The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 21, 1995, Image 4

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Page 4 • The Battalion
jAggielife
Tuesday • March 21, 1995
uesda:
Baltimore Consort brings Renaissance to A&M
By Amy Collier
The Battalion
T he Baltimore Consort will revive music of the Renaissance peri
od tonight in a performance in Rudder Theater at 7:30 p.m..
The concert is the University Chamber Concert Series’ fifth and
final concert of the year.
Dr. Werner Rose, professor of music and coordinator of the music
program, arranged for the consort to come to Texas A&M. Rose said
the musicians play authentic music from the Renaissance period.
“They’ve literally spent years trying to train themselves to be mu
sicians from that period,” Rose said. “On stage they become late Re
naissance musicians.”
The concert is an enriching opportunity for people to learn music
history from many centuries ago. Rose said.
“It is unusual and very special,” Rose said. “I think it’s going to be
a wonderful event. We have not had an old music group that was
pre-Baroque on campus in a long time.”
The ensemble began in 1980 by performing English instrumental
music. With the addition of soprano Custer LaRue in 1983, the
group expanded its music and began to perform Scottish music.
The consort now performs 16th and 17th century British, French
and Italian music with Renaissance instruments such as citterns, vi
ols and lutes.
By touring extensively across the United States and having three
compact discs on the Billboard charts, Rose said the group has es
tablished a name for themselves.
Like musicians during the Renaissance, Rose said the musicians
show their musical talent by improvising some of their music.
“There’s not a great deal of printed music from that period of
time,” he said. “The performers were expected to be improvisers.”
Dr. Lorinne Marlow, a visiting lecturer of music, said she has
been listening to the Baltimore Consort’s music for years and is
looking forward to finally hearing it live.
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The Baltimore Consort
“I think it’s a very marvelous group and they perform a wide variety 11 e0 °
of music really well,” Marlow said. “The people from that time come a F ua ?
alive when you hear their poetry and their music. This is a chance to n! 7 1 1 ^
see art history come alive.” "'mm I 1 ., 1
p sitec
Kathryn Creamer, publicity coordinator for the consort’s managing
company, said the great talent of the artists makes the show entertain )
ing for people of all ages.
“It’s very interesting and very lively music,” Creamer said. “It’s <
nitely a broadening experience.”
Rose said the concert will be an interesting and intimate experiencel
“I think people will enjoy a marvelous evening of music-making typ f
ical of a certain period,” Rose said. “I guarantee they’ll be leaving tap
ping their feet.”
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The
Madonna gets cranky
with fans at video party
NEW YORK (AP) —
Madonna hasn’t lost her
taste for discipline.
More than 1,000 peo
ple showed up for a party
at a Greenwich Village
nightclub to promote her
new video, “Bedtime Sto
ry.” The crowd was row
dy by the time she took
to the stage to lounge on
a brass bed and read
“Miss Spider’s Tea Par
ty.
Madonna
Hollywood publicist Lee Solters, who
has represented Barbra Streisand, Frank
Sinatra and Michael Jackson, said he was
hired to promote the career of the B-movie
actor best known as a guest at O.J. Simp
son’s estate.
“I told him I was interested in only one
thing — career publicity — and not using
O.J. Simpson as a device,” Solters said.
Solters said Monday that Kaelin has lost
some potential movie roles because he has
to be available to testify at Simpson’s tri
al.
One of Kaelin’s confirmed projects is a
movie titled “The 16th Minute.” The title
stems from Andy Warhol’s quip about every
one someday achieving 15 minutes of fame.
Doug Crider. She recently released the al
bum “Simpatico” with guitarist Chet Atkins
and sang “Take It to the Limit” on the trib
ute album “Common Thread: The Songs of
the Eagles.”
ude p
rvice
axirr
stlinj
“Th<
histor 1
Pianist gets birthday ponzal
wishes from Yeltsin
er
TTl just wait till you shut up,” she told
the crowd late Saturday. “Show some re
spect.”
Kaelin looks to keep
life in spotlight going
Country star Boggus
gives birth to first child
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Professional
house guest Brian “Kato” Kaelin wants to
stretch his 15 minutes of fame.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Country
star Suzy Bogguss has given birth to her
first child, ajson.
Benton Charles Crider, 8 pounds, 12
ounces, was born Friday at a Nashville hos
pital.
Bogguss, 38, is married to songwriter
MOSCOW (AP) —
Boris Yeltsin sent 80th
birthday congratulations
Monday to pianist Svy
atoslav Richter.
The Russian president
called Richter’s musical
interpretations “a source
of inspiration and love of
beauty,” and wished the
maestro “many more
years of creative work,”
the ITAR-TASS news
agency reported
atenc
Richter was traveling abroad, the agency^. . ( (
said. But friends and admirers organized a. ^
music party in his honor. || |L e r
Richter became the Soviet Union’s leading ^
pianist in the 1940s and toured the world’s |
stages in the 1950s. He has toured rarely in
recent years.
cemed
Statue dismembered in bizarre Big Boy brawl
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) — Who killed Big
Boy?
Someone stole the 300-pound, 6-foot Big
Boy statue from a restaurant Friday, dis
membered the grinning fiberglass fellow
with a hacksaw, scrawled “Big Boy is dead”
on the pieces and dropped them off around
town Sunday.
Between giggles, police are taking the
theft seriously.
“This is a sad, sad day for the city when
somebody would desecrate a hallowed symbol
of the 1950s and 1960s,” Sgt. Richard Murphy
said Monday, his brow furrowed in concern.
Then he grinned.
“It’s really hard to keep a straight face
when you talk about it,” he said. “We’ve been
trying to put him together again like Humpty
Dumpty. I think he looks pretty good for a guy
who’s been cut up.”
The hamburger-toting statue with the
black pompadour, red-and-white checkered
pants and suspenders has guarded the doors
of Big Boy restaurants around the world since
the 1930s. The chain is owned by Warren,
Mich.-based Elias Brothers Restaurants Inc.,
which operates 850 restaurants worldwide.
Murphy said Big Boy was chopped into
seven pieces. His hamburger was intact,
but his right ear and part of his belly were
still missing.
A note was attached to all but one of the
severed limbs with the message: “Big Boy
is Dead.” A note attached to one limb said:
“Big Boy is almost dead. Nevermind. Now
he’s dead.”
Each note was signed: “Pimps of pimply
ness.”
Taped to the severed right buttock was a
newspaper ad that said: “Strip Steak $2.29
a pound.”
“They had a sense of humor,” Murphy said.
The statue was worth about $4,000.
Restaurant Manager David Nelson said
his Big Boy, whose feet had been encased
in cement to prevent thievery, was discov
ered missing Friday morning, parts of
shiny black shoes left behind. The eatery,
one of 10 Big Boys in the city, has been
closed for remodeling.
Nelson found Big Boy’s severed head on 1 age to
“I 1
saware
our st
new c<
B tren
The
side the restaurant Sunday morning.
“I couldn’t believe that someone woulitheHt
do that to him,” Nelson said. “He’s friendly Sei
always smiling, ready to greet our cusPaso,
tomers. I mean, what kind of person wouli^gains
do this to him?” Would
It wasn’t long after Nelson reported thf produ
theft that police began fielding calls froir “It
other Big Boy restaurants where body part;time,
were deposited. Rosso
“Nine times out of 10 if the Big Boy is miss “W
ing, he’s usually down at the University olareas.
Toledo,” Nelson said. “During fraternity sea to sa
son, they do that as a prank.” |hink
Each time, he had been returned no worse body i
for wear. n’t se<
The culprits could be charged with grant Le;
theft, punishable by up to two years in jaii Texas
Murphy said. Pasn
Customers at one Big Boy were abuzzifegisl
about the theft. A s
“Hey,” said truck driver Robert Keane found
“it was probably somebody who didn’t like amok
the food.” low s
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