third movie, Nagoyatsi, is in the planning stages, Glass says. But films are very expensive to produce, and while Glass churns out his man- ifold projects, Reggio's vision re- mains delayed by production costs. For this reason, Glass plans to fol- low up this Koyaanisqatsi tour with a spring presentation of Powaqqatsi, whose ticket sales are also hoped to expedite the financing of the final installment of the series. "Naqoyatsi" means "life in a state of war" - and to the suggestion that such a topic might soon become very relevant indeed, Glass chuckles affably. "Godfrey has never shied away from being confrontational about things he considers urgent," Glass notes. "He feels that if he stirs up enough questions," Glass once told the Kansas City Star, "we'll find ways of making life more live- able without giving up our pocket calculators and Sony Walkmans." Asked if there's anything he'd like to do that still hadn't been tried yet, Glass warily acknowledges that that would certainly be a challenge; his main interest, he says, is in "other ways of integrating dance and film into music theater." "The tech- nology is on our side," Glass ef- fuses. "This is just the beginning." THE PHILIP GLASS ENSEMBLE performs KOYAANISQATSI live at the Michigan Theater (668-8397) Saturday at 8 p.m. Tickets are $16.50 for Theater members, $1850 for non-members. Avant-gardener Philip Glass brings his Ensemble and Koyaanisqatsi to Ann Arbor's muesli-munching set. part due to the incredible critical and popular breakthrough of Koy - aanisqatsi. The work ranges from the opening movement's ominous, funeral-like admonition to wan, dis- concerting brass and the whirling, breakneck arpeggios that accompany Reggio's curious, time-lapse cine- matography of a New York City un- der glass. The synthesizer-based score compounds panoramic images of grand canyon vistas, burgeoning factories, fighter plane pilots, vast forests and clogged freeways to an effect the Los Angeles Times called "the best match of music and film that we've experienced." Glass has made a staggeringly prolific career of cross-disciplinary triumphs, from Einstein on the Beach, the 1976 music-theater col- laboration with playwright Robert Wilson, to 1986's Songs from Liq- uid Days, an album of Glass music featuring lyrics written by pop singers Paul Simon, David Byrne, Laurie Anderson and Suzanne Vega. He scored Errol Morris' documentary film The Thin Blue Line, wrote Glass Pieces for the Twyla Tharp dance ensemble, and created music for the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. Glass says his next major project is another collaboration with Robert Wilson, a Portuguese-commissioned opera about the 1490-1500 exploits of explorer Vasco de Gama. It's a companion piece to the opera he has already completed for the Met titled MiE , . R ECOR DS 'Coiinued from page 7 'through light and witty or deep and treary, depending on the tune. She plays both moods well. @h The band opted for a live feel with their release last spring, Hot C'hocolate Massage. Prayer for the Jlfalcyon Fear offers a chance to hear the band in a more introspective, drcam y mode. While Massage is eonducive to dancing or at least _jumping around, Prayer is more suited to lying in the sun contem- pIating nothing but Croughn's lilt- '; ?ng vocals, Scarpantoni's soulful bowing and John Hamilton's in- Spired guitar work. Melancholy ;hould always be this good. -Kristin Palm Iloy Matinee Toy Matinee teprise/Warner Bros. w:As the producer behind the stone- jolid, trademark grooves of Madonna's "Open Your Heart" and r :'Like A Prayer," and as the man who used the same rhythmic sense to focus Bryan Ferry's romantic vi- sions on 1988's Bete Noire, key' boardist Patrick Leonard created the definitive dance/rock sound of the late '80s. But in joining lyri- cist/singer/guitarist Kevin Gilbert to record an album under the group name Toy Matinee, Leonard has forged an unlikely partnership. "Queen of Misery," to be sure, recalls Leonard's modus operandi circa "Prayer" through its employ- ment of percussive synth rhythms, and "Remember My Name (for Va- clav Havel)" is elegant, .gratifying pop - displaying Leonard's prizec ear for space and simplicity. But the voice and guitar of Gilbert - whc writes interesting lyrics about poli- tics, art and romance in uneasy po- etry that grows a bit belabored witi time- lends an uncanny '70s earth. iness to Toy Matinee's sound. The baroque twang of Gilbert's acoustic intro on "Last Plane Out" is pure Kansas. The quirky surrealist tribute "Turn It On Salvador" recalls weird Lennon (perhaps it's nc concidence that Julian sings backup). And with its wry keyboards and S 's , x7 .l v 1 S S t S , relaxed melody, "The Ballad of Jenny Ledge" makes one think of Steely Dan. But it is on somber, more con- templative tracks. - where Leonard plays up the stately moods of his pi- ano to memorable effect: - that Gilbert's handsome vocals find their best setting. "The Toy Matinee," spare and haunting, evokes the at- mospheres created by Ferry or Peter Gabriel; the chorus of "There Was a Little Boy," a strident, arresting por- trait of childhood alienation, carries an undertow of ominous synths. On a scale of 100, Toy Matinee gets a high "77" - but you can't dance to it. - Michael Paul Fischer I I The Michigan Daily - this is what college was meant to be!!! 1 Y . I 1 Save the LP! Daily Arts !ll Mary Claire Anhut fora Washtenaw Community College Trustee VOTE TUES., NOV.6a NON-PARTISAN BALLOT .Recipient Washtenaw Communmity College Community Service Award -WCC Futures Committee -Graduate Eastern Michigan University -Ypsilanti Chamber of Commerce Distinguished Service Award "16 Years on Catherine McAuley Divisional Board -Other extensive board experience Paid for by Committee to Elect Mary ClaieAnhui Maze A. Oberuscyer, Jr. Treasurer ._ _ i 8~ y1 .# ti r Health Care Clinic of Ann Arbor 3012 Packard Road " 971-1970 JOSTENS GOLD* RING SALE IS COMING!, 'a 1. ' 'a Hong Kong Motion Picture Night Lorch Hall Auditorium, 11/03/90 aturday, 6:00--12:00 PM, Free Admission! Film 1: "The Iceman Combat" (6 PM) Film 2: "Rouge Clasp" (8 PM) Film 3: "The Last Eunuch of China" (10 PM) Films in Cantonese with English & Chinese subtitles. Sponsors: Hong Kong Student Association, LS&A Student Government, Student Services Office, MSA, UAC (proposed). ExcOlwihths! Critical Care Nurse Internship xProgram Mayo Medical Center, Rochester, Minnesota :At Mayo Medical Center, you'll find a commitment to excellence in the nursing :profession as well as in patient care. We offer you: is looking for future leaders in Public Affairs. We offer a 2-year Master's program in Public Policy, with concentrations offered in: «9 r 0 r s r " Six month paid internship program - beginning in January and July " Salary starting at $28,800 (annual rate) " Rotation through five of Mayo's ten dynamic, advanced critical care units * Individualized orientation and instruction * Clinical Preceptorship " BCLS (and option of future ACLS) certification * Criminal Justice " Energy & Environmental Policy * Government & Business " Health Policy * Housing & Community Development " Human Services, Labor & Education " International Affairs & Security . International Development " International Trade & Finance * Press & Politics eScience & Technology " Transportation " Urban Economic Development Interested? Then come meet with the Kennedy School Order your college ring NOW. Stop by and see a Jostens representative, Wednesday, Oct. 31 thru Friday, Nov. 2, " Technologically advanced practice i