Page 8-Thursday, May 6, 1982-The Michigan Daily Even classical music can be fun I By Deborah Cleary and Maureen Fleming P DQ BACH has to be seen to be heard. At least that's what the audience realized- as they watched Peter Schickele and the Ann Arbor Chamber Orchestra perform selected works of PDQ Bach on April 22 at the Michigan Theatre. The composer, known for his simple- minded melodies and blatant plagiaries of standard works, is actually the in- vention of Schickele, who claims the _ composer is the youngest son of Johann Sebastian Bach. According to Schickele the youngest Bach suffered from "faded genes," and that's 'why his music is so bad. As if Schickele should talk. He began the evening by climbing down the Michigan Theatre balcony to get to the podium - he couldn't find the right door and thought the balcony was the stage. Theatrics were an integral part of the performance. The orchestra played en- thusiastically and responded with good humor to Schickele's spontaneous im- provisations that were sometimes, it seemed, as much a surprise to the or- chestra as to the audience. The Civilian Barber, based very loosely on Rossini's Barber of Seville, was a cacaphony of false starts, slides, and other un-Rossiniesque effects such as a movement for solo mouthpieces and a troppo forte, beautifully inap- propriate cymbal crash finale. The Wide World of Notes was next. Schickele turned Beethoven's Fifth Symphony into a contest between the composer and the orchestra. Tom Hemingway, sports announcer for WUOM, helped with the commentary. The orchestra won after conductor Carl Daehler lost his place in the music. After intermission came Chaconne a son Gout. Schickele accused PDQ of manic plagerism in this work. "PDQ Bach was the only composer who worked on tracing paper. Some of this rubbed off on me, and I just wanted to mention it in case you get a sense of deja voodoo," Schickele said. Deja voodoo it was, too. Music ranged from Schubert and Brahms to "Beatiful Dreamer" and "Happy Bir- thday," with lots more in between. Musical performance was best in the piece dedicated to Count Pointercount, where the classic 18th century style of flutes, oboes, and bassoons was in- terrupted by raucous ragtime melodies See PDQ, Page 11 Ormandy returns to May Fest (Continued from Page 7) the course of the work, which provided for an exciting performance by both Davidovich and the orchestra. The festival ended with Rach- maninoff's Symphony No. 2 in E minor, Op. 27, a work full of Russian black humor and rhythmic activity. The first movement was long and lush, so long that one began to lose all semblance of its form. The scherzo, which preceded the slow movement, was full of vitality; but ended in a chilling brass chorale based on Rachmaninoff's creative ob- session, the Dies irae, the ancient chant for the dead. The famous Adagio was voluptuous. Its celebrated theme was sung in solo by almost all the winds and strings at one point and was given an inspired performance; but its very sensual lushness reminded one of '40s B-movie love themes. The final Allegro vivace evokes the triumphant Russian spirit overcoming all odds, but not without reproducing some of the earlier musical opulence. Perhaps understa- ting all this naked emotion would have been more effective in its inter- pretation. The crowd still probably knew the or- chestra's rendition of The Victors bet- ter than anything else they played, but Ann Arbor is lucky to have such a recurring phenomenon as the May Festival and the University Musical Society to consistently present a high calibre of artists. The programming could have been less Russian this year, and it would have been interesting to see new musical director Riccardo Muti conduct in an otherwise successful festivaLThe beauty of the May Festival is that there is always next year to at- tempt to do htter. LSAT aMCAT REVIEWPROGRAMS June i1 NEW LSAT: Begin to im- prove your writing skills now for the new essay section . June 23 GMAT: Register now for June seminars. Receive our Moth Re- fresher text by return moil. CALL NOW: 800 243-4767 a 40 Not sure which HP is right for you?. We stock the complete line of Hewlett-Packard calculators. And we understand what we sell, so we can assist you in selecting just what you need. We're competitive. In fact, we'll match any deal or refund your money. - S ELECTRONICS Showroom 1110 S. University, 662 -3201 Main Store 549 E. University, 662-3201 Mon-Fri. 8:30-5:30, Sat. 9:30-5:00 0