Friday March 28, 2003 michigandaily.com mae@michigandaily.com ARTS 5 New By Daniel Yowell Daily Arts Writer 'Tremors' shakes up SciFi Courtesy of little brothermusic.com Beatx master 9th Wonder. % :. LISTEN TO YOUR BROTHJER DURHAM TRIO IS READY TO TAKE OVER HIP-HOP TV REVIEW Welcome to the quaint, sleepy town of Perfection, Nev.: proud home to the Graboids - a species of enormous, tenta- cled, burrowing sand worms. Even though Graboids will make a meal out of just about anything from humans to cattle to automobiles, they are a government-protected endangered species. This leaves the small population of stubborn and eccentric Perfectionistas no choice but to learn to live with the dangerous beasts. Based on the 1990 film and its Tremors: numerous sequels, "Tremors: The The Series Series" is best described as an action sit- Fridays at com. The quirky and one-dimensional 10 p.m. folks of Perfection make up a ragtag SciFi crew of do-it-yourselfers who accept the challenge of dealing with Graboids as well as investigating other unexplained phenomena, the likes of which Perfection Valley has no shortage. Although Kevin Bacon does not reprise his role from the original movie, the gun-toting paramilitary soldier and con- spiracy theorist Burt Gummer (Michael Gross, "Family Ties") is back in a lead role. Gummer was a standout character in the movie, and placing the series' focus on his vigilante activity makes "Tremors" similar to Chris Carter's short-lived "X- Files" spinoff, "The Lone Gunmen." Alongside Burt Gummer is the town newbie and dashing hero-hunk, Tyler Reed (Victor Browne), a former NASCAR driver who arrives in Perfection intending to revive a defunct tour company that formerly led visitors through the perilous valley. While most of the action centers around Tyler and Burt, characters like former hippie chick Nancy Sterngood (Marcia Strassman) and cute, perky general store owner Jodi courtesy of Scam What's up Big Perm? I mean, Big Worm. Chang (Lela Lee) add some cheesy humor to the mix. Rosali- ta Sanchez (Gladise Jimenez), an ex-Vegas showgirl, runs a ranch in town and brings requisite sexual tension to the show through her ongoing flirtation with Tyler. "Tremors" features a variety of special effects, combining computer graphics and puppetry with generally good-looking results. The notorious albino Graboid, El Blanco, burrows under the sand Bugs Bunny-style and, in one scene, bursts through the floor of Chang's Market convincingly. The frenet- ic camera work during action scenes as well as the overall tone of the show is reminiscent of Sam Raimi's successful syndicated fantasy series "Xena: Warrior Princess." "Tremors" debuts tonight at 9 p.m with two episodes on SciFi, but it will normally air Fridays at 10 p.m. The show stays true to the movies by featuring real action thrills but never taking itself too seriously. While it can't be considered first-rate television per se, the formulaic "Tremors" captures a distinct B-movie flavor and charm that is sure to attract a large following. By Joseph Litman Daily Arts Writer Durham, N.C. is not hip-hop's epicenter - yet. Ok, honestly, it will likely never supplant New York in rap's geographic hierarchy. However, The Listening, an aus- picious and exciting debut LP from Little Brother - pro- ducer 9th Wonder and MCs Phonte and Big Pooh - portends that hip-hop's best new group will put Durham on music's map single-handedly. Updating a sound reminiscent of the Native Tongue fam- ily, Little Brother makes music that all hip-hop fans should love, and as the group stands on the precipice of greatness and universal acclaim, the three affable and intelligent gen- tlemen spoke with The Michigan Daily about their music and their careers. The Michigan Daily: How did you guys hook up? Phonte: We all met at North Carolina Central Universi- ty and the night that we recorded "Speed" was the night when we decided that we would try to make things happen as a group. TMD: What are you guys doing to get your name out there aside from putting The Listening in stores? Big Pooh: We're doing live shows and meeting people, man. When you can hear a band and see them in person - that's real and it will help separate us, once everyone sees us perform. We're just doing dates here and there right now, though. P: Yeah, just hitting certain cities and states right now. We might also go abroad. There won't be a full out tour until this summer when we'll be out for like a month straight. Aside from that, it's like what Pooh said, just trying to stay in contact with people, making connections, respond- ing to emails in my inbox, you know? It's important to acknowledge the fans. That's what we're all about. TMD: Do you like it when people compare you to De La Soul and Pete Rock? 9th Wonder: We'd rather be compared to those cats - De La Soul, Tribe Called Quest - all day because we real- ly don't want to be compared to new jacks. If you're play- ing ball, you'd rather be compared to Mike Jordan than Sedale Threatt. You want to be compared to the great ones. TMD: 9th, how do you make your layered beats, which are sample heavy? 9th: At first, I didn't know what I was doing, so I'd hear a sample, throw drums on it, and that was it. Now, I have my own type of sound, which is derived from a lot of oth- ers, and I do a lot of stuff that other cats don't. I just start on one phrase, one piece of a sample, and just build on that. Sometimes you have your good days and sometimes you have your bad ones, but if you just keep at it - get a hot beat and hot lyrics - you'll be alright. That's a big piece of the Little Brother story. TMD: So then Phonte, Pooh, how do you guys go about writing once 9th gets you a hot beat? P: It all starts with the track, and Pooh and I will sit down with it and come up with a concept or whatever. I come up with a lot of the hooks,.so I might get one in my head and then we'll write around that. It's like writing a paper: The hook is the thesis statement, and you then build around your thesis. The important thing is that we make sure we have something to say; we make sure we ain't putting words together just for the sake of rhyming. It doesn't have to have a message, but people need to know more about Phonte and Pooh each time after hearing us on the mic. TMD: Who is your target audience? BP: Everyone who listens. We didn't set out looking for a certain group. There's something for everybody. P: However, when Pooh says that there's something for everybody, it's not like we said, 'tLet's get the Nepfne's *to' do one club joint and Timbaland to do another." Unlike most rap albums now, where there's 16 or 17 songs with no focus, having done something for every crowd, we don't try to appeal to everybody and then wind up appealing to nobody. We just wanted to stay true to our sound and make a regular record using our early-'90s throwback sound. We don't just want the backpack crowd, we're trying to get to the cats listening to Fabolous too. For more from Little Brother about music, Durham and wheatgrass-drinking, coffee-house motherfuckers, peep the full transcript of their interview at www.michigandaily.com on Monday. Family domiates tbird season of 'Six' By Ryan Vu For the Daily TV REVIEW Called groundbreaking and life affirming as well as pretentious and insipid, "Six Feet Under" has certainly made an impression on HBO viewers. Having just begun its third season, now is the time for those who have never seen this controversial pro- gram to tune in. The new season addresses" the results of choices Six Feet Under Sundays at 9 p.m. HBO made last season and is approaching what may be pivotal moments in each of the character's lives. Lacking any major crisis to centralize the plot, such as the first season's near-buyout of Fisher & Sons and Nate's impending operation in the second season, the focus now lies more heavily on the individual members of the Fisher household. Seven months have passed since Nate's (Peter Krause) operation; he is Courtesy of HBO You wanna have like 10,000 of his babies. now married to Lisa (Lily Tomlin) who has just left working as a live-in cook fora 'aeroticHollywoodpro ducer (played to the hilt by Catherine O'Hara); the two are hard at work building a life together with their child Maya. Ruth (Frances Conroy) has started a new friendship with Bettina (guest star Kathy Bates, who also directs a few episodes), while David (Michael C. Hall) and Keith (Matthew St. Patrick) struggle to maintain their relationship. Claire (Lauren Ambrose) is becoming more engaged in art school and has dif- ficulties with a new boyfriend who likes to "see other girls" while Federico (Freddy Rodriguez) deals with the challenges of his new role as a full partner in the funeral home. With Nate's troubled ex, Brenda (Rachel Griffiths), rumored to be making her reappearance soon, it should be inter- esting to see how things develop for the Fisher family. The phenomenal writing of "Six Feet Under" keeps these various plotlines from spiraling out of control, managing to maintain the show's unique flavor of drama, black comedy and quirky real- ism, with a dash of metaphysical medi- tation on life and death that elevates the series above the level of a mere soap opera for intellectuals. Granted, the increased focus on fam- ily relationships may alienate some viewers, and the jarring resolution to last season's cliffhanger might seem like too much of a cop-out, but the quality writing and performances keep audiences emotionally invested. As Olivier (Peter Macdissi), Claire's unconventional new art teacher, says, good art must make us feel something, positive or negative, "otherwise, who gives a fuck?" Quirky gang keeps FOX in the Pitts' By Jaya SonI Daily Arts Writer Hungarian sounds fill Muzsikds' fresh performance By Lynn Hasselbarth Daily Arts Writer FINE ARTS PREVIEW Performing Saturday night with the Takics Quartet and on Sunday in a solo performance, the folk music of ensemble Muzsikns expresses the life and sounds of Hungarian villages, FOX's new Sunday night comedy "The Pitts" stars a peculiar group with all the characteristics of a typical prime time television family: the rascal ado- lescent son, the defiant but responsible teenage daughter, and two adoring par- ents. Together the four create a qirky bunch that The Pitts plunges into life's Sundays at sticky situations. 9 As the father, FOX Bob Pitt (Dylan Baker, "Happiness") says, his family isn't cursed, it just has "bad luck." Similar to television land's infamous Munster family, the strange occur- rences within the Pitt house are public knowledge. Bob and Liz Pitt (Kellie Waymire) have a doting, all-too-perfect rela- tionship. They drink from cups with matching self-portraits, work togeth- er in a packaging and mail store and cling to one another in spare moments. The humor of this unreal- istic plot quickly becomes irritating as the other characters also depict Cour tes yIfFOX Johnny won't eat his ice cream. cliche roles. Faith (Lizzy Caplan) and her little brother Petey (David Henrie) consis- tently fight, similar to the children on "Malcolm in the Middle" and other family programs. The introduction of "The Pitts" depicts the show's intent to model popular culture. Unfortunately, the overuse of familiar images has nega- tive effects. Coupled with their ideal family characteristics, the Pitts find themselves in unlikely predicaments. Scenes with a psychotic nanny, a haunted car and Faith stabbing Bob in the chest with a syringe are reminis- cent of recognizable movies such as "Pulp Fiction." As a result, episode themes are pre- dictable and the familiar dialogue sounds inadequate compared to their legendary counterparts. recreating tradi- tion with purpose and enjoyment. The Sunday performance of Muzikis will fea- ture the added artistry of soloist Marta Sebestyan and dancers Zoltan Farkas and Ildiko Toth. Muzsikas and Takacs Quartet Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 4 p.m. $10 Student rush $16-40 Adults At Rackham Auditorium behind the sheer delight of the musi- cians on stage is a serious commit- ment to Hungarian heritage and the need to sustain a culture that was almost lost. "Around the edges, in the territo- ries that belonged to Hungary before the first World War, traditional cul- ture was also the tool of survival," notes lead vocalist Marta Sebestyen. Internationally known for her award winning vocals on The English Patient Soundtrack, Sebestyen is more concerned with the truthful music of her village ancestry. It is this music that speaks of life and struggle, commitment and compas- sion. It is this vitality and honesty that Muzsikas seeks to sustain. By the turn of the 20th century, the industrial revolution had swept over Hungary transforming much of the old culture in Budapest into an indus- trial center. The famous Hungarian musician and composer Bela Bartok feared this trend would expand to the precious corners of Hungarian society, taking with it the remaining forms of tradi- tional music. For two years (1912-14), Bartok left the lavish concert halls of Budapest and devoted himself to the collection, arrangement and study of folk music, until World War I put an end to his expeditions. During these years, Bartok crept into the most remote villages with a portable phonograph, recording the musical narratives of Hungarian her- itage. By doing so he preserved a tradition and future of Hungarian folk music. Bartok's desire to move forward with new interpretations of music while remaining committed to Hun- garian tradition is evident in all the musicians of Muzsikas. Originally brought together in 1973 for the sheer fun of musical collaboration, the group soon took on the daunting task of recording the fragmented pieces of village music from Bartok's primitive recording devises. In 1999, Muzsikas released a highly sophisticated and richly historical album appropriately named The BartokAlbum. Despite the emphasis placed on his- torical Hungarian music, Muzsikas is very sensitive to audiences' assump- tion that their performances only con- sist of "museum pieces." On the contrary, Muzikas presents a fresh interpretation of this style of dance music and encourages others to seek sounds that speak truth and meaning. Saturday's performance features the internationally-acclaimed Takncs Quartet, which will perform works composed by Bartok and Kodaly. Founded in 1975 by students at the Liszt Academy in Budapest, this quar- tet is founded on the same love and appreciation for Hungarian music and composers. The traditional Hungarian folksongs of Muzsikas will be inter- spersed throughout the program draw- ing together Bartok's classical compositions and his deep commit- ment to village culture. Together, they create a musical atmos- phere that depicts the experience of traditional Hungarian villages. Sounds of the fiddle and viola, string bass and guitar resonate throughout Muzikis' Gypsy folk tunes. These instruments coalesce in what seems to be a simple and carefree, improvisa- tional dance fanfare. However, what is ---- ---- pm StoragIe I All Units Indoors A world premiere written and directed by Holly Hughes A fun-filled play about how clothes and