THE MICHIGAN DAILY NEW STUDENT EDITION ARTS THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER R_ NPA p2mm 7n THEMIHIAN""""".SU."N -I - A ~ThIR lV ~P FR R l- - .v . . . I v. a m-. WF .---, V"'* 1 [U U SCU 1 .5 I PJI Iage Reporter's Notebook * Travails of covering the annual art fair By DARCY LOCKMAN And now that is the howling baby! Yes, no doubt about it ... and why not? Not an uninspired reaction -- "Aaaahh! Yaaaaaaooohhh, oooooh, waaaaah ... Waaaaaah!" - all things considered. SQUIMP (half-devoured wiener, pork parts, under foot). What kind. of yuppie disco prince brings his kid to artfairin 90 degrees and sunshine to suffer the pots and paintings at outrageous for- tune, to bestow suffering upon - to drop a pork- part wiener among - the crowds? Ahh, but they are the pearls of their own wisdom, the crowds. No, they've come to purchase the pearls of that wis- dom. The perils. Masochism: were it the only possible reason for their attendance! Covering the story - the only sane explanation for my attendance. But sanity is no longer an issue as I claw across streets 80 people deep and fend off an eager chesty man in a muu-muu who thrusts a 20 in my face for the paint-stained overall cutoffs I wear. ("They would look so post-modern in my garage," he confesses.) Jesus, unhealthy waves of frenzy, schizophre- nia, fear and loathing - insufferable reverbera- tions this last weekend of July in Ann Arbor. Get out. Flee! But I can't. It's late summer. The coffee shops sag, the fire hydrants wilt: but a journalist must cover her story! I have to be on campus. Still I wonder, is it worth it? I find safety and oxygen atop a parking meter on Church Street, where I sit still for three or so minutes until an old man mistakes me for a statue and inquires of the closest vendor whether I can be shipped with no chance of breakage. I jump down and the elderly inquirer screams, falls to the ground with a heart attack. The vendor calls an ambulance from his cellular phone, but the crowd simply refuses to let the vehicle through, and the unfortu- nate bloke dies. What can be done? The browsing continues. Who can stand still in such heat? The vendor smiles - the dead man will make a lovely statue once rigamortis sets in. Little chance of breakage in shipping. The key is lots of Styrofoam. The key is not to stand still for too long. I'm not a statue, but a journalist! I can't be purchased! I fume for a moment, but alas, there is work to be done. First I need a drink. Over the heads of the crowd I see the sky, and a sign that reads "Cold Profile Composer calls classics 'bonng' By KEREN SCHWEITZER FILE PHOTO Thousands of art lovers and dealers flock to the city each year for the annual art fair. Beverages." I try to barrel through the masses. After five minutes of college-try I have moved four inches, backwards. I need a strategy. At the top of my lungs I yell: "Fire!" No one moves, other than the half-inch it takes them to arrive at the next piece of art. I think for a moment. In a conversational pitch I remark to no one in particular, "Free T-shirts on the Diag." The crowd takes off for the center of campus and I am able to trudge the six feet to my beverage salesman who has resisted the draw of the free tees in favor of his pop shop. I reach him panting. "Diet Coke." "That'll be two dollars," he says handing me a 12- ounce can. "Two American dollars," I say. "No, two of those little Monopoly bill dollars," he says, a real wise guy. I hesitate. He crouches toward me, moving in for the hard sell. "It's worth it. You can keep the can afterwards, for like a book end, or a little coffee table chatchka. Haven't you ever heard of pop art?" Art! Buying art is part of the story. I take it, smiling at my fortune until I see my half-crazed reflection, the maniacal grin on my face, in a coffee shop window - the product of art fair mentality and Ann Arbor dehydration. I swig the pop, drop the can and sprint down an alley toward State Street. And now that is the presumptuous tourist! Yes, no doubt about it ... and why not? Not an uninvited guest - "Another summer another Ann Arbor Art Fair!" - all things considered. But still, need they request of me so forcefully to "Get out of the way?" Don't they see I'm not just another student, but that I'm covering a story? The tourists have been waiting for art fair - that woebegone spectacle boasting necklaces, vases, wall hangings, greasy food - and ascend in packs to Ann Arbor to wake the comatose summer city from much-needed slumber. Ann Arbor reacts like a 5-year-old startled out of a nap. She howls: sweaty, irritable. Cranky. And all the presumptuous tourists say flippantly, "Get out of the way." Get out of the way! State Street mirrors South University and I lose myself in the crowds. All around me people sweat and drip and move slowly through the trash-lined streets. The Art! They cannot even see the art anymore through the rows of people. All they see are backs - wet with perspiration, calves - grimy with street soot, bald spots - burned from the sun. I get dizzy and I am falling and falling and falling. "Fire," I remark before I hit the ground, spinning. Nike and deck shoes move carelessly around my fallen body. But I do not move. I may be a journalist, but I will not cover this story. They could not pay me enough to cover art fair. The University's distinguished faculty has always been praised for its scholarly research and teaching capa- bilities. Although most noted for such excellence, some members of the University faculty do more than de- liver lectures and write books. How many people are aware that the Uni- versity has several Pulitzer prize-win- ning composers on its faculty? I mean composers in the truest sense of the word -our own modern day Mozarts and Beethovens on this very campus! One such Pulitzer prize-winning composer is Prof. Leslie Bassett who retired from the University School of Music faculty in 1991. Born in 1923 on a ranch in California, Bassett started off playing the trombone. Fol- lowing World ncert h War II, he be- has a proble gan training as a composer. image. We I Bassett at-v tended Fresno very inform State College, the orchestr and then went on to attend the image is a s University --Prof where he stud-P ied with com- Pulitzer-prize wi posers Ross Lee Finney and Roberto Gerhard. Bassett was also a Fulbright Scholar and studied in France with the re- nowned Nadia Boulanger. Bassett received the Pulitzer Prize in 1965 for his orchestral work titled "Variations for Orchestra." In every art form there are certain trends or fashions that each artist ex- periments with in order to remain on the cutting edge. Bassett cited several current fashions in the world of musical composition including minimalism, neoclassicism and the most recent trend, an integration of pop music into the concert hall. Bassett praised his colleague, Uni- versity Prof. William Bolcom - also a Pulitzer prize winner- for his work in developing these new musical trends. "That's what Mr. Bolcom does. He enjoyed pop music all his life and does it very well," Bassett said. "For me, I don't like the idea because the danger is that the quote can often become more attractive than the rest of the music. Nevertheless, if they can emerge and then disappear before you really know it's there, the effect m a tI ra et nn can be quite wonderful." As the century nears its close, many musicians fear that concert hall music will continue to suffer from low ticket sales, aging audiences and financial cutbacks. Bassett believes more needs to be done to revive inter- est in classical music. "We live in an age of marketing. When we pick up the newspaper, we see page after page of advertisements for movies and pop music, but it is only toward the back that we see anything about our kind of music," he said. "Concert hall music has a problem with image. We live in a very infor- mal age and the orchestra concert image is a stuffy one. It is furthered by the aspirations of the orchestras to further that kind lII music of thing," he mn with said. Bassett also ve in a expressed frus- 4 age and tration at how rarely new com- i concert positions are ,, performed by Uffy one American or- Leslie Bassett chestras. "The orches- ing cormposer tras mainly play the same music that can often be heard on the radio and on recordings. If you've heard these pieces time and time again, it can get boring - there are no surprises. The orchestras are just plowing the same field as opposed to pop music in which there is always something new. That's impressive marketing and they have a lot to teach us." Bassett added, "It's a fallacy that new compositions drive audiences away. More importantly, how do we educate our audiences that new music is being created? In all other art forms, the newest thing is greatly anticipated. Why not new music?" Bassett offered some advice to the incoming class of 1998. He said, "Look at what the School of Music is doing when you plan your weekend activities. They perform 350 free con- certs a year, with performances by the band, orchestras choir, and faculty and student recitals. There are more concerts here in Ann Arbor than on any other campus that I can think of. Besides, it's often a chance to see and hear music performed by your own classmates." The Michigan Theater withstands the test of time A landmark built in the 1920s, the Michigan Theater houses not only a towering movie screen, but a stage for orchestral performances By RICH SINGER Sitting in the front row of the bal- cony you can see it all: the peeling plaster, the carpeting that is in need of a shampoo, the unsatiating combina- tion of red, gold and blue in the deco- rating, the seats that appear old and hard and not very forgiving for the back. Like all great relics from the past, the Michigan Theater, located off State Street, Ann Arbor's equiva- lent of Fifth Avenue or the Champs d'Elysses (well, sort of), is a dino- saur. Built in 1928, the theater is a surviving remnant from the golden age of film. Designed in the Ro- manesque and Moorish styles, it cost $600,000 to construct. Today, because of its rarity, a theater of this sort is priceless. This theater has seen it all and like an old man with too much time on his hands, it only wants to be useful and hopefully impart some of its wisdom with the younger generation. The- aters like this simply are not built anymore. Theater owners, nowadays, aren't interested in how many seats they can fit into a theater but how many theaters they can get into a building. The result is the unfortunate number of googolplexes dotting the landscape, whose decor is reminis- cent of early KGB debriefing centers. Originally designed for silent pic- tures, the 1,800 seat Michigan The- ater is replete with a stage, orchestra pit and a 13-rank Barton pipe organ. Silent pictures do not enjoy the popu- larity in the 1990s that they did in 1928 but the stage and orchestra pit are what enable the Michigan Theater to bring to Ann Arbor live concerts, symphonies and stage productions as well as avant-garde movie fare and old revivals. The Michigan Theater has seen it all - the Police and R.E.M. on their way up and Mel Torme on his way THEATER Continued from page 2D 50-minute drive), is a great venue; see "Once on this Island," "Jeffrey" and "Sweeney Todd" there this season. National tours can be a little pricey, but often top out at around $45 - still 20 bucks cheaper than the best ticket on Broadway. A few out-of-town productions stop in Ann Arbor. For example, the Michi- gan Theater (a film house) hosts the occasional stage production, but is a favorite for solo acts. Spalding Gray's "Gray's Anatomy," Lynn Redgrave's "Shakespeare for my Father" and MandyPatinkin's"DressCasual" tours have played the Michigan. If you want to be on the other side of the footlights, there are ample opportunities in Ann Arbor to act, sing, dance or all of the above. The Department of Theatre and Drama is the only University venue which opens its auditions to all students- Musical Theatre Program and Op era Theatre shows are restricted to program majors. MUSKET is the only musical the- ater opportunity to non-majors on campus. Basement Arts is a great chance for non-theater majors to show off. Performance Network often has open auditions; Ann Arbor Civic The= atre welcomes student performers. All aforementioned out-of-town produc- tions are professional. Theater in Ann Arbor is at its peak in November-December and Februk ary-April. At some times you could: literally spend Thursday night, Fri day night, Saturday night and Sun- day afternoon at performances. You don't have to be that much of a fanatic to enjoy Ann Arbor theater, but if you are that much of a fanatic,: you'll be right at home here. CHRIS WOLFDaily The Michigan Theater, one of the last true theater palaces, houses a "big" movie screen. nal splendor. Run as a not-for-profit operation the objective is simply to keep the doors open. But the theater is fighting an up- hill battle. It's a small fish in a large pond. Audiences continue to flock to the malls in droves to see the latest installment of the "Police Academy" series, paying no attention to what matters: atmosphere. Russ Collins, executive director, says people walk in and see the large lobby, the stair- case that leads to the mezzanine, and the numerous doors that lead to the seats and they ask which theater their movie is in. Today's audience was weaned on the multiplex and they marvel at the luxuriance of a real movie palace. This is the way it was done in the VCRs and cable. Hyperbolic as that statement may seem, it is not far off. Film makers take great pride in how they set up their shots, aesthetics of a movie being just as important as the story line or the soundtrack, only to find their shots cropped off at either end to adjust to the format of televi- sion. That is what the Michigan The- ater, fighting a lonely battle, is trying to save us from. Offering more diverse fare than your typical movie forum, the Michi- gan Theater is striving to give stu- dents and residents of Ann Arbor an opportunity to broaden their selec- tion. Not being a giant metropolis like New York or Chicago, it is important that Ann Arbor still has the same amenities. didn't know about it sooner." The Michigan Theater is an anach- ronism, a holdout from the past. It survives by catering to a niche in the community. A niche that favors solid, often times offbeat, often times main- stream entertainment, but always en- tertainment offered with a touch of class. M\CIGAN Take a Reality Break. Visit Sanctuary, a medieval town where brave knights and