10A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 27, 1997 BOOGIE Continued from Page 8A per and underpants model even fakes a bad voice in the movie. Julianne Moore does an equally impressive job as the sexy Amber Waves, the love of her life being the slick Diggler. There isn't a feeling of mutual love occur- ring here, though. Dirk does not express any deep attachment to Amber, his deeper love resting in fame and fortune. Burt Reynolds, who plays a ringleader of the adult entertainment business, does not display anything spectacular. His character is muddled and confusing; it is unclear as to whether he really has an emotional tie to Diggler. Sexual explicitness comes hand in hand with the movie's main theme: pornography. There's no hiding any- thing. Everything in this film is revealed, including a special treat: Diggler's "prized" possession. Needless to say, 13 inches doesn't make a movie. What is most frustrating and disap- pointing about "Boogie Nights" is that it gradually loses the creative camera shots that are so exciting and effective in its beginning. Anderson surely has real potential for a great movie. But, in the end, his inconsistency and abandonment of innovative techniques fail to reveal the characters' conflicts as tensions arise. T MBG leaves giant impression at Michigan NEW! BEER APPAREL WITH AN ATTITUDE!! Let these great new graphics make your statement for you! www.chugalugchums.com By Use Harwin Daily Arts Writer When They Might Be Giants are headliners, you can always be sure that you'll get your money's worth. Wednesday night's show at the Michigan Theater was no exception. Playing nearly 30 songs, the Giants kept up a high-speed paceR throughout the evening, generating plenty of heat in chilly Ann Arbor.T As the Giants are not touring in support of any albums ("Factory Showroom" came out nearly six months ago and "Then" soon after), the audience was in for quite a treat. The Giants were all over the place, playing every- thing from the classic "Don't Let's Start" to the humor- ous, puppet-performed "Exquisite Dead Guy." in a recent interview, Giant vocalist and keyboardist John Linnell talked about their reasons for touring now and shared some background information on some of their songs. "Though we're not touring to support an album, we are doing it to break in a new bass player. We also have some new material and we're paying some bills." Fortunately, fans did get the opportunity to hear several of these unreleased songs, material that should hopefully be appearing on an album in the very near future. Though the audience was not yet familiar with these new tunes ("First Kiss," "Dr. Worm" and "Rest Awhile") the response to previous hits like "Birdhouse In Your Soul," "The Guitar" and "Ana Ng" was stu- pendous. Songs from "Factory Showroom" included One particular EVIEW hey Might Be Giants Michigan Theater clearly not from r audience favorite is "New York City" a song that is actually a cover originally performed by the Cubs. "Generally we have a lot of original songs ... we don't do covers," Linnell said. "But John Flansburgh (Giants' vocalist and guitarist) heard 'New York City' on the radio, and something about it struck him that this band was New York. They were writing this an in-the-dark version of "Pet Name," a super-fast "'Til My Head Falls Off" and a sizzling rendition of "S-E-X-X-Y," which was naturally dedicated to John Flansburgh's "one true love ... the ladies." very positive, upbeat song and it was the last thing you would expect someone to write about New York. It seemed like a breath of fresh air to us." When they began, They Might Be Giants were just two guys performing with drums on tape and bass that they had recorded at home. "That was our primitive set- up, which turned out to be exactly what we needed to be able to have control over what we were doing" the key- boardist said. "Our independent records did very well, and on the strength of that, we got signed to Elektra. Not, too long after that, we decided to get a band and started doing shows with a horn section and another guitarist." Regardless of which songs from their vast reper- toire the Giants might play or which style they play them in, the most impressive part of any They Might Be Giants show is their astounding live spontaneity. Anyone who has attended Giants shows in the past can John Unnell (left) and John Flansburgh are TMBG. safely say that the band has never played "Istanbu the same way twice. Sped up, slowed down, shouted or whispered, the Johns manage to make the song sound fresh each time it is performed. This time around the Giants launched into a relatively short ver- sion of the song, which has, in previous shows, been known to last well over seven or eight minutes. Finally, in another burst of spontaneity, Flansburgh played conductor through the ending of "Spy," trip- ping up the other band members only temporarily, much to the audience's delight. This, as could clea be predicted, ended in a rousing version of Ace Base's "The Sign." As always, They Might Be Giants put on a fantasti- cally entertaining show that successfully blended both new and old material. As Linnell said, "We want to make the kind of show that we would want to watch, but for the audience's benefit ... not ours." Hungarian folk 'Muzikas' to hit Ark tonight. By Anna Kovalszki Daily Arts Writer On a warm afternoon in early July of '96, I was getting ready to experience a musical group's talents in a small town called Szentendre, outside of Budapest, Hungary. alotueen e Cotume! fFRIDAY MscP na' OCTOBER 31 DOORS OPEN 1n Con cerf AT 9:30 PM I had heard their traditional folk music many times in the car with my father, adding Hungarian spice to our travels across the United States. I did not expect to be as moved by their _ _ music qs I was that p night. The group in question is the most ar1 celebrated group in. the Hungarian folk- tradition, named Muzsikas (meaning, roughly, Musicians) and their vocalist Marta Sebestyen, who is regarded as one of the most talented Ia singers in the world. Muzsikas and Marta Sebestyen research and continually adapt their wed- ding songs, romantic laments and round- dances from the E I E W forgotten yet musi- cally rich villages Iluzikas and of Transylvania and a Sebestyen Hungary. For Tonight at sa' Muzsikas' album The Ark "Maramaros: The Lost Jewish Music of Transylvania," the members of the group learned to play their music in the traditional style from two gypsy musi- cians who regularly performed with Jews before World War 11. The instruments of the group are also appropriate for their songs, from the viola and violin, to the buzuki, contrabass and shall hammer dulcimer. Sebestyen adds her voice of undulating tones and varied emotions to many of Muzsikas' pieces. Marta Sebestyen has had a wide rang- ing career, influenced in many aspects by her mother, who is a music teacher and was a student of the great Hungarian composer Zoltan Kodaly. It was her love of folk music that she passed on to her daughter, which has now allowed Marta to not only rework and incorporate many of the Hungarian-Transylvanian tradi- tions, but even the folk music of Russian, Irish, Greek, Indian and Bulgarian roots. This collection is rendered with modern instruments for a tasteful blend of the past and present on her album "Kismet' It is, however, the multiple Oscar- winner, "The English Patient," thath allowed the greater public to expeerI Sebestyen's haunting voice. Her pieces from the movie are featured on her greatest hits CD, titled "The Best of Marta Sebestyen." According to Schoolkids' Records man- ager Byron Bull, Sebestyen has one of the purest and loveliest voices, which he dis- covered purely by curiosity a few years ago. According to Bull, "Morning Star," Muzsikas' and Marta Sebestyen's latest. album, released in September, "is a coll* tion of the rural music of Transylvania -- wild, beautiful ... evoked with unerring fidelity." This is Sebestyen's second appearance at The Ark, and Muzsikas' first. Come and experience the city dweller's emo- tions that are evoked when one encoun- ters folk music and traditions - which the late Zoltan Kodaly expressed in "Morning Star'"s liner notes as, "dumb- founded at the sight of its ancient hue* I Pizza Tuition Dentist Guess which one can't Movies Concerts Cabs go on your MasterCard? q j SPEND SOME TIME WITH THE MODERN MASTERS OF INVESTING Moderator: Deborah Roberts, ABC Correspondent, "20/20" y'i'..n1S w r SO- 5f. 4 r Jane Bryant Quinn, Author, Columnist TIPS FROM AMERICA'S EXPERTS A FREE NATIONAL SATELLITE TELECONFERENCE HOSTED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN OCTOBER 28,1997 3:00 to 4:30 pm Live teleconference locations: * KELLOGG AUDITORIUM, DENTAL SCHOOL Corner of N. University and Fletcher, across from the Michigan League Chris Farrell, Economics Editor, Sound Money w " UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL Ford Amphitheater, 2nd level " MICHIGAN UNION, POND ROOM " INSTITUTE FOR CONTINUING LEGAL ; : I I I