Sesame Meet NorthU by Darcy Lockman Sunny days, sweeping the clouds away ... Can you tell me how to get, how to get to ... Hill Auditorium? Sesame Street's Bob McGrath might be singing this familiar tune Saturday night when he comes back to Ann Arbor to perform with the Men's Glee Club. Chances are he won't need to ask directions, though. McGrath himself is a University alumnus. McGrath, who has played the role of Bob on Sesame Street since its experimental beginning 23 years ago, graduated from the University in 1954 and is, in his own words, "psyched!" to return to Ann Arbor. "It's going to be terrific. I haven't sung with the Glee Club since about 1967 when they were touring Japan at the same time I was there," he says. The Men's Glee Club will ac- company McGrath, a former Glee Club president, in renditions of "The Rainbow Connection" and "Danny Boy." He says, "The two pieces I picked are ones I thought would sound really good with men's voi- ces." The Michigan Daily - Friday, April10, 1992- Page 9 Lehman goes Bach to the fugue by Liz Patton Make way for the Bachmeister! Harpsichordist Brad Lehman performs J. S. Bach's "Art of Fugue" (Die Kunst der Fuge) this Saturday at the School of Music. Lehman has been studying this monumental final work of the immortal Bach this semester as an independent study with Professor Ed Parmentier. The last published work of Bach, "The Art of Fugue" is a huge collection of fugues and canons. Though the art of contrapuntal music can seem dry and intellectual on the page, the music unfolds with a care- ful balance of serenity and excitement. "This is really fun music," says Lehman, "to be enjoyed as both an in- tellectual trip and as gorgeous sound." There are fourteen movements labeled "Contra- punctus," which resemble fugues. Each one demon- strates a different aspect of fugal technique. Bach showed here a great flexibility in composition: acade- mic rules aren't as important as artistic expression. Part of Lehman's project involved the examination of different arrangements of this music for performing forces ranging from saxophone quartet to chamber or- chestra to jazz vocal ensemble. Bach himself probably intended it for solo harpsichord or organ. Says Lehman, "The piece is so rich that every arrangement brings out a new delightful aspect of his musicality." He adds, "This piece has been seen traditionally as purely contemplative music, not intended for perfor- mance, but it is only in performance that the unity and diversity of the whole are comprehended. As the techni- cally awkward spots are conquered, the music becomes infinitely rewarding. Playing the whole thing is like going through a liturgy: something new and unexpected turns up each time as the attention is focused differ- ently." Many scholarly investigations hinge on juicy ques- tions of provenance and authenticity. For the "Art of Fugue," there are uncertainties in the ordering of the pieces, their instrumentation, and the chronology of their composition. But the biggest question is the end- ing. Like a mystery novel with its final denouement torn out, the last fugue is incomplete. Bach is traditionally said to have composed this piece at the end of his life when he was going blind from cataracts. Several strokes prevented him from fin ishing the last fugue, which breaks off right after the exposition of the third subject (where the notes spell Bach's name, a favorite trick of his). It may be that the final page was simply lost. But Lehman offers another interesting explanation - Bach may have intended to leave it open-ended, as if to say with the whole work, "Here, I've shown you how it's done, now it's your turn to carry on the art of fuguing." Various editors and composers have attempted to complete the last fugue. Everyone has a different solu- tion, but most of them have one common factor. There is a subject in every other movement that has not yet been heard. Like the missing piece in a jigsaw puzzle it works very well in combination with the other three subjects of Bach's final fugue. Lehman will play an altered version of a completion. by Erich Bergel. He says, "I used all the creative tricks and shortcuts I have found that Bach himself used in all of his harpsichord music." He adds, "More than any other piece I know, this one has taught me a lot about general music-making principles, composition, expres- sion, and diverse practice techniques." Harpsichordist BRAD LEHMAN performs "The Art of Fugue" Saturday at the Music School's Blanche At- derson Moore recital hall (lowest level), at 8 p.m. Ad- mission is free. Bob McGrath is gleefully making his way to Ann Arbor to sing with the Men's Glee Club. How will they measure up against Big Bird? You judge. The Glee Club wasn't the only organization in which McGrath was involved as a University student. A music major, he was also president of his class and a member of Fiji fraternity. It was as a member of Fiji that McGrath met Dave Connor, Sesame Street's original executive producer. "Dave and I were both Phi Gams - and became friends working together in the kitchen at Alpha Phi. I ran into him (over ten years later) by chance and he asked me if I'd be interested in performing on a new kid's show," remembers McGrath. While children's television was not a direction in which McGrath thought his vocal career was head- ing, he changed his mind after seeing See BOB, Page 12 _ ____ CHINESE FOOD J NE27 YEARS CHEFJEXPERIENCE TOP GOLD MEDAL WINNER OF DETROIT COBO HALL NATIONAL CONTEST WINNER WASHINGTONIAN BLUE RIBBON BEST CHEF AWARD IN WASHINGTON, D.C. "BEST CHINESE RESTAURANT 1991"-Michigan Daily "BEST OVERALL RESTAURANT 1991"-Michigan Daily "BEST CHINESE RESTAURANT 1991"-Metro Times ------m-'---, r 15%~ OFF DINNER MENU wit this ad * Expires May 1,1992 Car Out or Dine nO nly Reservations * 668-2445 DINE IN OR TAKE OUT SERVICE 1.201 S. University 9 668-2445 9 Open 10:30 a.m. -10 p.m. The University of Michigan CENTER FOR CHINESE STUDIES presents The Eleventh Annual ALEXANDER ECKSTEIN MEMORIAL LECTURE "China and Asia, Developmental Paths" by SABURO OKITA Chairman, Institute for Domestic and International Policy Former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Government of Japan Friday, April 10, 1992 8:00 p.m. Rackham Amphitheater A reception follows the lecture tU 4 M ILa A film by Jicqucs Rivenc 1y I- WEEKEND UPDATE "** FRIDAY ""* *** SATURDAY *"0 DISCOUNT RECORDS 1m Coach & Four America ___ .~omengp Michigras '92 vnAirfies NA. :x CA N E toG .I t' I MARTf' Me W A LIBERTY MUSIC #' [pus BATTLEF OF THE BANDS ALL WEKB -s WOak ALL FOU SAND NLcI EU FOOD, FUN Little Caesars -1* MUSICLAND m C- q LSA GOV 2 STUDENT ~ERNMENT ZS60-11 PRESENT MOONWVALK AND MSA Scttuxdcay April It4 STARTS AT NOON'1 rS ' Je rry spr-a3Ie Ito\ p r swist CA SINO NIGHT it*** BEID, APRIL 1Of UNION:d:",t';n*. '" BATTLE OF THE BANDS BEGINS AT 7:30 ANI FRIlYAV APRIl 1n -199 IN THE (Q HNha FREE FOOb *." o . " s R.' r