SUNIDAY. NOVEMBER 11 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAIL'Y MAGAZINE PACE-PAGE 3 ..)Y OVME , 93MGArEPGEPG1 sloomm" Resident String Quartet Grows With 'Decentralization' of Music Arts Theater Displays Four Original Murals * * * * (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the first in a series of articles by members of the University's Stanley Quartet. Today's author, Prof. Gil- bert Ross of the music school, is the Quartet's first violinist.) By GILBERT ROSS Michigan is in the forefront of states, widely scattered in all se- tions of the country, currently par- ticipating in an extra-ordinary cultural movement which offers promise of a richer aesthetic ex- perience for those persons, parti- cularly in smaller communities, who do not happen to live in or near the great urban centers of the eastern and western seaboards. This is the decentralization of the musical-talent industry, and by 'industry' in this instance I mean the merchandizing of mu- sical talent rather than theman- ufacture of instruments or the publishing of music. Not long ago, perhaps as recent- ly as a third of a century, chamber music Was parcelled out to the smaller communities of the great industrial and agricultural states of the Midwest in 'package' ship- ments from New York. Today we are witnessing the disintegration of the old central- ized supply system. Smaller com- munities all over the country are beginning to assert their indepen- dence of the big supply houses in matters of talent merchandise. Regional supply sources are rap- idly developing and these regional centers are serving large rural and industrial areas hitherto almost without access to top quality mu- sical performnance - - - FEW TEARS will be shed for the New York concert manager who has imperiously dictated from a skyscraper office the musical di- et of hundreds of independent and helpless small communities. De- terioration of urban-center con- trol has resulted in a decentraliza- tion, a diffusion of the talent.,in- dustry, and this has led to a most rewarding surge of cultural acti- vity-in the so-called 'hinterlands.' Educational institutions, not- ably universities - and colleges, have played a major role in this movement, and not alone in the area of music. Theater, opera, painting and dance are only a few of the arts which have been brought directly to the people of the country, and in substan- tial volume, as a result of the process of decentralization and through regional initiative and leadership. The University of Michigan, with its diverse and extraordinary stim- ulating niusical activities, is not unique. Other great universities of the Midwest, as elsewhere throughout the country, are pro- viding a corresponding artistic leadership in their respective areas. A quarter of a century ago the string quartet-in-residence on the university campus was unknown. Today the. practice of maintaining a resident chamber music ensem- ble of professional calibre is com- mon among larger institutions. Ev- en smaller universities and col- leges, frequently situated in -iso- lated areas where regional talent source is critically important, are joining in this movement. WHAT PRECISELY do these resident quartets do? What is their purpose and fuction? It may be observed that the pattern of ac- tivity and service is much the same 4 in each locale, varying mainly when the line is crossed from the privately endowed institution to the state-supported university. Service to the institution's stu- dents and to the institution itself in a larger sense is of primary importance. Service to the whole community and to the adjacent areas might also be considered a proper function of the resident quartet. In the case of state univer- sities, service on a much wider scale is attempted, since the in- stitution's obligations are to the state as a whole rather than to restricted areas. Above all it is the purpose of the resident quar- tet to reach young people, since they will constitute the listening public of tommorrow. Let us examine for a moment the situation on our own campus. The Stanley quartet was established by the University's Board of Regents in June, 1949. Since its inception the Quartet has played approxi- mately thirty public conterts in Raclkham Lecture Hall (to an au- dience of probably twenty-four thousand) and about fifty concerts. elsewhere in the State of Michi- gan. The quartet's repertory numbers some fifty multiple-movement works, 70 per cent drawn from classical repertory, and 30 per cent from contemporary literature. It has given nine world premieres and has specifically commissioned some half-dozen works. IN THE RANGE and diversity of activities the season 1952-53 might be considered'typical. In this per- iod the Stanley Quartet presented seven on-campus concerts, all op- en to the public without charge. The quartet played eighteen con- certs in fourteen other Michigan communities. Finally, the Quartet conducted a number of string clinics 'in Michigan schools, appeared at several professional educational conferences, and recorded con- temporary music in New York. Someone once remarked that a string quartet concert is just an excuse for a party afterward. Another wag has said, that the best part of an evening of ama- teur chamber music making is the beer and cheese at the end. Neith- er is correct. The Stanley Quartet has found everywhere, even in small com- munities, a profound desire to-hear good music, to hear better music, yes even to hear great music. As soon as people realize that cham- ber music is simply music for the chamber, as against music for the theater, for instance, or music for the church, and that a Beet- hoven quartet is no more forbid- ding than a Beethoven symphony (the one being simply a sonata for four stringed .instruments and the other a sonata for orchestra), they will find the same characteristics (and delights) of melody, har- mony, color and expressiveness in this music as in the symphony, the concerto, or any other familiar form. By DEBRA DURCHSLAG Arts Theater is expanding the meaning of its name to include not only the action on its stage, but also the action on its walls. With the completion of the L. H. Scott mural in the children's classroom at the Theater, 2091/2 E. Washington will be able to claim four individual murals by four Ann Arbor artists. * . * * LAST YEAR'S Arts Theater au- diences could drink coffee while viewing John Goodyear's mural which decorated one wall of the coffee room. Now three additional murals can be seen. Goodyear's mural, which has been re-painted in part for the new season, is a humorous por- trayal of be-decked and be-jew- eled theater-goers under a be- decked and be-jewelled chan- delier. Around the corner from the cof- fee room, in the children's class- room, ballet dancers frolic over olie wall in L. H. Scott's mural, done in grey-blue, black, white and red. BEFORE CLIMBING the stairs to the theater, audiences can see a recent work of. Stu Ross in the office. This is the only non-repre- sentational mural of the four, us- ing abstract forms with heavy black line and large areas of white. Upstairs, Jamie Ross' mural shows a window of the theater at one end of the painting, pro- gresses through the town of Ann Arbor and ends with another theater, resembling the Globe of Shakespeare's day. Audiences at Arts Theater now not only have an opportunity to see theater-in-the round, but also the American mural, Ann Arbor, circa 1953. -Daily-Chuck Kelsey JAMIE ROSS AND HIS THEATER MURAL Paintings Shown in Theater -Daily-Chuck Kelsey L. H. SCOTT EXHIBITS HIS MURAL PAINTING TECHNIQUE Evening Music on WUOM sGilbert and ulia Group To Give Opera A comic opera, "Patience," sat- Archibald is by far the more irizing the idyllic poet will open desirable and after m u c h this year's Gilbert and Sullivan thought on her part, Patience fi- A good water-colorist being a relative rarity in these parts, the show of paintings by William Lew- is has fully realized the full po- tentialities, of water color; it is the medium with a personality of its own, and one that can seldom be forced into an expression alien to its personality. In fact Lewis is at his best when he allows his wonderfully free technique to dic- tate the terms of the painting, within the confines of his own ar- tistic imagination and intuition, rather than when applying the technique to more representation- al subject matter. His locomotives, while excellent locomotives, have in comparison nothing of the mood of industrial smoke and cinders that is in the abstract "Great City." Paintings like "Rain For- est" and "Side Shows" although abstract are so full of their res- pective essences that one could not help guessing their titles, or come very close, even if they weren't printed below. Lewis is essentially a colorist who needs the freedom of abstract form to work his magic, and work it he does. -Stuart Ross Evening music as selected by WUOM-FM for Monday through Friday listening will lead off with a Bach-Liszt Prelude at 7 p.m. Monday. Beethoven's "Symphony No. 5 in C minor" and Piano Sonata, Op- us 53 will follow at 8:30 p.m. on .the Music of the Masters show. ', * * UNTO ERKKILA'S violin selec- tions will be played Tuesday. Wednesday's listening will be highlighted by a complete per- formance of "Fidelio" by Beet- hoven on the Music of the Mas- ters program at 8 p.m. Barbara Holmquist will be heard playing the "Piano Concerto in D major" by Haydn on Thursday, followed by "Concert Highlights! at 7:30 p.m. The University Sym. phony Orchestra with Josef Blatt conducting will present selections of Wagner, Mozart and Stravin- sky at 8:30 p.m. Friday will feature Rimsky-Kor- sakov and Chabrier compositions, followed by Vivaldi's "Concerto in D minor for Bassoon and String Orchestra" and Berlioz's "Sym phonie Fantastique, Opus 14.' Season Thursday. . It is the story of Patience, the beautiful village milk maid who is loved by two poets, Archibald and Reginald. Both woo her with po- etry until she sees that she must decide between them'. BECAUSE OF a little education, Patience decides that in order to be happy she must make a sacri- fice. On this premises she decides she should marry Reginald the "fleshy poet" in preference to Ar- chibald an esthetic poet. nally decides it will be all right for her to marry Archibald. Put on entirely by the Gilbert and Sullivan Society, "Patience" will be presented Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Performances are at 8 p.m. every day with an addi- tional matinee performance at 2 p.m. Saturday. According to Publicity Chair- man, George Oakes, '56; tickets are 90 cents and $1.20 and may be purchased at the Lydia Men- delssohn Box Office. COLLEGE SHOP R IVIRTUOSI DI ROMA 14 ITALIAN INSTRUMENTALISTS Monday, Nov. 2, 8:30 - HILL AUDITORIUM CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA - NOV. 8 Tickets: $1 .50-$2.00-$2.50-$3.00 UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY Burton Memorial Tower fi - ?At 'J}y " yr:. (.0.1} :: ty'{.5 t.4 :% 9 s ' [ ' i. /' r '. 11 '1 ~ A. g~IC 0 .L :y:.:" :"::." : rrv ::v.-.:: : er:.": ".vv:: :o..,. y. o."-." v:~ :as:v: vv :"."st.^+.t:" ": vv ; .y. « ...,. { ::44:44":":":"'r:"sr'.": i "44":" APr}}Ri'fi:4 }s'r"v:4:vb}:4ik"'r}}Z sY". . s.......c..... e. :". w.. . s. {" e" , " .. ; v . ,,. ..v 'Vi S : s. s s... . ":,1.., y "s."'v:"}}.};{ai s...; .; s..}i{? 'y 4':' sQ.: } S r .. s . .s.v' ":' yf :: r. +.:".{:"}i ::-?"v'."'"'iti r..,:v .:. ....................'r.ti:".::ti4"?::..}: ?...:":v: .............:{Caa:Ha4:":3 .y:..o...s...o........4 "."::= r. s.". sk9?, f.".":..."s.%i ". ..4 y,. ..}} ".::::enviv+Yr:^T sMito.,: ....,,..k.{ riA r .: r . ., .t"+a'6. e...::kF."h:, 4 ': A 4'.t ' A f /' -'f .. ' f .. ... from Gl amour AT LIBERTY ANN ARBOR' the finest quality at prices that are fair yS .: r {Jf ' l; '":t . ti r ,5 rd ; : r f : ,".. v : xb ?; { is r }'"' r ,y t : }s :;:% : Y '"?tip ': : 1Sti ; :": li Z I ;{' 0',:T Revived from the Gay 90's! GRANNY GOWNS 5.00 These flannelettes take dorm-duty or beautifully, wear a long time and keep Cute "Jack-Be-Nimble" NIGHT SHIRT SET 7.95 Cuddly Bedtimers in warm COTTON FLANNELETTE by SdvI ,amn home-life in their stride. They'll wash y ou pretty and cozy besides. Borrowed from the Boy Friend! DORM-STORMER PAJAMAS 6.95 to: THE GIRL WHOSE TIME IS PRECIOUS I