8- The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 1, 1993 The Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra put on yet another spectacular performance at Hill Auditorium this past Friday night. National tour should. have been left alone By MELISSA ROSE BERNARDO Since it opened on Broadway in 1984, there have been no national tours of "Sunday in the Park with George." Perhaps they should have left it that way. The Stephen Sondheim-James Lapine musical presents many challenges in production. Since the show is centered around post-impressionist painter * George Seurat's masterpiece "A Sun- P Mday Afternoon on the Island of La Sunday in the Park Grande Jatte," a life-size reproduc- with George tion of the painting is necessary for a frame of reference. Much of the ac- Michigan Theater tion takes place in a park (on an October 28, 1993 island), so one needs trees and a set that looks like apark. And of course, there are the challenges for the actors. In the roles of George and Dot, Stephen Sondheim wrote his most beautiful and also his most difficult song work. The painting was represented on a curtain which moved across the stage (horizontally) as needed. So at various moments some poor stage hand would jog across the stage, dragging this curtain with him/her. The stage was raked a bit to give some perspective of the depth of the park, but that was really the only nice thing about the set. The moveable trees were made of some gauzy green material, through which we could see the molding holding the tree together. My companion commended the high school art department that made those fine trees. The cyclorama, which provided a blue sky-like background, was rather thin and sometimes revealed people moving behind it. Something must be said about singing the roles of George and Dot. Very few performers have the range and ability that Mandy Pattinkin and Bernadette Peters (the originators) have. So as any realistic critic would do, I set aside any expectations for reincarnations of Mandy and Bernadette. As George, Adam Karsten was shallow and generally annoying. He whined his way through many songs, singing all his vowels through his nose. In "Finishing the Hat," George's triumph, Karsten was nasal and, disappoint- ingly, reverted to his falsetto in pivotal high phrases in the song. He also had the tendency to represent intensity by stiffness and various ticks and bodily contortions. Rather than appearing introspectively obsessive about his work, his George looked autistic. He improved in the second act in his portrayal of George's great-grandson, but was still nasal and unmoved. Fortunately, Wendy Brown was a delightful Dot. Dot is intended to be a little rough around the edges, brimming with rustic charm and simple-minded physical and spiritual beauty. Brown did some nice vocal work with Dot, belting most of her songs (the title song, "Everybody Loves Louis"), and did some Bernadette Peters-ish acting, taking her speaking voice all over the treble clef. She was also touching as the 98-year-old Marie in her lovable lecture "Children and Art." When they were all together singing the chorus of "Sunday" (at the end of each act), the full company was quite powerful, especially when they were in the actual pose of the painting. But even two moving choruses of that lovely melody could not eclipse the cheesy sets, cheap props, did I mention the erratic spotlights and bad performing technique. Maybe the show is better left to the timeless portrayals of Mandy and Bernadette. You're more likely to uncover the magic of this show in the video tape than in this production. Leipzig performance has few faults By VALERIE SHUMAN The Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra is no fun to write about. You can't complain about a lack of finesse or emotion - there was plenty of both. You can't moan about sour notes - there were Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra Hill Auditorium October 29, 1993 none. (Ok, maybe one). You can't even sigh that the group was really hampered by the hall's hor- rible acoustics - Hill was its usual wonderful self. All you can do is sit around trying to come up with creative adjectives to describe just how fabu- lous they were at their concert Friday night, which isn't nearly as much fun as shredding some hor- rendous performance that was torture to sit through. On the other hand, it sure was good to hear an orchestra that really knows what it's doing. They even played neat music. The second half of the performance was taken up by Mussorgsky's truly fabulous "Pictures at an Exhibition," which is exactly what it sounds like: a musical journey through the paintings at an exhibition. Each sec- tion of the piecehas adescriptive title, from "Baba Yaga" (The Hut on Hen's Legs) to "Catacombae, Sepulchrum Romanorum; Cum mortuis in lingua mortua," and the sections are tied together by a repeated "Promenade" which lets you walk from painting to painting. The result is a collage of spectacularly colorful images, and the Leipzig Gewandhaus attacked it with the gusto itdeserved. They cheerfully chirped through "The Ballet of Chicks in their Shells," rumbled over "Bydlo" (a cart with huge wheels), and enthusiastically crashed through the finale "The Great Gate in the Capitol City of Kiev." Not only was the orchestra obviously having a blast, but the musicianship was excellent, and the winds and brasses took full advantage of the showcase the music provided for their talents. The first half of the concert was nothing to sneeze at either, even if the music wasn't as flamboyant. The "Overture to Ruy Blas," by Mendelssohn, was very well done, played with the verve it required. Schumann's Symphony No. 2 was also a pleasure to listen to, as the orchestra produced a polished sound and deftly handled emotion. The ensemble of the group really stood out here as well - the first violins often achieved an incredibly perfect unison, and the woodwinds handed off parts so smoothly it was difficult to tell where one instrument left off and the other began. And no review of the Leipzig Gewandhaus is complete without mentioning their legendary con- ductor, Kurt Masur, who has been leading them for the last 22 years. He has a masterful stage presence, commanding attention and respect, as he bows and sways with the music and hops into the air at dramatic moments. This conductor is clearly in control, and has built an enviable or- chestra which shares his delight in music. Last Exit Headfirst into the Flames MUWorks It's been four cold, bleak years since Last Exit released a domestic LP. Their last local belch of genius smelled a bit stale. "Iron Path" was their only studio album, and hope- fully their last. Their chaos loses its torrent when laminated with tasteful production and when the organic out- put is studio canned. Now we can thaw our ears to "Headfirst into the Flames," which captures Last Exit in the throes of improvisation live in Stockholm and Munich in 1989. The unduplicable cacophony of this combo results from the players' divergent backgrounds. Composed of PeterBroutzmann,Sonny Sharrock, Bill Laswell and Ronald Shannon Jackson, Last Exit doesn't need to strive for one coherent sound. Their collective thrust is larger than any of them. While Brdtzmann's tenor sax splatters are an inseparable part of his visceral Euro free-jazz repertoire, the other players' day jobs are quite dif- ferent. If you caught Sonny at the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival in Sep- tember, you may recognize only a few characteristic guitar licks in his Last Exit hysterics. His crazed free- dom will shock you out of your sensi- bility. This is stream of conscious- ness, head-banger jazz and Sonny is unchained. He provides all the ran- dom noise a dozen bands would need; that is, until Brotz juts his bearded Teutonic jaw into the foray. Jackson is enfolded in non-stop pounding, only comparable to his solo percussion album "Texas." RSJ keeps an intricate beat, propelling the others with bass wacks and repeated cymbal crashes. And Laswell? This is one of the few bands in which Bill participates as an equal and doesn'teven touch the production. His bass is responsible for maintaining a semblance of rhyth- mic harmony. None of the performers outshine each other. Collectively, this is the product of autonomous but equal musicians. Although their deconstructed jazz and roll has lost some of its novelty over the years, its vibrancy still screams of the labor of giving birth to a monstrous musical enigma. Now I know why Sharrock needs ten extra frets on his guitar: "So small, so weak, this bloody sweatof loving"is ablues massacre. Last Exit is a natural force beyond reckoning. "Stare not too long in the face of the fire," but know the fury of the flames. Hear Last Exit for your- self and proclaim "Jesus! What gor- geous monkeys we are." - Chris Wyrod Flop Whenever You're Ready Epic "Whenever You're Ready" is the majorlabeldebutofthisSeattle-based punk / power-pop band. With their fast, bouncy, punk-tinged songs, Flop comes across as a cross between Nir- vana and the Monkees. This album is 17 tracks strong, and full of fun, party music such as the bouncy "Julie Francavilla," the loud, punchy "Mendel's White Trash Laboratory" and the speedy, falsetto-driven "Woolworth." Though the songs tend to whiz past the listener, "Whenever You're Ready" is a pop treat worth trying to catch a hold of. - Heather Phares Not Drowning, Waving Circus Reprise NotDrowning, Waving had aban- ner year in 1990. The band's See RECORDS, Page 9 Unfortunately, we can't offer degrees in everything. Flop comes across as a mix of Nirvana and the Monkees. And, oh yeah, they're also from Seattle. 40edjgr ai - -- - a -- - - --til-l 0