Tuesday March 16, 2004 arts.michigandaily.com artseditor@michigandaily.com fi m f m 0 RTS 5 A E 9 5 Courtesy of IFC Films I'm sorry man, but I am going to have to eat you. 'Touching' story of living on the edge By Hussain Rahim Daily Arts Writer MOVI E REVI EW * ** The thrill of life is, for many, in the challenge of the unattainable - in accomplishing those rare feats that dis- tinguish one person from the herd. Although mountain climbing would cer- tainly not be the choice of many for sen- sational living, "Touching the Void" makes this world p logical and real. During the summer of 1985, two British friends in their early 20s, Joe Touching the Void At the Michigan Theater IFC Films mountain climbing without the jargon. Through the use of close-up shots detail- ing the mechanical aspects of the sport and descriptive narration of the charac- ters' thoughts, "Void" captures the emo- tion of the duo's peril. The elemental brutality is crystalline, as tales of -80 degree weather and images of frozen and tattered faces make a warm fireplace look a little friendlier. Confronted with every chal- lenge imaginable, these two men, and their sheer perseverance, are nothing less than inspiring. The symmetrical retelling of the events gives the film additional reso- nance. Although there is no mystery, since the two survivors dictate their tale to the camera, the impossibility of their predicament keeps the admiration levels high. With the prominence of documen- taries over the last two years, this style of storytelling is more accessible to main- stream audiences. The account is a truth- ful and identical recapitulation of one event by everyone involved. As an atheist, Joe wondered if he would turn to God at his most des- perate moment. Trapped in a cave with no supplies, water, heat or hope, he found himself resolute in his dis- belief. Through Joe's drive for sur- vival, "Touching the Void" boasts a deep humanism that forces you to contemplate that maybe life's pur- pose is to live. Simpson and Simon Yates, attempted to climb the Suila Grande in the Peruvian Andes to legendary acclaim in the moun- taineering community. After a relatively easy ascent, the story takes hold once the climbers attempt their nightmarish descent. On the way down, Joe lands awkwardly; his leg pushes up into his knee, which effec- tively makes him dead weight for his partner. After risking his safety to carry Joe, Simon cuts their connection and leaves Joe to his own fate. Once apart, their struggle continues - their unique paths establishing the heart of the movie. Part documentary and part re-enact- ment, the film captures the minutiae of By Alexandra Jones Daily Arts Writer CONCE R PREVIEW It's not often that an innovator of underground music appears in Ann Arbor. Tonight, Tom Shimura, also known as Lyrics Born, brings his funk-infused brand of hip-hop to the Blind Pig. Later That Day, Shimura's solo debut as Lyrics Born, features lightning-quick rhymes, explosive beats and a funk levity that distinguishes him as one of the most dynamic forces in the underground hip-hop scene. " " "When I was real little, (I Lyrics Born liked) Sugar Hill Gang, 2 Live, Tonight at9:30 p.m. Crew ... as I got older it was all At the Blind Pig about Eric B. & Rakim, KRS- One," Shimura says. After exploring the genre as a listener, producer and artist, the Northern California hip-hop pioneer has expanded his tastes. "Maybe 10 years ago, (hip-hop) was like 75 percent of what I listened to, but now it's 10 percent or 15 percent. Now I listen to mostly old soul and reggae." All the genres show their influence on Later That Day. Blistering-hot backing vocals (provided by Constance Lopez and Shimura's special lady Joyo Velarde) shimmer within the texture of Shimura's gravelly rhymes and infectious beats. Velarde also brings her seductive style to the slinky, reggae- inspired duet "Love Me So Bad." Courtesy of Quannum Projects Bye mom, I'll miss you. Attending the University of California, at Davis, Shimura and friends Chief Xcel, Gift of Gab of Blackalicious and DJ Shadow found themselves without an outlet to spread their music. "When we started (Solesides) up, it was out of necessity. We were all trying to go the conventional route. We had demos and we were all trying to get deals with major labels, but where we were, and at that point in music history, it wasn't really feasible for a label to sign us. We were very left of center, we were from California, it just wasn't that way back then." So the creators of Solesides (a group that Lyrics Born helped found) laid the foundation for their own hip- hop collective. "It wasn't because we wanted to be big business moguls or anything like that. We felt like if we could make our own records then our music wouldn't have gotten heard in the early days." Solesides has come a long way since its inception in 1992. After success with Blackalicious's album Nia and DJ Shadow's Entroducing..., the label became Quannum Projects. With Quannum, Shimu- ra established himself as a producer as Latyrx with Lateef the Truthspeaker on the legendary under- ground full-length The Album. Shimura began creating his solo debut with many different ideas, but soon hit on the idea that would create a cohesive album. Later That Day begins with a sound montage that includes snippets of human voices, birds singing, TV news and song clips, spaced-out percussion and a recurring clock radio buzzer. The sounds build up to the heavy beats of social-dissatisfaction anthem "Bad Dreams." "(Later That Day) is supposed to start late last night and finish late tonight. I wanted to make an album that had a lot of different styles and I think the only way I felt I could tie that together cohesively was to tie in the concept of the day and how things change ... Four or five songs into the album, it was clear that I had songs going in a lot of different directions." Shimura hasn't forgotten his Solesides roots. He trades banter with Gift of Gab on "Cold Call," a telephone conversation lined up with a laid-back beat and galvanized by a blistering funk guitar intro; Lateef appears on the hypnotic post-9/11 polemic "The Last Trumpet." Another collaborator, Cut Chemist, adds music to Shimura's lyrics on the high-energy "Do That There." Rappers The Altered Egos guest on "One Session." Shimura's career has put him in front of the mic and behind mixing boards; he's seen hip-hop grow and change for more than a decade. "I like the fact that we're getting much more diverse. Underground hip-hop is so widespread now - it's really hard to define because there are so many different styles at this point in history." "Having said that, I think the rap community needs to be more accepting of those groups having success outside of the underground. I'd like to see us get a little more tolerant of artists gaining larg- er audiences outside of that core underground community." ... m I