ARTS Prima Donna Debbie Chamber Facades This Sunday the Michigan Cham- ber Players will take on an unusual variety of works. William Walton's "Facade" can be roughly described as tongue-twisters spoken with a musical accompaniment. This startlingly origi- nal piece is completely unlike any- thing else in allofmusic. Ralph Vaughn Williams' hauntingly beautiful song cycle, "On Wenlock Edge" for singer and small ensemble will also be fea- tured. With the English vocal music, the group will perform Bela Bartok's "Contrasts" for clarinet, violin and pi- ano. Written at the requestof"the King of Swing," Benny Goodman, this is one of Bartok's best chamber music compositions. The concert begins at 4 p.m. at Rackham. Admission is free. All that brass It's a busy weekend at the Kerrytown Concert House.Tonight at 8 p.m. there's Saturday - the Satur- day Brass Quintet, that is, performing works by Gabrielli, Foster and everyone's favorite living Estonian composer, Arvo Part. As far as brass quintets go, this one's among the best for serious chamber music. Then on Sunday at 4 p.m. Vladimir Babin and Maria Kardas Bama will give a cello and piano recital, with sonatas by Debussy and Brahmson the program. Tickets are $8, $5 for students; call 169-2999. Classical guitars The renowned pianist Horacio Gutierrezwillperformarecitalofclas- sical and romantic pieces this Satur- day night. Liszt's powerful B minor Piano Sonata is the primary work on the program. Gutierrez will also play Schumann's delightful Fantasie in C Major and Haydn's Piano Sonata No. 50, also in C Major. The concertwill be at, Hill Auditorium at 8 p.m; tickets ranging from $10 to $35 are available at the Burton Tower Box Office, with $6 rush tickets available Saturday morning at the Union Ticket Office. Calt 764-2538. by Michelle Weger If this is February, it must be "Ballo." About a month ago, after a morning rehearsal, Debbie Voigt was lunching in an Orange County hotel cafe, and reel- ing off a list of her upcoming perfor- mances with an ambitious gleam in her eye: "Il Trovatore" at Opera Pacific in January; "Un Ballo in Maschera,"open- ing tonight in Chicago; "Ariadne auf Naxos" at the Met in March; and her La Scala debut in "Oberon" (which shejust recorded with Ober-tenor Gary Lakes) in May. Plusa few concert performances here and there. But she's pretty sure she'll get some time off, "sometime in August," she said. A Des Plaines, Illinois native, Voigt moved with her family to Southern California when she was fourteen. She sang in choir in high school and took voice lessons for fun, then entered Chapman College with the intention of becoming a choir director herself. After one semester, however, she decided that college was not the place for her right then, so for the next two years, Voigt worked as a computer operator, and kept singing on the side. She resumed her education at Cali- forniaState University, Fullerton, study- ing with voice teacher Jane Paul, and began winning competitions left and right. But it wasn't until about 1985, when she began a two-year stint as an Adler Fellow with San Francisco Op- era, that she felt she could actually have a career in music. Those two years were crucial to her development as an artist, she said. In fact, it was there that she first learned the role of Ameliain Verdi's "Ballo"-one of seven roles she covered but never actually performed there. She got her early professional exposure during a four-month tour with SFO's Western Opera Theater, which she said she "wouldn't necessarily want to have to do all over again," but which was an invaluable experience. That experience paid off when, just a couple of years later, San Francisco called her in to cover for an ailing diva, and Voigt sang Amelia with 48-hours notice, to many rave reviews. Amelia must have a particular spell over the 32- year-old soprano; Voigt made her offi- cial debut with the Metropolitan Opera during the 1991-92 season in the same role. Voigt said the character appeals to herbecause, "She's a very loyal woman, a faithful wife who loves her husband, but who has this attraction to another man. She doesn't want to be attracted to him." She paused before continuing, 'That's why she goes to the gallows ...," referring to the infamously dra- matic (not to mention strenuous) scene where Amelia goes in search of the herb that will cool the chemistry between herself and her husband's best friend. Voigt also commented on the diffi- culties involved in the role, particularly in the pacing of the singing. "When she makes her second-act entrance, there's a huge aria, then a duet, then a big trio. And in the production I did in San Francisco, we went right into the third act ... it's really a long sing," she said. But the labor involved in her career thus far obviously doesn't deter Voigt . While she admitted to occasional feel- ings of dissatisfaction "afterabadnight," she explained that it's, "usually just the fatigue." What seems to fatigue her most, in fact, is not the performing, but the travel involved. "We sat down and figured it out, and it was, what -," she looked at husband John Lietch, who answered for her, "- eight months we spent on the road last year." Garnering reviews like the follow- ing from the New York Tiines' John Rockwell must make the occupational hazards worth it, though: "The 'Ariadne auf Naxos' performance in Boston on Friday night introduced one truly re- markable singer in Deborah Voigt. That performance, her first of Ariadne, re- vealedone of the most important Ameri- can singers to come along in years." More importantly, however, Voigt has been excited by the audiences' reac- tions. When she performed Chrysothemis in Strauss' "Elektra" for instance, she expected the European audiences to be more receptive than the American ones, but said that at the Met, "they just went wild." That last comment is a telling one about Voigt's views on the state of seri- ous music as we approach the 21st century. She balked at the suggestion that the public might feel that classical music is a thing of the past, or without a future. Perhaps thinking of Los Ange- les' recent ground-breaking on a new, Disney-funded concert hall, she said, "I don't think people really feel classical music isdead ....There aremoreorches- tras and opera houses and productions going up than ever before." Aboutoperas like Corigliano's "The Ghosts of Versailles" and Bolcom's "McTeague," to mention but two major pieces premiered last year, Voigt men- tioned the importance of new works, but added, "I can't imagine that in our lifetime we'll hear more of contempo- rary composers than of Verdi, Strauss, Mozart, or Wagner. Opera is a tradi- tional art form and people want to hear their favorites, the standards. Maybe a hundred years from now, Philip Glass will be the Mozart of our time, but right now, we don't have the access to his work that we do to other composers." DEBBIE VOIGT will perform in the Chicago Lyric Opera's production of "UN BALLO INMASCHERA" tonight and February 10 at 7:30 p.m. and February 14 and 2p.m. Call (312) 332-2244. Mark Curry was a hit at the Blind Pig on Tuesday night. 1i k ( ij di I Juliana Hatfield Forever Baby single I See You single Mammoth Records - I f aith healers Juliana Hatfield has something to prove. Ever since the release of her solo debut, the slam-bang power-pop funfest Hey Babe, Hatfield has been adamant about it not being indicative of her po- tential. These two singles are her first moves to prove her point. Each comes loaded with new bonus tracks that at- tempt to prove that point. The "Forever Babe" single hits hard with a faithful rendition of Dinosaur Jr.'s "Raisans," and a brief glimpse of rare and (almost) happy face optimism, "Tamara." But it's the "I See You" single that truly delivers the goods. On "Rider," Hatfield lets loose with an incendiary barrage of post-Paglia feminist rage at women she sees as detrimental to her team. "I see you backstage/Pulling up your skirt/I wish it was a nightmare! ecause it hurts" screams Hatfield over sea of rollicking crash and burn guitars (Camille Paglia would be well advised to dump Madonna as her pop culture icon and start bopping to Hatfield). Hatfield's notorious self-directed bashing comes back to the fore on the two ensuing songs. "Here Comes The Pain" is a midtempo grunger that finds Hatfield lamenting how she "Feels like an alien/ I am my only friend." At the song's end, she resolves the source of this desolation to a giddy doubletime shuffle: "It's not enough/ Physical touch." Moral of the story? When it comes to what people really need, that ain't it. "Feed Me" is a painfully powerful ode to committing yourself to someone that's not really there through starva- tion. "If you only knew/I'm down to a hundred and two" is whispered over a stark and mournfully gorgeous acoustic guitar. Chilling. Juliana H., your point has been proven. -Scott Sterling The Legendary Pink Dots- Shadow Weaver Caroline/Play it Again Sam This is the fourteenth official LPby the Holland-Based Legendary Pink Dots. Formed in 1980, the Pink Dots have been noted for creating ingenious soundscapes using a tremendous amount of instruments, both electronic and acoustic. These soundscapes, which range from Skinny Puppy-like insanity to Phillip Glass new age calmness, al- most always convey amood of despera- tion and cynicism. Even the most mesmerizingly beautiful pieces are spiced up with adash of irony and anger, even in the music itself. These soundscapes are complemented by Ed- ward Ka-spel's hauntingly vivid narra- tives. On this release, the Pink Dots are relying more on rock instruments, and less on synthesizers and string instru- ments which their earlier works had focused upon. Unfortunately, this change weakens the power of their soundscapes, and brings their sound disturbingly close to Pink Floyd ("Stitching Time", "The Key to Heaven"). The notable excep- tion to this is the fourth track, "City of Needles." This song's unsettling com- bination of throbbing synthesizers and intense drumming shows how powerful their songs can be. Unfortunately, this only highlights the weaknesses of the rest of the album, and leaves the listener wishing for so much more. However, Ka-Spel's lyrics remain frighteningly cynical ("Squashed in a case/where we're all created equal/somewhere they're laughing, they're planning the sequel"), and are a constant bright spot throughout the album. All in all, this is a decent record, but it does not measure up to the power of their previous work. Andy Dolan Sth th faith healers lido 01 Hatfield Their newest release "1ido"is on sale! $7.99 cassette $11.99 CD prices good thru 2/14/93 Located In the Colonial Lanes Plaza on S. 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