yany other name Toorrow in Daily Arts: ,e French film "Ma Vie En Rose" continues in its second week U Daily Arts brings you a review of "Dreamgirls," the touring at the Michigan. Check out the film by Belgian director Alain musical that has wowed audiences across the country. Berliner that received an unfortunate snub by Oscar. The movie stars newcomer Georges du Fresne as a nine-year-old boy who thinks he's a girl, and his parents' attempt to understand the madness. The peculiarity begins at 9 p.m. Tuesday February 10, 1998 STrickster"s Hyde reads at Shaman By David Erik Nelson For the Daily Lewis Hyde's latest novel, "Trickster Makes This World," draws in so much of our own world under the auspices of a simple investigation into mythological tricksters (folks such as Greece's ' ermes and the Chinese Monkey ng.) that it ultimately about every- thing one could possibly imagine about life. To vastly oversimplify, "Trickster Makes This World," one might say that it explores the manner in which disrup- tion leads to progress. "To my mind," Hyde said in a recent interview, "it is also a book about the human imagina- tion itself, or the particular kind of agination that is disruptive and play- in the way Trickster is." Remember the Rubik's Cube? Once you solved one side (one face of the cube a perfect, serene blue grid, the other five a hopeless, ugly, multi-hued jumble) you had to be willing to disrupt that side if you ever wanted to solve the whole cube. Hyde explained that human societies are like the Rubik's Cube: We need to be willing to shake everything up if we want to get anywhere. This is why the disruptive, boundary-crossing, taboo- breaking trickster figures "all were thought of as creators of culture." Their transgressions make the world what it is. "Trickster Makes This World" is a hard, but worthwhile, read; its only real weakness is its clearly academic nature. Hyde plays to the higher-educated crowd, despite the fact that his observa- tions are universal. It's a somewhat sad, ironic twist that Hyde illustrates and explores our common human fascina- tion with cunning and trickery in such a manner that roughly 60 percent of the U.S. population would be too intimidat- ed to even try to follow him. For example, Hyde spends a great deal of time talking about specific works of art (e.g. M a r c e l Lewis Duchamp's "The Hyde Bride Stripped Bare by Her Shaman Drum B a c h e l o r s, Tonight at 8 p.m. Even"), yet the book does not contain any illus- trations or plates of these works which, at times, are the sole foun- dation of his argu- ment. His obvious assumption is that the audience is already fairly knowledgeable regarding the work of modern artists like Duchamp, Picasso, Pollack, Serrano, etc. Despite this stylistic fault, "Trickster Makes This World" is a finely crafted patchwork of sources: Personal, histori- cal, scientific and literary. Hyde decon- structs these, then reassembles them into clear, startlingly revealing illustrations. His method throughout "Trickster Makes This World"- the method he will illustrate tonight - is to give some piece of primary data (a myth, a per- sonal anecdote, a description of a piece of art) and then proceed to carve up that data, scrutinizing and trimming and re- arranging the pieces until the spirit of the data - its meaning- reveals itself. Hyde's art is somewhere between that of a surgeon and a master chef. Seeing raw data metamorphose into something truly meaningful is a beauti- ful and thrilling intellectual experience. Hyde's easy manner and clear-headed- ness will make this evening's talk at Shaman Drum a rewarding experience. Fish make 'reel' big splash yColin Barton aily Arts Writer It's official. The '80s are back, and the whole angst thing is dead. Now we're back to good ol' happy, fun music again, and who better to bring it to us than everyone's favorite "little ska band," the Reel Big Fish. If you haven't heard them by now, you must have been living in a hole for the past six months. Riding on the wave the "next big thing" Southern California's cartoony septet has made a 'reel' big name for themselves with a healthy dose of pop music, humor and horns. The ska scene's surge into the mainstream has carried RBF Reel Big with it as its Fish spokesmodel, Clutch Cargo's which, trombonist Tonight at 7 p.m. Grant Barry said in a recent inter- view, was totally by chance. "We were just lucky," he said, "I guess it was timing." Now that ska has captivated the industry in a big way, people are already getting sick of the fact that Iny of today's ska bands sound the same. "People are gonna get sick of something when it goes mainstream no matter what," Barry said. But what makes Reel Big Fish any better than the average band? "We got here first" Cortes oiMOJO Reel Big Fish plays tonight at Ciutch Cargo's. Barry said. "People like our songs, I guess, and that helps. I guess they like us as well" What people like is the fact that RBF is a band of young guys who love to play, play extremely well, and make fun of themselves, the music industry and the listening audience. RBF's debut album, "Turn The Radio Off" starts out with their big hit, "Sell Out, in which the band foreshadows its seemingly "manufactured" success. It's not that simple, though. Sarcasm is the key to really getting what this band is all about. "We're constantly sar- castic; there's never a dull moment" Barry said. "People still don't get it, but we're still laughing." The vocalist "Aaron's like 'Our next album is gonna be called 'If You Can't Take A Joke, Screw You!."" The irony of the band is so thick now, when you think that RBF has actually attained commercial success because only a year and a half ago lead singer Aaron Barrett wrote, "I'll never be a rock 'n' roll star" ("I'll Never Be") and "I don't know why I learned to play gui- tar, nobody's gonna know who we are" ("Everything Sucks"). Reel Big Fish never claimed to be anything but anoth- er trendy ska band, and now its mem- bers are laughing all the way to the bank. "If they wanna call us alternative, call us alternative. If they wanna call us ska, call us ska," Barry said. "If they wanna call us glam, call us glam. Call us what- ever you want, just come and enjoy." The live show is on which Reel Big Fish has built its reputation, and it's what the boys in the band want you to experience, as long as you don't mosh. "You can mosh to any other band, just don't mosh to us," Barry said. When asked about their anti-moshing theme, "In The Pit," Barry laughed and said "there's always a pit when we play that song ... it's pretty ironic" Don't be afraid to dance, though, have fun, and travel back to the '80s with Reel Big Fish. But don't take them too seri- ously,or they might just have to kill you. 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