Tuesday February 22, 2005 arts. michigandaily. com artspage@michigandaily.com UX1e MtgTh 9 ART S 8 EVAN McGARVEY Youth and experience 0 01 For better or worse, we pretty much like the art our parents gave us when we were little. The Picasso poster our mother put in our room sparked our lifelong fascination with modernist art; our father's Coltrane collection com- pelled us to try the trumpet. Like religion and political views, our childhood experi- ences and our parent's biases on art for- ever govern us. The thing is, rock music is at a crux and everyone has one group of people to blame: their parents. It happened in the '70s when art school drop-outs were listening to The Velvet Underground and feather-haired pop-rockers hummed The Eagles. In the '80s some kids got Zoloft-y to the Smiths; others bought Journey records. Ten years ago it was the Pixies versus Matchbox Twenty. And right now, for every square- glasses wearing, SPIN reading, Interpol fan there are four drunken pals giddily singing along to The Darkness. It's corporate rock versus indie-rock. RCA versus Matador. Jet versus Spoon. And based on the sheer amount of hurt feel- ings and bitterness that go along with any music conversation, the great rock debate of our generation cuts right to the bone. ' No one wants to be a corporate tool who's force-fed mindless soft-rock bal- lads and couldn't pick David Bowie out of a police lineup. But no one wants to be the chain-smoking East Village kid who 'efuses to crack a smile when "Gigolo" starts flowing through the speakers at a bleary Saturday night party. Now the way these things worked in the past is that the art kids call everyone ele a "sellout," make fun of everyone's favorite band and pretend to like impos- sibly dense music. The mainstreamers call anything with the least bit of white noise or lyrical opacity "weird," and dismiss the other kids as hopeless losers. Calmness drapes itself over the land and everyone moves on. Damn, those were the good old days. Now, thanks to that girlyman Seth Cohen, the East and West of rock music are, for the first time in history, colliding. Bands like Death Cab for Cutie and The Killers fake the independent music scene of the mid-'80s but wield PR and mer- chandise machines that would make KISS blush. "The O.C." and all of its attempts at trendsetting have done some marvel- ous things for long-suffering, impossibly talented bands like Modest Mouse and The Walkmen. But the Seth Cohen over- drive also means that young music fans carry the soggy, adolescent digitals of Postal Service hand in hand with modern indie-pop luminaries like Carl Newman. Children like me who grew up listening to Sonic Youth and Mission of Burma on the family stereo are confused. And when we get confused, we get angry. A culture of boldly independent music that preached dissension and innovation has been hijacked by bands who create mindless lyrics and overproduced guitar bridges under the umbrella of "college rock." Our generation has foggier rock border regions now. Both a devout drone-punk rocker who adores Big Black and a hip- pie scion who worships at the temple of Fleetwood Mac can, and most likely might, love The Walkmen's "No Christ- mas While I'm Talking." What makes it even tougher to talk about is that talking about music taste is damn tough to talk about. All the issues we're sensitive about come to the surface: social class, intelligence, artistic aware- ness, cultural knowledge and parental fal- libility come into play when we talk about what's fit for the masses and what is "elite" music. We can banter all day about what bands are in what boxes, but most of the time we've been in one mindset since the day we asked our parents to ditch the Raffi albums and give us big kid music - strained peas and lullabies to PB&J sandwiches and The Rolling Stones. But for the kids whose parents feasted on Chicago, well, when you decide you love Franz Ferdinand or The Strokes, welcome to the party. You've got a lot of history to learn. Blame your parents or at least Seth Cohen. Help Evan plot the demise of Seth Cohen by e-mailing him at evanbmcg@umich.edu. Courtesy of RCA "We shop at the same wig store. Can you really tell?" RETURN OF THE KINGS FOLK INDIE-ROCKERS AVOID THE SOPHOMORE SLUMP By Aaron Kaczander Daily Arts Writer MUSICR EV IEW The Kings of Leon have been whisked to the crucial point in any moder- ately successful rock band's career - the anticipated Kings of Leon sophomore album. This Aha Shake highly scrutinized record Heartbreak often determines the critical RCA fate and sales triumph of the now not-so-new buzz-band. Fortunately, the Kings of Leon have succeeded in maintaining their rural rock expertise with Aha Shake Heartbreak. There's something amusing about the Kings being the offspring of a Southern Evangelist min- ister. This spiritual association, though, is not the first thing to come to mind when their magazine spreads and interviews show a literal band of brothers and cousins on their way to a full revival of Southern-fried garage rock. The Kings do not sing about religion, nor do they radiate any sort of Jesus-worshiping persona. Still, their position as ministers' children puts an inviting twist on their involvement in the type of music that their dad might not endorse. The Kings have tired out their worn compari- sons to proper country folk like the Strokes, and with Aha Shake, they've taken their frenetic guitar lines and bouncy bass riffs to a level that a humble second full length should offer. Though the record lacks the overall feverish and frenzied ambience of their debut, Youth and Young Manhood, it still picks up where they left off. Perhaps weari- ness guided the boys to a record grounded more in moodier pieces of personal experience than the fancily wishful, Southern party-life tales of Youth. Singer guitarist Caleb Followill's vocals are still slurred and indecipherable, but thanks to the soni- cally messy, yet obsessively specific instrumentals, this is not a hindering issue. The jumpy riffing of "Velvet Snow" is both frantic and precise, with Jared Followill's bass banging an unending whir among the furious picking. His mechanical bass-playing style com- plements the raw guitar sound of a sloppy garage band. This messiness, though, is an aspect of the Kings' live recording style, courtesy of familiar producer Ethan Johns', that makes their songs shine with glossless live appeal. Aha's first sin- gle, "The Bucket" is a feel good, drum rolling head bopper that turns into a danceable gem by the final guitar solo from Jared Followill. "Taper Jean Girl" offers the enjoyable simplicity of three shrill notes atop jangling, modest drumming from Nathan Followill. On "Soft," Caleb explores his most sexually revealing lyrics, screeching as romantically as he can, "I'd pop myself in your body / I'd come into your party, but I'm soft." Not the most touchingly tender lyrics here, but still pretty damn genuine. The album suffers from a few weak moments as the Kings try to slow down the Southern frenzy with molasses like acoustic ballads. "Milk" may put a listener to sleep, and "Day Old Blues," anoth- er overly pensive tune, is just not as interesting as Caleb's yelping vocals in the twang-filled songs that surround it. The Kings' heightened popularity in the U.K. , where Aha was released nearly three months ago, and upcoming opening slot for U2 raise the stakes for Shake in a big way. Though they care more about how they look than your average hillbilly rock troupe, this family of religious classic rock lovin' boys follows suit with a sophomore effort that should have daddy thanking the Lord for his bearded sons' obsession with sparse, flavorful Southern rock tunes. a0 LCD reinvigorates disco-punk genre 'U' alum's debut novel. excites, but falls short By Hriday Shah For the Daily By Andrew M. Gaerig Daily Arts Writer In the 1970s, disco ate up blues- based rock'n'roll as the domi- nant genre of youth music because rock'n'roll forgot how to move its hips when The Rolling Stones went rotten. Punk rock because it was too lifeless and because disco sucked. Hair metal destroyed punk because, apparently, there is no God. In the 1990s, rock'n'roll destroyed disco LCD Soundsystem LCD Soundsystem DFA/Capitol for their obscure taste and became a smash-hit track for these very same fans in obscure dance clubs. LCD Soundsystem marks the band's first full-length album. It comes packaged with a second disc of the band's first six singles, a noble gesture, given that they could've sold this compilation separately and made a killing. The formula is simple: jackknife rhythms, plenty of keyboards and Murphy's detached shouts. The songs all start slowly, with just a drum machine and Mur- phy's distanced melodrama. The tracks build marvelously, however, and by the end of their frequently long runtimes, it's an orgy of cow- bells, shameless four-on-the-floor basslines and dense, layered beats. "Daft Punk is Playing at My House" kicks things off with an excitable Murphy laying out, liter- ally, the preparations before the Daft Punk show ... at his house. It's not as humorous or interesting as the title suggests, but it does provide the prototype for the rest of the disc. "Movement" is the album's short- est song, and its straight-ahead fuzz bass and handclaps lend it a unique immediacy. The title of "Disco Infil- trator" is a more fitting summation of the song's sound than anyone should be comfortable with, but the album's meanest melody saves it. "Never as Tired as When I'm Wak- ing Up" is the album's glammy rock song, and its placement in the middle From its catchy title to the cli- mactic conclusion, Megan Abbott's fictional debut, "Die a Little," is a sultry tale of jealousy, desperation and conspiracy. Abbott, a Uni- Die a Little versity alum, dramatizes the By Megan Abbott traditional ten- Simon and Schuster M Cour tesy of DrF/Capitol sion between a 1i I "No, I haven't been to Amsterdam recently." adopted punk because hair metal only appealed to derelicts and The Darkness. And then 2000 hit and punk rock had to turn to disco because rock'n'roll was too lifeless. For the last half-decade or so, James Murphy and Tim Goldswor- thy have been shaping underground dance-punk on their insufferably hip label DFA. They've taken a hip-hop -approach to rock, remixing tracks and providing beats for groups as diverse as free-form noise detona- tors Black Dice and, most famously, for funk-punkers The Rapture. Mur- phy has been releasing singles with LCD Soundsystem since 2002. Their debut track, "Losing My Edge," simultaneously took hipsters to town of the album necessarily breaks up the dance-oriented material around it. "Great Release" is a near-epiph- any at the end of the record, a Brian Eno-esque rock song that, after 45 minutes of disco beats, is more concerned with blowing minds than shaking asses. The high score earned here, though, centers as much around the singles disc as it does the album. Despite the fact that no one really needs 20 minutes of LCD's most inane single, "Yeah," the disc is a flawless compendium of their for- mative songs. LCD owes a huge debt to any early '80s punk band with a dance bend, but that's hardly the point. LCD aren't trying to break any barriers, just to shuffle some sneakers. LCD is walking a fine line here. They're making dance music that mocks elitists and hipsters but is idiosyncratic and "weird" enough to appeal to no one but those people. They are, for all intents and pur- poses, an underground band running around with shit-eating grins and semi-ironic "fuck the underground" T-shirts. In some ways, Murphy has made great strides: His work with the Neptunes was applauded by indie- rock fans everywhere, and the fact that this album is being distributed by mega-label Capitol records has received precious little attention. LCD's debut is bulging with enough glittering, climactic ass-shakers to dissipate any remaining doubts. It's enough to think that in two decades, when this ridiculous pop-music cycle comes back around again, some underground-hating under- ground rock fan will name a song "LCD Soundsystem is Playing at My House." sister and a sister- in-law during the first few months of a marriage. Lora King's life is turned upside down when her brother, a criminal investigator, marries the seductive Alice Steele. Ostensibly, Alice is the perfect wife. She is glamorous, a tal- ented dancer and a wonderful home- maker. However, as Lora quickly begins to discover, there is more to Alice's history than meets the eye. Discovering small inconsistencies in Alice's past, Lora probes further. The deeper Lora digs, the murkier the story becomes and the more obsessed she gets with discovering the truth about Alice's former life. Abbott's writing style is gripping. and conveys the urgency of Lora's investigation while simultaneously creating the ambience of a room suffocatingly stuffed with cigarette smoke. Her short sentences make Lora's descent into a world involv- ing sadistic sex, despondency and murder fast-paced and thrilling. Narrating through Lora's first- person perspective, Abbott plunges the reader into Lora's suspicious thoughts. The author also makes the story suspenseful by recounting it in present tense; it leaves Lora and the reader clueless as to what will hap- pen next. She puts together a collage of Lora's experiences that intertwine A the novel episodically, strategi- cally omitting parts of the story. For example, she barely mentions the novel's climax moment, leaving it entirely to the reader to sort out. This style of storytelling proves to be both interactive and exciting. However, the novel lacks proper development of the relationships between characters. Abbott does not adequately describe the plot- propelling love between Lora and her brother. This detracts from the reader's urge to find out more about Alice's past and even tends to cause indifference toward the plot. This, in turn, makes it harder to identify with Lora. Abbott also fails to ascribe a setting to the plot, providing no hints as to when the story takes place; this together with the lack of develop- ment leaves the novel lackadaisical and comparable to a bad soap opera, at part. Despite these weaknesses, the novel is supported by the plot's adventurous scandals, risqu6 ren- dezvous and a gut-wrenching con- clusion. While "Die a Little" isn't Gonzo journalist Thompson commits suicide in Colorado ASPEN, Colo. (AP) - Hunter S. Thompson, the hard-living writer who inserted himself into his accounts of America's underhelly and nonularized Thompson is credited alongside Tom Wolfe and Gay Talese with helping pioneer New Journalism - or, as he dubbed it. "gonzo journalism" - in which the writ-