Friday September 5, 2003 michigandaily.com artseditor@michigandaily.com Ule ICIJIWUT JatU ARTS 8 I I IWm By Jim Weber Daily Arts Writer H a w Q, 0 This could be the beginning of a beautiful friendship. Yesterday, Campus Corner and OF Playboy magazine held an auto- .,, graph session for Art and Design senior Yen Shipley to promote her appearance in Playboy's October "Girls of the Big Ten" issue that hit newsstands on Aug. 22. Man- ager Joe Kraim said this is the first time Playboy has done an autograph session at the party store, but hopes it isn't the last. Kraim estimated Campus Corner would sell 500 issues of the magazine and even got an autograph of his own on a Campus Corner T-shirt to join the store's collection of rare items. Although Shipley had never given her autograph before, she was definitely prepared for the session. "I have been practicing my autograph since I was four, is that narcissistic or what?" Shipley joked, adding she originally dreamed of signing autographs as an opera singer. The autograph session went smoothly and Shipley said that most fans have been courteous and respectful when they approach her about the photo. Playboy's news- stand operations director Lee Waedekin stood by Shipley through- out the session in suit and tie, but insisted he was not needed to moni- tor Shipley's fans. "Everyone really behaves them- selves at these types of events, we don't need to worry about anyone misbehaving," Waedekin said. The signing left employees and students wanting more. LSA junior Dustin Schneider, one of the many students to receive an auto- graphed copy of the magazine, and Kraim shared disappoint- ment that the other University students in Playboy - Adri- enne Rose, Sarah Louise I I My fingers smell delicious. Young rocki free in elaborate stage show By Laurence Freedman Daily Arts Writer O and Lauren Kathleen - could not make it for the signing. "The two blond girls (Louise and Kathleen) are unbelievable," Schneider said. "We were wondering if we could get 5 more girls in here," said Kraim, "but they didn't accept that, (and) that is up to Playboy." Waedekin said the other students were tied up with class during the shoot that lasted from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Interestingly, being tardy to class is the way Shipley originally found out about the opportu- nity to pose. She heard about Playboy's Big Ten issue on the radio while driving to ballet class late. Then just weeks after an interview and an audition photo shoot with polaroids, Shipley found herself in the Millennium Club for the real thing. "It was a great process," Shipley said. "I showed up (and) they were really professional and personable. It was a very comfortable expe- rience. "As artists, we see naked people all the time - drawings, sculptures, paintings," said Ship- ley. "So it wasn't a big thing to me at all." Even after the final shoot in the spring, Ship- ley wasn't notified that she was in the magazine until two weeks before the issue hit newsstands. But Shipley made sure the decision was no secret, informing her mom after the audition and telling her dad after the final photo shoot. She said that both family and friends have been very supportive throughout the whole process. Her sister has been telling everyone she knows, and also a lot of perfect strangers. Shipley insisted that she doesn't see the photo "as a hindrance in any way, as far as my career goes," and she continues to dream of a life in singing, acting or painting. She also did- n't rule out another photo shoot. "I won't necessarily pursue it, but if the opportunity comes up again and they offered me something, I would do it," Shipley said. sics, the three-hour concert showcased both the thoughtful creativity and the raw power for which Young has become a rock legend. The live perform- ance of Greendale is Neil Young and Crazy Horse Wed., Sept.3 At Van Andel Arena often as much CONCERT REVIEW Neil Young's show was a breath of fresh air. Performing his new record Greendale in its entirety followed by a short set ofYoung and Crazy Horse clas- ,f Green dale a return to form for aging rock legend musical theater as it is a rock show, a bizarre multimedia presentation of an even stranger story about a fictional Cal- ifornia town and the three generations of the hippy-dippy Green family that live there caught in changing times. Actors pantomiming as Young sang, the production used a video screen and a moving platform to turn what was strikingly similar to a high school play into something far more substantial. Greendales plot is confusing and it easily could have been over the audi- ence's head. However, thanks to the inti- macy of the arena, and Young's delivery, following along was as easy and satisfy- ing as pie. Singing a line or two fol- lowed by a moment of warm guitar, Young leaves room for us to reflect on every line, giving them more poignancy and depth. Musically, the Greendale songs man- aged to hit hard while maintaining the fla1ir Arc ambling quality of the studio album. Although the triumphant finale "Be the Rain" was certainly a highlight with over 40 people on the stage, the peak of the Greendale set was the contempla- tive "Bandit" which Young performed solo and acoustic. Its incredibly reso- nant bass line below, Young's falsetto soared as he sang the perfect chorus: "Someday, you'll find everything you're looking for." For many older fans the almost two- hour Greendale set only made the final hour of older Young tunes seem more exciting. The short set proved without question that these guys spawned grunge. Busting out with "Hey Hey, My My" followed by "Rockin' in the Free World," Young and Crazy Horse screamed through their hits with angular guitar solos and three-minute feedback- laced rave-ups at the end of each tune. Young remains a grizzly stomping maniac at age 57, delivering the kind of badass attitude one looks for in a rocker. Sometimes alone jamming out at the far end of the stage, sometimes huddled right next to his band mates Billy Talbot and Pancho Sanpedro, Young would return to the mic to deliver his charac- teristically nasal vocals in timeless songs like "Powderfinger" and "Like a Hurricane" ("I'm tryin' to love ya, but I'm getting blown away"). The Greendale portion of Neil Young's concert on Wednesday night was a joyous reminder of what can be accomplished by pushing the creative boundaries of the rock genre. On the heels of this new work came a thunder- ous reminder of rock and roll's roots. By Laurence Freedman Daily Arts Writer After a decade of releasing general- ly directionless, mediocre albums, Neil Young has come back with one of the most successful records of his storied career. Not only is Greendale a suc- cess musically, Neil Young and Crazy Horse Greendale Reprise Records dale, a fictional California town where the Green family live on the Double E ranch. What goes down there is utterly fantastic: a drug-relat- ed cop killing, visits from the devil, and a journey undertaken by Sun Green to "be a goddess in the planet wars" with a guy named Earth Brown. Greendale touches on themes that are anti-media, anti-big business and generally critical of the direction our country is headed. Nonetheless, hid- den underneath this canopy of disillu- sion is hope, and the story is by no means negative or contradictory in its messages. It is as if Young is reflect- ing on the idealism that was a corner- stone of his hippie generation with both nostalgia and a smirk while looking both doubtfully and hopeful- ly to the future. There is a lot here that could be incredibly pretentious, but Young manages to make it clear that he doesn't take himself too seri- ously at all. Straddling the territory between Young's soothing acoustic work and Crazy Horse's garage-grunge rock- ers, Greendale features 10 almost hypnotically simple songs, which invite the listener to relax to Young's cascading guitar work while soaking in the lyrics. Those who enjoy Young's quieter stuff more than his thrashing Crazy Horse material will probably get more out of Greendale, although any thoughtful music fan who appreci- but also it gives the sophisticated lis- tener something to think about as the story of this "musical novel" unfolds. The setting is present-day Green- ates a full-quality record in this day of singles and mixes will enjoy Greendale, which finds.Neil Young as prolific as ever. c -/ Bikini Waxing * Full Leg Waxing (Brazilian waxing available) Facials CLOSE TO CAMPUS WITH PLENTY OF FREE PARKING. To make an appointment call: 913-5557 0 Arbor Hills Hair & Body Salon (full service Salon) 2295 S. State The University of Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts presents a public lecture and reception Heteroclinic Cycles in the Rain Forest * ,$ s .a f~ K~7"Ui &T1 cen nyUn imn and Campus Life presen We The Plarnet John Leguizamo t/ saturday, .ptenber2y, 2003 9 p.m., EMU Convocation Center A riveting one-man show by dynamic actor, comedian and now director TuCletS John Leguizamo, whose career includes memorable roles in movies such as Moulin Rouge, Die Hard 2, Carlito's Way, To Wong Foo: Thanks for gva1able Everything Julie Newmar, and most recently Ice Age, and Undefeated. now! _________ SS EMU Students u i i