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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • 94

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
94
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I 10-C Oakland Oct. 25,1959 A ill 51 -t 1 New Features Announced For S.F. Symphony Season By CLIFFORD GESSLER, Music and Dance Editor The San Francisco Symphony Earl Bernard Murray, former Schmidt and the San Jose State season starting Dec. 2, 3 and assistant conductor of the or- College A Cappella Choir, by 4, not only will be two weeks chestra and recently appointed William J. Erlandson.

i longer than previous seasons, musical director of the San Beethoven's Ninth, closing but will have several new fea- Diego Symphony, will return the season on May 25, 28 and tures, according to Kenneth as guest conductor in April. 27, will have as soloists Dor-Monteagle, the president, and SOLTI TO RETURN Warenskjold, Katherlne Howard K. Skinner, manager. Georg Solti who has guest. Hilgenberg, and tenor and bass A Saturday evening series conducted in San Francisco be- nnund, with chorus will be introduced, and there fore will returnt 8nd tw0 con- to be nnunced-will be six guest conductors, ductors will make their local CLARINET SOLOIST Including a two-week return Fathf principal clarinetist of of Pierre Monteux and a visit the orchestra, will appear In a by Sir Thomas Beecham.

TfAiij single Saturday night concert There will be more soloists ffCAUHG April 23, a week when there than usual, and two major win be no Wednesday, Thurs- choral works Verdi Requiem a day and Friday concerts, due and Beethoven's Ninth Sym- debuts Bernard Haitnik of the to out of town engagements phony. Amsterdam Concertgebouw, a and the Black and White Ball. There are changes of con- protege of the late Eduard van The association will again ductorships in the popular Beinum, and Werner Torka- sp0nsor bus transportation and youth concerts. Johnny nowsky, who has been trained from Eastbay and peninsula Green, conductor of the Los by Pierre Monteux. point3 to the Opera House for Angeles Philharmonic Pronf- In addition to the joint re- Friday afternoon season sub-enade concerts and Hollywood cital by Yehudi and Hephzibah SCribers.

Bowl, will conduct four popu- Menuhin, already announced a complete prospectus is lar concerts, two on Thursdays, for Nov. 19, the Symphony scheduled for mailing to last two on Saturdays. Jan Popper, Association will present David year's season subscribers very on leave from UCLA as visit- Oistrakh, Soviet violinist, in a S00Ili and thereafter for release ing professor and director of special concert with the or- to the general public. Details student opera at University of chestra Jan. 14.

0f programming will' develop California in Berkeley, will Contrary to the usual pro- from a press conference with conduct the youth' concerts. cedure, the season will open Maestro Enrique Jorda when The traditional Wednesday with a soloist Hans Richter- he returns, later this month, evening and Friday afternoon Haaser, German pianist, and from guest conducting in Eu- 4 ,9. (. V. iiiiiiini in OAKLAND ARTIST "Point Richmond.

One" is Included In the first one-man show of pcdntincjs by Henrietta Berk of Oakland on view at the Luden Labaudt Gallery In San Francisco (through Oct. 30). Mrs. Berk was an award winner In the Oakland Art Museum's 'Tainted Flower" exhibit RETURNS AS GUEST Pierre Monteux retumi to conduct San Francisco Symphony two weeks in January. lumens uavc uroi jnticawu wui cuiumue witn ivisusiav roDe.

New York's Images of Man' Frightens Tribune Art Critic from 18 to 19, over a 26-week Rostropovich, cellist; Byron was learned, however, by the San Francisco Sym- featured a clarinet soloist. -period, allowing for two weeks Janis, pianist; Philippe Entre- fr0m sources at Stanford Uni- phony last spring, will be per- Although Mme. Schwarz-vacation at Christmas time, mont, pianist; Andres Segovia, versity that a concertino for formed next Wednesday and kopf has appeared with the There will be 12 Thursday eve- guitarist; Isaac Stern, violinist; trumpet and orchestra, by Thursday nights in Carmel and opera and in recital frequently ning concerts, and eight Satur- Jorge Bolet, pianist; Elisabeth Leonard Ratner, Stanford mu- Monterey by the Monterey hereabouts, this will be. her day evenings. Patrons sub- Schwarzkopf, soprano; Philip sic professor, will be performed County Symphony under Earl debut with the symphony.

Eos-scribing to both the Thursday Fath, clarinetist: Leon Fleisher, mi-Iv npxt vear. with TVmaM Murray, and by the Portland tropovich, who won wide- ac- By MIRIAM DUNGAN CROSS, Tribune Art claim when he was here' last. Took off for home from Mi ami on a 707. Rose like a rocket almost straight up. Startled to- find feet at eye ievei.

in mis unci posniun and Saturday concerts will near tne entire repertoire ot the regular series. Beecham will conduct one con- ieb. 14. Reinberg, the orchestra's first trumpeter, as soloist. The work was commissioned by the late a omnt in PnmnAcorc' TtVimm Stanford Symphony and played viewing spooky, propellerless of the cheerfulness of his color glass, wood ana meiai.

ms cert jn the regular series and mond Manton and George Lon- Ratner's "Overture Harle- soloists and conductors and in ago was playing the Commu-engines, considered "New Im- and pattern than the fearful talk, "Impressions of Israel," a special Sunday afternoon don, with Stanford University quin," premiered in 1957 by the solo instruments. It has been nity Concert circuit hereabouts, ages of Man," current exhibit of American and European MUSIC FOR EVERYBODY mimg ana Kuipiure i ew York Museum of Modern Art Onrtmsn Nov. 29). Visited New Images on but ominously quiet day. John Canaday, of the Metropolitan Mu- California Singers' Concert To Aid Children's Home Group The adoption agency of the everywhere except in Prague, Ford Foundation Funds Further American Opera Editor meeting, Nov.

2, will be Victor Reis, California College of Arts rraft? instructor and well- known designer in will be illustrated by colored 0t "Scenic Israel," photographs on loan from the Oakland Pub- nc Museum, will be on exhibit. BAIA officers are Cantor Simon G. Cohen, sponsor; Eya chairman; and Mrs. urer. For information call Eya Yellin 2-0936.

at the Temple, TE Mezzanine nailery Word comes from Oakland artist Jaseph Bennett that the Mezzanine Gallery in the Gray Shop, Oakland, long dark has reopened with an -exhibit of his conservative oils of Cali- fornia land and seascape. Dur- inc th nast vear Bennett has -i ri. haH fine Itiall SnOWS in Uak- 'spurn's Tirnnrforfnl urn rf 'books "Seminars in Art," com--'Tnented in the N.Y. Times that wthe show hardly frightened V- a 1 1 1 1 11 By SIGMUND SPAETH American opera gets another vious outlines of traditional mm at an. rausi oe ine iew climate.

Frightened us of our wits. -Man is doomed. Seared, de- laying, truncated, screaming, is often in agony always 1'ahxious and forever alone In- in the numerous small -Mlleries bv the museum's di- -oa rSuttnnr nTifrA! Vn vciraral totVo muvt uii.uiuo li wvio av 4J, orict effect Mild con- cern mounts to anxiety; anxie- to despair; despair stops madness only withes- oltOST-WAR WORKS 104 "effigies of the man," dating tznm fee of World Wsr IL wer selected by Peter S-1I2. tr.e museum's curator cf painting and sculpture exhibits. Salz.

who contributes the text to the $5 catalogue (not available on our visit) says, "These image makers take the human situa- pianist, and David Abel, vio- linist. Soloists in the Easter-time tvne Price. Tranrps RihlA "Rav Chorus trained by Harold where their offer of a concert was turned down. Memories of Via rnr a rnnporl in the cite UniVersitaire, Paris, in iu-sieB nwa wam- ln-gKUIJ, vf S6V-en ig with their luggage in a Pans vnth vncei At a Warsaw youtti ho siel 8U1S 111 ure barrassed to find windows un- curtained with a construction crew working ust across the orking just narrow trppt Rut thev ure uie aay wnen 100 or mwe jtuumi uuiuien, un school tour, exchanged folk songs with them on the steps of the Warsaw Museum. Young Fcupie Wi many tuunu, many meeting Americans for the first time, plied them with questions at the Warsaw hostel, Two of their most enthu- siastically received concerts were in Munich.

The shipboard concert on the return trip aboard the Queen Fredenca was described as hilarious, as they stood with feet wide- mau. agamsi me uwvj- ivu of the ship. They plan atrip next sum mor in th Npthprlanrla mer to the Netherlands and Scandinavia, CALENDAR nd wine in Graphic Art (through Nov. 22): (daily, 10 a.m.-5 cm.) nil rvi r.in mv d. cent paintings by Robert Morris ERic locke galleries.

3: xcept FErNGARTEN GALLERIES, 535 California: west coast Sculpture An- "na "nune tl TTfrt i greta Williams gallery. 2059 Ssw Figurine, (through 1 1 WCPKQHVS, 1-0 p.m. uumf's oallery.250 Post: Paint- ood3.loc,k. b3; suuidluic vjy van rtieecK KJi l. zo- i.

i tr Nov. 261. bnfv udic ram; x-cunaneni vunrcuons 10 a.m..5 p.n,,. loan exhibit sMoTART'war Me- ornamented of the past VSthi" yriy babaioua villa mont alvo: Mosaics, gcuip- ture, watercolorl by students of Bella Jeldman. Dolores Clapp, Warren fain (to Oct.

31; daily except 1:30 4:30 p.m.). a. rrd Foundation's of nearly a million dollars. These are t0 be spent on no less by the Metropolitan, New York City, Chicago and San Fran- cisco opera companies. This announcement is the aireci resuu oi me success- fui experiment conducted at th atyCentep by Julius Ru.

r- proving conclusively there is a large repertoire available of native operas of high quality. With such backing and en- couragement it seems logical our composers will come up with something of real sig- nificance and truly American jn character, not just a con- tinued imitation of European models. By a coincidence, this very problem is being dis cussed tonight (Oct. 25) at the New School by a panel con. sisting of Rudel, Marc Blitz- stein, Douglas Moore.

Michael Pollock, Winthrop Sargeant, Bernard Stambler, Claramae Turner and this columnist, with Dr. Louis Carp, a direc- tor of the City Opera, as mod- erator. rnrrr rrn nrmr T7 lire cussion will produce some con- StrUCtlVe and stimulating deas. There is a growing ng ieei- ine the contemporary musical diom is not too well adapted 4 i fka Artfirfitm ctacfo Alcn Thar 7 tion, indeed the human pre Symphony Jan. 18 under Piero enugi.

The season appears to be not in nnint nf nercnnnlitip nf a long time since the symphony hV the average audience-that is, unless the libretto has been carefully studied in advance. only a fraction of the text is intelligible to listeners, re- i varriioc nf th lantniatrA m. ployed, depending heavily on me cnarecier ui uie wuieiua- tion and the enunciation of the singers. These are unfortunately more likely to be interested in producing beautiful tones than in conveying words bevond the footlights. With the added handicap of a style that is often far from lyric and the religious avoidance of set.

num- bers of any kind, it is a won- der that 8ny0ne can derive real satisfaction from the per- formance of a modern opera QTnRV pnnmrivT STORY PROBLEM The search for typical Amer- ican settings and stories also has its Problems. In many cases 0ur composers have completely ignored this pos- sibility. They have gone to established authors like Shakespeare, Pirandello and -Lmnsany tor tneir mak- Jluie or attempt to interpret tne American Scene 111u.iii.Qii v. 1 1. i irw 11..

can have actual met wjth Rrrp with greater success than such aHantafions of foreign poSer was willing to settle for com- score oi oniy moderate com- i II PX One is tempted to hold up Gershwin's "Porgy ag fi ibIe thoueh this D0Dul. cm model, even though this popular work is content with the title of "folk opera." It is even possible to go a step further and cite, the enormous success of such Pac ific 'Ke fre airdefmlteirAmJricanTr are au oeiiniteiy American or frankly light operas as "Okla- cue an uui.iiiiicij' iaiiciiv.au ji at least Americanized stories. They are presented in a sure- fire musical form, admittedly with enough spoken dialogue to take them out of the tra- ditionally "grand opera" cate- gory. Time alone will tell which form of American onpra proves permanent. OOO The Broadway musical sea- wiuljuhu a hit "Happy Town" failed to "dpr live ud to its title and" closed Dftor five nprfnrmanrpc with all the ills that musical COm- edy is heir to.

"At the Drop of a Hat," a two-man revue straight from London, with Michael Flanders and Donald dica'ment rather than formal oicameni, ramer man iormai Structure, as their starting point. The existence of man. rather than the essence of form, is of greatest concern to them. This combination of contemporary form with a new kind of iconography the chief element these artists Canaday find a debt to Ma- tisse. Canaday thinks him too cheerful a painter to be in- eluded in me snow, ror me r-n jum umc wc tic iui.

quiet oi nis ngures. NOTED PAINTERS Famous painters represented are the late Jackson Poiiock by back and white paintings with figurative elements; Jean Dubuffet by his sand-incised I I mad images' and Willem de Kooning by 'his earlier paint- ings of women distorted by emotion, including one of Marilyn Monroe whom appar- entlv he couldnt bear to dis- tort beyond recognition. This nanPr rinll hlnndP swirlins in 1 im in Vi AO a uicauici in vic onuw. Other breathers but silly ones are C. Westerman's Dada constructions including "Memorial to the Idea of a Man If He Was An Idea," a Tsck tov man whose box body i-as a door open to reveal an interior studded with pop bot- tie trps svmbol of "a world which has become a mad house." The fall-out has eaten away the flesh of a truncated bronze nude by Cezar (Bal- dacchini).

Leonard Baskin's carved "Great Dead Man" lies life-size in tomb light at your fect. Solid, sightless and alone enduring sits Fritz Wotruba's idol-like, stone utonu ure. 'She-Goat' Most happy relief of all was not in the exhibit but in a show of the Museum of Mod- ern Art's Picasso sculpture She-Goat" the most recent 1 a-quiiiiuii uemg snuwn in me me continually inventive Picasso assemDiea a wicker hamper for earthenware jugs for ud der, palm-leaf stalk for spine, iiiow. lUlea the Construction With Plaster modeled a plaster head anH ii 'i rl 1 4 .,11 i and had it all Cast in hrnnzp to create the most compelling .11 i rxpnive goat or an umes. Welcome symbol of life, not death.

ivaviu rdlK New York's handsome, new Staempfli Gallery in a modern building at 47 E. 77th, is pre- sent ine for its first paintings by U.C.'s David Park. Father of the Bay Area con- temporary figurative painting eroun Vip wat oin 4v.vtl,u one-man show at the de Young. His brushWnrk has a npr frco XllS DrusnworK nas a new tree- QOm While the quiet figures 10 be compelling lmaSes arrested for a moment in heir environs. Affir- matlons of life, praise be.

Di- rector Staempfli on a visit JFl!" ms Pempg show for the dy- iirtniM 1 I 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 riilri nr rtr namic individual performance. BAIA Bay Area Inter'Congrcga- tional Artists, a new associa- lion rnmnnsiro tho art ormm r-" K.uuu or Oakland's Temple Beth Abraham and other congrega- ttntlC in tVt a evnn will Arn.A a i i i i tions in thp nrpa tuill nrotont aseriesof rt- n.n rl 1 ty i i.v i i snops ana lectures in which prominent Kay Area artists will participate RATA n-ill meet every first Monday, 8 p.m.. at Temple Beth Abraham, 327 MacArthur. The group aims avvaKen interest -Jewish art and artists, to promote the titduon ana exniDit ot con- temporary Jewish art and to incnirp the artist -itk the In inspire ine a. tin with the Ju- daestic heritage.

Guest speaker for the first returns as part of the cultural exchange program with the Rvron who a few veari has since rocketed upward, NEWS NOTES Ballet Groups Set Programs Bay Area Ballet Company opens its third season Nov. 2 ill Odii tmmisiu Ycicicuis Auditorium, after a "shake- down performance at. Tiburon Playhouse next Friday night, Program includes Marc tilde's new "Five on the Beach, Carolyn Parks So- nata Vern Nerden's "Dans Imperiale," Harold Garton'i Mtr acte ana ieona isor- "Entr'acte" and Leona Nor- janM Bowen-Kncson, Grace Boty, Sally Hobson, Gloria Cancilla, Richard Faulkner, Ron Poin- dexter and Harold Two performances of "The Nutcracker" are scheduled with the San Rafael Youth Symphony in J0ff rey Ballet Two of Robert Joffrey's own ballets "Pas de Deesses," whlch he choreographed-for Ballet Rambert, and "A la Gershwin" will' be included in the Joffrey Theater Ballet's program in San Francisco Veterans' Auditorium Nov. 6. Gther works are Dirk g'-." ders.

"Yesterday's 'Papers." to Bartok music, and Francisco Moncion's "Pasorale," score by Charles Turner. 'Vortex' at Museum dozen loudspeakers ara being instalied at San Fran- rism Miicenm Af -Ox. 7n- 1 i Sundays through November nf 7-5(1 onl a Folk Music Marilyn Child, who sings folk music ill San PVanrkm State College Little Theater luuiym i is a iormeroan Leandro grammer sclvool teacher who has appeared extensively in night clubs hereabouts. Born in Los.An- geles, she sang professionally to finance her education at Lni versity of California SanU Barbara ThtT hS nal Bay Area solo aoDear- ance before leaving on rawe luving on aataie wii a odd to Department tour of India with Sonny Terry. Cisco Houston Bna nnie Mctree.

The spon- EOr Rad'o-Television Guild, is organization of 80 studenta wno conduct radio program 0Peratlns on KAIW-FM and programs with com- mercial and educational 'stations. The University of alt fornix presents GLENN GOULD Phenomenal anadian pianist "He is a genius" Cincinnati Inqnhir TODAY p.m. HARMON GYM Main Floe ft Iktechert rudeti TM have in common. They do not Ul any way Constitute a ScnoOI i or a movemeni. Nonetheless the Hpmnn.

strate a nihilist trend of thought running independently in various parts of this coun- tt. iry ana in curope. Lxreaiesi rpafpst impact comes not from the as- ii riprt. nf anv nr all theco violently expressionist works dui irom tne realization that the tensions of our era are re- sponsible, that these agonized creations are direct refections Children's Home Society of California will benefit by pro- ceeds the California Singers' 1.. ley Little Theater.

The singers are 29 under- graduate and graduate stu- imU of stanford gan cisco and San Jose State Colleges, with one Berkeley student 01 University 01 Vienna whn lninpil tnem in Pans Rnh. wmmanoay oi i-wmucicu. and Mrs. Comrnanday was their principal interpreter. They rehearsed intensively ai bc, ulcu- ium, Monroe Kanouse, had joined them in Montreal, by special permission of the Army, and their first full-dress perform- nce was aboard ship, by mvi- Ration of the captain of the taha- performed in Pans, Berlin, Warsaw, Munich, Florence, Venice, Vienna, Bel- grade and Athens, recorded for "a vuice vi A.ua.i and were asked to sing more concerts than time, finances and Pnprrv nprmitfpH They were received warmly BAY ART EASTBAY iriumi ttds.ku tjara: worKS of Paul Schmidt ioiyiviw, not aama (through October) nd h.t iVr o5SyS'CS Oakland.

Painting, by Mace (to Oct. aivh 1 iSrSSS SW? 95. wf'' vaR- land: Theatre Design of the Bav Area 24oi shat- tiiiL. T3A.b.i.... iei, w.W-'Jn.t.

TiiMfAB cAVvr "awc Album art obects photoi TJg iWT, SCIENCE, sociation. 1416 Park. .7,7 S. Clai McEihinney (through laurel branch library. 372s TTiJiJ (throueh ewueia BTba Bennett (through "mSia gallery, Berkeley: Paintings, graphics by zolita Sverdlove (through Nov.

21- sat, noon-5 p.m.) COLLEGE ART GALLERY, Oakland campus: Mills College Ce- Annual; recent acquisl- uons unrougn looay, Z-5 p.m.). Oakland art museum. Munici- TvariJr bl Phyllis Maniey. waiter sneigW Bar (through Nov. Oakland pubuc' museum Oak wTUhs! tfXFZ ct Kray; meuiwork by victor dailv 9:30 a -s in 'm daily.

g.30 a.m.-5 p.m.. 10 a.m.- ORINDA LIBRARY. Reis; lithographs (through Nov. traiu Dy rranke Gilmour Members' CollectionMthroSh SANTORO' DESIGN riAT.T.rnv im i unvj "wiuf r.inHiiu Kuth Ptderson (through October). aiuLiui 1 1 1 r.

irh fik m4 rW'Wrt JlTtflntMA Print PaIIu Japanese Print Collection (thrmiirh rs: DI Bona T-i "'vrt'mm mm i "'uoci land! Pfn llnff. k. U.l CnMnn.r. kr inn 'i 1 T.m n.i. "1 juipun 1 cuner iwrougn Tr wov-.

Nov. 1-4 p.m.; 7- PiYERsrnr or santa clara by Haywlr AssociaUon (through today); BTTrc PagfbyrcChe Vf KK ii 4 CAI.irORJVIA rip THT. LEGION OF HONOR, Lincoln Park: and BoWmi; pauTtings by Meigs (both through Nov. sr: Metal Aru Guild (Oct. 31 -Nov.

AehentMcfa roundationi The Orape land. Carmel. Lauuna. and San Diego. He is a memoer oi tne Bohemian Club, Society of Western Artists and the Car- mel.and Laguna Art Associa- ons ana is on me Doara oi directors of the Oakland Art Association.

LuCien Labaudt First one-man show of paint- ings by Henrietta Berk of Oak- land, winner of an award in the Oakland Art Museum's "Painted Flower" exhibit, is being presented at the Lucien Labaudt Gallery, 1407 Gough, S.F. Kansas-born Mrs. Berk was educated in S.F. public c.t. iLauuis anu o.r.

oiaic vuncgc and later studied at California College of Arts and Crafts with Richard Diebenkorn and Harry Krell. She has exhibited in Oakland group shows and at Arts Unlimited, S.F. Paintings by William R. Davis of Oakland and Henry a c. .1 Aaams 01 o.r.

aie txiav 011 mun kiv wli. (JAA it 1 1 A 1. A is hnsipr than ever. oe ncnal hv its president, Mrs. James A.

(Vir- r. A a tjt of naintings at the i MP7aninP Callprv of the ciaremont Hotel, previewed at la reception and dinner, is now open to the public. OAA naintineq on naintineon riisDlavatthenew FmitvalP Rank nf America 1 o- l- were viewed by 2,500 persons at the opening of the bank. a cSSi Sho sp- sored by alumnae of seven eastern colleges, at the Clare- mom notei, ixov. uuuueii and will have charge of the j- 1 u.

Ail'c art display at the Legal Aid Tareops" a oroi- ect oi the wives 01 memrjers of the Alameda Bar Associa- tion, in Oakland's new Con- vention Hall, Jack London Square, Nov. 11 through 15. Dr. Marques Reitzel MarnueVRpitpl rharm- in? director of the Summer ing aireCIOr OI ine Summer Art Ranch at Pescadero, artist and teacher, has begun hlS SOU duty as Artist-in-Residence for Winsor and Newton, 127-year- i- v. i i nn r.nyii.sn Hrt sunn 1 1 1 in.

Hp is traveli np ftvpr thp statt painting scenes of -his choice i i a i l2 T' 6 icvmiiug iu an, giuuj's. Tomorrow will be i nm riiw vu 1 1 1 np a hi lev UU2T dav. iJX. xteuzei wilt conuuti j. iu interested cainters without charge at the Adobe Patio Shop.

1467 East Newell, Wal- nut Creek. 1-5 m. At 8 p.m. he will lecture and demon- state painting at the regular niahln Art mppt- tj-i s---t ing, Real Estate Board Build- ing, 1343 Locust, Walnut Creek. You are invited.

uj. an age iieeing ouu miles per hour from itself. Southern California's Rico Lebrun demonstrates his an- PUlSh With tWO DOWerful ar- rangements of dead and dy- ing Buchenwald and Dau- chau in charcoal on canvas and by the actual holes and slashes u- on tne canvas 01 his painting "Double Disparate." BAl AKTIsT THE CONCERT CALENDAR a.r.s iNatnan Uliveira, for- mer California College of Arts and Crafts instructor, points out the fearful isolation of the spirit in each of his four paint- ings with a faceless figure stilled in the limitless but murky space of his own crea- we cannot nooe lor a wiae i i a puDiic acceptance 01 Amen- can Pera ntil we at least approximate the broad melodic sweeP Md simPle. dramatic lines oi the classic master- pieces in this form. must be recognized that rand opera" is essentialIy Arm Tt 1 tions and has fantastic plots but has usually resisted the minute details of realism and the complexities of modern tonal technique.

Even the comparatively ob Auditorium Theater. 8:15. for members Oakland Civic Music Association. FRIDAY rliforni Siners. directed by Robt.

Cnmmanday. Berkeley Little Theater. 8:15. benefit Children's Home So- California Slner, directed by Robt. 'di Moslra.

Century Audi folk songs, spirituals. toriun1i San Francisco. 8:30. Francaix string trio: Kaminski quintet for clarinet and strings. Herb Holtman and David Mallory, violins; Elizabeth Bell, viola: Eugenie Egloff, 'cello; Morton suDotniK, clarinet; bodi.

leii, norn. tlS Fjrt Indian dancer: Academy oi Asian stuuiei, ban iran. Cisco, Bar Arte Bay Arte Ballet, Tiburon Playhouse, SATCRDAY Carlos, Montoya. guitarist Nourse "Vorte Presents' (electronic mu- sict. s.r.

Museum of Art, 7:30 and 9 m. NEXT StNDAY San Leanirn Symphsny. Bsncroft Trr San Leandro. 3 c.n Franc: oriii?" ourtei center, 3 p.m. Glenn Gould, pianist, Lurran The- rtet, ST.

U.C. Extension SCO. Obernklrchee Choir. IT. Opert TODAT Glenn Gould, pianist, Harmon Gym.

TT R-1f. Rerff sonata. Onn 1: Six Little Piano Pieces: rairo riecH. Krenek-S third sonata: Morawetz minor FanUay; Hlndemlth'i third o- lKhent Association 26 Pacific Memorial Scholarship Tea, Music Piedmont, 3 p.m., with Hlro Imamura, P'anist. (Open to public.) tr, S.F.

Opra House, 2:30 and 8:30. 1BAL, Israel national uance ine. Bob Mitchell's 8lnln( Boys, Alca- ineaier, can rrancisco, 3 p.m. Town SJ-ba-m Hall presentation tponsorea oy a assisi Vfamriei, upua unt, nq ran- tim with Donald Pippin. tet; Brahma minor piano quintet, state college Little Theater i WEDNESDAY Folk mmic studio 0.

678 Green a thibsdat cimtn In English, by U.C Opera Workshop. directed bv jan Popper. Herti Han. 8 30. Repeated Friday.

Saturday, Sun- day. Obtraklrakea Cnira'f I r. tion. Canaday calls these fig- 11 i ures "blind phantoms" and ex-t eludes them from the works which didn't frighten him along with Francis Bacon's prasninir nr screamins mon enveloped in noxious gas." Among his paintings is "The ITlfil vrnliitirr rinna still vpllinir sinrp its exhibit Hnnnr thV LpSion Berkeley's Richard Dieben korn is represented by four paintings in the arresting man- as those included in the Art Museum's "Bay i irea L-omemporary figurative Painting" Salz describes his urge ngures isuidiea in vast room or landscape space as abstract expressionism with sur-' realist, expressionist and fauvt heritage. Both Salz and Swann presenting their own songs in a diffident but very funny style, found favor with critics and audiences alike and must be labelled the first hit of the new season.

The most elaborate shows are not necessarily the best. OOO Beethoven's "Fidelio." the opening opera in NBC's TV series, is now available as a pocket-size book. Ceayrlrfet.USt, General Ftatirei Core. House, 3:30..

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