iTe, Niiic,- g ;i.,iyC-:riAy.. kArcn 24,A A1nnr- i ne micnigan Daily - Friday March 24~ 1995 - 9 'Sick' of all the controversy 'Orange' you glad these guys are on tour? y Kirk Miller ily Arts Writer 3Maybe the reason they called them- selves Sick of It All comes from how badly they've been treated. "The worst thing that happened was yesterday,"vocalistLou Kollerexplained. "We played First Avenue in Minneapolis. We've played there before and they've always had a huge barricade. (At SICK OF IT ALL ?When: Tonight at 6 p.m. Where: St. Andrew's Hall Tickets: Call 961-MELT for information. soundcheck) there was no barricade up, but we weren't thinking because we had .t got up and we had to go righton stage. Apparently it's been a few years since they've had a show without a barricade and the kids knew this and went crazy. I mean, there were 17 people stage-diving at once and abig human mess on the floor. I guess one kid broke his nose, another twisted his ankle." Although the band's legendary live show inspired riots on their last Ameri- tour threeyears ago, Koller claimed 'xcept for the previous night) that the audience has been great and there have been no injuries. But in typical Sick of It All fashion, one small incident has already blossomed into a controversy. "Now I'm getting calls at this club today," Koller complained. "They're saying 'If you don't play with a barri- cade you don't play this club, because we heard that you broke someone's neck and somebody broke their ribs.' Everything is exaggerated and blown out of proportion, and it's really bring- ing me down." However, attendance at their shows is up, probably due to the favorable response to their new major label re- lease "Scratch the Surface." While other New York hardcore bands have been plagued by overproduction and lack- luster songs, Sick of It All have made easily the best hardcore album in years, very stripped down and heavy. Most importantly, they have the songs to go with the anger, including what might be their first hit in the catchy punk anthem "StepDown." Ifyou blinked, you might have missed its 2 a.m. debut on MTV's "120 Minutes." Part of the reaction against the band might stem from a horrible 1992 inci- dent when Massachusetts prep school student Wayne Lo gunned down sev- eral classmates while wearing a Sick of By Gianluca Montalti For the Daily What happens when hardcore bands get older? Some 'mature,' like Bad Religion, some stick to their roots like Sick of It All, and still others like Orange 9mm expand their musical horizons while maintaining their hardcore integrity, a noble achieve- ment indeed. Borne out of ex-Burn It All t-shirt. While the band received no coverage for their work on amnesty orantifascist benefit concerts, suddenly the press jumped all over them. "The worst was the New York Times," Koller commented. "We wrote a letter of rebuttal against them. They had called us 'fascist' and all of this other stuff. But they didn't print the letter until a friend of ours from the Village Voice wrote how they did some shoddy reporting and didn't read the band's lyrics or let the band have their say." While the music is extremely ag- gressive, Koller thought most of the lyrics could be summed up as"Don't be ignorant, because that's the basis for all evil." Besides, Koller, an admitted Sade fan, is more of an expert on the punk scene than any relative newcomer or concerned parent. "If they'd just look past the violence," he admonished. "It's a really good scene, and, from what I remember, a very positive one." can never say you're too old for hardcore," he said. "Hardcore is the most guttural level of crowd to audi- ence interaction. Anybody who says that they can outgrow that is a little weird." The band is always striving for pure expression, a carryover from the hardcore book of songwriting. "I de- cided I wanted to do something a little bit different," he said. "Burn was a little less personal and more about every- body. In Orange 9mm, what I'm saying is the same shit that you go through, yourcousin goes through and my mother went through when she was a kid." The band recently released their major label debut, a truly nontradi- tional major label record. It is nontra- ditional in the sense that, for better or worse, it incorporates Chaka's 'Driver' concept in the songwriting process. "The record is called 'Driver Not Included."'he said. "You put this record on and you control it and take it where you want to go. When I listen to our record all the way through, I'll go through nine, 10 different emo- tions." In fact, the musicians are cred- ited as 'passengers' on the inlay. He sings incessantly about his feelings in a rather juxtaposed fashion, much the same way that we think and feel ev- eryday. "When Iget asong and Ihave to write lyrics to it, I'll get naked and lie on my bed and be like, BOOM, let's see what happens. Whatever comes out ends up being the fucking song." Orange 9mm has now joined the ranks of Quicksand, Sick of It All, and B iohazard as a hardcore band that has graduated. Chaka sees it as a chance to be part of the next big thing. "The scene is still young," he said. "It went from English punk to American punk, then to the Minor Threat, SST bands of the world to what you call New York Hardcore which is kind of a mishmash of all those styles to like metal/hardcore. Everybody right now is in kind of the baby stage of growing into what the next type of rebellious music is going to be." vocalist, Chaka Malik, and ex-Foun- tainhead guitarist, Chris Traynor, Orange 9mm is a living testament that the energy that drove the New York hardcore scene is not dead, it has just taken a different form. Chaka Malik has been encounter- ing some dissension from the hardcore ranks for moving to a major label from Revelation Records, the same label that put out Quicksand's first EP. Even though Chaka may be attacking a wider array of styles these days, he has not forgotten his musical standby. "You Aw, aren't the li' guys cute? After long wait, 'Cement Garden By Fred Rice Daily Arts Writer "The Cement Garden" started pre- production twice during the '80s, but apparently, the filmmakers could not find a studio to back their controversial #mes of incest and cross-dressing. "The Cement Garden" tells of a family's struggle to survive after their father and mother die. To ward off foster agencies, the family secretly bur- ies the mother in a cement-filled coffin in their basement. The kids gradually reinterpret their familial roles in a quest for love and stability. The film is set among the industrial ns of England. Something is gradu- y decaying in every scene: Aban- doned buildings, the family's house that resembles a giant cement cinder block - all overloaded metaphors. The lack of any other details makes the story impossible for the audience to date and for the characters who occa- sionally comment that they can't re- member their family being different. To keep the surreal qualities from floating adrift, Andrew Birkin grounds The Cement Garden Directed by Andrew Birkin with Andrew Robertson Friday only at Nat Sci 7:30 & 9:30 the sibling dynamics in firm reality. Jack (Andrew Robertson) is a typical, miserable teenager, uncertain how to behave and constantly masturbating. His older sister Julie (Charlotte Gainsburg) has greater poise and re- sponsibility. No matter how much they tend to 'blooms into strange love story disapprove of each other, they some- Birkin carefully manipulates the how manage to show understanding. It shifting sexual and gender roles to is through this dynamic that Birkin illuminate a family's resilience in the weaves in Jack and Julie's desire by face of disintegration. The superb casually inserting scenes that appear narrative draws the audienceso tightly harmless at first, but then take on tre- into the bizarre world that everyone mendous significance. An example: will be rooting for the brother and Jack bursts into Julie's. room to tickle sister's relationship to culminate. her - rather harmless sibling play - The delayed production was well but then they have orgasms. worth the wait. U U University of Michigan School of Music shades of suiuucr 1995 This summer, attend Colorado State and earn credits during 4-, 8-, or 12-week terms. Courses begin May 15, June 12 and July 10 No formal admission requirements Summer Call for a free Bulletin or Class Schedule 1-800-854-6456 University Friday, March 24 Contemporary Directions Ensemble: Music of Henryk G6recki H. Robert Reynolds, music director; G6recki himself will attend. " Quartetto, op. 5 (1956) " String Quartet No. 2, "Quasi una Fantasia" (1991) " Kleines Requiem far eine Polka (1993) Rackham Auditorium, 8 p.m., free Saturday, March 25 Composition Seminar with Henryk G6recki West Conference Room, Rackham Bldg., 10 a.m.-noon Digital Music Ensemble: "Medieval Meets Jazz" Stephen Rush, director Dancing monks plus Jimi Hendrix, chant and guitar synthesizers, all in cathedral-like acoustics and lighting McIntosh Theatre, School of Music, 8 p.m., free Sunday, March 26 Digital Music Ensemble: "Medieval Meets Jazz" Repeat of Saturday's program McIntosh Theatre, School of Music, 4 p.m., free Monday, March 27 Michigan Youth Ensembles Dennis Glocke, Jerry Blackstone, Michael Webster, conductors " Michigan Youth Band: Two of Gustav Holst's Planets " Michigan Youth Chamber Singers: Gabriel Faurd's Requiem " Michigan Youth Symphony Orchestra: Paul Hindemith's Symphonic Metamorphoses Hill Auditorium, 7 p.m., free Tuesday, March 28 UMS: Michigan Chamber Players " Strauss: Sonata in E-flat for violin and piano (Andrew Jennings, violin; Martin Katz, piano) " Beethoven: Trio in B-flat (Deborah Chodacki, clarinet; Erling Bl6ndal Bengtsson, cello; Louis Nagel, piano) * Dvorak: Trio in F minor (Arthur Greene, piano; Stephen Shipps, violin; Anthony Elliott, cello) Rackham Auditorium, 8 p. m., free Piano Forum Professor Dickran Atamian presents a new work for piano. Recital Hall, School of Music, 11:30 a.m., free Wednesday, March 29 Piano Dedication Recital Four faculty pianists inaugurate Rackham's new Steinway: " Anton Nel-Chopin's Mazurka in C-sharp minor, Scherzo No. 4 " Arthur Greene-Etudes from Scriabin'ss Opp. 42, 65, and 8 " Louis Nagel-Souvenir de Porto Rico by Gottschalk; La Fille aux cheveux de lin and L'Isle joyeuse by Debussy " Dickran Atamian-Rachmaninoff's Etude Tableaux; Liszt's Jeux d'eaux a la Villa d'Este; Pavane by Mouret (arr. Atamian) Rackham Auditorium, 8 p.m., free Arts Chorale Jonathan Hirsh conducts Maurice Durufle's Requiem Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m., free .Opera Workshop Joshua Major directs Hoiby's one-act opera The Italian Lesson McIntosh Theatre, 7 p. m., free Note: The 5 p.m. Opera Workshop performance has been canceled. U 1-1 J'. N ,. 1 11 rt Ton %A- 1 11 1160-