Wednesday October 1, 2003 michigandaily.com artseditor@michigandaily.com ARTS 5 SING A SAD SONG ELVIS AND RUFUS PLAY IT SERIOUS By Scott Serilla Daily Arts Editor In a season of slumping album sales, Rufus Wainwright and Elvis Costello have bravely bucked simple commercial sense. Both chose to release piano-based and fully orchestra-backed chamber pop to the masses used to subsisting on Hilary Duff sugar rushes. It's downright scandalous to hear strings this full and lush swelling behind a well- crafted ballad these days, but talent- ed artists like these pull it off without so much as a smirk. Wainwright offers up the theatric but heartfelt Want One, while Costello delivers the sophisticated and somber North. Although sepa- rated by a generation (this is Wain- wright's third album and Costello's 20th), the two albums are united not just by concurrent release dates and bittersweet vocal melodies but also by a deep personal investment from each songwriter. It's that "all-too- human" that edge keeps these records from drowning in the obvi- ous excesses and baggage of orches- tral arrangements in pop. Wainwright uses Want to chroni- cle his bottoming out on drugs and booze after years of the party-boy life, his subsequent climb back up to sobriety, turning 30 and his perpetu- al search for Mr. Right. His usual flair with mixing Tin Pan Alley pop, folk and opera with Leonard Cohen- esque reflection is on full display here. Want also wisely undercuts the serious subject matter with plenty of wit and beautifully rich multi- tracked background vocals. Though no single track seems to leap out like "April Fools" or "Ciga- rettes and Chocolate Milk" did on Wainwright's first and second albums, the epic build of Ravel's "Bolero" beneath opener "Oh What a World" and poignant title refrain of "Go or Go Ahead" follow their own logic of catchiness, making you crave this album's promised spring- time sequel Want Two even more. Yet perhaps the most enduring song here is "Dinner at Eight," which captures an angry falling out between Rufus and his folk-singer father, Louden Wainwright III. The heartbreak and complexity encapsu- lated here alone warrants picking up the record. Costello also seemed to have his dear old dad in mind when he com- posed the slow, jazzy torch songs on S OutKast's "Hey Ya" - Andre 3000's lead single from the Out- Kast twin solo album project Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, "Hey Ya" features poppy ghetto bounce and Andre's clownish vocals. THE HOTTEST PICKS IN ENTERTAINMENT FROM A DAILY ARTS WRITER His aim is true. North. His father Ross was a noted British bandleader/singer and Elvis seems more than a little intent on proving he's up to snuff in the vocals department. Focusing less on lyrics, and leaving most of the ivory tin- kling to Attractions cohort Steve Nieve, Costello does an admirable job improving his status as a singer from the pub-shouting days of This Year's Model. Obviously, the man who wrote the immortal "Shipbuilding" knows a thing or two about ballads, but the introspection into the recent demise of Costello's marriage hangs as a cloud over North. Still, despite the slow-burning gloom, the album still seems like a must listen to Costello fanatics. Want One, DreamWorks: **** North, Deutsche: ***I "Intolerable Cruelty" - The follow-up to the Coen brothers' understated and underrated "The Man Who Wasn't There" "Intolera- ble Cruelty" features an all-star cast including George Clooney, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Geoffrey Rush and Billy Bob Thornton. The Coens can do no wrong. Michael Ian Black on VII-1's "I Love the '70s" - Mak- ing VH-1 tolerable again, Black offers up gems like this one about Monty Python: "They were a comedy group from Canada, and they did a nice job. They understood that to be funny you just had to speak with a British accent. (He demonstrates) It's very funny when I do it. I'm a professional." 2 Fountains of Wayne - After seven years and three records, the "Stacy's Mom" band is finally getting the respect and attention they deserve. Major League Base- ball playoffs on ESPN and FOX - Now that the pathetic Detroit Tigers' season is over, it's time for some good baseball for once. And finally there's some- thing on TV. Red Sox over Cubs in six. One Man Guy. Courtesy oMLB Decemberists deliver early Christmas gift L1Cf/ tr: J / I XWf'. . q/est No hatin' allowed for the RC Players By Lauren Hodge Daily Arts Writer With October approaching in the wings, the RC Play- ers will take the stage for their first performance in the East Quad Auditorium Oct. 3-4 at 8 p.m. This student- By Alexandra Jones For the Daily .Music REVI EW *** The Decemberists are not the next Neutral Milk Hotel. They never were: While Jeff Mangum created In the Aeroplane over the Sea, one of the most inventive albums of the '90s, The Decemberists The frontman Colin DecemberistS Meloy has done Her Majesty, something a little the more calculated Decemberists and no less admirable: Her Kill Rock Stars Majesty, the Decemberists contains some of the most effective storytelling outside of a Raymond Carver anthology. Where magnum crackles sound into catharsis, Meloy spins tales over a carefully-laid blanket of sound. In nasal and insistent tones, he details characters tragic, dain- ty and peculiar, singing of street urchins, quirky authors and curious bodily appendages. Attention to characterization and music complimenting lyrical ideas shows that the Decemberists have grown since their debut, Castaways and Cutouts. The crunchy combinations of unlikely instruments and occasional bursts of racket have given way to a cleaner, more measured approach that better sets each track's mood. Though tighter focus improved the band's song- writing, it made the songs on Her Majesty slightly less compelling with the first few hearings. They may have perfected quirky, expansive ballads, but the Decemberists still create sweet and dark acoustic songs. Notable track "Red Right Ankle" sounds tender without getting sappy, and the album's undoubted high point, "I Was Meant for the Stage," articulates the desire for fame and adulation nearly perfectly, then devolves into a cacopho- nous coda. "The Soldiering Life" and closing track "As I Rise" are Her Majesty's slightly lower points; while they're decent songs in themselves, they seem to lack the momentum and intri- cacy of the other tracks. Happily, the band has improved their incredible versatility in creating charac- ters; the first three on the album are respectively ghostly, jaunty and inspir- ing. The album opens with the hollow creaking of low strings and piercing scream that introduce "Shanty for Arethusa," the band's most effectively orchestrated pirate tune yet. Strains of Jenny Conlee's accordion recall pre- Industrial Europe, and galloping drums and guitar chords give one the feeling that marauding bandits might jump out from around the next corner. An account of a pubescent boy's lazy sum- directed, written and performed act- ing troupe has been preparing for its bi-annual production, an "Evening of Scenes," featuring a variety of drama and comedy sketches. Though much work has been put into the performance, LSA senior Susie Schutt says, "Our'niaini goalis to The RC Players www.umich.edu/ -rcplayer have furi. rt's i'ot mer, "Billy Liar" serves as the super- catchy second tune. In "The Gymnast,. High Above the Ground," the haunting, pensive gauze of sound introduced by git r h lp build antic patjon before. the gymnast's leap. At the track's cli- max, the Decemberists' full sound surges forward, propelling listeners off the platform and out over the crowd. Meloy has placed some of his most precise lyrics in "Los Angeles, I'm Yours." Phrases like "An ocean's gar- bled vomit on the shore" lilt indolently over the chunk-chunk of acoustic guitar. Impressive alliterative lines are found in "Song for Myla Goldberg" ("... I know I need unique New York" - it's easier to say than it looks); "The Bachelor and the Bride" features meditative rhymes ("And the windows and the cinders / And the willows in the timbers") as well as one of the band's most memorable choruses: "I will box your ears and leave you here stripped bare:" The Decemberists use playful and sharp ingenuity to fill your dreams with pirates, orphans, soldiers and Geisha girls, so tuck yourself in and listen as many as 80 people auditioning for parts this year," a number Caputo said grows each year. Shetadded that one of the best perks of joining the players is the laid- back atmosphere that surfaces both on and off stage. The RC Players, which has been on campus for over 20 years, presents four student-run plays during each semester. "Just Sitting Down To Dinner," which will be performed Oct. 19-21, is one of the student-directed plays that will be showcased this term. Scripted by two of the RC members, the play is based around issues that arise among conservative American families. LSA junior Sam Botsford attributes the strong quality of each performance to the fun and relaxed environment that the Playeris eTifit."I've'bben acting since I was in sixth grade, and I feel like I've developed more as an actor because I am able to grow off of others. And when you come as an audience member, it's just a good time," said Botsford, who has acted with the group for three years. "We stress a comfortable environment because we want people to know that this is a place of total safety," said Caputo of the group. "You don't have to be a the- ater major to be on stage." as competitive as some of the other groups on campus." The RC Players offer students the opportunity to par- ticipate in all aspects of the stage. Whether it be writ- ing, directing, performing or working on the set, the players give students the chance to test out one or sever- al areas of theater production as they so desire. LSA senior Morgan Caputo, who has been with the RC Players for four years, said, "We want to get as many freshmen involved in the group as we can. We had Out of the garage come the Raveonettes By John Notarianni For the Daily M usc REV IEW Garage-drone band the Raveonettes have composed their new album, Chain Gang ofLove, under the following self- imposed sanctions: A) All the songs are recorded in the same key - Bb major. B) No more than three chords are \ ~&WMW'-OJ1A-lfM Out of Sight! ABC's 'Sisco' a stylish success allowed. C) Each song has to be under three min- utes. D) No high- hat or ride cymbals are allowed in recording the album. And who The Raveonettes Chain Gang of Love Sony By Adam Rottenberg Daily Arts Writer Carla Gugino plays the titular charac- ter, originally portrayed by Jennifer Lopez in the film version, in ABC's sleek new Miami police drama. Based on characters from the Elmore Leonard novel "Out of Sight," "Sisco" fea- tures a tough, street Karen Sisco smart U.S. marshal Wednesdays at (Gugino "Spy 10 p.m. Kids") and her pri- ABC vate-investigator father (Robert Forster, "Jackie Brown") solving crimes. This is a show clearly built around Gugino, immediately giv- ing the series a strong focus to build on. Continuing in the tradition of Leonard's other distinctive work such as "Get Shorty" and "Rum Punch," the series never takes itself too seriously. In the pilot, Karen accidentally lets a womanizing convict escape and subse- quently has to recapture him. The ensu- ing action plays out like most TV cop shows, but the style and humor help to deviate it from the rest of the "CSI" pack. Countering "CSI" and "Law and Order," "Sisco" is character driven, pre- venting the cases from becoming the focal point of the show. An interesting sight is in store for "24" fans as Xander Berkely and Sarah Clarke both have roles in the series pre- miere that put them into a situation that never would have been believed over on the FOX suspense thriller. The Miami scenery and visual style have been retained, giving the series a unique feel. Gugino fills in admirably for J-Lo, while a replacement for George Clooney's character is nowhere to be seen. Without the steady love interest from the film, Karen is able to entangle herself in different romantic situations creating new storylines. The reworking of the characters and con- cepts succeeds and the theatrical ver- sion is never referenced. ABC's placement of the series against NBC's powerhouse "Law and Order" may not give it the best chance for survival. But, with a slight schedule change, ABC may have the perfect compliment for its other empowered female crime fighter on "Alias" with a move to Sunday nights. Until then, "Karen Sisco" is one of the freshest and most entertaining new shows of the sea- son no matter what the competition is. says indie rock isn't pretentious? Raveonettes bandleaders Sharin Foo and Sune Rose Wagner (Scan- danavians by birth and rockers by trade) made a big, swaggering splash in the garage scene last year with their debut album, Whip it On. How- ever, the transition to a major chord (a departure from the Bb minor of their last album) serves to transport their pouty, drone-sludge sound to something that, dare I say it, resem- bles vintage pop music. The album plays like a quick spin of the AM dial through '50s radio - that is, after being buried in stat- ic and teleported across outer space. Beneath the reverb-heavy vocals and fried electric tubes, the songs pay homage to early surf, county, pop and even vintage soul. The dual male-female lead vocals on "Noisy Summer" are suggestive of the Everly Brothers performing inside a jet engine. "The Love Gang" sounds like the theme song to an animated children's show pervaded by whips and leather. The songs evoke a twisted view of nostalgic summer fun. Lyrics bounce from "pretty lover boys" and "that perfect day" to "chains, black leather and sex" in seamless synthe- sis of old-time summer love and heavy bondage. Still, the Raveonettes fit right in with the cur- rent flux of euro-rock revivalists immigrating to U.S. airwaves, play- ing American music with a decided- ly foreign feel. The album isn't helped by a few mindlessly plunking tracks such as "Little Animal" and "The Truth About Johnny." With such regi- mented song structure and excruci- atingly consistent Bb major, it sounds more like one big fuzzy jam session than a conceptualized new album. Three-quarters of the way through the album thesummer fun begins to lose its charm and the songs become indistinguishable, differentiated only by the feedback freakouts and subtle tempo changes. For the calculation of their image and the absurdity of their by-the- rules schtick, the Raveonettes have managed to put out a listenable, spo- radically danceable album ("Heart- break Stroll" is possibly the underwear-rockout song of the year). Chain Gang of Love is, considering its stylistic limitations, an enjoyable set of tunes, but writing without the blessing of variety is no way to cre- ate a memorable new album in such an overpopulated genre. It's time to diversify, or at least pick.a new chord. After two albums and 21 songs, we're sick of Bb. Would you like to start a fraternity? We have got a great opportunity for you! w- - -------- r- --- Local/national scholarship programs Immediate leadership positions 145 years on campus 500+ alumni ULINE Uline, the nationwide leading direct marketer of packaging and industrial supplies Is coming to U of M, and we want to talk to you! We are looking for bright, energetic candidates for full-time positions in all locations and summer internships in our Chicago headquarters. A I IddsimIm alk I