ftb ialtcltiju DoI Jammin' Gospel Style The University Gospel Chorale is ready to rock Rackham Auditorium tomorrow with its second annual concert. If this concert is even half as good as last year's extravaganza or the choir's opening performance for Sounds of Blackness during 1995's MLK Day celebratioris, you'd be a fool not to attend. The show is at 5 p.m. Admission is free. Friday February 16, 1996 azz ace perfomis By James P. Miller Daily Arts Writer There are certain achievements that sond immediately impressive to the ears, among them: Summa Cum Laude gradu- ation from Harvard, admission to Yale Law School and winning both the Down- beat and Rolling Stone awards for Best New Jazz Artist. A person with any one of these accomplishments is enough to make the average college grunt sick; a person with all makes you feel downright suicidal. Meet Joshua Redman. Just so you don't feel so bad, he's not pursuing both careers at the same time. He was admitted to law school in 1992 but, deferred enrollment for a year to pursue music. One year has stretched into four. "Seven years of Ivy League will fry your brain," Redman explained with arelievedlaugh. But elbow patches and tweed weren't the only things that drove him to his second calling. "It was the sum of great opportuni- ties to make music and play with great musicians, not really any one thing," the saxophonist said. Among these was his first place vic- tory in the Thelonious Monk Saxophone Competition. Redman regards it as agreat career opportunity, but a strange musical JOSHUA REDMAN Where: Pease Auditorium, EMU When: Tonight at 8 o'clock. Tickets: $15-$19 in advance. Cal 487-1221 for more information. experience. "Art is subjective. Music, especiallyjazz, is even more subjective," he said. "How can you say one person's soul is worth more than another?" Apparently such heavyweight judges as Branford Marsalis, Benny Carter and Jackie McLean thought Redman's soul was worth more than the rest. If nothing else, it was the start of a meteonc career. 'Vhen asked about his influences, Redman lists the usual: Rollins, Trane, Lester Young, Miles Davis. But his tastes also run to the more eclectic, like Stevie Spituals hight DSO's bill 'Classical Roots' program features African music By Craig Stuntz For the Daily For the past 20 years, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra has performed a series of annual "Classical Roots" con- certs that feature works by African American composers and musicians. This year's installment features the U.S. premieres of works by Leslie B. Dunner, the DSO's Resident Conduc- tor, and Carlo Franci, as well as tradi- tional spirituals. Also included, strangely enough, is a composer who is Joshua Redman loves his sax. Wonder, Prince, Zep and Aretha Franklin. Such a grab bag of styles also accounts for his attitudes toward newer permuta- tions of jazz, like jazz/hip-hop fusion acts. "It's beneficial for music. Whenever youhearmusicians expressingthemselves honestly it's good for the whole scene. But it's a mistake to think that this type of music is 'saving' jazz," he said. Redman's father, freej azz Wunderkind Dewey Redman enters his son's playing, but not to the extent one might assume. "My father doesn't influence me as my father. His influence has been from afar," the young saxophonist said. Redman has released four albums: "Joshua Redman," "Wish," "Mood- swing" and the most recent, a double-disc recorded at New York City's legendary Village Vanguard. The Vanguard session displays his most inspired and hard-swing- ing work to date. The idea to play the club was his, but it wasn't done under the assumption that he would automatically have a good night there. "Playing the Vanguard doesn't in- sure a good show," Redman said. "You can have a great night anywhere. It's not like you can hear Trane whispering in your ear as you play. But there is a great sense of historical weight." You can tell a lot about a musician by who he listens to. Among his contempo- raries, Redman lists Roy Hargrove(trum- pet), Christian McBride (bass), Jesse Davis (sax) and Cyrus Chestnut (piano). Most of these names have appeared with Redman's on marquees across the coun- try and in a myriad of liner notes. Redman visited the Ann Arbor area on two other occasions, once with gui- tarist Pat Metheny and once with the Lincoln CenterJazz Orchestra. He rates both visits as positive experiences, say- ing, "Ann Arbor is a great town for jazz." With artists of Redman's caliber coming to town, that isn't a difficult reputation to live up to. Tickets: $15-$38. Student rush tickets still available at showtime are 50 percent off. as white as they come: Beethoven. The inspiration for Dunner's "Mem- oirs of a Shattering Glass Building" should strike a familiar chord with any University student who ever walked by the Undergraduate Library before its recent renovation. Dunner says: "Dur- ing my student days, a very ugly stu- dent union building comprised essen- tially of glass and mud-colored brick was erected adjacent to the academic quadrangle. It obstructed all direct paths to and from classes. In honor of its dedication ceremony, I dreamt up a short ditty representing my dreams (and every other student's as well) of the building's total demolition, complete with wrecking ball. Needless to say, it was not performed on that 'auspicious occasion.' "As my career began to develop, that short work did mature and represent the 'glass ceiling' felt by many as an ob- struction of the realization of their dreams and goals ... I hope that my 'Memoirs' will serve as an aural re- minder that all barriers can be shat- tered when we find within ourselves a true belief in our strength and poten- tial." The inclusion of Beethoven in a con- cert dedicated to African American music is no doubt due to the presence of Awadagin Pratt, a talented pianist who has also studied violin and con- ducting. He was the first student in the history of the Peabody Conservatory of Music's history to receive diplomas in three performance areas. He also won the 1992 Naumburg International Piano Competition. Pratt has just released a collection of Beethoven piano sonatas on EMI Clas- sics, which helps to explain why his performances are so well regarded. This recording easily compares to an earlier Telarc release featuring pianist John O'Connor, both of which include So- natas No. 30 and 31. Although they are both excellent performers, Pratt's renditions of these works tend to have a much more dy- namic character, both in timing and intonation. While O'Connor keeps a fairly consistent metronome through- out each section, Pratt, when appropri- ate, gently bends the pulse for emo- tional effect. He also gives some pas- sages which O'Connor plays in exact time an almost syncopated feel, andhis use of volume was more varied. Occasionally, Pratt's timing shifts and unexpectedfotte notes are a little jarring, and in these instances I appre- ciate O'Connor's restraint. But for the most part, Pratt's renditions are more emotionally compelling. It will be in- teresting to see him perform with an orchestra. Having premiered in 1994 at the Johannesburg City Hall in South Af- rica, Carlo Franci's "African Orato- rio" is a work for solo soprano, speaker, mixed choirs, electronic tape and a percussion-laden orchestra that in- cludes both Western and African instru- ments. Synthesizing the music of Africa with American Jazz, the work alternates a cappella choruses, sung in Zulu, with instrumental dance movements. This performance will feature American mezzo-soprano Tichina Vaughn, a North Carolina native who has performed nu, merous times in the United States, Eu- rope and South America. The program will also mark the an- nual collaboration between the Brazeal Dennard Chorale, a Detroit ensemble; Any program including works by musicians other than dead Europeans is refreshing. dedicated to the performance of choral works by African American composers, and the DSO. This weekend's perfor- mance includes two traditional spiri tu als, "Lord I Want to be a Christian" an* "Fare Ye Well," arranged by Brazeal Dennard, Artistic Director of the Cho- rale and an adjunct professor of music at Wayne State University. Also on the program is "Lift Every Voice and Sing," written at the turn-of- the-century by James and John Johnson. It was arranged 50.years later by Hale Smith for a national meeting of the NAACP in Minneapolis and becama intensely popular; the songwriters sooP' found success. The DSO's commitment tQ perform- ing compositions by contemporary com- posers is refreshing, and this is their second concert this season to promi-; nently feature works by African Ameri- can artists. And, of course, any program including works by musicians other than just dead Europeans is refreshing. ; I, Don't cry for her, I. Argentina How do we love Patti? Let us count the ways. We loved her in the title roles of "Evital and "The Baker's Wife," as the original Fantine In "Les Mis6rables," as the sensuous sermonizer Reno Sweeney in "Anything Goes." And as for "Life Goes On," well, at least it was Patti on prime time. Most recently, we stood by her as Andrew Lioyd Webber Jilted her performance as the original Norma in "Sunset Boulevard." But Patti LuPone is still the greatest star of all. After a successful Broadway run, La LuPone is bringing her brilliance here this Saturday, when she sings with the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra at Hill Auditorium in a benefit for the Summer Festival. Tickets are at the UMS Box Office In Burton Tower (764-2538), and range from $15.$50 - a small price to pay to bask in the aura of such a supreme diva. - Melissa Rose Bernardo . i 11 The University of Michigan School of Music Tuesday, February 20 University Choir - Jerry Blackstone, conductor " Bernstein: Chichester Psalms * Stanford: Motetsj * Works by Purcell, Holst and Handel Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Feburary 21 University Symphony and Philharmonia Orchestras Kenneth Kiesler and Pier Calabria, conductors Featuring the 1995-96 Concerto Competition Winners * Martin: Ballade for Flute, Piano and Strings * Korngold: "Tanzlied des Pierot"t from Die Tote Stadt * Mozart: Concerto in A Major for Clarinet, K. 622, Allegro *,Bishop: "Hank" Barber: Concerto for Piano, Op. 38, Allegro appassionato * Bartok: Concerto for Viola, Adagio religioso and Allegro vivace * Bolcom: Concerto in D Major for Violin, Tempo giusto, Allegro elegiaco Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. Thursday-Sunday, February 22-25 Theatre and Drama The Male Animal by James Thurber and Elliott Nugent Hal Cooper, director Mendelssohn Theatre, Thu.-Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m. Tickets: $16, $12, $6 (students) 764-0450 a Friday, February 23 Chamber Choir Theodore Morrison, conductor Stephen Thomas, pianist " Brahms: Vocal Quartets Morrison: Byron and Shelley - Argento: Peter Quince at the Clavier Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Sunday, February 25 rt,. .:. L.,.. li .,h r l av.. . 11 STA TETHEA TR 94 h INF 994 424 Git Crtfi ate Nw nD al 4 Academy Award Nominations Best Picture * Director Actor "Screenplay 11 His Name is Alive - and he's playing tomorrow The entrancing sounds of His Name is Alive aren't often heard live; the Uvonla-based band prefers recording to touring. Their 1990 debut, "Uvonia," as well as more recent releases, has made it clear that Warren Defever's haunting songwriting and Karin Oliver's spectral voice are a special combination. The beauty of the group's music gives their dark side a poetic quality. Uve, His Name is Alive deconstructs, with Defever's spiralling guitar lines and Oliver's beautiful voice r@Igning supreme. The group plays tomorrow night at the Green Room in Ypsilanti. There are no advance tickets for this show. Doors open at 10:30p.m.; call 482-8830 for more information. - Heather Phares 1:30 Saturday & Sunday Only : 11:30 Fri & Sat Only 4:30 7:00 9:30 11:30 A hilarious rivalry both on and off the football field. T ae TrMale EAnimal by James Thurber and Elliott Nugent Directed by Hal Cooper Mendelssohn Theatre February 22-24 at 8 PM February 25 at 2 PM - m L9, m