The Michigan Daily - Friday, May 9, 1986- Page 9 Festival continues classic tradition By Rebecca Chung and Sean Oslin The Ann Arbor May Festival opened last Wednesday night, April 30th, at Hill Auditorium and ran through Saturday, May 3rd. The Pittsburgh Symphony was the orchestra-in-residence, joined by Ann Arbor's own Festival Chorus on the opening night, and other in- ternationally recognized guest ar- tists each evening. Wednesday's opening concert was a provocative performance of Giuseppe Verdi's Requiem Mass. Featuring in this presentation was the Pittsburgh Symphony Or- chestra, the Festival Chorus, and soloists Carmen Lavani, Seth Mc- Coy, John Cheek, and Janice Taylor. Czech-born Zdenek Macal was conductor. The Requiem, a mass for the dead, is Verdi's most popular non- operatic work and has a long history with the May Festival. This was the twelfth presentation of the piece, which was first per- formed in Ann Arbor at the first May Festival in 1894. The performance itself was good. The Pittsburgh Symphony showed themselves to be an ex- cellent ensemble, handling the dif- ficult music with seeming ease and grace. Especially notable was the string section in the Dies Irae - the quick descending passages were a Dantesque trip to Hell. The Festival Chorus also glittered, blending well and displaying a rich sensuous sound. But one of the best moments in the piece was the choral entrance in the first section. It was dark and quiet, yet very. intense. Maestro Macal did a reasonable job of pulling the or- chestra, chorus, and soloists together. His direction was dramatic and interesting to watch. But he really did not appear to communicate with the players. The soloists were the weakest part of the performance. The soprano, Carmen Lavani, had oc- casional pitch problems, an un- controlled verbrato, and she lacked any rapport with the audience.ThetenorSeth McCoy had intonation problems. He also swallowed his voice at times, rendering himself inaudible. The bass, John Cheek, was better. He sang to the audience with a beautiful, strong voice. But he could not match the mezzo- soprano Janice Taylor.Her solo in the Liber Scriptus was elegant and expressive. She had wonderful control of her voice and beautiful tone and expression. She also left one with the feeling that she was singing the Requiem for someone. Thursday night's performance, Chris Eschenbach conducting Pit- tsburgh, was a mixed success. On the one hand, there was Eschen- bach the pianist, obviously talen- ted, and full of music. During the first part of the program, which consisted of Mozart's Piano Con- certo in C minor (K. 491), he played solos full of expression that displayed a remarkable, if not astounding, degree of control. Particularly beautiful was the candenza at the end of the first movement and the slow, lyrical opening of the second. Then there was Eschenbach the conductor who, somehow, could not get the orchestra to create the sounds he must have been imagining. The orchestra respon- ded sluggishly to the cues they were given from the piano during the Mozart piece, As a matter of fact, the entire concerto seemed to drag, either from lack of tempo or, more likely, lack of life. The Sym- phony No. 2 by Johannes Brahms went somewhat better; the direct rapport between conductor and orchestra seemed to help. Eschenbach's musicality sparked occasionally, such as during the strong, lyrical cello opening in the second movement. But even so, the result was less than outstan- ding. It was not entirely Eschenbach's fault. Unfortunately, the or- chestra's upper winds and horns were habitually out of tune. There was also the distraction of people wandering into the auditorium after the performance had started. But these things do not explain the inability of a talen- ted musician to communicate his ideas to other talented musicians. But the obvious breakdown unfor- tunately marred what could have been a tremendous performance. On Friday, the Symphony was accompanied by international star Jean-Pierre Rampal. For this per- formance Rampal served a dual role, a conductor and flutist, and did a commendable job as both soloist and conductor ina program of Rossini, Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven. The first piece of the program was an overture by Rossini, The Silken Ladder. It was a delightful piece, very up-beat, and it set the mood for the remainder of the concert. In the overture the wood- wind section figured prominently, the Symphony's winds giving a rich, warm, and pleasing sound to the music. Rampal's conducting was elegant and he kept control of the orchestra. The second piece of the program was the Concerto in C major for Flute and Orchestra by Bach. This was the first selection that Ram- pal performed as soloist. His flute playing was basically good, but not phenomenal. Occasionally he sounded raspy and at times his technique was sloppy. This was especially noticeable in quick, running passages where the notes were not crisp but blurry. The performance of the Bach piece was, as a whole, very reserved and too calculated. It was the evening's biggest disappointment. The third piece performed was the Concerto No. 1 for Flute and Orchestra by Mozart. Rampal's performance of the Mozart con- certo was a definite improvement over the Bach. The orchestra was more relaxed and Rampal's playing was as golden as his flute. Especially impressive was the cadenza in the third movement, where he amazed the audience with its flutter-tongued passages. The final piece was Beethoven's Symphony No. 2. The orchestra played the symphony with ex- citement and confidence, but not at the peak of their potential. The conductor was to blame for this. Rampal, a flutist first and director second, did not bring out the con- trasting parts of the music. He relied on melody (what he is used to playing) to carry the symphony along. But since it is the interac- tion of each line of music which gives the piece interest, the ab- sence of the counterpoint caused the music to lose much of its rich texture and emotion. The result was a less than complete perfor- mance. The finale of the May Festival, with Chris Eschenbach again ap- pearing as conductor of the Pit- tsburgh Symphony, and featuring Isaac Stern as violin soloist for the Brahms concerto in D major (op. 77), was a solid. fulfilling, and undeniably fitting conclusion to the four-day series. The performance opened with Hector Berlioz's Overture to Benvenuto Ceilini. A tem- pestuous work that depicts the fiery, colorful character for whom it is named, it was boldly, ex- pressively performed by the or- chestra. Then Isaac Stern played the violin. That should say it all, but for those who did not even get the standing-room-only tickets Saturday night, suffice it to say that his performance of the Brah- ms was unbelievably good. The man has more control of his left pinky than most people can exer- cise over their entire bodies, and he used this technical mastery to express his exquisite musical taste. The perfect execution of the cadenza trill in the first movement alone was worth the price of :a ticket, not to mention the exquisite color changes from dark and for- ceful to intense yet lyrical (found in the first and third movements). The third movement showed Stern at his best, the theme-and- variations pattern giving him the perfect opportunity to show the depth and breadth of his ability. If one ignored the orchestra's pitch problems, then absolute satisfac- tion was guaranteed. The closing piece of the concert, Ravel's Bolero, managed to over- come the pitch problems of the in- dividual soloists, finding life and reaching a most satisfying con- clusion. The gradual crescendo was excellent, happening so im- perceptibly that one did not notice the increased volume until the full orchestra was playing. The en- ding, raucous by intent, brought instantaneous applause as the audience commended conductor and orchestra for its major part in this Ann Arbor tradition. Records Let's Active- Big Plans for Everybody (I.R.S.) Like its forerunners afoot and Cypress, the songs on Let's Ac- tive's Big Plans for Everyone all pretty much resolve themselves into nice little packages of pop/rock glory. Unlike the predecessors, though, Big Plans capitalizes more completely on Mitch Easter's weird talent for encyclopedic collaging of sounds in his songs. Where afoot was minimal pretty-pop, and Cypress' electicism was strongly defined and directed, Big Plans pretty much tosses in everything but the kitchen sink - from metal to bu- bblegum goo, neglecting few stops in between. The fact that Easter can orchestrate it all indicates Big Plans to be a landmark Let's Ac- tive record. Big Plans' lead track, "In Little Ways," disappoints a little in its Srather overt attempt to dispel the myth that Let's Active is a "jangle" band. It's somewhat piano-heavy, and the piano is not so transfixing as to merit its prominence. It's nice, but a little labored. Things snap too quickly, though, as it precedes three of the best Let's Active songs yet committed to disc. First is the mega-hooky Easter guitar blitz, "Talking to Myself." Following it is "Writing the Book of Last Pages," which sounds a lot like the Move and beats all the nouveau-'60s goons at their own game with its brazenly beautiful psychedelia. "Last Chance Town" proves Mitch can indeed ROCK (with an umlaut over the "O" and with tongue firmly in cheek). I'd expect Aerosmith to cover itany day now that they're back together. "Won't Go Wrong" and "Badger" pick up the vaguely folky threads of Cypress and ease the side down. Side two begins with the excruciatingly sweet "Fell." Easter's talent is definitely musically and lyrically with this kind of very sweet- tempered, unaffected pop. Side See RECORDS, Page 10 "There's no such thing as a free lunch. Until now. Get your free lunch at the U-Club. Have 9 lunches with us, and we'll pickup the tab for the 10th. Pick up your coupon today at the University Club, located in the Michigan Union. Exnirae Aim a3 IQR98 Be A Part of It! nnArbor -\'-sti~al University of Michigan Gilbert & Sullivan Society invites you to attend a MASS MEETING For our summer shows Gilbert & Sullivan's COX&BOX and TRIAL BY JURY Singers, Dancers, Instrumentalists and any person interested in all aspects of production are needed. Everyone is welcome. SUNDAY, MAY 11th 8:00 p.m. Pendleton Room - Michigan Union Call 761-7855 for information