Wednesday 0 March 16, 2005 arts. michigandaily. com artspage@michigandaily.com RU E9iditS Mil 5 __ 5 SPEKTOR RisING THE INDIE QUEEN OF HYPE DELIVERS By Kat Bawden Daily Arts Writer Courtesy of Credit Apparently the elevator doesn't respond well to groping MobMus Band looks *to find unique sound By Chris Gaerig Daily Arts Writer Mobius Band's brand of electronic pop is one that's seen immense radio play and publicity in recent months. With the emergence of the Postal Ser- vice and other like groups, smaller, similar artists are receiving the rec- ognition they've craved for quite some time. Mobi- us Band's latest release, the City Mobius Band City Vs. Country Ghostly Vs. Country EP, exhibits their abil- ity to integrate driving guitar riffs, soft vocals, electronic glitches and catchy hooks. City Vs. Country has two distinct sounds that intertwine and separate frequently: electronic and guitar driven pop. There are tracks that combine the two seamlessly and oth- ers that keep them virtually separate. The ability to shift between the two without losing the group's identity is one of the EP's greatest successes. "Starts Off With a Bang" and "I Had a Very Good Year" are filled with spastic drum machines and spo- radic computer generated sounds. The digital glitches fill negative space and give the songs a warm essence. The delicate vocals com- bined with the instrumentation to create a cocoon of sound. Both tracks eventually morph into a short guitar bridge before transforming back to their original processed sound. Mobius Band proves that they can work outside of a digital field and electronic free with "Year of the President." Nearly all of the instru- ments on the track are organic. The group sheds the keyboards during the choruses, opting for controlled guitar feedback; however, soft com- puter generated hums can be deci- phered in the background of the verses. The lyrics leave a bit more to be desired throughout City Vs. Coun- try. They are generally inane and make little sense, "So sick of music I It's not like I choose it." Where the words fall short, the melodies take over. The hooks are infectious, and the croons fill the tracks with a strange friendliness. City Vs. Country's biggest down- fall is its lack of experimentation. Mobius Band doesn't offer anything original on this release: run-of-the- mill melodies and lackluster instru- mentation. They prove their musical ability and show their craftsmanship on the EP but its not enough to get them the recognition they are obvi- ously striving for. Mobius Band is too small to hit the mainstream and not interesting enough to be wor- shiped by the indie-music elitists. Regina Spektor, the object of musical affection for such kings of hipness as The Strokes, has finally released her first full-length album, Soviet Kitsch, in American record stores. To = = her fans who glued themselves Regina, to her del ightfully personal Spko website as the only reliable Spko source for her music; who fol- Soviet Kitsch lowed her performances at Sire various Manhattan caf6s; and who found themselves wooed and drooling from the moment she coyly appeared onstage as the opening act for The Strokes, Kitsch is a mouthwatering prospect. In tune with her previous artistic outings, Kitsch shows Spektor as an artist elusive to definition. Her songs are piano-driven with her free-spirited mezzo- soprano vocals - at times strong chants, childishly trill or uninhibitedly improvising - racing across octaves. The musical genre dangles between folk, classical, jazz and pop - a rare balance sustained by Spektor's energy and willingness to experiment. In her songs, she skips among being vivacious, silly and helpless. She's sweet enough to be perpetu- ally awe-struck and heartbroken, but gutsy enough to tell a man, "You're children are grown / And you haven't made your wife moan" and "Maybe you should just drink a lot of coffee / And never watch the 10 o'clock news" as she does in "The Ghost of Corporate Future." The track "Chemo Limo" exemplifies Spektor's Just like Tori Amos. Minns the suck. emotional and categorical versatility: The melody Courtesy of Sire Records begins as winding and plaintive, and her voice hops feisty from note to note. Then, she sing-speaks with a Spanish Harlem accent, beat boxes and loops back to that wispy sadness. On "Ode to Divorce," she sings, "I need your love / So won't you help a brother out / Won't you help a brother out?" Though her repetitive playfulness can be unnerving in the way talkative kids can be both endearing and annoying, she reminds listeners that music can't be taken too seriously. Her concurrent vulnerability and free- spiritedness create an image of Spektor as revealing as the characters in her songs. Spektor's music shows people uncontrived and uninhibited. She's recorded various moments that, in their different forms, blanket the human experi- ence. As she sings, "Things I have loved I'm allowed to keep," on the song "The Flowers," the listener is cajoled into nostalgia, remembering observations, arguments, first kisses, needs - some that may not even be their own. The main theory of psychiatrist Carl Jung is that of the "collective unconscious," the reservoir of our universal experiences as humanity. We are never fully conscious of this basin of happenings; nonethe- less it affects all of our actions and emotions. Regina Spektor's songs are a manifestation of Jung's theory. She ties strangers' stories together with seams of fidgeting piano solos and bold vocals. She drags a microscope across a bustling and bursting world, letting it linger over protagonists in their moments of confusion, irony and sillyness - experiences too real to be helplessly lost amongst the swollen crowds. Ensler's play 'Floating Rhoda' staged by RC By Andrew Klein For the Daily / 7/7 < / 7 / 7< (7 7 ~/ 7 ' <7 <' ~ ~ 77 <'7 ~7 ~ /7 / 7,7 ~7 7 777 ,777 ass a' a / /7 7777 '77 2 7 7 ~ ,'K 7 7777~~<,77777 .'< / 77777 77< 7777 / 7' 777 / 7"'~ 7 / '' / / ~ / .< 7, ',~7<(777 77 ~ ~' ~ 7.", 77 / 7' 7 <7, /7 777'7 7'"'' 77~ ~, ,77 ? inm~M~ ~U'U- $0RWRS? 77 '7 / U'U~<'W. WU~ZE~U ~ W.ZUE~ /77 77 / 7/7 7 / 77 / ' / ~7 / / 7 7 7 ,7< 7>,7~ ' 7< 7 7 i -~ 7 PI*A~SR tI#fURt4TIISM T~ 7 /7 7/ 7 777 ~ 77 <7777 777 7777 7~ ~ &' 7 '7 7 7 <7 ~' 7 7 7 7 /77 7 ~/7 7 , 7 / ), 777 " 7 7 7777 7', 7 7 / / 7 7<77'7777/ 7 7 7 7 7/' 7 /7 7Wi MISS ThEM WRY MUCH. The University will once again host a potentially controversial play by the pro- lific Eve Ensler, author of the intensely debated "The Vagina Mono- logues," as the RC Players prepare to stage three perfor- mances of "Float- ing Rhoda and the Glue Man" this weekend at the Residential Col- lege Auditorium in East Quad Resi- Floating Rhoda and the Glue Man Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m. $3 Students $5 non-students At the RC Auditorium value and a negative portrayal of males, RC senior and Director Megan Shuchman believes that while "Floating Rhoda" is "honest in its portrayal" of an abusive rela- tionship, there is "empathy for both sexes" as the play seeks to "focus on the problems of society that lead to such behavior." Despite flyers that highlight the pro- duction's sexual aspects in a lighthearted manner, there is no denying that this ear- lier piece of Ensler's work contains just as much emotional weight as its more con- frontational successor. The play features intense displays of physical abuse coupled with titillating scenes of sex. But Shuch- man argued that "within these two plays, there are two different versions of shock," and "Floating Rhoda" is more versatile. She explained that this play "is more uni- versal than 'The Vagina Monologues,' " and that its message can "transcribe to any group in society." She worked with the production of "The Vagina Monologues" SHUBRA OHR'/Daily RC alum Devon Dupree and LSA senior Megan Metlugh, front, rehearse a scene with the rest of the cast of the play yesterday. for three years and explained that while "Rhoda is not necessarily a representation of every woman," the lives she and rest of the characters lead are more readily accessible. Shuchman was more than enthused about her cast, which includes solid vet- erans such as LSA senior Zach Spencer and RC senior Erin Kaplan, who both appeared in the Rude Mechanicals' ver- sion of Shakespeare's 'A Winter's Tale," and rising talents like RC sophomore Anna Rose Kessler Moore, who shined in this winter's RC Player's "Evening of Scenes." For those who may have missed "The Vagina Monologues," this play is the per- fect opportunity to re-evaluate not only one's opinion of Ensler, but more impor- tantly, Ensler's message. dence Hall. Although some believe "The Vagina Monologues" only resonates with audiences thanks to over-the-top shock 77