The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 15, 1996 - 9A intercollegiate harmony fills fans with glee Sy Anitha Chalam Por the Daily With football season still a long way off, hundreds of Michigan and Michi- gan State fans gathered in Hill Audito- rium on Saturday night to witness a different kind ofcompetition: the Battle ofthe Men's Glee Clubs. But those who qxpected a true competition with only one victor must have been disappointed by the fact that both glee clubs were incredible, with neither group outdoing the other, yet at the same time, with both groups singing amazingly well, to end in an exciting tie score. The Michigan State University Men's Glee Club, under the direction of Jonathan Reed, took the stage first that .evening, for an early lead. Intheir forest green blazers and khaki slacks, they oked great, and their singing proved equally good. MSU scored many times that evening, right from their first song, "Zion's Walls." Strong and serious, this reviv- alist song demonstrated the group's beautiful teamwork and harmonizing skiis. This song was followed by four other religious songs. "0 Filii et Filiae" was sung in Latin, and had a beautiful, olyphonic texture, again demonstrat- ng the amazing skill of this team, who scored a touchdown with their next ;song, "Blow Ye the Trumpet," the fa- REVIEW - UM/MSU Men's Glee Club Hill Auditorium April 13, 1996 vorite hymn of the title character from the opera "John Brown." At this point, MSU took a timeout, and the Spartan Dischords, a 12-mem- ber a cappella subset of the group, came forward. They performed three songs. The first was fast and had a nice har- mony, and received loud applause and whistling at its conclusion. The second song, "One More Minute," by Weird Al, was about a broken-hearted boy who had just been dumped. This song generated much laughter from the audi- ence, especially at the end, when the singer admitted that it was a Wolverine he had dated. The final song, "Mon Amour," by Erasure, was also very en- joyable, and displayed the mediocre, but funny, dancing abilities ofthe group. The full Glee Club resumed their singing, sounding exuberant after a re- freshing timeout. They briefly left the religious genre of music for a genre which included blood and sex in their next two selections. Both scored many points from the audience, who gave long and loud applause. The final selection sung by MSU, "I'm Gonna Sing," returned to God. It was a very cheerful piece, and received many cheers as well. It was amidst this noise that the Glee Club left the stage, commencing halftime... uh, intermis- sion. After halftime, the crowd waited ea- gerly in their seats in anticipation of the world-renowned University of Michi- gan Men's Glee Club, whom many hoped would even up the score. The University scored bonus points for catching everyone unprepared when it performed its first song, "Laudes Atque Carmina," from the rear of the audito- rium. The second piece, a German song entitled "Sing dem Herrn," had a nice marching beat, very effectively dem- onstrated by the University, as they marched up onto the stage, again scor- ing points for a spectacular entrance. The next two songs were taken from South America, the destination of the next Men's Glee Club international tour. The songs expressed contrasting moods, but both were very beautifully sung. And with the next four songs, the University secured the lead in the num- ber of languages in which they per- formed their songs. The University took a timeout at this point, and the Friars performed three songs, including a Billy Joel spoof, "Graduate on Time," and an audience participation piece, "Minnie the Moocher." These were very well re- ceived by the audience, whose excite- ment level was amazing, evidenced in their boisterous singing in the audience participation piece. The University came back charged for itsnextpiece, "Selections from West Side Story." All that can be said about this piece is "Wow!" The piano was good, the soloists were good, and the arrangement was amazing. This piece was a big crowd pleaser, scoring a touchdown and the extra point for the University. "Michigan Songs," the final selec- tion for the University that evening, was nice and nostalgic. It concluded with "Varsity" and "The Victors," the perfect ending to any sporting event, be it Big Ten Football or Big Ten Glee Clubbing. The audience showed its sup- port by joining in on the Victors Trio. After this piece, the University and MSU crowded together onstage for a joint rendition of both schools' alma maters. Members ofthe audiencejoined in, and enthusiastically sang along, sum- ming up their opinion of the entire evening, an evening of superb music, and one of the best vocal performances all year. uby Slt Peter eation/WORK Silverfish fallout alert: Lesley Rank- ine, formerly the largest force behind tie raucous band Silverfish, is apparent 'helargest force behind Ruby.Andwhile at first her new direction of somewhat 4ance-and techno-influenced work m iht seem to violate the spirit of Sil- verfish, on longer reflection, "Salt Pe- ter" is a different-sounding but paral- "e-spirited collection of songs. the lyrics retain the same sinister nd angry tone as Lez's past work. She could have easily sung the lines "And if tomorrow didn't come / Would you?" from "Salt Water Fish" four years ago astoday. It's the music that's changed. Slower for the most part, more melodi- ous and "listener-friendly," the music can be a bit hard to accept at first for a longtime fans. Butthere are still enough *nergetic songs to make the transition easier. "Tiny Meat" is a power song, upbeat and hard in a poppy way, and with the most non-mainstream lyrics possible (I crack it split to see inside / I run because I can't abide / This tiny meat in my hand / And the pound, pound, pound of your bleeding heart"). "Pine" also pounds away with a spec- tacularly subtle violence. *,The beat is the main nonvocal ele- ment of most of the songs on the album. "Paraffin" hassuch a heavy beat that once you start to pay attention to it, it begins to pound on the inside of your skull like a dwarf with a hammer and some time on his hands. The beat is gradually removed, preserving sanity and the song. Other percussive instruments abound; the tim- pani and xylophone on "Hoops" make a very interesting base for the spit-talk de- ivery of the chorus: "Duckin' n' divin', ppin' n' skivin' between the shit and the shovel, the ass-lick and the grovel and ',od, oh what a lord, makes me thankful forbeing bored." It beatsyou silly. "Bud" has a sort of nightclub feel with a cymbal and some fine nightclub vocals that would improve the new Bond films. Lez's voice moves around, too. It's nearly PJ Harvey's on "The Whole is Equal to the Sum of Its Parts," but it tends oretowardamorequiet typeofsinging, one more akin to a speaking voice than the screams fans might be accustomed to - not a bad thing, just different. "Salt Peter" is a fine effort. Smooth and evil, it's what we need a lot moreof in the world today. Let this gem of the jewelcases gnaw into your brain, not just sit around on a shelf. - Ted Watts *sta Rhymes The Coming Elektra Records "I don't want to hear about this issue of keeping it real no more. It's all hype. It's time was all saw through it. Everybody's talking aboutkeeping their 4 itreal. For who? Their hood? You are iving a reality that someone else has set the tone for. You want to be real? You want to be true? Start with being true to yourself, and then come talk to me." Busta Rhymes may not look it, and he may not act it all the time, but he is serinulv one of the deenest hrnthas in overkill, Busta's first single, "Woo Hah!! Got You All in Check," is like a breath of fresh air. Just barely uptempo and filled with beats as twisted as Busta's dreds, this song shows that Busta is a rapping kingpin. "The Coming" is a crazy album, and you can see this even before you take the wrapping off of the CD. The cover photo features Busta's face (in its usual open-mouthed, squinted-eyes pose) bathed in blinding white light sur- rounded on one side with a dark-brown hue with a ghostly white dove sitting upon his head (you can even see it's pink feet). The inside photo/portrait has an aura of terror surrounding it; it is a cross between the psyche of Freddy Krueger and Charles Manson - a little too excessive to stomach as completely factual, but much to gripping to be completely untrue. "The Coming" is as varied as it is vicious. "Hot Fudge," a tribute to his days with the Leaders and the philoso- phies he developed back then, and "Keep It Movin'," which he performs with Dinco, Milo and Charlie Brown (a Leaders founder), shows that the slight animosity which surrounded his leav- ing the Leaders has at least begun to fade. "It's a Party," featuring the beloved female duo Zhan6 (ain't heard from them in a while), is followed immedi- ately by a rather interesting interlude. Following in the tradition of what Eazy- E and DJ Quik have already done, this interlude speaks on a growing popula- tion of men, who in the past would never admit to going "downtown," now proudly gloating over their expertise in the oral pleasures. Busta's deep, grungy, gurgling voice is much like that of Wu Tang's 01' Dirty Bastard and Onyx's "Sticky Fingaz." But Busta's no copy-cat; if anything, he's a progenitor. It was Busta who popularized the sort of crazed, enraged rap delivery that many mimic. "The Coming" is filled with spooky, horrifying tones, much like what the Wu-Tang is notorious for hitting its crowd with. The apocalyptic sounds flowing throughout this 13-cut LP comes to a head with "The End of the World (Outro)." But don't let this album's dark, mys- terious contents create in your mind a completely twisted Busta Rhymes. He is a genius whose album will play with your emotions and titillate you with an almost morbid fascination with a darker, more sinister side of ... if only we knew. And his penetrating rhymes - a purposeful roller coaster of on-beat- off-beat flow - will keep you in his mental choke hold. - Eugene Bowen Pulitizer Prize-winning author Jack Miles to tackle 'God' at Borders tonight Othello, Don Quixote, Holden Caulfield and God? Thanks to Jack Miles, who just won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography last week for his book "God: A Biography" (Vintage, 1996), God can now be counted among the world's most explored and puzzling literary characters. Miles, a former Jesuit priest and a Professor of Near Eastern languages, will be at Ann Arbor's Borders Books and Music to read and sign copies from the highly debated book. "God: A Biography" is an evocative and Intriguing look at the world's greatest and best-known literary and historical character. Miles takes a probing and imaginative look at the God of the Hebrew Bible, and recreates the life of the most-scrutinized character in literary history. Religious conservatives have shuddered as Miles' scholarship has depicted a God that strays far away from the idealized Judeo-Christian concept of a supreme being. Miles, a former Jesuit priest, depicts a God who is capable of mistakes and irrationality. His God ranges from omniscient and omnipotent to blind and powerless. Michiko Kakutani of The New York Times has called "God: A Biography" a "work of literary scholarship that will forever color, if not downright alter, our conception of the Bible as a work of art." Still, Miles' work should not be read as a piece of biblical interpretation; instead, Miles tackles God as.a literary character, delving into his psyche and motivations, the way one might explore the character of say, Hamlet, Odysseus or Leopold Bloom. And Miles' exploration of the divine being does everything to shatter the Western concept of a perfect and unchanging God. Still, "God: A Biography" does not come across as blasphemous or intentionally unsettling. Miles' prose is sharp and tender, and ripe with imagination and a thorough knowledge of his subject. Tonight's appearance at Borders is sure to challenge, entertain and quite possibly unsettle your soul. Ruby is pouting. She's lost her Silverfish. mltvLai 1 &I 3311 1'AtIf&W -.. . em