The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 6, 1998 - 9 Stanford experiments with hardcore sound 'Homicide' slays competition By Colin Bartos Daily Arts Writer If you're looking for more of the same bland, mindless crap that's been circulating throughout the airwaves lately, don't look toward Stanford Prison Experiment. You say you've never heard of it? Shame on you, because the longer you stay ignorant, the longer you miss out. Not unlike Stanford Prison Experiment The Shelter Sunday Tickets $6 Rage Against The Machine, Tool and other post-punk hard- core influenced bands of the early '90s Los Angeles scene, SPE attacks you with in-your- face, aggressive rock and intri- cate, thought- provoking lyri- cism. After which could mean good things for SPE's future. May of this year will see SPE's first major-label release, titled "Wrecreation." It's been more than two years since "The Gato Hunch," and Jimenez said the new record is well worth the wait. "I think we wanted our bass sound to come up a bit. We've always thought of ourselves as a bass-heavy band ... it kinda captures where we're at right now." "It's a more varied record. It's got slower songs, it's got fast songs ... it's kind of a spring board off the other two. It's got more dynamic to it - more heavy tunes." One of SPE's strong suits has always been in the lyrics department. Jimenez said that he likes to talk about "things that tend to concern us daily. Some reflecting kind of social issues, but not overtly political ... we like to examine the mental framework of people - like the whole thing of war. It's obvious that war is bad, right? But what's not so obvious is the mentality of the person who wants to go to war." "Lyrically, you try to bring some- one to a certain area," Jimenez added, "You want to bring them to a certain place and then ... let the listener make up their own mind about it." Someone might question why a quality band like SPE hasn't broke through yet, while numerous other talentless bands like Smash Mouth and Matchbox 20 rule the airwaves. Courtesy of World Domination Records This Stanford Prison Experiment has little to do with social psychology. It's simply politics, Jimenez said. "All these bands do well,' Jimenez said, "because the music industry is a very powerful thing and they sell what they think people will buy, not what's necessarily good. I just know that it's a business. It's not about aes- thetics or art or ideas ... that's what is pushed. People just kinda grow used to it and think that's all there is." "I think most people are really smart. I don't believe that the average American is stupid," Jimenez said. "They don't know what's really out there. The average person doesn't have the time to seek out new and interesting music. If they hear some- thing cruisin' down the road on their radio, they think that's their option and so they go with it. People don't have time to be musical researchers." And dammit, you don't have to. I've already done the research for you. Now all you have to do is go see SPE live. If you like catchy, aggres- sive rock that is definitely not what you've come to expect from the radio, come on down and witness a real band rip it up. sons, not just one Homicide: life on the Street or two episodes. Much of the show's genius is that it relies on the intelli- gence of the audience. Unlike "Brooklyn South" or "Cops," "Homicide" does not pander. Recently, "Homicide" ran a two- hour, movie-length episode that sent the detectives of the Baltimore Homicide Unit looking for a suspect who kills priests. But rather than focusing on the spectacle of the deaths and violence, the episode focuses on the emotional and spiritual impact on the detectives. These two hours of television do not culminate in a shoot-out with explo- sions and guns blazing, but in a deeply By Ed Shoiinsky For the Daily Since 1993, "Homicide: Life on the Street" has been a rocket, exploding onto the small screen with the power of "Hill Street Blues" and "The Fugitive." It is also one of the first mainstream shows to put its heroes at odds with each other, accusing one another of being racist and competing for the impossible cases. Instead of acting like street toughs or action stars, the characters of "Homicide" distinguish them- selves by using their brains. "Homicide" also happens to be one of the most creative shows on television, using crossovers with "Law and Order" and story lines that develop over the entire season, or sea- NBC 10 p.m. Fridays at u Courtesy of?'NBC The cast of "Homicide" takes a break from life on the street. middle-class suburban life. Anchoring the show is the immense talent of its executive producers, Oscar-winning director Barry Levinson and Emmy-winning producer Tom Fontana ("St. Elsewhere"). Combine this with the outstanding ability of Braugher, Richard Belzer (Det. John Munch), Kyle Secor (Det. Tim Bayliss) and Yaphet Kotto (Lt. Al Giardello), and the incred- ible writing, directing and jump editing, and the resultis a gripping crime drama. Although the cast is frequently chang- ing (four of the original nine cast members have left the show), "Homicide" manages to keep the characters fresh, never settling for sub par actors, writers, or directors. Added to the cast this season are Thorne, Gerety and film star Jon Seda as Det. Paul Falsone. This series has never been nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Dramatic Series, but that has not limited its acclaim. "Homicide" has won the Peabody Award twice (only accomplished by one other series in history) and won the 1996 Viewers for Quality Television Award for lest series. Maybe sometime soon, the Emmy people will give up nominating safe choices like "Chicago Hope" and pick the daring "Homicide" as one of the outstanding programs on television. While "Homicide" airs at a bad time for college stu- dents (that ever coveted 10-1 1 p.m. time slot on Friday), the show is well worth viewing. So, set the VCR and egch this under-appreciated series at the earliest possible 9n- venience. releasing two records on World Domination Records, and a tour through late 1996 with Rage, SPE recently signed with Island to broad- en its horizons, so to speak. The tour with Rage was a rousing success, as lead singer Mario Jimenez explained in a recent interview, for the fact that it "makes you a better band in the sense that you play every day ... playing in big places." The mainstream audience seemed to accept the band as their own, moving scene in the great outdoors. The detectives find the best way to appeal to the suspect is not with his sense of vio- lence, but with his sense of redemption and inner peace. In a world of murder and death, the homicide squad provides hope and life to someone who has never known anything but the streets. In a vile, terrible work, the homicide squad is the unlikely calm center. "Homicide" originally came out of David Simon's non-fic- tion book "Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets," mixing the facts of the novel with intense dramatic action. To call "Homicide" the best cop show on television would not be broad enough, it is the best dramatic series on television - the best show without filthy-mouthed third graders or a bald, animated character exposing the banality and dark side of a :: r.. .,,, Poet Jackson stays 'Alive' * By Erin Diane Schwartz For-the Daily -ave you ever started a conversation wtth someone, only to interrupt yourself multiple times within the conversation while continually returning to what you started talking about in the first place? Award winning poet Prof. Richard Jackson tries to emulate this style of thinking in his book of poetry, "Alive All Day." Attempting to imitate the natural pro- gression of his thoughts, Jackson elimi- nates the idea of a linear pattern of thought in these poems. He describes his poetry as "discontinuous." He says, "I write like a nervous person trying to eat lunch." Jackson's first books tried to progress in a linear style with a begin- ninag, middle and end until a friend said to him, "But, that's not really the way you think." Jackson's poetry in "Alive All Day" attempts to become more natural and honest than in his previous books of poetry, "Part of the Story" and "Worlds Apart." It also allows him to convey a wider range of emotions in the poems. Through this freedom, he not only retains the quirky style for which he is known, but also adds the element of humor to his work. He tries to convey messages into his poems so that by the end, the reader does not know whether to laugh or cry. By forming the poems in this dual manner, he says, "I wanted the responses within the poem to be as com- plex as human responses." The title, "Alive All Day," tries to encompass the intricacy and weaving of tone in the poems. The title initially sounds positive, "But then," the poem says, "What happens at night?" Jackson brings many such questions to his students at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Not only has he won numerous awards in writing, but he-has won awards in teaching as well. "I love the energy in my students," Jackson said. "My students are painful- ly honest with each other. They want crificism, but after a workshop class, they are still good friends." Jackson also has much criticism - for the way in which students are taught poet- ryin the United States. "Poetry is taught in a meaningless way. The process which the author takes you through is the value of poetry and writing and that requires effort," he said. "Our culture likes things effortless. This is a problem with our edu- cational system. Students can barely read prose and think that poems are hidden with all kinds of hocus pocus." Recycle the Daily. Richard Jackson Shaman Drum Tomorrow at 8 Jackson said he believes that a vast difference exists between reading poetry and listen- ing to poetry. "Listening to poetry is an art in itself," he said. He thinks of it as, "Listening to a flow of images like listening to songs on the radio. There is basic music and tone. If someone was listening to the radio, would they ask to hear a line again?" In his future writing, Jackson would like to see his poems becoming shorter but still retain the power of emotions as well as the humor. Jackson explains, "The way when you meet someone interesting, you can't quite figure them out" He wishes his poems to retain the interest of his readers while leaving them wanting to still try to figure out his poems. "The information Technology Asso- ciation of America estimates that one IS position remains unfilled for every 10 IS workers at large and midsize U.S. companies. 'Across the board, companies are feeling the pinch caused by the lack of qualified IS professionals." Netscape Enterprise Developer The nation's UNMET DEMAND for information science professionals makes this the perfect time to come to the University of Michigan School of Informa- tion. Our Master of ..JPre~pctr Science in Informa- tion gives you the SKILLS YOU NEED for dozens of careers. Students from diverse academic backgrounds study in a setting that is truly without limits. The jewel of our program is an INTERDISCIPLINARY faculty who emphasize teaching and mentoring, theory and applica- tion, and rigorous classes. You'll apply what you learn right away for the Future Gain Valuable * Business Experience while taking Classes Now hiring Account Execu- through our community-based Practical Engagement component. Our PROJECT- BASED RESEARCH - literally from digital libraries to the upper atmosphere - is global in scale. SI graduates leave with a wealth of experience to show at employers. As a new-generation information A/fr ('fly professional, ,I ?z. \ A , a- 'V -malAib A E