NEW STUDENT EDITION ARTs SECTION D ARTS: 763-0379 wwwmichigandally.com Fall 2003 I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim -- - -- - -- - - - - - JOEL HOARD 'Hey man, I'm in a band": A look at the college music scene H ey, dude, I'm Ben, your new roommate. Since we're gonna be spending the next eight months together, I should probably tell you a little bit about myself. I'm from Rochester Hills, and I play guitar in this band called the Vortex. We're actually getting pretty good, man. We started out doing mostly covers - Dave Matthews, Zeppelin, stuff like that. But I've been working on some of my own songs lately. They're not as good as anything Dave does, but they're pretty good. Yeah, I'm a music major, so hopefully that'll, like, help me out when it comes to writing songs. I don't know exactly how to describe our sound. It's, like, kind of garage rock-y, like that band the White Stripes - you've heard of them, right? - but not quite as heavy. We like to do some acoustic songs, too, and our drummer, Mike, can do this really hilarious rap stuff. You really have to hear him sometime. Anyway, I don't think you can really fit us into any particular genre, which is what I think makes us, like, stand out a little bit. You know what I mean? I actually have a CD we recorded in my basement last summer, if you wanna hear it. We did it on this really old four-track, so the quality is pretty bad, but it can, you know, give you a taste of what the Vortex is all about. Our bass player, Andy, said he found this sweet stu- dio in Detroit where you can record a few songs for, like, $200, so we're probably gonna do that in a few weeks. Yeah. I think the Stripes recorded there once when they were first starting out, but it could be anoth- er place I'm thinking of. Anyway, we wanna put togeth- er an EP that we can sell at our shows and maybe send to some radio stations and record labels. Mike's really good with Photoshop, so he's gonna design this sweet cover for it. We haven't really picked out a name for it, yet, but I was thinking it should be, like, Into the Vortex, or something like that. My dad knows this guy who runs this printing compa- ny, too, so we're gonna print up some T-shirts and stickers pretty soon. Mike's working on some logos and stuff like that now. Hopefully we can sell some of those at our shows and make a little money. But it's really not about making money just yet. We're just trying to get our name out there, you know? Our shows are pretty crazy, man. Like, this one time we were playing at this shitty little club in Hamtramck, and Brian, our other guitar player, was, like, totally shit-faced. It was his birthday, and before the show he was, like, doing all these shots, and then he had a few beers on top of that. He was so flucked up he could hardly even hold his guitar, man. He couldn't even, like,play any chords. We actually had to unplug his guitar. He was that fucked up. It was so hilarious, man. I was laughing so hard I could barely play. The next day we actually told him that he wasn't even plugged in at the show, and he was like, "Dude, what show?" Aw, man, that was hilarious. Yeah, music today is, like, separated into all these lay- ers. You have people like Justin Timberlake and Eminem on one layer, like the ones who sell billions of records and everything. And then, like, underneath that you have the bands like the Stripes, who have a decent-sized fol- lowing but are still, you know, true to their music. You know what I mean? Sure it would be cool to sell millions of records and make all kinds of money, but I don't want to, like, compromise the music for it. But I think it would be cooler to be like the Stripes and really focus on the music and have, like, a smaller fan base. I'm sure they make pretty decent money, and they really get lots of respect, which is cool. That's what you have to remember, though, that it's all about great music. It really worked out good for us, since we all got into U of M. We were kind of worried for awhile, because Mike was on the waitlist. If he hadn't gotten in, it really would've sucked for practices and stuff, because we'd be, like, all over the place and it wouldn't be that easy to get together and play. So I think it's, like, a sign or some- thing that we're all together in Ann Arbor now and we can keep playing. The scene in Ann Arbor is pretty awesome right now. I don't know if you saw it, but Rolling Stone picked it as one of the best college music scenes in the country, right up there with Austin and Athens. So if you wanna get discov- ered, this is, like, one of the best places to be. You never know when you're in a place like this, man. One second you can be playing in small club and the next you can, like, be headlining a big show in Detroit or something. We've been looking into places around here where we can play, and there are a lot of sweet clubs. I heard the Blind Pig has, like, an advance-booked open mic night, which doesn't make that much sense, but it's still a great place to play. We're definitely gonna try to do that. Hey, we're gonna be playing at this party next week to kick off the school year. You should really come and see us play. It should be pretty sweet. Aw, man, that's too bad. Maybe you can check us out some other time. Courtesy of Universtal Eminem's tackles the character Jimmy Smith Jr., whose rap name is "Bunny Rabbit," In gritty "8-Mile." Taking a trip down By Ryan Lewis Daily Film Editor MOVIE REVIEW* The once-promising city of Detroit is separated from the suburbs by a bleak boundary, a border to the city limits known as 8 Mile Road. Where life formerly thrived and prosperity prevailed in the past, the city has little left to offer. Inside the line is pain: no chance, no money, no hope; across that line, that man-made border, is destiny: a record, a future, a voice. When all you desire is something else, but pride, the past and a need for respect hold you back, it is up to you to stand up and be heard. "8 Mile" deals with that life marked by a disparity between what it is and what it should be. Director Curtis Hanson unfolds the emotional struggle of one man trying to find his own way in a grittily unflinching style. He presents Detroit through desolate images and a story that rings true to the life it portrays. Provocative, important and intense, he takes a sensitive topic, adds a controversial rapper and stresses a message that is as pertinent to young people everywhere as it is to the inner-city dwellers it models. Eminem plays Jimmy Smith Jr., rap-named "Bunny Rab- bit," a struggling white rapper in the black-dominated world of underground hip-hop in 1995 Detroit. In a powerful open- ing scene, Rabbit's friend Future (Mekhi Phifer, "Clockers") beckons him to the stage to battle and be heard. On this stage, battles are done with words and rhymes but have emo- tional blows that liken it to a fierce boxing match. Over- whelmed and nervous, he chokes on his words and is booed off the stage. Everything is wrong in his life. Fired from his job, separated from his girlfriend and without a car, he is forced back across 8 Mile into the 810 area code to live with his broke mother (Kim Basinger). She lives in a trailer park with his sister (talented young Chloe Greenfield) and a boyfriend that graduated high school with Jimmy. All Jimmy has to rely on are his friends, the Three-One- Third - appropriately named for the Detroit area code. Future wants to bring him back to battle, hoping that Jimmy will be discovered and gather a following; the self-righteous Wink (Eugene Byrd, "Sleepers") wants to give him a way out by producing a demo tape for him. With Jimmy's situa- tion becoming ever bleaker, he has to do more on his own. Somewhere in the confusion of trying to be heard, working at the stamping plant to make money and fighting with the rap-group the Free World, the beautiful, model-dreaming Alex (Brittany Murphy, "Don't Say a Word") puts dreams of a better world into his head. Tension constantly builds as Jimmy fights for control and opportunity. Pleasantly surprising in his demeanor, Eminem proves that he has skill beyond the recording studio. His performance is powerful and convincing with an emotional range that even the most experienced actors would have trouble reaching. In every scene, Eminem carries the entire weight of the film on his shoulders. The controversial raps and bad press become lost as he truly personifies the character. As the movie pro- gresses, Eminem disappears and Jimmy Smith Jr. takes cen- ter stage. Even where it starts to resemble a biopic of Eminem himself, he becomes immersed in the role's com- plexity that translates into an enthralling screen presence and riveting debut. Certainly praiseworthy, this portrayal should change naysayers' opinions of the cultural phenom. Supporting cast members also provide a wonderful array of characters and performances. Murphy, Basinger and Phifer bring a touch of class to the set. Their experience and expertise adds validity to the film, but their embodiment of characters has the raw nature of reality. Casting known rap- pers in bit parts also adds a depth to the story as they raise the battles to a level of extreme intensity and natural flow. The best move that Hanson makes in casting is his decision to use unknowns and native Detroiters to fill bit parts and be extras. These people are the story; they have the natural ability to create the aura because they live it. An excellent compilation of songs accompanies a realis- tic, grainy film stock and the concentrated camerawork. Eminem's amazing amount of input, including the lyrics for every battle, is astounding when considering his lack of film training. The photography brings the audience in for a close exhibition of emotions necessary to understand the characters' intricacies. With a story that resembles the orig- inal "Rocky," Cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto transforms Rabbit's trials on the microphone into an exchange of words that cut like right-hooks and knockout punches. Unlike other movies based in Detroit, Hanson shoots the neighborhoods and not the sights. He uses the city as more than a setting; it becomes a dominating, oppressive force. Where other films show the prominent venues, he shies away from known features to show the harshness that encompasses the majority of the area. Hanson has added to his awesome list of credentials (high- lighted by "Wonder Boys" and "L.A. Confidential") with a wonderful piece of drama and truth. Everything comes together in powerful fashion and leaves a lingering sense of satisfaction. "8 Mile", entirely shot in Detroit, is one film in which the people and city it projects should take pride. Bntabi's Royal Shakespeare ( By Christine Lasek Daily Fine/Performing Arts Editor In March, the Royal Shakespeare Compa- ny performed three plays, in the second installment of its five-year residency at the University. Headlining the lineup was the U.S. premiere of a stage adaptation of Salman Rushdie's "Midnight's Children," as well as two Shakespeare plays, "The Merry Wives of Windsor" and "Coriolanus." Where the 2001 residency totally immersed audiences in the world of Shake- speare's histories, the 2003's selections were all over the board. The two Shakespearean selections, nearly total opposites of each other as far as themes and content are concerned, were played by the same 20 actors. Each actor appeared in both productions. The cast of "Midnight's Children" fea- tured 20 different actors with some x playing as many as five roles during the three-and-one-half-hour longr production. Because the content of "Midnight's Children" included many, instances of magical realism, direc- tor Tim Supple's production was a multimedia masterpiece, including some parts of the play performed against the backdrop of archive footage of Jawaharlal Nehru, Indi- ra Gandhi and 1960's Bombay. In reference to the addition of this highly controversial play, "Midnight's ompany begins residency at 'U Children," Michael Boyd, the new artistic rior, raised to be the perfect fighting director of the RSC, said: "The Royal machine. Yet, he has no understanding of Shakespeare Company is in continual revo- politics, and his arrogance turns the citizens lution. I am not interested in the RSC of Rome against him. Outraged, he joins being a pontificating center of expert- with the Volscians, raises an army and f ise, but more an explorer of the avant- marches on Rome. Coriolanus brings the city garde with Shakespeare as its guide." to the brink of mass destruction, but subsides The second installment of the when his mother likens marching on Rome Royal Residency only built on the to treading on her very womb. When Cori- accomplishments of the first. The olanus agrees to negotiate for peace, the RSC is not only devoted to keep- Volscians accuse him of treason, and he is ing Shakespeare's words alive in stabbed to death. adaptations of his classics, but also Despite his arrogance, it is hard not to see in discovering new classics of our Coriolanus as a sympathetic character, own time. caught in the sticky web of politics. Cori- AP Photo 'Coriolanus' olanus was raised to be a great warrior, and Coriolanus is an unparalleled war- See BARD, Page 4D Over 30 pieces at Picasso's masterwork exhibit By Christine Lasek Daily Fine/Performing Arts Editor Through Sept. 15, 2002, the Michigan Museum of Art featured "Picasso: Masterworks from the Collection" in the Museum Aspe. This collection was an overview of Picasso's career, and was comprised of 31 works, most of which were- from the UMMA's own extensive collection. The artistic career of Pablo Picasso lasted over 75 years, until his death in 1973. He painted his first picture at the age of 10, under the guidance of his father, and went on to create an astounding body of work spanning several genres of visual art. Although he is perhaps most famous for his pioneering efforts in cubism, his full body of works span all facets of art, including sculp- tures, prints and ceramics. In "Masterworks from the Collection," there were several different artistic forms, including oil paintings, drawings, etchings, engravings, dry point and lithographs. The collec- in different artistic forms and periods not only illustrate Picasso's personal growth, but also serve as a survey of sig- nificant 20th century innovations in art. One of the oils on canvas included in this collection was "Two Girls Reading, 1934," which is one of several works demonstrating a fascination with women engaged in everyday activities. Several of Picasso's paintings done in the 1930s are said to reflect Picasso's pleasure at hav- ing a new love interest, Marie Therese Walter. The curvi- linear lines present in "Two Girls Reading" almost express and underlying eroticism, which could seem to lend sup- port to this hypothesis. Picasso's pieces illustrate a personal need to discover the true nature of the thing observed. The violent but still poetic movement of a bullfight is evident in his oil on can- vas "The Bullfight, 1934," and the purposefully striped bodice in, Portrait of Francoise, 1949," seemingly enforces the idea of precision as beauty. Picasso's works of art are never stagnant, but instead always have an underly- ing activity even in his "still lifes" In this collection, one .;:ir' L.k tdst'.. s 054 ft , F