The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 11, 1994 - 9 *Feltsman's life after the Fall By MARK KATZ "This may sound cynical," Russian pianist Vladimir Feltsman said last week, "but freedom and democracy have their price." According to Feltsman, who will appear with the Ann Arbor Symphony tomorrow night, there is no question that life is much more difficult now for the average Russian musician than it was before the fall of communism. With Russia's economy in shambles, it might not be surprising that money and job security are hard to come by for the performer. Nevertheless, it is hard to believe that for Feltsman the plight of the musician could be worse than it was when he lived in the Soviet Union. In 1979, the 27-year-old pianist applied for an exit visa, hoping to experience greater artistic freedom than the government was allowing him. Instead, his application was denied and his career nearly shut down. Two hours after leaving the visa office, his concert tapes were removed from the State Television and Radio Studios, his records dropped from Soviet stores. For two years the government granted him no concert engagements, and when he was finally allowed to perform in public, it was often for factory and kindergarten audi- ences in remote towns. After eight years of a purgatorial existence in which he was allowed neither to emigrate nor to pursue the career his talents warranted, Feltsman was finally granted a visa. This was due in no small part to the efforts of several influential musicians and politicians - including Isaac Stern, Daniel Barenboim, George Schulz and Ronald Reagan - who knew of the pianist's predicament. In August, 1987, Feltsman arrived in New York City a hero, and was sought after to perform in the country's most prestigious venues, from the White House to Carnegie He il. But all of this is yesterday's news for Feltsman, who would much rather talk about music than politics. In recent years Mr. Feltsman's musical activities have ex- panded beyond the recital hall. Of all his new projects, he is clearly most excited about the school for gifted young musicians he is establishing in New York City. "It will be like no other school," boasted Feltsmani- it will combine rigorous study in academics and music beginning with the youngest schoolchildren. Feltsman, however, does not plan to teach in this school, which he anticipates will begin classes within a few years. He admits to being better suited to teach older students for whom he can "be a mirror," allowing them to learn from themselves. Feltsman currently instructs a select group of piano majors at SUNY New Paltz. Mr. Feltsman is also pursuing a conducting career. In tomorrow's concert-- his Midwest conducting debut- he will lead the Ann Arbor Symphony in Beethoven's "Coriolan" Overture and Symphony No. 8. He will also perform Mozart's A-major Piano Concerto, which he will direct from the keyboard. He has only begun his public conducting career, he has been studying the conductor's art since he was a teenager in Moscow. Still, he plans to start out modestly, conduct- ing only occasionally and working with a small group of works he knows intimately. "I'm no megalomaniac planning to conduct Mahler's Eighth next week," he said, referring to the gargantuan "Symphony of a Thousand." Nevertheless, he is apprehensive about this aspect of his career. There are two types of pianist-turned-conduc- tor, he remarked, "those few who are good, and those - well, we all know who they are. I hope I'm the first type." VLADIMIR FELTSMAN will perform and conduct with the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra works of Mozart and Beethoven at 8 p.m. Saturday night at the Michigan Theater. Tickets are available at the Michigan Theater box office, 668-8397. Student tickets are half price at the door. "The Colored Museum" will be playing through February 16 at the Trueblood Theatre. The gospel of the Teenage Fanclub bring their "hook-enriched" guitar pop to Detroit tomorrow night. Fanclub leaves patterns behind By ANDY DOLAN Teenage Fanclub seemed to come out of nowhere a few years back with their brand of hook-enriched guitar pop. The Scottish foursome's latest effort, "Thirteen," proves that the band has a true knack for writing catchy, addictive songs that snag the listener the first time through and refuse to let go Throughout their musical career, their style of beautiful pop melodies combined with heartfelt lyrics has won over fans of all types of music. -wRather than striving to forge a new genre of music, the band members prefer to think of themselves as the newest additions to a long tradition of songwriters whose songs are easily accessible to everyone. As bassist / songwriter Gerry Love explained, "The tradition that we follow has been going in Scotland for 500 or 600 years ..: and if you listen to folk or blues music, it's just about simple things that ordinary people can relate to. It's just the same as country and western music in America. The tradition has been going for hundreds of years, and it's only since the late '60s that music has progressed toward what it's be- come today, so maybe it's just an aberration at the moment." "People will always sing about what they think and how they feel," he continued, "and some people might make music more intimidating, and other people just want for ordinary people to relate to the songs." In their particular pursuit of this ideal, the band members write many of their songs about love and relationships, which are themes that, as Love put it, "affect every person that's ever been alive." The band's simple chorus hooks often sum up feelings in rela- tionships in just one line, such as "If you don't care, why are you standing there," from "Ret Liv Dead," and the undeniable truth in the title of the song "Tears Are Cool." Despite Love's confidence in his own musical approach, he appears somewhat cynical when it comes to Rather than striving to forge a new genre of music, (Teenage Fanclub) prefer to think of themselves as the newest additions to , long tradition of songwriters whose songs are accessible to everyone. the music around him in his home country. "It's not so much wishing that songs would return to a certain structure," he explained. "It has more to do with the motivation behind songs these days, and I think lots of bands are actually playing the game of ap- proaching the press and the public in a manner that will sell records. "You can produce sales by pro- motion and by journalists creating scenes, (and) Britain's a very small country so it's really easy to manipu- late the record buying public, not by letting them hear the music, but by telling them everything about a band other than the music that they play." Love attributed the negative reac- tion of the English press towards Teen- age Fanclub to the fact that the band refused to buy into this pattern. "We've never tried to present a public image, and that's annoyed a lot of British journalists. All we've got is songs, and that's all we're really will- ing to give away. Teenage Fanclub's talent for pop songs has carried them nicely through their current work, and the freshness of ideas on "Thirteen" shows that there's no telling how far they can take it. But Love admitted that he doesn't tend to think too much about what lies ahead, and instead prefers to let their music take whatever course seems best. "I've never thought about (the future)... we just kind of do what we feel is right to do ... there's no big philosophy behind it." Hopefully their irresistible style will feel right to them for a long time to come. TEENAGE FA NCLUB plays Saturday at St. Andrews Hall with Yo La Tengo. Doors open at 9 p.m., and 18 and over are welcome. Call 961-MELT for more information. By KAREN LEE When one first reads George Wolfe's "The Colored Museum," it seems didactic and preachy, an in- The Colored Museum Trueblood Theatre February 9, 1994 dictment of those who have oppressed the Black race and those who have given up their Black roots. One might even feel a bit guilty for not having been born Black and therefore not quite understanding the history or the culture. But, of course, Wolfe understood that a play was to be performed, not read, and once "The Colored Mu- seum" is on its feet and with the right cast, it's not preachy anymore - it's gospel. And we're not talking about the sanitized stuff a la Amy Grant, but Black gospel. Now, being Jewish and white, I have not had much experience with Black gospel. All I know of it was whatkwas shown in the tribute to gos- pel great Marion Williams on the "Kennedy Center Honors." But what I did see was big and loudsand boister- ous and utterly joyous. I saw it again in the production of "The Colored Museum," which was performed last year in the Arena The- atre and is running at the Trueblood Theatre through February 16 as the centerpiece of The Colored Museum Project. The indictments are still there, but they are shrouded in humor and hilarity. More than anything, there was a celebration going on here, a celebra- tion not only of the heritage, but of the "madness" - the paradox that "whereas I can't live inside yesterday's pain, I can't live without it." As one of the characters, a woman with a perpetual party going on in her head named Topsy Washington, pro- claimed, "There's madness in me and that madness sets me free." That madness was set free in all sorts of ways on Wednesday night, when director Julie Nessen and her stellar group of actors put on a show that entranced an audience composed mostly of high school students. Against a plain white background (which by now will have moldings and reliefs on it), they enacted a series of vignettes that ranged from the bit- ing wit and bitchiness of "The Gospel According to Miss Roj" and the eeri- ness of "Soldier with a Secret" to the poignancy of "Permutations" and the rather bizarre humor of "The Hair- piece." Through it all, despite some slight technical difficulties (under- standable in a dress rehearsal), the cast remained consistently outstand- ing. More importantly, they also ap- peared to be having a great time. Of course, there was a lot to have fun with. The production started with "Git on Board," in which Angela Peaks played an overly perky stew- Wolfe understood that a play was to be performed, not read, and once "The Colored Museum" is on its feet and with the right cast, it's not preachy anymore - it's gospel. ardess aboard Celebrity Slaveship. It continued with Rhonda Williams fill- ing the entire-theater with a low, rich contralto as the "down-home" host- ess of a cooking show in "Cookin with Aunt Ethel." Kevin Clayborn was chillingly persuasive as the res- 4useum urrected Vietnam War soldier who knew "the secret to your pain" in "Soldier with a Secret" and Nyima Anise Woods was innocently proud in "Permutations" as the young girl who laid an egg. Amidst all the fine work, though, there were still standouts. Williams and Elise Bryant threw attitude back and forth at each other as two talking wigs in one of the funniest segments 3 of the performance, "The Hairpiece." ' Clayborn flounced onto the stage as Miss Roj, a cynical, drunken queen who was "quintessential style" ("I cornrow the hairs on my legs so that they spell out M-I-S-S R-0-J.") in "The Gospel According to Miss Roj." But the centerpiece of the evening was "The Last Mama-on-the-Couch Play", a parody of "A Raisin in the Sun," complete with Jason Hackner's overly intense male lead and Bryant's overly emoting, "well-worn" Mama, which transformed itself into a song- and-dance number. In fact, I can't say which version of "The Colored Museum" was bet- ter, this year's or last year's. There were things that were different about each, including the replacement of one actress and the fact that it's being done in a larger theater, which both added to and detracted from the past production. But even though the church is different, it is well worth going to hear the gospel. TECOLORED MUSEUM plays at the Trueblood Theatre through February 16. Performances are tonight at 7 and 10:30 p.m., Saturday through Wednesday at 8 p.m. There will be no Monday performance. Tickets are $6 students, $12 others. For informa- tion on "The Colored Museum" or its surrounding events, call 763- 9713. I 5th AVE. 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