Music is in the air by Monica McQuaid The UPEI Music De- partment will be ending sec- ond semester with a bang. There are no less than eight night recitals planned for the upcoming weeks. On Thursday, March 24 at 8:00pm in the Dr. Steel Recital Hall, there will be recital featuring the UPEI Choral Ensembles. All the music, with the exception of a few selections, will be twentieth-century music. If your excuse for not going to a recital was that music was all “old stuff”, here’s your chance to come out and join us. The price is right, too. The recitals are free. As added incentive, keep in mind that some of this music will be first performances of composers in the Music De- partment. ’ Following this recital, you can go to the one on Saturday, March26 in the Dr. Steel Recital Hall. The recital will start at 5:00pm. This recital is the Third An- nual Music Alumni Schol- arship Benefit Concert and Banquet. That means that UPEI Music alumni will be returning to play. Some of the alumni included in the program Angele Hache, Jane Naylor and Dave Shepard. The admission price is $24. All the proceeds will be used for music scholarships here at UPEI. This is a very worthy cause. The next in the series of recitals is the UPEI Instru- mentation Ensembles in con- cert. This will take place on Tuesday, March 29 at 8:00pm in the Dr. Steel Recital Hall. The concert will feature vari- ous ensembles, including the UPEI concert band. Again, no admission is charged. If you’ve gone to these three recitals, and you still think your life needs to be jazzed up, then come to the Dr. Steel Recital Hall on Saturday, April 2 at 8:00pm to hear the UPEI Jazz En- sembles in concert. The UPEI Jazz Singers and the UPEI Jazz Ensemble have put a lot of work into this performance. It’s going to be spectacular, so come on out and listen. This recital is also free. The final three recitals are on April 5, 6 and 7, are free, and are all in the )r. Steel Recital Hall. On April 5 at 8:00pm, there will be a senior recital featuring Jill MacLeod on piano. On April 6, there will be a student recital at 12:30pm. This will be the last of the noon-time student recitals. Finally, on April 7 there will be a special studies recital featuring Ge- — offrey Lane on classical gui- tar, at 8:00pm. You may not be able to attend all of these recitals, but we hope you have a chance to see some of them. They’re worth the effort. = ==Thursday March 24th=1988 UPEI eu) Theatre Society Presents: Count Oederland by Jim Mcgrath Count Oederland writ- ten by Max Frisch, was per- formed by the UPFI Theatre Society, and played last week as the David Mackenzie The- atre from Thursday to Satur- day. The play was centered on the Public Prosecutor, who was trying to get a con- viction of a bank employee murderer. The Prosecutor was working very hard on the case and his mind seemed to have snapped, he seemed to think that he was now one of the children’s fairy tale monsters, Count Oederland. Count Oederland was a man that ran around and killed people with an axe. The Prosecutor started doing this not knowing that it was ac- tually him that was doing all the murders. The people of the country started to help him in his fight and started a rebellion against the govern- ment. The State agreed to a new government with the Count in charge. In the fi- nal scene, the Count woke up, everything seemed as a dream, but it wasn’t, The President came to get the Count and form the new gov- ernment. The play ended with the Prosecutor/(Count) screaming to himself to wake up, but he was awake, and he WAS the Count. The best scene of the play was with the Clsirevoy- ant, played by Linda Wig- more. In this scene she was trying to ‘sense’ the where- abouts of the of the play, main actor the Prosecu- tor; played by Greg Durham. A very interesting scene of the play was with Di- anne Thompson and David Larsen, the police came into to search the home for the murderer that he had seen throwing glass out the window. The dick van dyke’s — “a. by Jim Mcgrath The debut album by “Hamilton’s Ambassador’s of Tackiness to the World”, took the underground scene by surprise in ’86 with their Nobody likes the dick van dyke’s Record Review detestable blend of original- ity and polyester. This fris- bee is another pathetic at- tempt to spread their warped sense of reality into every crack of Canada. The title for this album from Og Records is very suit- able. While listening to the cuts from this album, it’s like listening to various disgust- ing songs at once. This is the second invasion of the group into the market of unmarketable music. The Van dykes create the ulti- mate tacky-garage-punk en- vironment for slightly off-key lead guitarist and “vocalist” Ole oes o@ ‘S tk NO. Dik’s satirical assault on life in general. The cut that I “enjoyed” the most was ‘I was a teenage Gumby’, only because of the title though. It seemed to be the most normally writ- ten track on the album. The sang of totally strange things that made NO sense, but it was a funny song. For those of you that en- joy the rebellious type of mu- sic, you should rush out and purchase this album right away. It could be of some in- terest to the professors in the Psych Dept. 2 Page 17