8 -The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 23, 2002 ARTS Baxter says goodbye to local literary scene Provocative Indian music comes to campus with 'Sangam 2002' 01 By Ricky Lax Daily Arts Writer University Prof. Charles Baxter bids Ann Arbor's literary scene goodbye with a farewell reading of his latest book, "The Feast Of Love," a National Book Award finalist, tonight at 7 p.m. in Borders on South State Street. Baxter sat down with Daily Arts to talk about his work, Ann Arbor and love. The Michigan Daily: What will you miss most about Ann Arbor? Charles Baxter: Somebody I knew used to say that the world comes to Ann Arbor, which is not exactly CHAF BAX' At Boi Tonight a Love," would you insist they film it in Ann Arbor? CB: Once you sell your book, you don't have say over things like that. The people at Miramax thought that they were going to make a movie out of it. The plan was to shoot it in Toronto because you can make films more cheaply there. I did want them to shoot some exteriors here. TMD: Nothing came of the movie? CB: The director couldn't write a screen- play that she was satis- RLES fied with. There's a TER director who made a film called "Love and Death rders in Long Island," who t 7 p.m. seemed to be interested in it. I'll believe it when it happens. TMD: Are the characters in "The Feast of Love" based on real people? CB: No, they're all imaginary. TMD: What makes them so real? CB: Well, that's the trick of writing a novel. You take features, one small thing of a person you know, one other feature of somebody else, and then you put these things on one character. You add one detail after another until the charac- ter starts to look real. TMD: There's a lot of sex in "The Feast of Love," heterosexual on right, but just about any- thing you want in music, books, or movies, that kind of artistic/intellectu- al life, is here. TMD: Does that make Ann Arbor a good place to write? CB: I've always had good colleagues and friends here, so I've always had a community I could show my work to. TMD: Your book, "The Feast of Love" is filled with local references; Stadium Boulevard, Pioneer High School, Ypsilanti. If someone was to make a movie of "The Feast of Courtesy of Random House Author Charles Baxter. page 7, and lesbian by page 46, but it's always fitting and never awk- ward to read. CB: It's not particularly explicit and it's not there in order to get the reader aroused. It's funny or it's meant to tell you more about the characters. TMD: (Defensive) Not that I read a lot of romance novels or have a lot to compare it to. CB: Of course not. I wanted to write a novel that was about romance, which somebody could read without feeling ashamed. TMD: Do you actually know peo- ple that have had sex on the Big House's 50-yard line, as you describe in your book? CB: I saw some people having sex in the Big House when my son was 10. It was a Sunday afternoon, around one o- clock, anPmy son and I were biking around ... we biked into the stadium, and there was a couple there, doing it on the 50-yard line. And my son said, "What are they doing," and I said, "They're mating." FOOD FOR THOUGHT MANIPULATING OPINION Agents planted in the U.S. by North Viet- nam's allies played on strained race rela- tions in this country, saying: "Poor Blacks are fighting a White man's war!" Despite statistics to the con- trary, the protestors fell for it. GARY LILLIE & ASSOC. REALTORS WWW.GARY LLLE.COM By Archana Ravi Daily Arts Writer "Sangam" in Hindi, means "to come together." It is a powerful, resonant word that reverberates through music, peoples and entire cultures. This Friday, "Sangam 2002: A Confluence of Streams" will bring all of these elements together in an evening of classical Indian music. This particular concert will interweave the talents of two highly acclaimed musicians, Grammy Award Win- ner Pt Vishwa Mohan Bhatt and Millenni- um Award Winner Chitraveena N. Ravikiran. It will also fuse together both artists' respective regional music of India, SANGAM namely Hindustani and Carnatic music CONFLU styles. Bhatt will be playing the Mohan STR Veena, while Ravikiran will be playing the Nava-Chitraveena. At The Po The Ann Arbor community is fortunate Friday to have the opportunity to hear the work- y ings of these two internationally renowned AID and S musical geniuses. Bhatt, most famous for his successful Indianizing of the Hawaiian guitar, has traveled the world making appearances in Madison Square Garden on the 50th anniversary of the United Nations, Lincoln Center on the 125th anniver- sary of Mahatma Gandhi and Royal Albert Hall in Lon- don in the "BBC Proms 100 Years." He has even 0 E ow at $1 'ul participated in jazz and world music festivals, display- ing his unbounded love for music. He has received such prestigious awards as the Padmashree Academy Award, the Sangeet Natak Award, the Musical Scientist Award and the Grammy Award for his 1994 album, A Meeting by the River. At the age of two, Chitraveena N. Ravikiran was the world's youngest performing musician. His brilliance was revealed to the world when he identified, at age 2, 325 ragas (melodic scales) and 175 talas (rhythmic cycles) to an audience of esteemed and eminent musi- cians. He even answered technical ques- tions about Carnatic music from music maestro Ravi Shankar. When he first start- 2002: A ed his career as an artist, he was a concert ENCE OF vocalist. However, when he discovered the 21-stringed slide instrument called the AMS Chitraveena, there was no turning back. He ver Center became one of the most sought-after Car- t8 pm. natic concert artists, and still is to this day. o p. He has been the first or youngest to receive dehkaxom awards such as the Millennium festival award, the Star of India, Sangeet Samraat, among many others. The event is being sponsored by Sulehka.com, an online Indian community, as well as the Association for India's Development (AID), a'non-profit organization that supports social development projects towards an improved life for the poor in India. They Might Be Giants rock the Mi~chigan with oddball songs Si By Thomas Burke Daily Arts Writer With a career older than most college freshmen, They Might Be Giants have held true to their nerd ethos, even though horn-rimmed glasses have fallen in and out and then back into style. The vocal tandem of the Johns (Linnell and Flansburgh) along with the catchy pop confections, quirky melodies and some deranged, caffeine-powered accordion have endeared the New York City duo to crowds throughout the '80s and '90s. Children were the theme of the night with The Giants promoting No!, their first children's album. Their eccentric melodies have been incorporated with simple educational rhymes for a CD fit to entertain the entire family. "That means no swearing," quipped John Lin- School Cboice Research Need Subjects! 1 hr pays $4-$19! ($12 avg) Economics study of decision making. SIGN UP iiiww.schoochoiceresearch.or g /rluhur@umic.ed" This is a NSF and UM Research Project nell, co-founder and accordionist Mon- day night as TMBG took the stage at the Michigan Theater. Although most of TMBG's set con- sisted of idiosyncratic pop children's songs, they also trucked out the classics. A five-minute THEY M acoustic flamenco guitar GI solo preceded "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)," At The ending with of a poppy Tb jam session and "Doctor Mon., Worm," received as Clear much applause as laughs. They Might Be Giants' set transformed the Michigan Theater into a comedy club. Linel's and Flansburgh's wits and abilities to work the audience kept the crowd roar- ing. Flansburgh attempted a seance and spiritual possession on the drum- mer, conjuring up impressive Stevie Wonder and Grand Funk Railroad beats with a grand finale of Animal- style drumming (The Muppet, not the Brit-invasion outfit). The jokes did not stop with the I vli AT CM iea ,O Ct music. During the encore, TMBG turned on a radio and attempted to play along with a random song. Finding only commercials and elevator music, Flansburgh responded with, "Oh, I get it, radio here sucks" .GHT BE They Might Be Giants NTS ended with the thirty sec- ond version of "Boss of Michigan Me," the theme song to ater FOX's "Malcolm in the )ct. 21 Middle," concluding an hannel evening of witty banter and PBS rock. Adding to the surreal fifth birthday atmosphere of the show, the opening duo's ultra-simplistic jin- gles and anti-capitalist propaganda eeri- ly heightened the laugh factor of the night. Consisting of a nine-year old female drummer, a synthesizer played by her father, and second-hand slide show presented by her mother, The Tra- chtenburg Family Slideshow added fast- paced pop tunes, culturally subversive lyrics and vocals verging on spoken word and for instant laughs. Tired of being a . 1 Want to be a le * You've got the business savvy, but things aren't challenging. Well, come join the Business Staff at the Michigan Daily and become an Account Executive. You will sell advertising locally and nationally, manage your own account Ab