Friday Novemnber4, 2005 arts. michigandaily. com artspage@michigandaily.com Rle TSichigan a 5 . . .... .......... LUDACRIS Continued from page 1 safe (but really frequent) sex - it was impossible to notice the similarities between Ldacris's durable, echoing voice and the timeless shout of Public Enemy's Chuck D. Both opening acts, P-Live and later One.Be.Lo, were more reserved than the headliner and struck to nice, if a bit average and forced, verses. The dingy, worn-in atmospherics toward the end of One.Be.Lo's set in particular acted as a nice calm before the storm. With no DJ's on stage, the openers had Hill in a more intimate light, certainly fitting both acts' status as local and largely underground warriors. But any impact either opener had was washed away by the seismic crowd roar as Ludacris leap-frogged from hit to hit in the blistering open- ing minutes of his set With such a bulletproof career as a singles artist (though his last two albums have shown a startling focus), he had an arsenal of hysterical party hits from which to choose. He tore through his two best soundtrack appearances, "Act A Fool" from "2 Fast 2 Furious" and "Area Codes" from "Rush Hour 2." He could have easily omitted these two and picked from a glut of songs he left on the shelf this night ("Roll Out," "Fat Rabbit," "Blow It Out"). He offered snippets of others' hit singles (Ciara's "Oh," Usher's "Yeah!") and gave a collage of his notorious guest verses. The up-tempo numbers slayed the already famished crowd, Ludacris's voice reverberating exquisitely over SKYLAB-blips from the Neptunes on the thrashing "Southern Hospitality." In easily the night's most intoxicating moment, the dually sleazy and irresist- ibly gallivanting Ludacris changed a famed couplet from the song to "U of M girls gimme U of M head." You could've howled in disgust but for most, this was what Ludacris was expected to bring. And he brought it pretty completely. Hill's delirious shift from bastion of "high art" to "popular music" is what let the audience see the man who once referred to himself as the "abominable ho-man" in an ornate, gorgeous venue that's one of the world's acoustic gems. Keep in mind that Dylan, and INXS played Hill in decades past. Not to belabor the point, but as much as Ludacris is irreverent, astute and utterly memorable, he's also com- pletely a possession of this genera- tion. Hill is made for international orchestras. Hill is made for Ben Folds. Hill is made for Ludacris. Weak as the middle section of his set was - the mid-tempo, even ballad-like joints like "Splash Water- falls" drained the crowd's energy just as destructively as Shawnna's overlong stint on stage - Ludacris still prowled the sparse, lonely even, stage and never let dips in the crowd's activity stunt his ego. The "big ideas" surrounding rap right now - who's listening, who goes to concerts, where rap shows can be held, old and black and young and white - are vital and impor- tant, but with a show like last night's it's damn near refreshing to find that Rakim's old adage still holds: It's not where you're from, it's where you're at. Courtesy of Sony Left: Cartoonist Aaron McGruder will produce "The Boondocks" series on Cartoon Network. Right: Animated renditions of "Boondocks" characters Riley, Huey and Granddad. STRAIGHT OUTTA. BOONDOCKS' AARON MCGRUDER'S CONTROVERSIAL COMIC BECOMES ADULT SWIM SERIES By Emily Beam Daily Arts Writer Cartoonist Aaron McGruder sees himself as "a satirist and an entertain- er." The creator of "The Boondocks" didn't want - and certainly didn't expect - to be considered a leading advocate for the black community. "I've done nothing to earn that title of being spokesman for anybody, other than tell some jokes and draw some pictures," McGruder said. Speaking about what his work on "The Boondocks" actually accom- plishe-, he explained, "I don't think it really makes a difference, to be hon- est. I think we're past that point where someone can get on and say something and wake people up." Is the self-described "angriest black man in America" modest, jaded or just realistic? Regardless, the dispar- ity between how he and the rest of the country views his work is clear. McGruder shrugs off the idea that he's doing much more than keeping readers entertained through politically and socially charged humor - judging his success by whether he keeps get- ting paid. "I personally don't want to mislead people into thinking that I'm a political leader or that my show or my strip is a political movement. It's not." In the eyes of fans and critics, how- ever, McGruder has done far more than just make them laugh. "The Boon- docks" runs in more than 350 papers nationwide, but its controversial and blunt humor have led to dozens of editors banning it from their papers. The strip has served as a platform for McGruder to take on racism, U.S. for- eign policy and public figures ranging from Santa Claus to R. Kelly. When U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice requested he include her in his strip, he readily complied, writing a series of cartoons in which Huey and Riley try to spark romance in Rice's life. "Maybe if there was a man in the world who Condoleezza truly loved, she wouldn't be so hell-bent to destroy it," Huey says. That particular story- line convinced The Washington Post to suspend his strip for a week. McGruder suggests that a lack of black political leadership in the coun- try may be why so many readers are eager to assume that his satire on cur- rent events and race relations makes him a leading voice of black America. "I really shun the idea that I have some kind of job or some kind of leader- ship role to play. It used to be we had politicized entertainers and then actu- al political leaders," McGruder said. "James Brown could make a political song, but he wasn't a political leader and no one mistook him as such. With the void in black political leadership, we're too quick to turn to entertainers to fill that void, and that's not neces- sarily the best move to make." On Nov. 6, McGruder will take on a new role as executive producer of the animated series, "The Boondocks," bringing the comic strip to Cartoon Network's Adult Swim. It's a plan that has been one of McGruder's goals since the beginning. "For six years we had one deal after another fall through," he said. "The strip is what keeps the property alive and we were eventually able to find the right home for it." Moving from newspapers to late- night cable television has provided McGruder with more creative freedom in both his strip and the show. "Self- censoring is always a part of it. You're just using common sense," he said. Although indifferent to the public perception of his strip and his show, McGruder quickly dismisses those who perceive him as unafraid of con- troversy. "There's nothing I've ever put out that a white corporation hasn't permitted you to see," he said. "This whole idea that I'm some crazy, fear- less guy isn't coming from me. It's coming from everyone else, but there's no validity to it." Besides providing the opportunity to earn from DVD sales, McGruder sees the show as a chance to shift toward storytelling, inevitably toning down some of the political commentary and attacks on public figures that have been largely responsible for both his strip's success and its controversy. "The show allows us to just tell stories about the characters for a half hour," McGruder said, "and that's something I always wanted to do." It is difficult to predict whether the animated series will provide McGrud- er with more airtime to continue his attack on American society, or whether the show is just a new distraction and income source for a cartoonist trying to hide that he's losing interest and running out of things to comment on. "I don't really have much to say any- more. I've got nothing to say, to be honest with you, because there isn't anything I could say that would make a difference," he said. "There's a lot of political commentary in (the show), but if I could get in front of a micro- phone and tell America something ... It wouldn't be anything. I do the show so I don't have to do that kind of thing, at least that's the hope - that the work speaks for itself." Actress Lewis's rock project hits Blind Pig By Amos Barshad Daily Arts Writer Juliette Lewis still speaks with her trademark drawl, a quirk of an actress once considered a hot Hollywood com- modity in the '90s - largely due to such eccentrici- Juliette & ties. But Lewis The Licks has lost much of Tonight at 8 p.m. her Hollywood At The Blind Pig luster in recent years and finds herself mostly playing bit parts in com- edies and making frequent trips to the "I Love the '80s" studios. All of this finds her here, traversing the country in a tour bus with four sweaty dudes, pushing her garage rock band, Juliette & the Licks. Lewis insists that music is a "natural extension" of her film career, an alternative form of expression to that of her day job. In conversation, Lewis is affable and It might seem easy to dismiss Lewis musically, but even a cursory listen to the band's first full-length album, You're Speaking My Language, reveals that, despite an abject absence of ingenuity, it has its merits. In an industry where bands like Jet top the international charts and an army of Strokes clones fills the country's rock clubs night after night, there's no reason why a band whose primary influence seems to be The Hives shouldn't get a record deal. The question, then, is whether Lewis is banking on The Licks to become her primary source of income any time soon. Despite recent cinematic travails, Lewis has several films lined. up, including "The Darwin Awards" and "The Fuck-Up." Still, none of these are lead roles. Lewis sidesteps the issue of the dearth of quality roles for veteran actresses: "Hollywood is a big fat machine, with all these inner politics, and in independent film, there's always a lot of opportunities. But I'm not really old yet, so I don't have that problem." ~FRESH AND FlIRCE? .h. L&~~TOF E LAU THE PfF ~ l tWf $ e pevft fs X81 brc i ohl -hur.e *TWO THUMBS UP" Courtesy of Fiddler "Legwarmers and scrunchies were my favorite things to wear ...last week." Lewis seems genuinely pleased with the progress of her band, genuinely unencum- bered by the hordes of writers just wait- ing to lump the band's release with Don Johnson's "Heartbeat" and Bruce Willis's "The Return of Bruno." "The press, they never get anything right anyways. It's about the people and the audience, so right now we're still looking for an audience. I think it's going good. It's going as it should for a new rock band." CongratulAions E-stherC mo so n IL ..I xi : "'x~ ZE iU - i i Xff u ,i ,'i