Hoch Hip-Hops at DrumAdS auit Tomorrow in Daily Arts: 0 Danny Hoch comes to Shaman Drum. The spoken word artist U Weekend, etc. examines the controversies surrounding performs selections from his collection, "Jails, Hospitals and marijuana use. Hip-Hop. 8 p.m. Wednesday September 29, 1999 Anderson reinvents Melville novel Patricia Barber comes to the Bird of Paradise tomorrow and Saturday, Pyt Poeticc Ba~prber perfer. By Jeff Druchniak Weekend Etc. Editor Before the very idea of performance art became a punch lie on "Saturday Night Live," there was Laurie Anderson. Perhaps Anderson didn't invent performance art, it just seems like it sometimes. And not only has Anderson has remained a creative force over the last two decades or so, but this week- end her journey persists in the form of an Ann Arbor appearance to perform her latest work, "Songs and Stories from Moby Dick.' With "Moby Dick," Anderson has fashioned a unified, full-length perfor- man ce piece which transforms the Herman Melville novel - the novel that general consensus still burdens with the prefix "The Great American."The tout and the coinciding album version of the work have earned Anderson some of the best receptions of her career, which is saying a mouthful. Anderson first gained recognition with her experimental hit single ". Superman" on the British pop charts. Since then, she has collaborated with such distinguished artists as film director Wim Wenders and dancer/choreo- grapher Bill T. Jones. Meanwhile, her style has devel- oped into something that begs description- Suffice to say that Anderson is always the star of her show, which might be an advantage or disadvantage to a .aurie career as a performance artist. Anderson Anderson tends to build her work around short, often repeated texts, but there are many other fundamental Power Center elements to an Anderson performance. Sept 3- Oct. 2 Dance is ever-present, foremost by Anderson, who is her own primary choreographer. Anderson is also a phe- nomenally accomplished musician: with near-equal adeptness she sings, plays violin and undertakes many other instruments the average person knows of and even more he/she doesn't. That's because the other bedrock of Anderson's work is the incorporation of new technology into perfor- mance. This catapults Anderson into engineering a multimedia circus of mostly one woman, one which can disturb and galvanize as often as it amuses. Anderson revealed, "l began to work on this project becase a multim 'dia. producer . wanted to something that would get kids interested in reading" And by the time the proposed project fell through, Anderson, asked to come up with a favorite novel, had fallen in love with "Moby Dick.'Never mind that it's a book of which she admits, "I hadn't really read the wholedshad In Anderson's view, Melville's novel is perfect for her adaptive purposes iecaus of its multiplicity of narrative voices, representing myriad walks of life and attitudes, Anderson called it "a cast of the living and the dead," and ryi she has enlisted a rotating support crew of performers to help her embody radw L An s, a this east through song.iisftourseshsafhw iimaAdsn bh One of the highlights of Anderson's sound-and-motion extravaganza fig- orely Laurie Anderson ses TMo y through auudium. rest to be the composer's latest music-tech brainchild, which she calls the Based solely on a videotaped performasce from early in the decade, thi Talking Stick. A slender staff longer than Andersot is tall, the Talking Stick presence is clearly formidable.h e wayher small frame and angelic fat is atn ultra-precise digital instrument that responds to Anderson's "playing" contrasts with the forbiddingly haphazard shock of bristles she calls ha and sometimes feverishly dancing with it by sampling a vast array of prere- does not make Anderson seem like a typical stage star But a passion to pet corded "voices." form and create often conveys a charisma more electric than the most elal [he Talking Stick may elicit amazement from the audience and help to orate set or most advanced bells and whistles. Luckily for Anderson, sh#Peiemscislbttefcso h tg hwwl eanAdro oh herself. Non-English majors need not be intimidated by the show's literary Laurie Anidersotn perfiiii hrs csi, through Saturdav at i8 p.m. at ti pedigree; Anderson estimates that only a tenth of the evening will be drawn Poiwer Center Tickets range froiii $36-S/S :S/t $0 student rash ticket directly from Melville. A big chunk of the rest will rely on Anderson's stage for Thiirsao night. For miore in/or)i;;aloo. ,i/ the Untirersityv Music, presence. Society at (734) 764-253 ol'debuts at Arena th1s weekend By Nehe Srkoz By John Uhl Daily Arts Wntcr When the Chicago pianist/stnger/ composer Patricta Barber performs at the Bird of Paradise this weekend, audi- ene are likely to catch her drift. Her lynes are often bleak and candid testi- monials, whose wry delivery is guarded by a voice so sultry that many won't care who or what is insulted. Barber's upcoming release, "Companon," fea- tures the reprimanding "If This Isn't Jazz,' a sketch of the drawbacks, nega tive stereotypes, hypocrisy and lack of artistic integrity that she associates with jazz. In "Postmodemn Blues;" from her last release "Modern Coo,' she laments the pass- T " ing of the Modernist move- ment with a cata- log of her favorite Barber 20th Century Bird of Paradise intellectual pio- Si/t. 30 Oct. 1 neers. The song's instrumental break of uniform piano and guitar phrases, chopped into a stale metro- nomic exchange sounds like com- puter prattle and ushers in an age when "Bill Gates has won." It is perhaps the best summation of Barber's struggle with her limbo between centuries. There are also occasions where Barber delivers her disposition without the crutch of her own words. "You knoythat I would be a liar, if I were to say to,you, girl we couldn't get much higher. Come on baby light my fire;' Jim Morrison asks in "Light My Fire." The jovial organ entrance of The Doors' version makes it obvious that Morrison's flame could do with fuel (if anything), rather than ignition. His enticenent to the girl is about testing limits seeing how high they can get. He wants to "try set the night on fire;' without regard to whether it is logical or even possible. Bi Barber interprets the song dif- fetently on "Modem Cool." Creeping at nearly half the original tempo, the chorus is less of an invitation and more of a plea. Barber's fire really does need to be lit, Yet the pace is-so persstent through verses gar atd trumpet solos, that evntualkw, si rer uest is a taunt. Barber has nit i-nnton of get- ting liton this oceaston and her labored enunciatisoof come on baby, light my fire" wamsic:that thet satisfac- tion of her entreatys iihlikcly n The most satisfi sokt Babet r's work, ilhough. fuses b othchepoetic density of her wordstinth int- mental innovation Tofher music ino an invention as profoand as attything since early Bob Dylan. In "Winter'" the loss uS .i cvei leaves the narrator in an existential statec of shick that is compared to the: uniceitaiittycitwin- ter's desolat"ion. 1The lyrics dfow in a simple, bitter melody over a layered rhythmic structure that juxtaposes a sense of motion against the unyield- ing; she is frozen while her world falls away from her. After she has tiihed smgmg the words, her voiice rises ahose the band's arctic soundsc.ipe in a maon Soon trumpet aid diftitig guitar commingle with Baxher and f one sod a half unearthly minUtes, the three voices howl. Barber's performances at the Bird will mark her belated debut to the Ann Arbor Detroit area and, like the stubborn temperance of "Light My Fire." her relative obscurity has largely been her privilege. She has been content playing every Sunday and Monday night at Chicago's The Green Mill and recording on an inde- pendent label. Since the glowing critical appraisal of "Modern Cool," however, the last year has seen Barber's first extensive tour and a collaborative effort arranged between her Chicago-based record label, Premonition, and indus- try giant Blue Note Records. Her band will consist of John McLean on guitar, Michael Arnopol on bass (both of whom played on "Modern Cool") and Eric Montzka on drums. All of these musicians are fea- tured on the live recording "Companion," which will be released. Oct. 19 and proves that Barber and her band's careful and limber synthesis of voice and instruments doesn't lose its shine in a concert setting. By Neshe Sarkozy For the Daily Basement Arts will debut student David Garcia's never-before-seen play, "Polly Puts Her Foot Down" this weekend. Family dynamics, mother and daughter relations, a different sense of reality and a view into a parallel uni- verse are all things that the audience can expect to expe- rience in the somewhat "absurd" play. Garcia, writer and director, said that the "play deals with big issues that for the most part weren"t intentional, perhaps a view into the subconscious." "Polly Puts Her Foot Down" at a glance is made up ofa three member, very dysfunc- tional, family. Kitty, the mother, (Jillian Landau), the daughter Polly, (Katherine Banks) and Polly Brick, the son, (Jonathon Gentry). Arena Theater Kitty is insane but loves enter- taining guests, whether they be Sept. 30 Oct. 2 real or fictional. Kitty frequently makes up hol- idays so as to give her an excuse for celebration. Somehow Kitty manages to back up her love for the holidays with a passage from the Bible that she cannot ever find. Polly is a 15-year-old starting to be leary of her moth- ier's erratic behavior. The fact that Kitty is always talking about her sister but never meeting her makes Polly all the more suspi- cious of her mother. She begins to wonder if perhaps her aunt Jeannie is real. Brick, the brother, seems to not know what is going on. This seemingly "stupidest boy on the planet,"noted Garcia, is the perfect son that Kitty could have hoped for, always compliant to his mother's wishes.Brick Jillian Landau and Katherine Banks share an emotional moment. eeW ilsYsr.r s eew . never talks back to his mother1 dumb as they come.""When Po Garcia added, "it's as if she is ob of her aunt Jeannie." Thus the p This is David Garcia's first pr University. He worked on the sc Foot Down" for a year. Initially, for one of his playwright classes page, 1 hour andl5 minute plt rewritten 10 times. Initially there were more char Welcome Wendy's is see in our friendIl but, said Garcia, is "as it seemed better with just a few characters, so Gaic ly puts her foot down," kept it that way. In regards to Kitty's character Garc jecting to the existence noted that "everyone has a mother that annoys the . lay continues. but she (Kitty) does it all the time. oduction of a play at the "Polly Puts Her Foot Down" is much like a dar ript of "Polly Puts Her comedy, Garcia said as it "derives at humor fron " the play was a project people that don't get along, almost in a morbid st . Since then Garcia's 57 For nothing else, Garcia says that he "loves maki ay has amazingly been characters that get people to reevaluate their fai dynamic." And what a beter way to do that then in t acters in the script, but theatrical form. ___Recycle the Back Students Daily. eking people to work y team environment. Ask how you can eam up to COLD SORES? 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