ARTS The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 7, 2002 -11A HAVEN'T SEEN YOUR FAVORITES YET? 31-40 BEST BANDS Continued from Page 10A 31. The Stooges - Hostile as hell. Not nearly as intelligent, but undoubtedly dirtier than the Velvet Underground, both bands addressed similarly subversive top- ics, but in dissimilar fashions. Where the Velvets were coy, the Stooges slapped audiences around with grime and sweat. When David Bowie mixed Raw Power people panned it for sounding too thin, but what the record revealed was Iggy Pop for the raving lunatic genius that he is. 32. Simon and Garfunkel - Sure, Paul Simon and his faux-afro loving partner Art where no better than a couple of pretentious Eng- lish majors playing the guitar for their prude girlfriends on a hilly brush, but their lyrics and harmony remain unmatched. Their five albums together, from 1964's Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M. through 1970's Bridge Over Trou- bled Water produced pop classics that became standard, timeless bal- lad ("The Sound of Silence," the first time they used an electric gui- tar) and comfortably dated time- capsule fare (Mrs. Robinson). 33. Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young - While they're all right on their own, the addition of Neil Young's oily high-pitched drawl takes Stephen Stills, Graham Nash and David Crosby's vocals and forces them into tightly packed harmony. On Dejd vu the dichotomy is at its most crystal clear, CSN singing with one voice battling it out with Y, not for domi- nance but for reso- group that matters, their longevity speaks for itself. Black Thought easily makes the top five-list of best emcee's of all time, and the band members consistently compli- ment each other's styles to make for their crisp sound. Their onstage versatility combined with amazing beat-boxers and vicious lyrical exercise make their sound essential to the genre. 40. Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band - Silvio Dante, guitarist Little Steven Van Zandt's character on "The Sopra- nos" definitely wouldn't listen to The Boss and his stellar line-up of serious rock musicians. Make fun of "Dancing in the Dark" all you want, these guys may be the last unapologetic rock band that does- n't resort to goofy self-indulgence or post-modern ironic hatred in order to seem relevant. They know they're relevant because they know they're great. See BEST BANDS, Page 12A Courtesy of Universal Iggy, engaging in his healthiest habit. Wearing a crucifix. Yeah. nance. As close to perfection as four old addicts can get. 34. Public Enemy - Hip- hop pioneers who ushered in the first socio-political consciousness into the genre. Most noted for their 1988 masterpiece It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, the band's militant message inflicted an unique controversy that separat- ed them from, and often pit them against, the popular "gangsta rap" uprise of the time. 35. T. Rex - Glam rock pio- neers T. Rex never had the success on this side of Atlantic they enjoyed in Britain during their heyday from 1970 to 1974. Only the catchy chorus of "Bang a Gong (Get It On)" from their 1971 album Electric Warrior could get the attention of American music consumers. Marc Bolan, the towering singer/song- writer of the band, heavily influenced co-glam rock- er David Bowie. T. Rex's career ended abruptly with the untimely death of Bolan in 1977. Rock. 36. Neil Young and Crazy Horse - The patriarch of t grunge-guitar first ' "i ^ r teamed with guitarist Danny Whit- ten, bassist Billy Talbot and drum- mer Ralph Molina on 1969's Everybody Knows This is Nowhere, spawning the masterpiece "Cinna- mon' Girl," Despite the occasional side project and his work with CSNY (see 41o. 33), Young has remained faithful to the three, and they continue to make good old fashioned cantankerous rock. 37. A Tribe Called Quest - Instead of following the trend of gangsta rap, Tribe, made up of Q- Tip, Phife and Ali Shaheed Muhammad, were artistic, intelli- gent, political and funny, all while blending jazz and hip-hop, creating a new form of music along with contemporaries such as De La Soul. Tribe's second album, The Low End Theory, while not the most commercially viable, is one of the best and most important hip- hop albums ever produced. 38, The Grateful Dead - With the possible exception of Kiss, the Dead are the only band to have has also generated their own dynamic subculture. Alongside Bob Marley, the Dead's music represents the best of the "peace, love and gettin' high" theme. But listeners can hate Deadheads and all they stand for while retaining a genuine apprecia- tion for the sheer technical virtuos- ity behind the Dead's unique blend of musical Americana. 39. The Roots - The only instrumentally backed hip-hop Courtesy of Sony Still The Boss. Always The Boss. A look at the underside of U of M www.universitysecrets.com X11 A 3e a cam3pus Apps cQu Ques f- lications available today: www.umich.edu/~info/ stions? Call 764-INFO Courtesy of Rhino El1s, before the Emo freaks stole his glasses. --- -- -- M. This Weekend in Michigan Athletics Presented by: Scingular- trf .. . I Hockey CCHA Tournament- First Round Michigan vs. Lake Superior State Friday, March 8 7:35 p.m. Saturday, March 9 7:05 p.m. Sunday, March 10 7:35 p.m. (if necessary) Yost Ice Arena Women's Gymnastics Saturday, March 9' #4 Michigan vs. #13 Denver and Washington 4 p.m. at Criser Arena First 1,000 fans will receive the final set of Gymnastics Trading Cards courtesy of Bank One! Senior Day-join us as we honor the 2002 seniors! Adrmt ia i $4 for adults $2 for chidren & seNior itizeins. U-M students admitted FREE with a valid ID! Lacrosse Friday, March 8 #4 Michigan vs. #10 California 7 p.m. Saturday, March 9 #4 Michigan vs. Oakland 7 p.m. Oosterbaan Fieldhouse Admission is $4 for adults; $2 for children & U-M students with a valid IQ! To order tickets, call (734) 764-0247. COLUMB I A UNIVERSITY BIOSPHERE 2 TUCSON, ARI ZO NA For more information on Michigan Athletics, visit MGoBlue.com. Columbia's Biosphere 2 is an extraordinary campus for hands-on exploration of Earth systems science, policy, ecology, and astronomy. SUMMER PROGRAMS: Sky Islands, Desert Seas June 3-June 28, 2002 Sea of Cortez: A Natural History June 3-June 28 Summer of Stars June 3-July 5 Deserts of the Southwest June 17-July 26 Earth Systems Field School July 15-August 23 Biodiversity Institute July 15-August 16 FALL PROGRAMS: Earth Semester September 3-December 20 Biosphere Research September 3-December 20 Universe Semester September 3-December 20 ;