Musician Ricky Lee Jones drops by Ann Arbor for a quaint show. Get set for folksy tunes and fun times from this lady who's ben rocking in the business since the mid-'70s. The Ark, 8 p.m. utaje icjiai d I.T Tomorrow in Daily Arts: Check out a review of Monday's Ricky Martin concert at the Palace of Auburn Hills. Tuesday November 2, 1999 5 k Medeski trio plays Michigan r r 'theater, By John Uhl Daily Arts Writer Curious jazz musicians are rarely con- tent to explore certain idioms or musical environments for too long. Thus, as record labels and large festivals favor the ptoity of rare joint-headlining artist bills, the life expectancy of emerging jazz bands is dwindling. Which is why it is perhaps surprising that the members of Medeski Martin & Wood (John Medeski on keyboards, Billy Martin on drums and percussion and Chris Wood on basses), inspired by a variety of playing back- grounds and musical associations, have Zany, outrageous 'Ally McBeal' opens fall season funny and wet By Kelly Watchkowsk For the Daily While last season, "Ally McBeal" may have ended on a somber note with + our favorite single and lawyer, one thing became clear with this season's pre- miere. Producer David E. Kelley has+ brought Ally and her entourage back in + full effect. If the first show of the season is any indication of the action to follow,a the audience will be shocked and satis-+ fied to find Ally McBeal (Calista 1 Flockhart) back to her old self. Now that she has risen out of her slump, she has aI new vigor towards her journey to find 1 Mr. Right, and is making sure to enjoy all of the car washes along the way. Courtesy of Blue Note Ann Arbor favorites Medeski, Martin and Wood return for their annual concert. Medeski, Martin and Wood Michigan Theater Tonight at 8 recorded seven albums in their eight year stint without luring themselves away from each other. This relative longevity may, in part, be due to the band's willingness and ability to keep its music fresh. "We're always going in a new direction, we're always searching, success and creative sustenance might lie in the way the bandmembers do and do not resolve the differences between their individual music style biases. "John and I, I think, are more studied in jazz,' said Wood, "but Billy was more involved with dance music, including Brazilian music and hip-hop. He was also checking out African rhythms. So he wasn't really from ajazz background when we hooked up with him. And that's what made it interesting for us." The band can sound melodic and dis- sonant, funky and off-kilter within the same song, arduously exploring a groove. only to abandon it to tinker with cowbell and Wurlitzer tones. This quirky cocktail of brainy abstract sound probes and steady funk beats has caught on to a ded- icated, somewhat bohemian, crowd that draws comparisons to Phish and Widespread Panic followers. Classified by record stores as a jazz bandM M W finds itself in an uncommon situation fr such ensembles when, during concerts, hundreds or thousands of fans dance in auditorium aisles. "Billy was listening to Run DMC and stuff like that back in the day,"said Wood. "His grooves are danceable. So it just kind of works out that way, lucky for us." DJ Logic has brought another aspect of the hip-hop medium into MMW's music, scratching on three tracks on "Combustication." For much of the last year he has been performing onstage as part of the band and for this tour his group, Project Logic, is the opening act. Unusual alliances don't always work out for the best. Logic's scratches and samples often simply fade into the foliage of MMW's sound jungles, but occasionally his contributions surface and seem tacked on or even irrelevant. Sometimes, however, a unique oppor- tunity does provide for a happy accident. The song "Whatever Happened to Gus" on "Combustication" features the spoken word of East Village figure Steven Cannon, who relates a dream about old Kansas City jazz musicians over the trio's subtly shifting bossa. "We had a piece that we just had improvised," Wood said, "... it wasn't complete, it needed some- thing. So we just took the DAT recording of his voice and flew it over the piece that we'd improvised. It just, somehow, worked perfectly" Although voice and band were each recorded on a separate occasion without bearing the other in mind, the track works perfectly. Cannon's voice is rhythmically in time with the music, and the band manages to hush and swell appropriately with his verbal pauses. Wood's ambling, yet grounded bass is reminiscent of Butch Warren's frugal playing on Kenny Dorham recordings of the 1960's and Medeski's eclectic keyboard splashes provide a suitable style contrast for a story about a surreal meeting of Wynton Marsalis and Charlie Parker. Medeski Martin & Wood bring their experiments to The Michigan Theater tonight. Recent performances with an emphasis on an acoustic piano trio for- mat and adventures though new album material give a vague idea of what to expect from MMW But with DJ Logic on hand alongside customary cravings for the unexpected, audience members should keep their minds open. sexual revolution. Imagine Ally, walking soaking wet down a street and into the law firm. Surprising to her friend and coworker John "the Biscuit" Cage (Peter MacNicol) is there to question her damp state. This leads to Ally's carefully detailed story of how she had taken her car to the carwash, made eye contact with a gorgeous stud who walked through the carwash, crawled into her car and began kissing her. Then, he pulls her out of the car and the two engage in what Ally refers to as steamy "You know, that vulgar verb we use to describe what two people..." during in the rinse cycle of the wash. While Ally is lost in her graphic mem- ories (yes, it was reality and not one of her psychotic episodes), her friends have issues of their own. Renee decides to break away from the DA's office and start her own firm. When Judge Whipper decides to join her, the two women begin an interviewing process, or cattle call of sorts, that involves a procession of hot men and an interview requirement of shirt removal. After all, "the business of law is all about getting clients" Meanwhile, a case is brought to the firm by the daughter of one of its most important clients. Richard Fish (Greg Germann), the firm's sarcastic and z; Ally McBeal Fox Mondays at 9 p.m. Last season's finale left Ally, depressed over her recent breakup with a doctor she decided she loved a little too late. While her friends and coworkers are usually capable of reviving her spir- its, even they were more pessimistic than usual, so absorbed in their "waddle loving" partner pulls Ally into the case with him. A young bride has been caught, by her priest, having sex the night before her wedding. Only problem is that the man was not her fiance. Of course, after some silly yet convincing antics by the firm, the priest decides he will marry the two and their wedding ensues with Ally as a new bridesmaid. In the grand tradition of Ally McBeal, the comedy doesn't stop there. Ally finds herself standing on the altar face-to-face with her fantasy man from the carwash. Of course, being Ally McBeal, she can- not let this go, so she interrupts the entire wedding. After the third intermission, and some booing and thrown objects from the irate audience of 300, the wed- ding is called off with accusations thrown at carwash man of trying to steal his fiance's money. Thus, the antics of this crew continue rolling into their third season. As "the biscuit" attempts to stay tuned in with Barry White, Ling remains "finger lick- ing good," Elaine maintains her over- sexed hormone act and the others try to deal with life and love, we never know what to expect. For this cast and its cre- ators, tapping into the craziness of every- day life is exactly what the psychologist ordered. own lives and problems they barely realized Ally had taken her hopes and fantasies hostage, locking herself in her room. Luckily, the Emmy winning comedy has once again taken a turn for the hys- terical. Not only have the characters rediscovered their zaniness, these thirty- something lawyers have begun their own IEEE UR U EUMUM E UM E *MEM EM M c a a I a a I I a I a a I I a a a a a 2 a a a 8 6 1 8 2 1 6 QUA LITY 16 Jackson Rd. @ Wagner (1/2 mile west of Weber' sInn) West bound 1-94 or M-14 exit @ Zeeb Rd. & go East one mile on Jackson we're always influenced by new music," Wood said in a recent interview. Although the bandmembers explore their diverse tastes through individual projects, the band also has performed collaboratively as a unit. Most recently, they appear on three tracks of Iggy Pop's latest recording "Avenue B." In 1997, the bar recorded an entire album, "A Go G 4ofguitarist John Scofield's material. "A Go Go" not only boasts the band as sympathetic accompanists, but the album's precision reminds listeners of the meticulousness that must be devoted to their usual vaunts. The explanation for both the band's tolly.1141 23 m a N { 3 z 2 JACKSON >s 23 F 4 5N z N OP 2 i. YP@a* " Ya yY r A. FALL MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10Ob11 AM October 23rd & 24th November 13th &14th fp Antz (PG) Jack Frost (PG) October 30th & 31st November 20th & 21s1 s. Muppels from Space Prince of Egypt (PG) Rugrats (G) - - ALL AUDITORIUMS INCLUDE Digital Stereo Dolby SRD & DTD High back rocking chair seats with cupholders STADIUM SEATING gives you an unobstructed view Student Prices__ - - - - - - - - - I ONE FREE 460Z POPCORN I (MEASURED BY VOLUME NOT WEIGHT) WITH THIS AD EXPIRES 11/14/99 MD " S--------------j 'a21aaaEaEEEa18aaUaaEUaaE8aUEaaa0E mmEE I -------------- : . ; S mw:<$