ARTS The Michigan Daily Friday, February 11, 1993 Page 11 Classical icon Andre Previn shows his jazzy side by Jessie Halladay When most people hear the name Andre Previn, they think of the world-renowned classical conduc- tor / pianist. Some jazz enthusiasts may remember him as the man whose adaptation of the "My Fair Lady" soundtrack was the bestseller of its time. What many may not know is that Previn is now making a brief tour with his recently created jazz trio. The tour, which will only last for 10 days, will make its first stop at Hill Auditorium Saturday night. Previn brings with him friends Ray Brown (bass) and Mundell Lowe (guitar). His busy schedule de- mands that this tour be brief. "As a classical artist, and this may be hard to believe, I am booked four years in advance," Previn said on the phone from New York. Previn has taken a25-yearhiatus from his profes- sional jazz playing days. This does not mean thathe has stored jazz in the closet all this time. He always played for himself as a method of relaxation. Even now that he is on a whirlwind tour, it is still like a vacation for him. With encouragement from his wife, Previn has gotten back into professional jazz within the last two years, making three records with plans to record a fourth in May. "Well, it's really my wife's doing," Previn recalled. "... don't you think you might have some fun if you went back and made another (jazz) record. And I did and she was absolutely right, I had avery gbod time. And it's turned not tobeembarrass- ing musically, I mean for anyone to listen to, so I decided we'd have another shot at it." For some lesser artists the boundaries between the two genres of classical and jazz may become blurred. But for an artist of Previn's caliber, the differences are very clear. "It's a different kind of atmosphere all together," Previn said of playing jazz versus classical music. "There's no period of studying and it's a different kind of rehearsing, if any, and it's just much more relaxed." Another fundamental difference between jazz and classical music is the way that the performer approaches the material. "It's completely different because you see, in jazz the emphasis is on the performance and in all concert music, classical music, the emphasis is on the piece," Previn said. "In other words all you can do as a performer is do your best to be responsible to the composer. And whatever the composer has written is the reason you're doing aconcert. And injazz if you think about the really great players, you don't really care what it is their playing." But Previn does not make a distinction between classical and jazz. For him, each mode is an artunto itself. "It's completely different. I mean, I never compare the two. I never think one is like the other," he said. "I never think one is better or worse or anything because they have nothing to do with each other. I think that the two kinds of music are as separated as painting and architecture." Previn understands the differences between clas- sical and jazz music and successfully keeps them separate. "If you were a great fan of Dizzy Gillespie ... it didn'treally matter what the tune was he was playing because it was his ingenuity that made the thing interesting. And in classical music it's not like that; if you start out with a bad piece, you can't win." THE ANDRE PREVIN TRIO performs Saturday at Hill Auditorium at 8 p.m. Tickets are $10 to $24, with rush tickets available Saturday morning at the Union ticket office. Call 764-2538 for more information. You'd never think Andre Previn was such a jazz whiz too. Just in 'Time' for Valentine's Day by Lia Kushnir If you're looking for something completely different, the Performance Network announces "It's About Tune," a col- laborative work of poems set to music, just in time for Valentine's Day. Incomparable to any traditional theatrical piece, there is no plot, and there are no characters. There is, however, an emotional and intuitive connection in this production which puts poetry into a musical setting and surrounds it with an array of dance and movement. "Although you won't be able to find a plot, there is development," said poet Matthew Smith. "What follows is the passage of a human soul, both in the sense of incarnation and just the passage through life's different stages, with a special emphasis thanks to Valentine's weekend, on love as a turning point of the human experience." "It'sAboutTime, butit'snot," added musician Ken King. "There's adouble meaning to the title. It's about time that we did this show, but what can you say about time except that it gets away from you? We're using words, but it's not enough, so you need the music and the dance to get the show to be an emotional experience." "Life is in a cycle and we come and go," Smith com- mented, "but I really feel that the human experience goes beyond the individual's lifetime, and that there's an emo- tional response that is quickened in a dramatic and musical setting. This goes one step further when Kate McQueen shows up and starts rendering everything alive with move- ment." The production is musically diverse as well as emotion- ally. "We have some traditional folk pieces, while the King Brothers write in a contemporary Rock & Roll style, and Ken composes some wonderful ballads performed on acoustic guitar with some electric rifts stepping in to accentuate," added Smith. "It's About Time" is not the first collaboration for these artists. You may have heard of this group when they pre- sented "Late Returns 92" at the Performance Network last Fall. Smith and King have been thinking about and working together on "It's About Time" for the past ten years, and they believe it will be ameaningfuland worthwhile experience for everyone, now that it has finally come to the stage. It's not something that can be understood just on paper, or through music or dance alone. "'It's About Time" needs to be experienced," said King of the production. "It will be healing and I think it offers something that people will carry with them for a long time and not just forget. There's a lot of entertainment available out there to chose from and a lot of diversity, but this is not an ordinary show. "It'sAboutTune" is something people can take and keep." Don't miss the world-renowned Leipzig Chamber Orchestra when they make their North American debut. 0A eZi g goes North American IT'S ABOUT TIME will be performed Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. at the Performance Network, 408 West Washington. Tickets are $7. For information and reservations call 663-0681. Saigon Kicks surprises by Kristen Knudsen We can thank some gung-ho radio guy for Saigon Kick'srecent catapult to national attention. Said DJ's eagerness to play the since-top-15 hit "Love Is On The Way" led to its release and subse- quent success. But if this is the only Saigon Kick song you know, then their current, second album, 'The Lizard," may surprise you. Itcovers awiderange of topics and moods, from the anger of "Hostile Youth," to the silliness of the title track, which tells about a dance performed by lead singer Matt Kramer (that, according to bassist Chris McLernon, "has to be seen to be appre- ciated and understood"). Saigon Kick, which besides McLernon and Kramer includes guitar- ist Jason Bieler and drummer Phil Varone, manages to express countless feelings with intensity and unique mu- sical style. Perhaps this explains why McLemon has found his band's album under "Pop, Metal and Alternative - sometimes all atonce at the same store." He offered that a more accurate descrip- tion of Saigon Kick's sound would be "everybody's record collection on one record," made coherent by the combi- nation of harmonic vocalizations and often powerful thoughts. In the mid to late '80's, McLernon said, an album byBandX would unfail- ingly contain "nine kind of rock songs and a ballad co-written by Desmond Child - quiet, then the verse, then the big chorus."You know, something like, "I love you and I miss you and how come I lost you but you're coming back and I'm happy now" (sound familiar, Jon Bon Jovi?). McLernon explained that this is something Saigon Kick has been careful to avoid. The result of Saigon Kick's efforts is a group of songs dealing with obsession in "Chanel," the dark side of the city in "God of 42nd Street," and everything in between. "There's a lot that goes on in' someone's day," McLernon stated. "I don't think it's all happy, all sad, all, exciting, all boring. It's all mixed up." This is honesty designed to get a reac- tion, good or bad. "I'd rather have a reaction one way or another than be ignored," McLernon said. Rock 'n' roll to them thrives on danger, or is, as McLemon put it, "like, a mosh pit, a horrible swirl of energy" Guitarist Bieler, having just finished singing an impromptu "opera" concert in the background, added to this charac- terization of rock music - "It's the physical price for having mental fun." Though intended as ajoke, this sen- timent seems to fit a band that fuses originality with energy. Check out Saigon Kick - they're on the way. SAP GON KICK appears tonight with EXREME at 7:30 p.m. at the State Theatre in Detroit. Tickets are $18.50 through Ticketmaster. by Keren Schweitzer More than 20 years ago, Georg Moosdorf founded the Leipzig Cham- ber Orchestra comprised of 23 musi- cians from the famous Gewandhaus Orchestra. This orchestra has become world-renowned in its superb interpre- tations of early chamber orchestral works, andhas appeared in all the major concert houses in Germany. Their visit to Ann Arbor marks their first visit to North America as a cham- ber group. Moosdorf, in addition to directing this orchestra, is also the prin- cipal violinistin the largerGewandhaus orchestra that performed in Ann Arbor last year. Of the city, Moosdorf said, "I know the public and the audience of Ann Arbor well, and I am happy to perform here with the Leipzig Orches- tra for the first time." The concert will begin with the ear- liest dated work on the program, the Sinfonia Concertante in F Major for oboe, cello and orchestra by J.C. Bach. The composer was J.S. Bach's young- est son and was written in 1718. The performance will feature oboist Tho- mas Hippei, and cellist Matthias Moosdorf, who is himself Georg Moosdorf's son. The next piece on the program is Haydn's Symphony No. 3 in G Major. "This is a very impressing work," Moosdorf said. "Haydn uses many new practices in composing, such as the fugue in the third movement and the use of the minuet as a canon ... It is one of Haydn's early works; it has a very per- fect character." Mozart's Concerto in B flat major for bassoon, written in 1773, is a well- known work and will be performed by soloist David Petersen. The bassoon concerto is notconsidered an early com- position, since Mozart was the ripe old age of 19 when he wrote it. The Mozart bassoon concerto is considered stan- dard repertoire for any serious bassoon- ist. Many comparisons have been made concerning Mozart and Schubert, since both were outstanding musicians and both died at an early age. Schubert's Symphony No.5 is the final work on the program. "I likeitverymuch,"Moosdorf said. "It is Vienna and it is the great impression of Mozart which has influ- enced his form andmanner to compose, it is a useful work." There could be no better way to spend Valentine's Day than to listen to the wondrous music of Bach, Haydn, Mozart and Schubert. These four com- poserswere masters atcreating serenely beautiful music with great ease. Hill Auditorium will be transformed with the sounds of eighteenth century Eu- rope. THE LEIPZIG CHAMBER ORCHESTRA will perform Sunday at 5 p.m. at Hill Auditorium. Tickets are $20 to $29, with rush tickets available Saturday morning at the Union ticket office. Call 764-2538. r 11 A fV "WA R 13 0 R #u4"&: Good music, intense lyrics & different styles. Check 'em out. .. "" 0 " s 0 " 0 0 0 " " 0 " 0 1 VISIONS OF PARIS Summer Programs 1993 Intersession : May 24 - June 1 1 Summer Session : June 14 - July 23 More than 50 regular offerings from the University's liberal arts curriculum. * A three-week French-language Immersion program, featuring cultural walking tours and conversation classes. Weekend excursions : Normandy, Champagne, Loire Valley chateaux, Burgundy,Givemy and Chartres. Seminar tours with the University of Texas, the University of New Hampshire and the University of California at Berkeley. Also, two new French Immersion Sessions: Summer '94 in Biarritz Winter '94 in Paris 00"0 " " 0 " " " " " " " " " " " " thl T h t icluding: DOGS OF LUST LOVE IS STRONGER THAN DEATH HELPLINE OPERATOR SLOW EMOTION REPLAY epic LEONARD COHEN THE FUTURE Including: CLOSING TIME/THE FUTURE DEMOCRACY MM w 11 I 1 it'