sttrwj f p m nC"fQGicirt encerroinm Oft : ..J.; (Cocker has sound production Review by Meg Greene Hidden away and safely secluded in a California recording studio, Joe Cocker has finally come through after two years with an album that is, technically sound and musically excellent. True, the music on "I Can Stand a Little Rain" is somewhat subdued, bordering on easy ballads and blues essence. The band itself is a well-balanced group, with a fairly infuentia! set of keyboards, a CockerRussell throwback. His back-up vocalists are tight and clean; giving the right touch to Cocker's vocals, in which there also seems to be more control. Cocker tans may be disappointed by the lack of razzie dazzle, gut-spilling sound which has been Cocker's trade mark and has made him a phenomonon in rock music. But the grave! sound has just been paved over. The essence cf Cocker's soul is 'still prevalent and comes through song after song. From the ballad, "You Are So Beautiful" to the cryptic "I Get Mad," Cocker has .recovered his niche in the rock world. Perhaps the change that's affected Cocker can be seen in the title cut of the album: And when I'm on' my last go round ; I can stand anolher test Because I've made it before And I can make it some more. , Kanal: war horrors This week the Union Foreign Film Series presents "Kanal," a 1956. film by one of the pioneer directors in the new Polish cinema, Andrzej Wajda. ' It was Wajda and a handfull cf others who set up independent, self-supporting production units in the mid-50s and brought worldwide recognition to the then still young Polish film scene . "Kanal" is his second feature and it teils of a group of Polish Jews fighting for their lives in the sewers of the Warsaw ghetto during Nazi occupation. The movie shows the dark horrors of war, escape and survival and conveys the gradual disillusionment of the story's young uprisers. Showings are at 7 and 9:15 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in the Sheldon Art Gallery. Admission is by series ticket. st ring quartet s cnamDer concer t first rate Bv David Ware First-rate chamber music is rare enough so ensemble-play enthusiasts had generous reason to be grateful for the Saturday night performance by the Vieuxtemps String Quartet inlhe Raymond Hall TV room. Sponsored jointly by the Lincoln Friends of Chamber Music, The Nebraska Arts Council, Centennial Educational Program and the Cather-Pound-Neihardt Residence Complex, the recital was an entrancing reminder of the vitality and majesty of quartet work, a genre .often neglected. The qua tet performed three works. First was Medelsshon's Third Quartet in D Major, a flowing, melodic work that reflected ' the serene, affluent life of the composer. Mendelssohn's works have, at times, been deemed somewhat superficial, but the quartet emphasized the exceptional lyricism and energy present in, the work without acrmcinq ivtendeissonn s characteristic prettiness. . The second work played was the first movement of an unfinished quartet by Schubert, composed in 1820 but not performed until 1868. Especially notable in this piece was the remarkable tone of the cello, prominent in several tricky passages toward the end of the work. After a brief interval, the quartet returned to play their third and final selection, Beethoven's Quartet No. 18 in A Minor, Op. 132. Defying the convention of having a light, mobile first movement, Beethoven's work starts out slowly, then swiftly switches to a storming allegro stride. The second movement is taken at a moderate pace, forming a tension-easing connection to the hymn-like third movement, a deliberate, eloquent work of thanksgiving written by.-Beethov.eifc upon recovery from. a lonq illness. The fourth movement was a sort of march, connected by an impressive. violin bridge to the fifth. ' ' The musicianship of the quartet was of rare high quality. Singled out for special praise should be the violinist, Masako Yanagita, who displayed a breathtaking attack and exceptional accuracy throughout the redtai, save a momentary choppiness st the beginning of the Mendelssohn. The only other noticeable difficulties came during the second movement of Beethoven's piece, -where the second violin displayed a bit of sloppy intonation. It is seldom that one is privileged to hear musicians the caliber of the Vieuxtemps Quartet, and the sponsors of the event are owed a debt of gratitude for having presented an evening of music that was both technically superb and supremely enjoyable. 1 - jL-i ij-n-'tfi-'v-tAw t-. No one really needs I f" !' r' 'I I i I' I, r . Y .-, (onanny !', ft RI 0 (lRIM fPICN ,lm (OClfTV A I-1 t 4 i V. i f Downtown arrd Gateway V f A I M ft, rlftfui i To celebrate our opening in Lincoln we make this X ii i M 'i I r, t - S la, M 9 n ii 'S 4 RQABDUSS&f ymr Fnscriptwi OUR ONI IOW NUCE - M cat - imWIS tif'l't Vmon Unwi 8i'(x.i U'.v tnfucjl Unts Yoiff ifio ol Mti fWMt in Our l'g Mtitct.oe o tiy'ei cosw twt .,- 8fi'- rtr Of PHVSX.AN $ ('0) frol 9uf tsrst :. 1kj, j . f f i ? t 1! ' downtown 1191 "0" STREET W. i I LINCOLN CORf Of iti AND "O" S?ftfet'T I i i 1 : s I S rfwB6?5d and u;r5il i J I J 1 I,-. THEAIHt."'. VT WVfUYiss: f Kit iuJt sunm I 'ii! VjnF Just for ftr of HI . KATMAStiMt . THEATRE 2 f UI-XTOK NKvvhk under ; '"W ntMadrod I i-i;.Hii'.i, "r' 11. if ' V V 130 i ...... X JO I ,r:.".r.. so j I SEND US HOME I c Ph. at , i. a t. a a .... 1. .... - . .. bomnirms mat letier noma may sup your mind, let us keep your parents and friends infr r mod about this year et UNL. Fill out tha fcr.v;': f?!?V.' 2 fid fH f h?f m mAiiAv Mtimf fr . $l..ftO'fcr a full year's subscription.. '. Make! cl c' s payable to The Daily Nebraskan, : II -ihr. Union, Lincoln, Nebr. 63508 w .... mm m v m mm mm mm mm mm ttm tm mm mm sm t 2 eritcr a one-year subscription- .GO per year for: I SAdarss. i i C i iy i , StateZip Code ... . . a " m ww mm mm mm mm mm mm mm mm ma tS page 6 monday, September 30, 1974