Friday April 8, 2005 arts. michigandaily. com artspage@michigandaily. com ARTS 5 - - - -- ------------ Courtesy of Roc-A-Fella "Don't ask why I have my own ice cream truck" Sigel humanized on last LP before prison MIKE HULSEBUS/ Daily Prof. Stephen Lusmann conducts the Men's Glee Club at a rehearsal for tomor- row night's concert. By Evan McGarvey Daily Music Editor MUSIC REVIEW It's a wonderful touch of kismet that Beanie Sigel hails from Philadelphia. LUSMANN CONDUCTS FINAL HILL AUDITORIUM CONCERT By Jessica Koch Daily Arts Writer Both the man and the city are woefully underappreciated, ruggedly cultured and unrepentantly surly. But under the earthy surface of both the Beanie Sigel The B.Coming Roc-A-Fella City of Brotherly Love and the longtime Roc-A-Fella clean-up man, you'll find a place of stark emotions and surprisingly delicate humanity. The B.Coming is Sigel's third album and apparently the last LP released on the recently dismantled Roc-A-Fella label. Thankfully, it's a mostly successful elegy for an artist and an epochal marker of rap's evolution. "Pressure can make a diamond," Sigel raps on the sin-washing "Look at Me Now," and if there's one thing he's been feeling lately, it's pres- sure. A string of charges attached to an attempted murder and drug trafficking arrest last year are sending Sigel to a six- month stint in jail. The "gangsta" persona is created from a rapper's desire to create a separate per- sonality, an icon that's an exaggeration of Mafioso traits: infinite libido, a pen- chant for drug dealing and a bulletproof street resume. Sigel doesn't need much fiction in his backstory; he never record- ed any mix tapes or demos before Jay- Z signed him. Sigel, even with almost every facet of his history confirmed by court records, became mythic: Before his debut album hit stores in 2000, the rap world was besieged with rumors of a mid-level Philadelphia street hustler who could spin freestyles while push- ing crack bricks around the city. Sigel became the consummate hardcore rapper - he actually lived the life he rapped about. That honesty has transformed into a brutal confession on The B.Coming. Sigel's hefty baritone tears apart "Flat- line" and the slinky, glossy manifesto "I Can't Go On This Way." Majestic trum- pet sections and butter-soft percussion, some of the standard Roc-A-Fella musi- cal touches, sound odd on the album. Just Blaze and Kanye West don't show up on this disc, but the Neptunes flash some superstar production on the benign, for- gettable "Don't Stop." Sigel is too serious for the usual production schlock. When the album works, it's because Sigel's verses, easily the most personal and human of his career, take promi- nence. "Feel It In The Air" eerily recalls the Geto Boys' "Mind Playin' Tricks On Me" as Sigel shows the cracks in his hoodlum fagade: "I still shine bright like a prism I My words still skippin' through air / I know you can't don't won't get it / You square chose to ride that shit, salt with it, I'm still afloat / I ain't the captain of the yacht but I'm on the boat." The B.Coming is understated for a major-label rap release, and its sparse- ness proves to be a double-edged sword. The lyrics compelling and worth revisit- ing, but the lack of an infectious single won't help the album reach the masses. And, in all honesty, Sigel doesn't rein- vent any lyrical wheels; it's his personal development on the album that deserves recognition. Currently in a federal penitentiary, Sigel really does sound mournful and a bit frightened. While his star may be pinned down for a while longer, there is every reason to believe he'll return with a mind fertile for rap. Rage, rage against the dying of the light, Beanie. Throughout his 22-year career, Stephen Lus- mann has been known as a renowned vocalist, singing leading roles with major opera houses around the world, including the Men's Glee Opera de Monte Carlo and Club 145th the Oper der Stadt Bonn Annual Spring in Germany. A gifted bari- Hill Co rt tone, Lusmann performed onCer as a soloist at such notable Saturday at 8 p.m. venues as Carnegie Hall Tickets $15 and $10 and Alice Tully Hall in Students $5 New York's Lincoln Center. At Hill Auditorium In 1999, he was appointed assistant professor of voice at the University's School of Music. After Lusmann took this teaching position, he had the opportunity to add yet another accomplish- ment to his resume: conductor of the Men's Glee Club. His official appointment occurred in April 2002, after former conductor Music Prof. Jerry Blackstone's final performance at Hill Auditorium. Lusmann will step down from his position after Saturday night's 145th Annual Spring Concert. As conductor, Lusmann quickly gained the respect of Glee Club members with his passion and devotion to art. "(Lusmann) is quite inspiring and directs in a very big manner, which drives us to sing louder," LSA freshman Lucas O'Bryen said. Lusmann's fervor was present in every rehearsal, exemplifying the three standards of Glee Club members: "Tradition, Camaraderie and Musical Excellence." In his three years leading the ensemble, the Glee Club premiered two new works, toured the Southwest and attended the Intercollegiate Men's Choruses National Seminar at Harvard University - a conference in which it had not participated since 1986. In last year's spring tour, Lusmann led the Glee Club on its first trip to Ireland and, after nearly two decades, a return to England. The tour was a great success and created many memorable moments, including Lusmann's personal highlight, "(a) performance in St. James Church in Piccadilly London, England." Last October, Lusmann announced that this year would be his last as the conductor of the Glee Club, bringing his three-year tenure to an end. He decided to resign in order to devote more time to his soloist career as baritone and to his voice stu- dents here at the University. Lusmann's final performance with the Glee Club will also feature the Rutgers University Glee Club under the direction of former Michigan Men's Glee Club conductor Patrick Gardner. "He is a gentleman that I met in New Jersey, where I used to live. It was he who inspired me to direct the Glee Club," Lusmann said of Gardner. The collaboration will feature many harmonic pieces including Franz Biebl's "Ave Maria," which Lus- mann called "one of the greatest choral pieces written for men's voices." Lusmann's tenure will conclude after this year's East Coast tour. The tour - comprised of stops from Ithaca, N.Y. to Annandale, Va. - will include a date at Carnegie Hall where, suitably, Lusmann will be the baritone soloist in the Club's perfor- mance of Beethoven's -- ------------ . The Club will miss Lusmann's leadership. "(Lusmann) really has been a friend to all of us," LSA sophomore Keith Hudolin said. As he leaves the group, Lusmann wished to encourage the Glee Club to "just keep singing." Sufi concert presents music from Islamic mysticism By Shubra Ohri Daily Arts Writer A treat for the senses in the form of mystic music will be available to University students next weekend. As part of the final weekend of the Arab World Music Festival, three artists will perform their music at Rackham Auditorium under the title "Songs of the Sufi Brotherhood." The musi- SHORT TAKES 4a courtesy of UMS Rizwan and Muazzam Qawwall, front, along with their uncle, Nusrat Fateh All Khan (not shown), brought Qawwali music - a form of Sufi music from Pakistan - to American audiences. FAVELA ON RLAST: RIO BAILE FUNK HOLLERTRONIX Baile Funk rips through you like hot lead. The music of Rio de Janeiro's favelas (ghettos) mirrors some of the most dangerous hoods in the world: chaotic, explicit and fierce as hell. Baile Funk is alive, it's not just music - It's a time, a place, a people. This CD-R, available only through hollertronix.com, was compiled by Philadelphia DJ Diplo during a visit to Brazil in 2004. iplo, recently gaining notoriety for his role in M.I.A's explosive debut, is as much responsible for the global sound of Arular as anyone. In the mix the two released prior to Arular, Piracy Funds Terrorism Vol. 1, Diplo threw in a few snippets of Baile Funk, incorporating it into M.I.A.'s evolv- ing sound and whetting her follow- ers' appetites for more. At only 30 minutes, Favela can Blast ends too soon. The booty-shak- ing Miami bass beats, rudimentary drum loops and Clash samples pro- vide the backdrop for passionate (and apparently dirty) Portuguese rhymes. The emphasis is placed on a dance- able beat, but it's the energy of the kids rapping that makes this such a fascinating listen. These are not per- fectly produced FM jams; this is the music of no-man's land. These are 15- year-old kids doing lines of coke with guns in their back pockets; this is a snapshot of a life not many gringos glimpse. Llyd Cargo cians featured at this event are Hamza El Din from Nubia, Hassan Hakmoun from Moroc- co and Rizwan and Muazzam Qawwali, two brothers from Pakistan. These three artists represent three different forms of Sufi music. Followers of Sufism, a sect of Islam that practices mysticism, believe that the only Songs of the Sufi Brotherhood Sunday at 4 p.m. Tickets $20-$36 At Rackham Auditorium way to truth and spirituality is through a direct and immediate experience with the spirit. Hence, the slow, meditative beginnings and entrancing, vir- tuosic developments characteristic of Sufi music are beginning to attract an American audience. "Although these three traditions contrast, they share a common thread. Their music invites the audience into a trance, similar to African-Ameri- can Pentecostal music," Vice President of Folk- lore Productions Matt Greenhill said of Sunday's upcoming performance. With each artist adopt- ing his own style of Sufi music, audiences should expect an eclectic mix of a style that dates back nearly 1,000 years. Although Sufi music carries a long history, the genre has only been represented in the United States by the Whirling Dervish of Turkey. "Songs of the Sufi Brotherhood" looks to offer a fresh, different perspective on the sounds of Islamic mysticism. The traditional music that the artists play has been heavily shaped by their individual experiences and histories. Hakmoun is the son of a mystic healer; he gained musical experience by playing alongside snake charmers and street performers in Morocco before moving to New York, where his music was influenced by rock and funk. El Din collected his songs by traveling around on a donkey throughout the countryside of Nubia. Widely popular in the Middle East and Asia, El Din considers himself a citizen of the world. Perhaps the most notable performers of the group, the Qawwali brothers hail from a 500- year-old tradition of Qawwali singers. They are the nephews of the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, perhaps the most internationally recognized of Qawwali singers. The brothers are accustomed to playing six-hour sets but plan to shorten it consid- erably for the concert on Sunday. The music presented by Din, Hakmoun and the Qawwali singers is intended to pull at the heart- strings of its listeners by setting classical Islamic poetry to music. "Their (poetic) verses deal with images of romantic love as metaphor for the spiri- tual journey," Greenhill said. With pieces featur- ing rhythmic, trancelike beginnings and escalating climaxes, it's hard for the listener to feel anything but touched. Sufi music, often used in healing ceremonies, can also be utilized to engage the senses. It is easy to appreciate the dynamic pulse of the Tabla (tra- ditional drums) and the melodious sounds of the Oud, the predecessor to the modern flute. These two instruments are fully utilized by El Din and Hakmoun. In addition to the instrumental per- formance, the Qawwali brothers will engage in hypnotizing vocal acrobatics. "Songs of the Sufi Brotherhood" will present a performance that combines different variations on the same mysti- cal Islamic ideas. 'Neverland' DVD supported by revealing features By Christopher Lochner Daily Arts Writer Marc Forster's "Finding Neverland" is an example The movie's performances feel utterly convincing and tragically intimate. Depp leads the way in his second Oscar-nominated role - he marvelously con- veys the quiet constraint of a man forced to grow up too soon. As astounding as Depp's portrayal is, the young actors who play the Davies boys steal the show. Freddie Highmore, playing Peter, delivers a perfor- include more features on the DVD. However, those included are excellent: full-length commentary, out- takes, deleted scenes and a featurette exploring the production of the film. The featurette shows how a number of the great scenes in the film were con- structed, oftentimes in unorthodox ways. In a year full of biopics, "Finding Neverland" of the best that cinema has to offer. I MM