Professor shares poetry.... Professor Alice Fulton reads from Felt, her new collection of poems, tonight at Shaman Drum. 8 pm. ARTS michigandaily.com /arts TUESDAY MARCH 6, 2001 8 YAHOO SELLS OUTLOUD TOUR COMPLETELY Weezer finds self knee-deep n tour, hype By Luke Smith Daily Music Editor Behind the catchy ruefulness of "Buddy Holly," and the irony-rich wit of "Undone (The Sweater Song)," it appeared Weezer was going to become a .mainstay in pop music. Rivers Cuomo's infectious ear for melody and catchy love } songs Weezer would surely be a staple of the post-grunge rock movement. They would tour Weezer and head back into the studio putting out a new album every State Theater year and a half. That is the way Thursday at 7:30 p.m. pop music works, right? Following the commercial bust of Pinkerton, a concept album mirroring Giaccomo Puccini's Madame Butterfly, in which Cuomo transformed the morally bankrupt Captain Pinkerton into a jaded rockstar who sleeps with different women from town to town; Weezer completely van- ished from the limelight. One magazine falsely reported that Cuomo had gone insane, burned all the Pinkerton master tapes and could be found holed up in a studio bouncing a rubber ball off the walls. Instead, Weezer did indeed part ways after their supporting tour for Pinkerton. Drummer Pat Wilson took his side project the Special Goodness, on the road, Brian Bell set out to make a name for the Space Twins, and Matt Sharp ultimately left the band in favor of his side project the Rentals who had a minor radio hit with "Friends of P" on their debut album Return of the Rentals. Cuomo and Co. found a new bassist in former Juliana Hatfield bassist Mikey Welsh, and set out to record a new record in 1998. A few weeks into the sessions Pat Wilson walked out due to the lack of the rehearsals. Spring of 2000 brought Cuomo's recall to the estranged member of the pop-quartet saying he had material he was ready to present to the band, and start Weezer back up as a full-time endeavor again. The band regrouped, rehearsed and set out on a few Get Up Kids, Ozma bring pop-smarts to Outloud's spring tou? By Luke Smith Daily Music Editor 1999's Something to Write Home About lived up to its namesake entirely, creating a stir on indie-label Vagrant Records. Kansas-born rock quintet the Get Up Kids began to develop a hard- core fanbase with strong EP releases on Doghouse Records, and fair sales fig- ures for their 1997 full-length Four Minute Mile. After taking a brief hiatus last winter the Get Up Kids were nabbed by alt- pop-punk trio Green Day for their winter tour. "Initially we had planned to take 2001 off," Get Up Kids drummer Ryan Pope said. a plan which was promptly mon- key-wrenched by hard to turn down offers from Green Day, and a Weezer/Yahoo! Outloud corporate alliance. If the Get Up Kids had been interested in touring they could have headlined their own tour, but "It was a good package and we are fans of the band," remarked Pope. "Plus, there is a lot of crossover between our fans, I think." Pope couldn't have been more correct, as the Get Up Kids finished first in an online poll conducted by Weezer as to who fans would most like to see them tour with. Fellow tour special guests Ozma were voted second in the same poll. Once the Outloud Tour is over Pope said that the Get Up Kids plan to "take time off, and write material and get into a studio," to record the anticipated fol- low-up to STWHA. Pope said he hopes the record would be out in "late f11 2001, or early 2002" The story is a different read all togeth- er for California co-eds Ozma who have built a considerable fan base in California and have sporadic holdings of fans throughout the country; the only thing missing from their fairy tale is a soft kiss on a sleeping maiden's lips. Ozma's blend of pop chord changes, harmony and melody, all wrapped inside a careful wall of sound vaguely resemble tour headliner Weezer. But where Rivers Cuomo's lyrics explicitly describe * experiences of a 20 something, Ozma's tunes both reflect and invoke feelings of high school nostalgia. Pop-culturally aware songsmith Daniel Brummel frequently ties staples of his youth into his songs, "In Search of 1988," and "Lorraine," the latter of which is a song hung around a '50s style riff pining for the mother of Marty McFly. Both bands have experienced posi fan reaction on the first half of the tour, and there's no question why. Cortsyo Kr >Kch "Hey could someone fix my collar? I'm trying to rock." Rivers Cuomo, ladies and gentlemen. small club dates. In the summer of 2000 Weezer played a few early club dates in California, then were asked to join the Warped Tour for a leg, and when the success of both outings grew Weezer launched into a nationwide club tour. The summer nationwide canvassing met Weezer head on and they proceeded to sell out every- where they played, tickets for Chicago and New York lasted just minutes on internet pre-sales. Fresh off of their summer tour Weezer headed into the studio to record their follow-up to Pinkerton. They tabbed Ric Ocasek (Cars' frontman, and pro- ducer of Weezer's eponymous debut) for production duties. Entering the studio in the wake of Christmas Weezer wrapped mastering the day before their Yahoo sponsored spring tour kicked off last month. When the new album was played at Interscope offices three weeks ago it was met with a complete- ly different response than Weezer had expected. Just a few days into recording the new record, Interscope executives stopped by the studio to hear the new material, and proceeded to voice their discontent with Weezer's new material. However, when they were played the completed version of the record they recanted their previous statements, "loving" the new material. However, Interscope promptly and quizzi- cally pulled the original release date of April 17th 2001, leaving the release date in a musical purgatory where the band has hung for the last four years. Corporate giant Yahoo offered to sponsor a spring tour before Weezer had even entered the studio to record their third record. This unity between Weezer and corporate American icon Yahoo upset many of their fans - fans that take pride in the obscurity that Weezer's absence has garnered. Weezer's time away resulted in steady sales for Pinkerton, and recently the album was certified plat- inum, proving abscence makes the heart grow fonder. Weezer storms into Detroit for the second time in nine months this time at the State Theatre on Thursday accompanied by special guests and unsigned California quintet Ozma, and torch toting indie-rockers The Get Up Kids. Both bands were chosen via an online fan poll thru Weezer's official website. Courtesy or vagrant Records Members of the Get Up Kids chill on their porch with an odd-looking bald fellow. Pinkerton still swimming around five years later Pinkerton, Weezer; Geffen Released: 9.24.96 Somewhere between the Fonz and Jonze, Weezer's cutesy image was shed and irony rich lyrics were left by the wayside. Pinkerton s looser production and autobiographical lyrics burst at the seams with Cuomo's sing- a-long choruses and intelligent hooks. Instead of tongue-in-cheek slackjaw rock, Weezer follows their eponymous triple platinum debut with 10 carefully penned songs about Cuomo's reclusion at Harvard following Weezer's tour in 1995. Painfully personal and still rich with the melody and wit that drove the band to success Pinkerton ' songs were built around the concept of Giacomo Puccini's Madame Butterfly, turning the enigmatic Cuomo into a morally bankrupt rockstar traveling from town to town seducing women. Puritanical rock and roll open- er "Tired of Sex" displays Cuomo's roots as a reformed shredder with a Scorpion-esque display of soloing. "Across the Sea," was written around a letter that was sent to Cuomo from an overseas fan. Cuomo took the letter almost verbatim and turned it into the first verse for the song; he is sharing royalties with the fan. Hook-y and riff driven "El Scorcho" is arguably the strongest track on the record. Gang-vocals and obscure falset- to harmonies, driven by a double time interlude collide in an end- ing that oozes pop. In "Pink Triangle" Cuomo is again shut down, this time by a lesbian. Rivers Cuomo has recently recanted his feelings on Pinkerton, saying the record was like "waking up after a party where you got really drunk and spilled your guts." Drink up boys. Drink up. Get Up Kids off and running Somthing to Write Home About Get Up Kids; Vagrant records Released: 9.28.99 Marching the indie-flame to the giant torch and lighting it on fire in with their 1999 release Something to Write Home About, the Get Up Kids joined a major/minor label in Vagrant and improved the quality of their sound immensely from their Doghouse debut LP Four Minute Mile. Raucous octave sliding guitars and power chords swirl together behind beguiling lyrics and are swathed in Matthew Pryor's blaring high-pitched vocals. Obtaining their fans from the emo / pop rock / punk crossover some- where hither between Green Day and Cheap Trick, the Get Up Kids music is an energized blast in the face of cur- rent stock rock. Opening track "Holiday" causes an involuntary twitch of humming and foot-tapping teetering towards an epileptic rock seizure. "Action and Action" is a slow tear-jerking ballad. Something to Write Home About loosely follows a theme of losing someone and moving on, cultural uni- versals. "I'm a Loner Dottie, a Rebel," makes the pop-aware chuckle with its not-so obscure Pee Wee Herman ref- erence. Pop-savants Ozma come forward Rock and Roll Part Three, Ozna; Tornado Recordings Released: 1.15.00 Their online biography quips "You know the story, five California kids who fell in love with melody"and fall they did. Nationally unknown, and at the same time holding fans in narrow crooks of European coun- tries, quasi-indie rockers Ozma's Rock and Roll Part Three has been out for almost a year. Brimming with adoles- cent angst, and clever lyrics these five 'kids' from California have all taken a collective semester off and headed out on the road with Weezer and the Get Up Kids on behalf of Yahoo's Outloud! Tour. RRP3 is excruciatingly catchy and wistful. Nostalgia runs wild through Ozma's tunes, which explicitly describe the difficulties 0 growing up, and heartache, as if these kids were a few years removed from adoles- cence. Dynamically the band loves the loud/soft contrasts. "Natalie Portman," exploring more than a feigned obses- sion with the sexy Amidala, crawls in with a keyboa hum and peaks in a fury o guitars and the helpless Brummel lyric "There's nothing I can do." L Prague Chamber to perform at Hill By Jim Schiff Daily Fine/Performing Arts Editor It takes a special kind of orchestra to perform without a conductor. The Prague Chamber Orchestra is such an j! 3 ;Prag ue Chamber Orchestra Hill Auditorium Wednesday at 8 p.m. ensemble, com- prised of 36 tal- ented musicians who each take part in directing each other. On Wednesday evening, this unique group will join the Beaux Arts Trio for a spectacular evening of popu- lar 19th-century works. While the majority of the orchestra's repertoire draws from the classical peri- od, with composers such as Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, they have per- formed works as far back as the High Baroque period, and as recent as twen- tieth-century pieces by Prokofiev and Stravinsky. Wednesday's program includes Rossini's "Overture to L'Italiana in Algeri," Janacek's "Suite for Strings," and Mendelssohn's "Symphony No. 4 in A Major, Op.90." The highlight of Wednesday's con- cert, however, will probably be Beethoven's rarely performed "Triple Concerto in C major for Violin, Cello and Piano, Op.56." On this piece, the Beaux Arts Trio will perform the solo sections on their respective instru- ments: Menahem Pressler on piano, Young Uck Kim on violin, and Antonio been invited to perform in many of the world's major music centers, such as London, Paris, and New York. Apart from performing on stage, Beaux Arts Trio dedicates a substantial amount of time to educational and cul- tural programs in North America. They participate in a concert series every year at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Celebrity Series in Boston, and the Library of Congress, where they are in residence. Pianist Pressler is a pro- fessor at the Indiana University School of Music. He has found that "to teO the things you really know - to give that to a young person is enormously satisfying and important" A major contributor to the Trio's longevity is Pressler, who has been with the group since its conception. "The works in the trio are much designed for