yxperience Ann Arbor's tradition of open mics. The Terraplanes U Norma Desmond traipses down her stairs in "Sunset Boulevard" host an Open Mic Blues Jam in the Tap Room of the Michigan each night this month at the Detroit Opera House. Come back Union ground floor at 9:30 p.m. Conor O'Neill's invites all for an tomorrow for a review. open mic Celtic jam at 9 p.m. The Blind Pig has an advance-booked open mic at 10 p.m., featuring Limited Time Offer and The Velvet Beat. All are free. Tuesday March 9, 1999 ilson rides California wave back with solo tour By Ted Watts Daily Arts Writer When you think of influential musi who do you think of? Trent Re Madonna? Notorious B.IG.? Get you out of the sand and smell the '60s, Brian Wilson, the creative meteorite b, t Beach Boys, is going on his firs tour ever, and it begins tonight in Ann .a The Beach Boys were of course the ningly important band in the '60s thai from making p surf singles to chst the way people, est Br I~t ly musicians, liste music with the co Wilson "Pet Sounds" albur : igan Theatre Brian Wilson, th Tsnght at 7:30. ving force of the Boys up throug time was not esp< visible during the and early '80s, because his outpu of a poorer qualiy because he pro between little ar, music during the period. In a recent view with The Michigan Daily, Wilso cased his feel for making music throug rs. "It got worse. Actually it got b then it got a little worse ... I was inspired heh as I used to be ... I don't it just over the years kinda went away'" Wilson has been experiencing a r sance of sorts in recent years. He was nated for best box set at this year's Grat demonstrating the continued appeal c older material. And at least some of his ration seems to be returning, as h Streep's V1 By Matthew Barrett and Aaron Rich Daily Arts Writers The Zack attack is back. Mark-Paul Gosselaar, immortalized by his role a the scheming Zach Morris on "Saved By the Bell," returns with "Dead Man New On .on Campus." This dry as toast Video This comedy features Week Gosselaar as a struggling stu- dent (big reach) who must do what most first-year stu- Iats contemplate when their room- tme gets a little too annoying: kill 'em. No word on whether Mario Lopez makes an unbilled cameo, but we hear that Dustin Diamond is always up for reprising the role of Samuel "Screech" Powers. She can get all the nominations in the world and win all the Oscars that she wants, but she'll never be our "One True Thing." Here, Meryl Streep stars as a sick mother who spends the movie l ding with her journalist daughter, ed by Renee Zellweger. William Hurt stars as Streep's controlling hus- band, and ponders whether or not the accent is one of Meryl's basic needs. There are no easy answers. released more new recordings in the past five years than for the 20 years preceding them. The current tour is yet another good sign, although it seems to be going for the com- mercial throat as opposed to the innovative. Still, a retrospective of his work with the Beach Boys and as a solo artist is an encour- aging sign of outreach from the uniquely introverted songwriter. "We wanted (to play) songs people could tap their foot to, you know?" said Wilson. "(The set) is about 22 songs long ... It starts with 'California Girls,' and then it goes to 'South America."' In spite of the unavoidably balmy tone of the set list, the four-date tour is set in the upper Midwest "because Joe Thomas figured out I was pretty popular around that area .. (We're) playing to my strengths ... It's Joe Thomas on keyboard, me on keyboard, and the Wondermints will back us up." The tour is curiously short. "Yeah, yeah, just to see how I like it, how it feels. And if I like it, we'll do more." If his legions of fans are lucky, Wilson will like it. He seems upbeat about music in general, and about his future studio output in particular: "I don't know when we're going to do our next solo album, I don't know. But probably in a year from now." Considering the dearth of Brian Wilson albums in the past, this is unexpect- edly productive, and could conceivably carry over into his touring habits. It has taken years of development for Brian Wilson to reach this point in his career. "I like to rock 'n' roll. I believe in rock 'n' roll music," he explained. "First record (I bought was) 'Rock Around the Clock.' I bought it cuz I loved the beat and I liked the sound of it." That love of music led to the creation of to "Pet Sounds" was never completed, and Brian Wilson fell into his unproductive decades, to the disappointment of those excited by what he had last released. But in the ellipse of his career, little changed for Wilson. "Only the new technol- ogy. I don't cut live tracks like I used to where everyone plays at once. We do one instrument at a time." It's not really surpris- ing that using computers to keep track of what sound is doing what may be all that's changed, since there was such a fundamental stop in Wilson's art. Others never stopped being overtly influ- enced by Brian Wilson's music, however. From Paul McCartney to His Name is Alive, Wilson has been praised by other musicians non-stop for 30 years. "It's quite a pump up, it's quite an honor" he commented sedately. Recently he has been preparing for thc tour. "I've just been hanging out at the piano, just trying to write tunes ... I can't write all the time. I can play the piano. I don't get too inspired these days, I don't know why. That's not the word; I get inspired, but I'm having trouble finishing songs that I start," Wilson chuckled. Other than music, Wilson has laid back interests at this point in his life. "I take baths ... I use Bath Therapy salt. I don't do bubble bath ... I also like exercise, like to exercise a bit. Treadmill." Wilson also relies on exercise when he encounters a creative block. "I get up from the piano and take a run ... We have five dogs here, but I run alone." Brian Wilson will not be alone on stage tonight, but it will be surprising if people pay attention to anyone else. As it turns out, he may have been made for these times after all. Courtesy of Waner Brothers Brian Wilson will appear tonight at the Michigan Theater, Hawaiian shirt in tow, of course. hits like "Surfin' Safari" and "Good Girls' ... I think the sound that we put in Vibrations." The surf guitar and vocal har- made it a good record. The layering of the monies that the Beach Boys used combined tracks and the echo and everything." in a way that struck a chord with music lis- Wilson's obsession with densely layering teners. But these things are not what Brian his music led to deeply aurally complex com- Wilson finds most admirable in his oeuvre. positions, but also ultimately to a breakdown "I'm probably (proudest of) 'California of the process. The planned follow up album deo weeps Robin hugs Annabella in "Dreams." Named the worst movie of 1998 by a few esteemed critics, "What Dreams May Come" storms its way onto video shelves today. This special effects extravaganza shows the rarely-seen kinder, gentler side of funny man Robin Williams. Cuba Gooding Jr., who amazed us with his dramatic depth in "Judgment Night," comes back with a vengeance as a mysterious angel who tells Robin how to keep it real in the pie in the sky. Watch and find out why Max von Sydow has decided that foreign movies are superi- or to domestic flicks. Zigman tames wild of Luman relationships Animal Husbandry Laura Z igman The Dial Press Women who were disappointed by this *s Valentine's Day can relate to Jane (odall, not the anthropologist, but the main character of "Animal Husbandry." Goodall is one bitter, bitter woman. She has just been dumped by her co-worker Ray, a J. Crew model look-alike, after a mere three months of bliss. This book, all 300 pages of it, is about Jane's struggle to get over Ray. Jane resorts to researching males of all species i hopes of finding some consolation. stalks Ray by rummaging through his drawers at work and by calling his answering machine to listen to his voice, the stalking mode of choice in the pre- caller ID era. The result is a character that is at times psychotic, yet admittedly so. In addition to obsessing over her ex, Jane smokes, drinks and swears too much. So while Jane is certainly off-kilter, she is also lovably faulted if not downright identifiable. Jane, armed with her best friends, a *ale peer of the same socioeconomic status and a sympathetic gay male, becomes any woman who has ever been dumped and can't seem to get past it. The difference lies in how she deals with this grief. Her approach to coping is through never-ending amounts of research on male behavior in animals and humans, both read and observed. Jane finds startling evidence that it is inherent formalesto leave femalesinmost animal species as well as in all walks of human life. And what originally appears to be a clever metaphor for this poor girl being thrown out on herrump later proves to be the premise and the hyper-extended metaphor ofthe entire book From a feminist standpoint, at times Jane is portrayed as a liberated, success- ful woman. She has a high position in the business world and she puts her energy into this beneficial research project, ulti- mately writing a renowned article for a magazine. But at times, Jane is portrayed as utterly pathetic, for she proves herself incapable of functioning properly and healthily without a man. At times the reader wants to shut Jane's pitiful mouth if she again mentions Ray's "washboard stomach." Through all of this she comes across as presumably husband-hungry. The plot, in addition to the character of Jane Goodall, is faulted because itsis too stereotypical. The women in the book are dumped unequivocally and the men are hated oppressors, even extracting plea- sure from their hurting victims. The only respectable male in the book is gay. This results in borderline male-bashing and a plot that serves the author's purpose too fittingly to be believable. Despite the book's shortcomings, it is the soon-to-be standard prescription for the broken-hearted woman. It is the first recommended read for one who wants to laugh through her post-relationship tears. Reading "Animal Husbandry" makes any women's situation, no matter how desperate, seem slightly less pathetic. - Gina Hamadey i