ARTS L The Michigan Daily Friday, November 8, 1991 Page 8 No, we're not so violent Massive Attack has Mushroomed into success by Richard S. Davis Although the name brings to mind large fists pummeling a helpless face, peacenik and Massive Attack keyboard player Mushroom says time ago. There was a show we did that couldn't be farther from the in London called the Massive truth. Attack, the Underground Massive "Massive Attack - it's not a Attack. I don't know. It's more or violent thing. It happened a long less in the category of a massive attack of arts, really," Mushroom explains. A dance group unlike most of the others that litter the radio dial, Massive Attack is a collection of DJs, musicians, vocalists and artists who have succeeded in creating soul- ful music that begs to be both danced to and just listened to. "Everything influences us, really, everything from films to groups to a church bell ringing in Mexico or something," says Mush- room. With this sort of eclectic mix of influences, the band easily brings to mind the music and philosophy of Soul II Soul (even though Massive Attack blows that group out of the water). This is no surprise, since members of both Massive Attack and Soul II Soul once all belonged to the Wild Bunch. But musical dif- ferences proved to be that band's un- doing. "Yeah, they've been very success- ful," says Mushroom with a cool, nonchalant British accent. "But, I mean, they went about it in a differ- ent way. They actually set out to be successful. We didn't really set out to be successful. We just set out to do our own thing and make the mu- sic really what we wanted to hear Attack. These guys say they're non- and give people a chance to hear it as nean. well, the people who wanted to hear --- - -it." 01 The Canadian Brass is: (I to r) Graeme Page, Ronald Romm, Charles Daellenbach, Frederic Miils and Eugene Watts. The group plays tomorrow night at Hill, which is no Great Wall of China, but it'll have to do. who who Nancy Griffith plays with her Blue Moon Orchestra tonight at the Michigan Theater. She describes her- self as a folkabilly artist, and is widely praised for her songwriting. Her amazing voice is as airy as Kate Bush's, with a twang reminiscent of Oh no! It's the members of MassiveA violent and all, but they look awfully m if where The Canadian Brass performs tomorrow at 8 p.m. in Hill Audi- torium. The group will be playing everything from "Heal Street Blues" to a Peter Schickele (of P.D.Q. Bach fame) piece, "Horn- smoke, A Horse Opera in One Act." Tickets are from S16-S24. Rush tickets are $8 at the UMS Burton Tower box office, available tomor- row from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The king of cinematography is back. "Who is Warren Miller?" you overcultured, pompous film junkie with a contempt for sports may ask. For over 40 years, Miller has been making movies about skiing, providing breathtaking shots of the terminally insane leaping from magnificent panoramas of mountain ranges. In a press kit for his latest aptly-titled film, Born to Ski, Miller says of one such jumper, "I've screwed up a lot of people's lives by putting them in my films and I hope this one lives to talk about it. If that dummy gets up and when The University of Michigan SCHOOL OF MUSIC Sun. Nov. 10 Tue. Nov. 12 Wed. Nov. 13 Thu. Nov. 14 Thu.-Sun. Nov. 14-17 Fri. Nov. 15 Sun. Nov. 17 French Classic Series John Vandertuin, Larry Visser, Marcia Van Oyen, Leslie Wills, organists Nicholas deGrigny: Mass Blanche Anderson Moore Hall, 4 p.m. Michigan Chamber Players George Shirley, William Bolcom, Yizhak Schotten, Donald Sinta, Katherine Collier, Paul Kantor, Stephen Shipps, Hong-Mei Xiao, Sarah Cleveland, Miriam Bolkovsky Swenson: Battle Pieces - A Melville Cycle Hindemith: Trio Schdnberg: Verkldrte Nacht School of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Creative Arts Orchestra Ed Sarath, director School of Music McIntosh Theatre, 8 p.m. Arts Chorale Paul Rardin, conductor Karl Schrock, organist Britten: Rejoice in the Lamb Mozart: Sonata for Two Violins and Organ Missa Brevis in C, K.220 Regina Coeli in C, K.276 Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. University Philharmonia Orchestra Donald Schleicher, conductor Laurence Kaptain, cimbalom soloist Verdi: Overture to Nabucco Daugherty: Flamingo Kocily: Suite, Hdry Jdnos Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. Digital Music Ensemble "Electric Amadeus" Steven Rush, director School of Music McIntosh Theatre, 8 p.m. Opera Theatre Britten: Albert Herring Gustav Meier, conductor Tickets: $12, $9, $6 (students) Power Center for the Performing Arts Thu.-Sat. 8 p.m.; Sun. 2 p.m. Women's Glee Club Earl Coleman, director Tickets: $5, $3 (students and seniors) Rackham Lecture Hall, 8 p.m. Michigan Marching Band In Concert Tickets: $4, $2 (children) (764-0582) Crisler Arena, 3 p.m. But even though the band did not set outtoagainnfame, that's exactly what's happening. Several critics have proclaimed that Massive At- tack's album Blue Lines is one of 'Massive Attack - it's not a violent thing. It happened a long time ago. There was a show we did in London called... the Underground Massive Attack. I don't know. It's more or less in the category of a massive attack of arts, really' -Mush room, on the band's name the best releases of the year, but Mushroom takes the praise in style. "We're not looking for any of that, you know?" he says. "We've just done what we've wanted to do, really. We're not making any mes- sages or any statements or asking anyone, 'Vote us this, vote us that.' We're not asking or saying anything, really, you know? It's up to those outside elements... what they want to make of it. We're just doing our own thing." MASSIVE ATTACK plays this Sunday at Industry in Pontiac with Giant Step. Cover is $5 and doors open at 8 p.m. Griffith Loretta Lynn and the pith of Woody Guthrie. Tickets for the show are $15.50 in advance (p.e.s.c.) from TicketMaster. Dancing at the Edge of the World: Thoughts on Words, Women, Places Ursula K. Le Guin Harper & Row Every once in a while, if you're lucky, an author will come along who speaks to you, really speaks to you. You murmur "Yes! yes! that's it!" and look up to see if anyone no- tices the glow of your discovery. Of course, no one does. Like the civil rights movement and the general upheaval of the '60s, the women's lib movement often seems distant and rather obscure to those of us in the following genera- tion. One reads often enough these days about the feminist movements in crisis, stalling, etc. Ursula Le Guin's essays, ranging far and wide over topics from the history of civi- lization to abortion, bring not just an understanding of the past but of the present and an optimistic future. The reader joins her on a retrospec- tive journey of intellectual disco- very as she shares keen insights into her own work and that of others. Le Guin waxes most eloquent when addressing women's issues - exploring women's language, cul- ture, consciousness and morality. In her language, in her writing, one begins to see, as through a mist, the outlines of a new form of expres- sion for women, and there is a sense of urgency in reaching for it: "Men live their whole lives within the Dominant area. When they go off hunting bears, they come back with bear stories, and these... become the history or the mythology of that culture. So the men's 'wilderness' becomes Nature, considered as the property of Man. "But the experience of women as women, their experience unshared with men, that experience is the wilderness or the wildness that is utterly other - that is in fact, to Man, unnatural. That is what civi- lization has left out, what culture excludes, what the Dominants call animal, bestial, primitive, undeve- loped; unauthentic... what we are just beginning to find words for our words not their words: the exper- ience of women." Pregnancy and motherhood are an integral part of the experience of See BOOKS, Page 10 Miller skis away, it's gonna be hard to explain." Thankfully, the local ski ranges aren't open yet, so no one will leave the Michigan Theater Sunday night and break out into violent ski jumping. The show starts at 7:30 p.m. and tickets are $4 for students, $5 for civilians. r Albert Herrin Britten's charming comic opera about the lack of young women able to honorably lead a small town's May Day, and the young man who fills their shoes ~ ,'1 . 4 I . t l; Faculty Recital by Jeffrey Gilliam, piano Assisted by Stephen Shipps, violin Berg: Sonata Op. 1 . . VV '