The Daily Collegian Friday, August 6,1976 railer Music of royal Europe a delight Americans, never haying had a royalty to call their own, are, always eager to share in' the courts" history. The manners, morals and diversions of kings and queens entertain Americans in a way that the presidency never could. The musjc of Europe’s rulers was heard once again as the New York Renaissance Band played selections that had en tertained royal courts in the Middle Ages. Using instruments of the period, many of which were copied from pictures of the O.D. FREE AND CONFIDENTIAL 24 hours a day drug & alcohol crisis information & dispatch hot line information & referral 237-5855 236 A South Allen St. 1 (a service of, for, and \ by people / Compare quality, detail, workmanship, and price, you’ll choose ours. A $5.00 deposit is all it takes, NE HUNDRED EAST COLLI This relief print from artist Charles Battaglini’s 1975 Truck Series is among the worl shown in the Museum of Art through Aug. 22. The painting’s name? High Trailer. THE OFFICIAL PENN STATE CLASS "NG by Jos ten s AVENUE time, the five-person band played selections from the •Netherlands,' France, -Italy, -Germany r *Austria r and Eliza bethan England. ' Each country had a distinct mood that dominated its music. The French pieces evoked a pastoral air, conjuring up images of- green forests and small villages. The Italian music was much 1 harsher, with an almost Middle Eastern tint to it. The Austrian music, heard in the court of the melancholy Marguerite, was sad, nearly tragic. The Germans, on the other hand, listened to lilting pieces, sometimes almost comic in nature. The musicians were as varied as their music. Lucy Bardo rocked forwards and back, in and away from her viol. Allan Dean would lay his recorder alongside his cheek and close his eyes, dreamily listening to his companions. Guest Artist Ben Peck tossed his head defiantly on the faster selections and silently mouthed .the notes on the quieter pieces. Sally Logemann sat rigidly, only moving her deft fingers across her instruments. Ben Harms moved his arms in land out, un derscoring,the percussion. 1 It was the instruments, however, that were the stars of the show. Ancient in form, fresh in sound, their bizarre shapes and sounds captivated the audience. From krummhorn —sort of a combination between a kazoo and an umbrella to sack but a sleek trombone the instruments, aided admirably by the musicians who played them, brought a little of the glory of royalty to modern America Fresh Sea food, Swiss Fondue THE TAVERN RESTAURANT Check our daily menu in window at 220 F. College A ve. (open 3:30 to midnight except Sunday) Jim Lockhart istoric Charm & fine food. chelob on draft i hies for groups By KATHLEEN PAVELKO Collegian Arts Writer S’Wonderful, S’Marvelous, S’The American Musical. ' “Yankee Doodle Tune,” a lively musical revue at Kern last night, features 12 talented performers in a non stop singing celebration of the American musical theatre. Beginning with “After the Ball,” (from “A Trip to Chinatown,” 1890) and ending with “Send in the Clowns,” (from “A Little Night Music,” 1973) “Yankee Doodle Tune” is a song history of the American theatre. Compiled and directed by Mary L. Hauptman, a graduate student in theatre arts, “Yankee Doodle Tunes’ ” whirlwind succes sion of solos, duets and foot stomping ensemble numbers is enough to leave the audience breathless but not the singers. The ballads, sung sweetly and straight, are mixed right in with the raucous shows-stoppers and the effect is joyful and charming. It is almost unfair to single out any single member of Hauptman’s fine cast, but Jessica McNall’s rich voice and Lowell Manfull’s professionalism demand special mention. Look for Manfull and McNall in the humorous duet from “Camelot,” “What Do the Simple Folk Do?”. Roy Grodsky and Julia McKin stry’s duel-duet, “Play a Simple Melody,” is also great fun. “Yankee Doodle Tune” is the result of ah independent class project for Hauptman, who began compiling songs in mid-May. Eighty-five songs were originally selected for the revue, but Hauptman eventually reduced that New music Brecker boosts brass-rock By RICHARD HEIDORN JR. - - • - • ----Collegian Arts Writer When Bob Dylan shocked the Newport Folk Festival in 1965 by bringing an electric guitar onstage, he provided a con venient cornerstone for what came to be known as folk-rock. As he was booed off the stage, he learned a lesson that con fronts all innovators: purists are normally the last to embrace new hybrid musical forms, especially when their beloved music (in this case “socially conscious” acoustic folk) is fused with something so vulgar and hedonistic as electric rock. Similar growing pains have accompanied the arrival of another hybrid form brass-rock, the amalgamation of the big band tradition and contemporary popular music whose influence is becoming increasingly pervasive but which has yet to emerge full blown as a style in its own right. Among the jazz faction, reaction to brass-rock has ranged from benign neglect to outright exploitation. Real purists don’t consider the style at all related to their art. Others, more opportunistic perhaps, recognize that the invigorating commercial success of the form has created a potential audience for more improvisational jazz among white middle class college students where none existed before. Not surprisingly, it has been die-hard rock fans that have reacted most disdainfully to the fusion. Opposition in this case is less ideological and more aesthetic than that which greeted folk-rock, however. There is a delicate balance that must be struck to make lyrical music work with brass; more often than not, the brass drowns out the vocals or the vocals intrude on the in strumentals. Blood, Sweat and Tears, one of the first groups to try to iT?< SUMMER TERM -197(6 Due to the small number of conflict examination requests filed, no schedule of such examinations will be published in the Collegian for the Summer' Term. Department heads have been advised of the time and place of meeting of conflict examinations in those cases in which such an examination was required. In structors will be asked to announce con flict examination times in class. number to the present 63. “It subject. - Hauptman has was like murdering my directed community theatre children,” she says. Feeling (she has a BA. in theatre arts guilty about not including from George Washington every great song, Hauptman University) and has sung for compromised by constructing five years with the Penn State the -overture from the ex- Choir. According to Haupt cluded material.' The man, “Yankee Doodle Tune” ‘‘rejects’ ’ include: developed naturally from her “Cabaret,” “Tea for Two,” love, of the-musical theatre. “The Impossible Dream,” An interesting sidelight: the and “Lost In the Stars.” advisor for Hauptman’s There is blessedly little project is Lowell Manfull, an dialogue in the show associate professor of theatre Hauptman believes the songs arts at the University and a are most important. With “Yankee Doodle Tune” cast tunes like “Can’t Help Lovin’ member. That Man,” “I Got Rhythm,” and “Send In the Clowns” Although all the songs in who needs dialogue? “Yankee Doodle Tune” are “Yankee .Doodle Tune” winners, some of the musicals reflects both the director’s they originally graced were expertise and her love of the not. Who has since heard of 'Lifeguard' a soggy film ' for mind of 16-year-old “Lifeguard” is “Beach Blanket Bingo” all grown up, a PG-rated fantasy for the 16- year-old mind. The lifeguard (Sam Elliott) is 32 and facing a mid-life crisis: should he give up the carefree beach life for the lot of. the respectable car salesman? This soggy saga seems to have been shot through the eyes of a teenager: except for the bronzed Elliott, everyone over 30 is bald, fat or a crass sell-out to the establishment. The lifeguard’s 15th class reunion is a gathering of 32- year-old grotesques. “Lifeguard” is, however, an accurate re-creation of the 16 year old’s dream: the gentle older man willing to take a young girl seriously. style a hybrid r —“ I ARBY'S ■ ROAST BEEF SANDWICH I FOR 79 c I OFFER OOOD ONLY AT I 111 SOWERS STREET ! VALID FRIDAY, AUGUST 6 ■ SATURDAY, AUGUST 7 A SUNDAY, AUGUST 8 Rick, the lifeguard, is wooed by the misty-eyed but nevertheless determined Wendy (Kathleen. Quinlan). Wendy’s big moment: she tells Rick, “I’ve wanted to make love with you ever since you bandaged my finger." After that startling line, Rick succumbs reluctantly, of course. Elliott, for his part, talks in song titles: “Enjoy being a little girl,” he says to Wendy, “you’ll be a woman soon enough.” Rick’s font of sandy wisdom is evident , from the film’s first line: “Only place joggin’s gonna get ya is right back where you started.” Heavy. Rick’s only alternative to the barely-pubescent Wendy make a go of brass arrangements within the rock main-' stream, hit this balance,early, and has rarely regained it since'.'" Their “Chjld Is Father To The Man” album made use of the talents of A 1 Kooper to come up with one of the few classics of the genre, “I Love You More Than You’ll Ever Know.” Since then nearly all of the original musicians have jumped, ship and BS&T has drifted away from the bluesy feel that' made that album a success. With the emergence of groups like' Tower of Power and the continued success of Chicago's homogenized sound, BS&T has been left behind: their most recent records sound like a polka band trying to do the Rolling Stones. One of the original members of the group, trumpet Randy Brecker, is back with an album that might go a long way toward raising brass-rock to something beyond a bastard' The Brecker Brothers’ “Back to Back” (Arista 4061, $6.98 list) shows a brass-oriented group that doesn’t play as if It were paid on their decibel output. There is little flash on this LP, just well-produced and arranged music that is hard not to like. p The opening cut, “Keep It Steady” is a disco number, but one performed with more taste and integrity than just about any of the slush heard on the radio. Thankfully, they don’t let the entire album fall into this mold. “If You Want To Boogie Forget It,” is hyper-horny funk doesn’t quite make it but is kept afloat by the superb musicianship and drive of the band. The band is at the top of its form in “Lovely Lady” and “I Love Wasting Time With You,”- gentle songs with strong melodies where the horns and vocals truly complement each other, creating a mood neither could evoke alone “Nightflight” is an instrumental tune that starts off ten -tatively, sounding like a cross between Stanley Clarke and Herbie Hancock circa “Headhunters,” but builds in spite of its inital lack of pacing to become the cooker of the album. The band fares less well with “Dig A Little Deeper,” more Caucasian soul that would be better left to the Average White Band. The song is as refined as the rest of the album but the& rhythm is too weak to move the band and the song collapses under its own weight. Saxophonist David Sanborn of the Brothers has released a solo album as well. “Sanborn” (BS 2957 Warner Bros.) doesn’t have the benefit of the consistency of the material on his pre vious album, “Taking Off,” but shows nevertheless the of probably the most sought after saxophonist around. 9 Highlights include “Smile,” aided by lyrics from Paul ; Simon and background vocals courtesy of Phoebe Snow, and ' “Concrete Boogie,” which has one of the few memorable' melodies on this album, which is distinguished only by San> lv born’s improvisations. f I |m\m 79' SPECIAL j> I I WITH THIS COUPON | I I 1 II I I II I I I I II 79* SPECIAL wim mis coupon “the Cat and the Fiddle” or “Forty-five Minutes from Broadway”? the songs and the singers are trie, heart of “Yankee Doodle Tune,” although I would be willing to put in a mention for the revue’s use of placards/ and the fine piano of Pam Wissinger. , The final performance “Yankee Doodle Tune” is at 8 tonight in Kern. Apple pie and ice cream, are offered at seven. The revue’s title is taken from George M. Cohan’s 1903’s production, “Mother Goose,” an otheit wise mortal musical. But George said, “I want to hear a Yankee Doodle Tune,” and I agree. t is his old high school, sweetheart, Kathy. Kathy' works in an art gallery and lives in House Beautiful. But Rick, who lives in an apart ment decorated in Early American Ugly, is not sure they can make it together. \ The teenage girls in the audience Wednesday (for’ whom this film was obviously ■ intended) did not like Kathy at all. They were rooting for Wendy to get the guy. I wasn’t rooting for .Wendy; or Kathy or even the hand-; some Rick. I was rooting for' the star of “Jaws” to appear, to liven up the limp lifeguard.” At the Garden! 6EIANARBYS ROAST BEEF SANDWICH FOR 79* OFFER GOOD ONLY AT 111 SOWERS STREET "VALID FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, SATURDAY, AUGUST 7 A SUNDAY, AUGUSTS " K^:,