Features Editor: LisaToth lisatoth@dailyemeraId.com Thursday, November 15,2001 Jacko, Radiohead & R.E.M. Emerald webmaster Dave Depper shares R.E.M. ’s latest yogurt-friendly antics. Page 6 uounesy Knot Van Cliburn silver co-medalist Antonio Pompa-Baldi will join the Eugene Symphony at 8 p.m. today at the Hult Center. tickling the Antonio Pompa-Baldi brings his 22 years of piano experience to the Eugene Symphony ivones By Sue Ryan Oregon Daily Emerald Pianist Antonio Pompa-Baldi has been in love with classical music for most of his life. “I started when I was four,” Pom pa-Baldi said. “I saw a pianist play some where and after that came home and banged out music on the table, then a toy piano, until my parents decided to take me to a teacher to study it formally. ” The 26-year-old Van Clibum silver co medalist joins the Eugene Symphony to day for an 8 p.m. performance featuring Prokokiev’s Third Concerto at the Hult Center. He said he chose the concerto for its density and passion, both character istics of his performance style through 22 years of playing the piano. His endeavors led him to formal com petitions, including the Van Clibum con test in June 2001 in Fort Worth, Texas. Per formers tied for both the gold and the silver medals for the first time in the histo ry of the competition. Pompa-Baldi came away with one of the silver medals and a concert tour for two years, which brings him to the Willamette Valley this week. On Monday night at the LaSells Stew art Center in Corvallis, he caressed the piano while playing and leaned forward to peer into its interior as if drawing the music out toward him during the 90 minute recital. He said he chose Mozart, Chopin, Liebermann, Poulenc and Rachmaninoff for his Monday perform ance for the variety of styles. “They are completely different from each other,” Pompa-Baldi said. “I like to 5 have music I can plunge into.” He also plunged into life in a new country by moving to the United States in 2000. The move was precipitated bv his tour as the winner of the 1999 Cleve land Competition. “In six months. 1 crossed the Atlanta Ocean 18 times. That's when I decided ! was time to make the move, ” he said. Pompa-Baldi relocated to Cleveland. Ohio, from his native citv of Naples, Italy He learned to speak English began teach ing at Cuyahoga Comma n it v College and took a position on the board oi the Oberlin Conservatory. He said the adjustment to a different culture has not been a problem. “I like it here. I don’t miss Italy as a country, but I do miss my family who are still located there,” he said. The Van Clibum competition will be his last one as Pompa-Baldi has decid ed to pursue his career as a concert pi anist at a professional level. “I don’t want to compete anymore,” he said. “It’s mainly to get your career started and this has done that for me.” Pompa-Baldi said even though he has done well in such events, he dislikes that musicians end up rated by such competitions. “I don’t feel artists should be ranked,” he said. “We all love music, and it should be reflected individually, not through being compared to others. ” At tonight’s Eugene concert, Pompa Baldi will pair with Conductor Marc Taddei and New Zealand composer Gareth Farr. Tickets for University stu dents cost $10. Sue Ryan is a community reporter for the Oregon Daily Emerald. She can be reached at sueryan@dailyemerald.com. University Theatre performance series highlights ‘New Voices’ ■Student-written plays ‘Leaving Shallot’ and ‘Peephole’ will debut this week at Arena Theatre By Lisa Toth Oregon Daily Emerald In early February of this year, University student Alexander Pawlowski spent two school nights in a row wide awake. Dur ing this time, the theater arts major from Eugene was writing and revising a play. Pawlowski said his “Leaving Shallot” is a modem romantic tale of two lost souls coming together for one night. And it’s one of two plays presented in the University Theatre’s second annual “New Voices” playwriting series. The pair of new student-written plays begins Nov. 15 and runs Nov. 16 and 17. Performances of “Leaving Shallot” and the other play, “Peephole,” will be held in the Arena Theatre in Villard Hall, 1109 Old Campus Ln., starting at 8 p.m. Both plays have been selected for submission to the Kennedy Center/ American College Theatre Festival new play competition. “Peephole” was composed by theater arts alumnus Ian Appel, who graduated in 2001 and currently teaches English at Oregon State University. “Both plays are exceptional works for young writers,” said director Craig Willis, a doctoral candidate in the theater arts de partment. “Playwriting is perhaps the most difficult task in theater, and I think it’s incredibly exciting to hear the voices of our own students on the stage. ” Appel said he considers “Peephole” to be die first full-length one-act play he has written, and part of his path to find ing his “sea legs” in playwriting. He en couraged people to attend because he said the script is relevant to how the me dia today fabricates images. The play, which he described as short and chaotic, is a serio-comic consideration of soci ety’s ability to be driven to insane acts by overactive media, and also questions contemporary spiritual fulfillment. He said the play focuses on an end-of the-world scenario, where the “media rules the roost, and everyone feeds off television.” “It’s been fun getting into these char acters’ minds and figuring out how they’d react to each other,” Appel said. He added that he would like his play to make a lasting impression on the au dience. “What I’d hope resonates is a sense of both the comic absurdity and human tragedy of our media-saturated pop cul ture, how that affects our relationships with other people and how our relation Turn to ‘New Voices’, page 8 Courtesy Photo Emily Howell, a first-year journalism major from Portland, plays Rhiannon, and Ian Hanley, a senior theater arts major also from Portland, takes on the role of Tony in ‘Leaving Shallot,’ showing at Arena Theatre as part of ‘New Voices’ Nov. 15-17.