%4O'.'~,. records this weekend C~.is Ann.. Arbor..'s. 5fl 3j MeSca i 0 celebrating the release f their debut album at Dexter BowlN-Bar (2830 tr dnDxr) m.atray.WSecond, 89X's Greg Ginipper will be playing Massive Attacks new record, Protection" at the Shelter Page 8 In Detroit Saturday; door& open at 10 p.m. Make it to both, Iftyou (. Fday February 3, 1995 FutureDance leaps over heads 101 By uz Shaw Daily Weekend Editor An evening that was expected to be chock-fullof cyber-technic wonderment turned out to be a fantastic display of computer wizardry, choreographic ex- cellence ... and stretched-to-the-limits abstraction. "FutureDance 1935-2035" debuted last night to an appreciative FutureDance 1935-2035 Power Center for the Performing Arts February 2, 1995 crowd, although many of the works had rmuch of the audience diving for their programs for explanations as soon as lights came up. The production started of with the reworked versionof MarthaGraham's "Panorama," abreathtaking piece with 35 women running about the stage, all dressed alike and making identical movements. The piece seemed as if it were flowing about the stage, con- stantly expanding and contracting as the entire group acted as one body. The sounds of marching and the blood-red costumes left one wonder- ing what kind of social commentary Graham was making at the time of the choreography, but the meaning was left to the audience to decide. The second piece, "Stale Green Traffic Light," by visiting choreogra- pher Alan Good, was opened with the computer operator and a huge- screened computer (which was on the back wall of the stage) opening up various files which commenced the beginnings of life in the dance itself. The dancers, all dressed in various street outfits, fluttered, spun and pranced all over the stage, in no par- ticular pattern and in no way match- ing the random beats and clangs of the background music. Although a bit dizzying in both its length and its reason, Good and the dancers pro- duced an applaudable piece that de- fied the norms of dance. Choreographer Jessica Fogel's piece, "Save Changes Before Quit- ting," used common computer terms to shape the different images and movements represented in the piece. The first dancer to enter was wearing a big red boot, as if to "boot" up the program. This piece also used the big computer screen to relay ideas and images to the audience while the danc- ers moved below. This time a screensaver that broke the image on the screen into various geometric pieces was, played out both on the screen, and as it seemed, on the stage. This extremely exhausting dance gave one the feeling of being amongst the inner-workings of a computer as the dancers scattered from place to place jumping, pouncing, biting (or, per- haps byting) and barking. "Wintercount" presented a much softer dance than the two that pre- ceded it, and gave somewhat of a break from the computer theme. The FUIREDANCE: 1935-2035 Where:Power Center Tickets: $16, $12,,$6 students at the League Ticket Office When: Tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m. Sunday at2 p.m. Call 764-0450, dance took you back to an earlier time in history. Janet Lilly, the choreogra- pher of the piece, had the dancers dressed in country-style dresses, over- alls and plaid shirts. It even started with the call of a square dance. As the dance progressed, the sense of an approaching storm was easily antici- pated by the sounds of whipping wind Apparently dancers in the year 2035 like ripping off "Star Trek." Too bad Jean-Luc Picard wasn't there. and the spinning turmoil of the danc- ers. The piece appeared simple, but had much more complex undertones, some of which didn't even occur to you until the very end. The final dance, Peter Sparling's "The Pursuit of Happiness," was a fantastically exaggerated future piece. All of the dancers were, as Sparling said, "... decked out a la Star Trek," and portraying students who were try- ing to dance in zero gravity. The back- drop had a large, oval viewfinder that looked like something straight off the Enterprise. Through this portal the students could see the outer space surrounding their "space station" and any images that their instructor, actor Malcolm Tulip, chose to project to them. The dance moves themselves were mostly based on how move- ments would look in space, forming many chains with the dancers weav- ing themselves in and out of each others arms and grasps. The entire concert was a worthy effort, though much of it seemed to be* so far on the abstract side that it made the dancers seem like little more than random characterson acomputer screen. Messin' you up witcha Monster Voodoo Machine By Kirk Miller Daily Books Editor Life is tough when you have to kick the crap out of your fans. "I hate having to resort to vio- lence," Monster Voodoo Machine lead singer Adam Sewell explained over the phone. "Just because some punk rock kids don't understand if you tell a band to 'fuck off,' they will hit you." Eight months into their various tours and MVM has started to be- come an industrial band worth not- MONST ER VOODO01 MACHINE Where:St. Andrews Hall Tickets: Sold out Doors open at 9 p.m. ing. Their first full-length major label release, "Suffersystem" has gained several strong reviews with it's groovy industrial metal vibe, tempered with little bits of hip-hop, hardcore and techno. The first single, "Bastard Is As Bastard Does" (apparently no Gump reference implied) has a gang Biohazard style chorus, while "De- fense Mechanism" is virtual techno. It's the CD that the Revolting Cocks haven't made and Front Line Assem- bly only wishes they could, not en- tirely original but interesting enough in its range of styles and sounds to stand up to repeated listens. Just don't call it industrial. "On our first record there is indus- trial, southern rock, hardcore stuff, no rules," Sewell said. "I don't think of us as industrial. We're not trying to be anything we're not. We don't dress in black and come out in Skinny Puppy t-shirts and scream about vivisection." All six members of the band started out in the city of Toronto, not neces- sarily the home of angry, abrasive sounds. Instead of street rage, Sewell and his band mates had to deal with a different kind of angerrelated to grow- ing up peacefully. "Toronto has the appearance of being a mellow city," he admitted. "But it's really got a more-assholes- per-capita than any city I've ever been to. In Canada everyone's so looked after, and the music scene is just a bunch of spoiled upper class kids who ruined things for other people." Part of the problem in the music scene comes from a conservative club atmosphere up north. "For heavier, underground bands it sucks," Sewell said. "If you're playing commercial glam rock you can do really well and make lots of money and people are behind you. There are clubs that will let us play, which I'll always be thankful for, but there isn't the same support." As MVM tours well into the year they might see their popularity grow slowly but surely. Already "Defense Mechanism" has been a heavily added See VOODOO, page 9 Robocop Versus the Termintor Virgin Games Detroit is such a wonderful city. It's filled with so many opportuni- ties, and that's why it's always cho- sen for movies such as "The Crow" and "RoboCop," and now as the stage for a humanoid war in the new video game "RoboCop Verses The Terminator." Detroit is run down and burning (in the game, of course), and RoboCop has to blow a few thou- sand people away in order to save the world, and Detroit too, from the evil OCP corporate empire once again. There is a story behind this game, something about sending Termina- tors and robots from the future into the past to try and kill people, or something, but that isn't important. This is a good old-fashioned killing and destruction game, and killing is what RoboCop does -- and does it well, he does. And what better place for killing than Detroit? As RoboCop, players walk through the streets of Detroit blowing away the evil OCP army, with blood and splat sound effects galore! In this traditional shoot-'em- up game, RoboCop is supposed to free the human hostages being held captive, and destroy everything else he can. With a slew of explosive guns to find along the streets, RoboCop con- tinues level by level, doing what else, but killing people, along with Monster Voodoo Machine drive us crazy with that boogie-oogle-oogle. KUUMBA & UM Major Events/Div. of Student Affairs Present robotic dogs, endoskeletons, and of course, Terminators. Quite disap- pointingly though, the Terminators0 are no match for Robo, and there aren't too many difficult battles with them in the game, dominated by RoboCop. Not to worry. There are a num- ber of other evil bastards that await you in this veritable hell on Earth. ED-409, the big mutha from the first "RoboCop" flick, is a fun foe, and puts up a good fight along with the majority of the other bad asses.O However, some of the robots are extremely difficult to beat, and maIy actually be impossible without us- ing special invincibility codes. This does make the game impossible to finish in just a few hours, unlike many other similar death and de- struction games. "RoboCop Versus The Termina- tor" has excellent graphics and* sound effects, and is much closer to the original arcade "RoboCop" than an earlier sub-par version from Nintendo. It is one of the better of this type of game, and is full of exciting and bloody scenes. "RoboCop" offers hours of fin and bloody killing, and is just what most people look for in an action game. Plus, hey, there's probablya smaller chance of being killed play- ing Sega than there is going to De- troit, right? (Hints: To enhance the Sega Gea- esis game to the original version that was originally rejected because of (more) extreme violence, type in CBABBABBCBBCCBBCBCA CCAAABBBACA while the game is paused, and it will be restored to the first version with extra blood, 1 more screams, big-busted women, and some other fun additions. To give RoboCop 54 lives, pause the game, and type in CCAABB CCAABB.) -Brian A. Gnatt .DAILY.ART$S* ..E MN0~E R ULEIII.. FR ANCIs BE BEY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, EN SE M B L E RACKHAM AUDITORIUM "Combined the best elements of the world of music and literature" The Washington Post "The course of his career conforms to the ideal of the Renaissance man, one who is fluent in several Arts" "A virtuoso guitarist." International Herald Tribune "He's an original: a composer/ performer who turns every- thing he has heard, African and Alien, into something entirely individual." Let us ship your male parts! (oh yeah, and everything else too!) PRINTING HIGH QU9LITY LOW PRMCPC Tickets available at the MichiganeUnion Ticket Office and all Ticketmaster outlets. Charge by phone 763-TKTS. omawnwammmmmmmd I VAC's Soundstage Welcomes IN CONCERT THURSDAY MARCH 16TH at -lv I AN - I- - I I I ^ , I 1 11 t. I .rhsnr[I var andrl F) mnnth I1