The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 25, 1997, Page 8, Image 8

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    Music festival to feature
15 bands, extreme sports
_ Walkin’ Cheetahs, 22 Jacks, Grasshop- tured, which is composed of Norwood
PATRICK Miner per Takeover, Fragile Porcelian Mice, Fisher of Fishbone, Keith Morris of
Staff Reporter Rocket Fuel is the Key, Animal Chin, Circle Jerks, and former members of
- Dirty Walt, Creed, Vicki Calhoun and the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Parliament
Nebraska’s only weekly news Missile Command. and Funkadelic.
and arts newspaper and America’s The Nutt Stalk Tour will also be fea- The extreme sport competition will
newest soft drink
have teamed up to
bring an intriguing
beginning to a hope
fully long summer.
The Reader Surge
Games, a day-long
festival featuring na
tional bands as well
as extreme games
competition, will be
held Saturday at the
Anchor Inn in
Omaha. The show
begins at noop and
will end around mid
night.
Extending across
two stages, die show
includes Reel Big
Fish, the Skeletones,
Thelonius Monster,
Spearhead, JOI, Su
per 8, Weapon of
Choice, Street
m include dual
| downhill slalom
1 mountain biking,
a skateboarding
competition and
demos on the
halfpipe, as well as
a street course and
ramp inline skat
ing.
Competi
tive games regis
tration and ad
vance tickets are
available at Lancer
Sports in Omaha
and Precision
Skateboards in
Lincoln. Tickets
are also available
t h r o ugh
Ticketmaster for
$10 in advance
and $15 at the
gate.
GOUKRSY PHOTO
Galway to bring ‘golden flute’ to Lied
MxttHanky/DN
From Staff Reports
f> Internationally acclaimed flutist
James Galway will perform Saturday
night at the Lied Center for Performing
Aits.
Galway, whose performance will
close out the Lied Center’s spring semes
ter schedule, is commonly knownas the
“Man with die Golden Flute.”
After mastering the penny whistie at "
age 12 in his hometown of Belfast,
Northern Ireland, Galway has gone on
to record over 50 best-selling albums for
RCA Victor/BMG.
His vast spectrum of music runs from
classical tunes — including the works
of Johann Sebastian Bach and Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart — to contemporary -
music, jazz and Irish folk melodies.
One of the most successful perform
ing artists of the century, Galway has
won several awards for his flute play
ing.
John Bailey, a UNL associate pro
fessor of flute, will give two pre-perfor
mance talks in the Lied Center’s ^
Steinhart Room. The talks are at 7:05
pm. and 7:30 pm. The concert begins
at 8 pm. Tickets cost $38, $34 and $30,
and are half price for students.
UNL choruses, choir deliver final performance
From Staff Reports
Sunday marks the final perfor
mances for UNL’s Symphony Cho
rus, Concert Choir ami Oratorio
Chorus.
The groups will conclude their
1996-97 seasons Sunday at 3 pan.
in Kimball Recital Hall with “An
cient Gods and Heroes: A Chorale
Final.”
lyier White, Director of Orches
tral Activities, will conduct
Sunday’s concert featuring Roman
tic movements. The orchestra will
perform Richard Wagner’s
“Siegfried’s Rhine Journey” from
the opera “Die Gotterdammening.”
Concert Choir and Oratorio
Chorus director James Hejduk will
join the orchestra far performances
of Johannes Brahms'
“Schicklsalslied” (Song of Destiny)
and the Overture and Polovetsian
Dances from Aleksandr Borodin's
opera “Prince Igor.”
Admission to Sunday's show is
free.
Ansel Adams lecture, i
exhibit showcased at
Hayden Art Gallery |
ByJohnFulwtoer
Senior Editor
Many people know the name. Sunday through Tuesday, they can get to
know the man.
Famed landscape photographer Ansel Adams, though deceased, practi
cally will be in Lincoln. The Nebraska Art Association is bringing a three
day exhibition of his photographs to Haydon Gallery Sunday through Tues
day, and a slide lecture by Adams biographer Mary Alinder to Sheldon
Memorial Art Gallery Tuesday.
Describing an art-world legend is a task fraught with peril, but Haydon
director Anne Pagel took a stab at it for the benefit of those less familiar
with Adams’ work.
“He had an eye to see beyond a romanticized vision of nature,” Pagel
said. Along with other West Coast photographer members of Group f/64,
I III I 1111! Ill II I
Photo courtesy of Alinder Gallery
“ROOTS, FOSTER GARDENS,” take* by Aasel
Adaas la Haaslala la 1040, Is sae af a
caHeetlea af Adaatt’ pbetegraphs aa display
Saaday tbreefh Taesday at Haydea Gallery,
335 N. Elfbth St.
sne saia, Adams advo
cated “straight photogra
phy” — a concern for
showing the strength and
power of a subject by mak
ing a precise, rather than
idealized, photograph.
Adams, who died in
1984, loved Yosemite Na
tional Park, a love that is
reflected in his many pho
tographs of the sweeping
vistas at the park. All of
his photographs are in
black and white, and are
available nearly every
where as framed prints
and posters.
Sunday’s photography
exhibition at Haydon was
organized by Alinder and
her husband, Jim. To
gether they own the
Alinder Gallery in
Gualala, Calif. In addition
to photographs by Adams,
they will have works by
Imogen Cunningham,
Wright Moths, Paul Strand
The exhibition’s opening
335 N. Eighth St. The sho\
p.m. and Tuesday from 101
The Alinders got to kno
ship in art at the University
named executive director
of the Friends of Photog
raphy in Carmel, Calif.
The organization’s board
chairman was none other
than Ansel Adams.
Later, in 1979, Mary
Alinder became Adams’
staff supervisor, personal
assistant and writer Of his
memoirs. “Ansel Adams:
An Autobiography” was
published after his death
and became a New York
Times bestseller.
Her slide lecture Tues
day at 7 pjn. is a personal
journey though Adams’
life, illustrated by slides of
his photography. The lec
ture, willconclude with
selected photographs of
Adams’ favorite place on
earth, Yosemite National
Park, and a recording of
him playing Beethoven’s
“Moonlight Sonata*” A
champagne and chocolate
reception will follow.
The lecture at
Sheldon, 12th and R
streets, costs $5 for stu
dents, $7.50 for Nebraska
Art Association members
and $10 for nonmembers.
The lecture is expected to
fill up quickly; reserva
tions can be made at 472
2540.
r ' ' - ' * - in
Photo courtesy opAunder Gallery
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