The Michigan Daily - New Student Edition - Tuesday, September 3, 2002 - 9D Rockin' the Suurbs Fold the band: Ben goes solo Sarcastic piamno man touring all bykhs lonesome By Luke Smith Daily Arts Editor "I mean it's not fucking cool to be like Billy Joel," laughs Ben Folds. "I sing out of tune all the time, and I get shit wrong, and he doesn't." A man stands at a piano plays his heart out and everyone wants to say he's Billy Joel, except for him. The problem with being a guy in front of a piano in music now, a time when metal and rap/metal are barely alive and kicking yet some- how still dominating airwaves, are the inevitable comparisons to piano composers of yore. Folds narrates many of his songs in the third person, with lyrical styling sharing similarities with ex- Pavement frontman Stephen Malkmus. Folds formed and lead the ironically titular group in 1994, sans guitarist, near the height of over-commercialized guitar grunge. Ben Folds Five released a self-titled independent effort whose tin-pan alley indie-pop propagated a major label bidding war. It was the band's fol- low-up and Sony debut, Whatever and Ever Amen that broke the band: The bitter "Brick," about a pair of teens sneaking off to have an abortion, beamed out of top 40 and modern rock radio towers alike. Whatever was a leftfield hit, selling over a million copies. The band released a B-sides and outtakes LP in 1998 before dropping their final album The Unauthorized Biography of Reinhold Messner. Reinhold portrayed a desperate band, beginning to grow apart. Widely regarded as the strongest of the Ben Folds Five catalog, the album was met with praise and lukewarm sales. Messner was a darker depiction and often a depar- ture from the upbeat piano pop for which the band was known. Rein- hold incorporated stringed arrangements and even a quasi-experimental tune in "Most Valuable Possession" (the song was an answering machine recording of Folds' father, with tweaked musi- cal backgrounds and a fatherly lec- ture on the importance of intellectual preserva- tion). The record was far more coimercially inaccessible, especially to radio's fickle ears, than the Five's previous efforts and sales slumped. November of 2000 brought the unexpected announcement of the Ben Folds Five's breakup. While the band was unraveling during the support tour for Rein- hold, anxiety, nervousness and tension were high inside the Five. BEN F Folds told The Michigan Daily, "During the time when the band Atec was breaking up, I had to go out and feel like I did when I was March 1, playing a talent show in 12th grade." After the Five disbanded, Clear Ch Folds began work on his second solo record (his first, an avant-pop album recorded under the moniker Fear of Pop, came out in 1998). Rockin' the Suburbs hit shelves in September of 2001, and Ben Folds was back, minus the Five. The album most resembles the pop sensi- bility of Whatever and Ever Amen, but the recording is bigger, and the writing is better. Songs like "Zak and Sara," "Fred Jones Part 2" and "Carrying Cathy" continue the smarty=pants third-per-E s o n r< narration that Folds cultivated in the mid-'90s. Suburbs is undoubtedly the slickest recording Ben Folds has released, either by himself or with the Five. "The songs probably relate a lit- tle stronger," Folds said, "and in a way, it's probably not as exciting because it is so highly produced." OLDS higan tter 2002 annel Part of Folds' reasoning for the resounding pop sensibilty on Rockin' the Suburbs was the lack of radio play the Five's final album received. "I really felt like I'd written songs before that should've been hits, and I don't know why they weren't. They weren't produced the right way, we took too many liberties with it, they weren't Rockin the Suburbs, Ben Folds; Epic Records A year after deffunking the Five. Ben Folds solo drop Rockin /e Suh- urbs picks uip where The Llnnuho- rizedt Bic ivpi,of lReinhold Azlesne- left off, with melancholy ditties and a continuing reliance on quasi-mature pian-ic power ballads. Ivory tickl 'd freakouts find themselves fewer and farther between in the Suburbs. Not lax and lethargic is Folds' sharp tongue, which is planted firmly in his cheek throughout Rockin. Folds' gentle coo on "The Ascent of Stan" is thrown off by his oddball lyrics "Textbook hippy mn/Get rest while you can" and disjointed song- smithing, the track later breaks out into a techno-warble induced pops- mart schizophrenia. Ben Folds harkens briefly back to the Five's "Where's Summer B?" with the narrative number "Zak and Sara" The song combines the story- telling sentiment of "Jack and Diane" spun with a Billy Joel breakdown. Fods adoration for AM radio pops, crackles and snaps throughout the Suburbs jaunting through the musical giggly-weeds with Folds' one-man- band-dom (he played all the instru- ments on the record) and his solo virtuoso bubbles on "Fired." Folds pulls the plug of irony on a few occasions, drip-drying the han- kercheif on "Carry ing Cathy'" a sui- cide ballad that wvsas left off the band's denoument finding itself a permanent home in the Suburbs. The title-track rips and roars through a series of dynamic changes, sporting wit-rich lyrics and sarcasti- cally pointed metal homages. Suburbs is the old-man mature answer to the Five's purveying juve- nility and makes for a smarty-pants sing-a-long. Rockin the Suburbs is singable, smart and sardonic. Sham on. RAfING: ****A A big enough recordings and for some reason, they weren't really flying at radio, and I thought they should." When recording Rockin', Folds took careful heed of producer Ben Grosse's words: "I thought, 'OK I'm going to listen to the advice of my producer, and when something doesn't sound big or large enough or pop enough, I'm gonna make it that way,' because I don't want to take a great song and have it wasted." After a pair of successful tours last year, Folds is hitting the road again. "It's my first real solo tour; it's just going to be me, a van and a piano." Folds' solo tour will be the first time he's revisited the Five's material during his regular set-list since the band's break up. (Folds' encores during the two fall tours con- sisted of him at the piano playing audi- ence requests.) H e said., "With the encore sets, I don't need a set-list, because whatever someone wants to hear, I can play it." Listeners shouldn't expect to hear a set-list of new material; rest assured, he'll be playing all kinds of songs. "Anything goes, unless it's something I really don't feel like I'm inspired to play at that moment, or it's something that really doesn't make sense at the piano," he said. And the all-too frequent Billy Joel comparisons? "I would like to be compared to Randy Newman or Todd Rundgren. I dig what they do." Tenacious D rocks the socks off St By Lyle Henretty and Luke Smith Daily Arts Editors The self-proclaimed "greatest band on Earth" gave the proletariat a treat by slumming it at the State Theatre in Detroit this past Octo- ber. Tenacious D, in the personage of Jack Black and Kyle Gass, took the nearly-sold-out crowd on an acoustic odyssey through their ate Theatre souls, in the process playing most of their new album and several cult favorites from their short- lived HBO series. Before The D transcended the stage for their nearly two-hour feast on the senses, opening act Sounds of Urchin brought the crowd to a seething frenzy for TENACIO State Th October 1, written. While this was not entirely true, the boys did rip through both obscure gems and classics, such as their career-making "Tribute," a tribute to the "best song in the world," which they had also written but subsequently forgotten. They also commandeered a few songs from other, lesser bands, including Guns 'n Roses ("Mr. Brownstone") The Who (From Tommy) and The Beatles (including a closing medley from Abby Road). The port- ly pair even found time to sponta- )US D neously treat the audience to "Eye of the Tiger." Ivan Drago was eater unable to make an appearance. ,2001 The music intermingled seam- lessly with the some famous D sketches ("Inward Singing," lots of oral sex jokes). Yet it was their musical and lyrical genius that made this the best concert Detroit has ever been privy to. "Fuck Her Gently" is the perfect anti-love song, and "Kyle Quit the Band" and "Kyle Took a Bullet For Me" are pitch-perfect odes to The D's quiet guitar prodigy. Black admitted that the concert really began in Detroit, at their biggest venue thus far, and their excitement was tripled by the D- loving audience, who received the duo for what they are, the homely, humble "greatest band in the world." And in true rock form, The D were treated to a host of female chests at stage left while they mercilessly kicked out humor-tinged hard rock. Complimenting The D's more folksy riffs, Urchin's lead guitarist (The Reverend B. Ill) sent volts of electric energy out through the crowd. The good Rev- erend was kind enough not to talk in rhyme and let his fanatical shred on his Fender do much of the chat'ting. After a thorough warming-up, the crowd frothed for the greatness that was the night's main attraction. The soundtrack to "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" emanated through the speakers, occasionally heard over frenzied cries for The D. The tenacious ones began their set with crowd-pleaser "Wonderboy," their first single. While this pleased many, die-hard fans could be heard mumbling about a "sell-out." Motion picture and music video master Spike Jonze has filmed a clip for the song, which is sure to catapult band to the forefront of the Total Request Live; teeny-bopper sect that has yet to be receptive to their music. As fans cried for their own favorite taste of The D, Black angrily asserted that they don't do requests. Gass then reminded that they would, on the other hand, play every song that they had ever Its a chubby not-so-teenage wasteland on stage. the jams. Afterwards, fans of the D who had pur- chased the CD that evening were granted a meet and greet with the Two Kings. Patrons were funneled up a staircase where the scepters- held by KG and JB were Sharpie pens and treated to an autograph and a kind word. It was more than a kind word though which made the D's trip to Detroit worth each fan's while. I1 /4 - -® .' W- -' ,> Students. m ANILI < ' . - Alh AM_ Wl M 0 -dik _~ - - - wwwbkstorcom/umichigan Reserve and buy your books on-line. Over 10% of all sales at the Michigan Union & Pierpont Commons Bookstores go back to support U of M student services. A wide variety of our best selling items like aifts and annarel for all SUIIWWt SHttA Student Special during the entire month of September Present ID with purchase I Omost EUII Classical Ponular 1 t I i- N i