ARTS 'The Michigan Daily Tuesday, February 11,1992 Page 5 Bored Brit pop stars grow up by Nima Hodaei For the past several years, the path of aggression and anger in techno- music has been led by Chelmsford, England natives Nitzer Ebb. For- ever dark, brooding and completely intimidating, Nitzer Ebb was a per- Nitzer Ebb, as McCarthy ex- plains, started back in 1984 (a trio at the time), to go against the wave of commercial acts that had an all- too- mainstream feel. What resulted was an engaging and revolting mix of songs, captur- ing listeners with its repetitive The duo's popularity around the world has increased tremendously with each subsequent album. A sup- porting spot with British Mute Records' labelmates, Depeche Mode, garnered the band great reviews and gave it a broader exposure base. Oddly, however, the British press continues to downplay Ebb's importance in the dance-oriented genre of industrial music. When the British press is mentioned, Mc- Carthy opens up: "There's a lack of respect here (in Britain) for anyone in journalism. If a guy who's been learning to play the guitar since he was twelve-years-old, didn't make it, and so then went on to write as a secondary thing, he has a bad atti- tude (towards bands like us). "They think, 'Well, he's no bet- ter than me, and I was a really good guitarist, and I should be where he is.' I don't really give a shit about what they think or what they do. We'll carry on doing what we want to do. "The categorization of music in America is so much less than it is in England. Everything has to be cate- gorized to make it easier for the journalists to describe things in a few words. And that's all it is - an industry thing. It has nothing to do with the fans and what they like or dislike. It's a power trip really by the press." This anger toward the press has not increased the "wall" Nitzer Ebb had originally constructed be- tween themselves and others for so long. Ironically, that "wall" has in fact begun to come down, as the group tries to break the myth that it is cold and distant. McCarthy attributes the origi- nal facade to their upbringings in the violent and uninspiring town right outside of London. A multi- tude of experiences, however, have changed his approach to fans and media. "As we grew up and moved away, we started to loosen up," he says. "We left a bit of our attitude behind us." Nitzer Ebb has now embarked on its first headlining tour of the U.S. in several years. Terms such as "ecstatic" and "energetic" hardly seem to do the band justice on stage. With a furious fusion of drums, synths, and McCarthy's balance of chant-like vocals and actual singing, Nitzer Ebb places a lot of impor- tance on its live show. With a tour comes the excite- ment of playing new material in front of an audience. While the band would be the first to admit that it What resulted was an engaging and revolting mix of songs, capturing listeners and then sending them away once it beat them to a bloody pulp. has grown up during the past eight years, McCarthy also makes it quite clear that this new material is al- most a culmination of this matura- tion process. "I'd say we've got a pretty good base with Ebbhe ad," says Mc- Carthy. "We're really happy with the way the album sits and it's just a progress of developing from the ba- sis. It's not that we're disowning the previous three albums, I just think that this album is really start- ing to (describe) what Nitzer Ebb is really about." NITZER EBB plays Saturday at the State Theater in Detroit at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $15 at TicketMaster (plus evil service charge). I Nitzer Ebb is a band Dickens could learn to love. Douglas McCarthy and Bon Harris do the urchin thing in this photo which says a lot about urban alienation, wouldn't you say? fect portrayal of the hostility and mystique that ran rampant in the in- dustrial music business. This image came to a grinding halt in 1991, when the duo - com- posed of vocalist Douglas Mc- Carthy and percussionist Bon Har- ris- released their fourth album, Ebbhead. In place of the minimalist lyrics, and the draining drumbeats, stood an honest to goodness "pop" album! The same electronic elements, although present, were shown in a new light. "We were bored of what we Were doing," says McCarthy. "We've been around for a long time and from the very beginning we haven't really been bothered about song structures and melodies and keys and such. We wanted to exper- iment with songs." Daughters of the Dust (1992) dir. Julie Dash African-American filmmaking has gone through a renaissance of sorts in recent years. The emergence of Spike Lee, John Singleton, Mario Van Peebles and others has paved the way for aspiring African-Amer- ican filmmakers to bring their unique perspective to the screen. Until now, their female coun- terparts have lagged behind in terms of commercial success and national recognition. With Daughters of the Dust, however, Julie Dash becomes the first African-American woman to make a nationally distributed film. sound, and then sending them away for shelter once. it beat them to a bloody pulp. McCarthy readily ad- mits that this new out-look, at the time, was actually two-sided. "It was partly out of boredom of listening to what was main- stream, and the accepted music of the time which was really overpro- duced," he recalls. "We wanted to offend as many people as possible, really. It seems that you can offend quite a lot of people easily - just use one bass line or one synthesizer with a heavy, disco-type drumbeat. "But we couldn't be bothered to waste time learning how to play guitars. We really wanted to make music as quickly as possible. Syn- thesizers and sequencers were really the quickest way to get a whole sound." An MIT professor engineers poetry Who started the rumor that everyone at Massachusetts Institute of Technology is a gearhead? Even MIT has a writing program, and Robin Becker, an instructor there, will be reading her poems in the Rackham Amphitheatre at 4 p.m. today. Becker also serves as the po- etry editor of The Women's Review of Books, a job which seems to balance out the technical atmosphere of MIT, keeping her poetry well away from the influence of formulas and math. Her latest work, Giacometti's Dog, contains an array of poems about such diverse topics as her sister's suicide and the accidental death of her dog: "The vet said it was quick, your unmarred body / dy- ing on the inside, all the organs crying together. / Dog of the many days, of the city, of the desert, / I hear the jangle of your collar in my dreams." Becker's poems take her readers on a tour around the world - from a jazz festival in France to Agra and the Taj Mahal. She also writes poems about works of art, producing a unique perspective on a painting by Chagall or Matisse, or a sculpture, as in the title poem "Giacometti's Dog." "He moves so gracefully on his bronze legs / that they form the let- ter M beneath him. / There is nothing more beautiful than the effort / in his outstretched neck, the simplicity of the head; / but he will never curl again in the comfortable basket,/ he will never be duped by the fireplace and the fire." Becker has won poetry fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts (guess she doesn't do anything too kinky with nuts and bolts). You can find more of her poetry in her other collections, Back- talk and Personal Effects. Need CASH for COLLEGE? We can help Our computerized research and matching service can help find the unpublished, private funds available for you. Call for free information. (313) 6774714 Or write to: Scholarships Unlimited P.Q Box 15282 Ann Arbor, MI 48106 McCarthy Dust tells the story of the Paezan family, Sea Island Gullahs who live off the coast of South Car- olina. Set in 1902, the story takes place the day before the family mi- grates North. Dust centers around the family's matriarch, the great grandmother, and her decision not to go North. A voice-over narration reveals the family's trepidations about leaving their homeland, and a second voice-over, by the unborn child of one of the couples, is a retrospective of what happens to the family years later. Within these two narrations, we are offered several reactions to the grandmother's decision and the family situation. Dust breaks with Hollywood cinematic traditions. The film cre- ates its own time and space, and its narrative is free-form and episodic. The beautiful photography and un- obtrusive camera work add to the lyrical quality. The female characters are no longer mammy caricatures and stereotypes; instead, they are real women with real concerns about the future of their people. The film does not resort to cliches and offers a re- freshing look at the African-Ameri- can female experience. At times, however, the narrative is difficult to discern. The multiple voice-overs are confusing, and the characters (with the exception of the great-grandmother) are not clearly delineated. Too much time is spent just trying to figure out what is going on, making the film tedious at times. But Dash is not new to filmmak- ing. She began studying film in 1969 and spent 15 years researching and studying the Gullahs. Hopefully, American audiences will not have to wait this long again for films by Dash and other African-American women. Daughters of the Dust plays tonight at 6 p.m. in MLB 4. Admis- sion is free.- -Michelle Phillip * M J- I I ty" -'Eu-uM s w . m r r w vi v r.a .v . v w w " W W aU U " - *W ..I -- -."-I - . --.