Friday December 2, 2005 arts. michigandaily. com artspage@michigandaily.com e TSitlogan Baitt Rr s 0 8 'Messiah' to perform at Hill By Kristine Michel Daily Arts Writer As students write term papers and cram for final exams, it may be easy to forget that Christmas is right around the cor- 0 ner. For those looking to share in the holiday spirit, the University Musical Society is pre- senting a performance by the UMS Choral Union and the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra of George Frederic Handel's Mes- siah. Performances will Handel's Messiah Saturday, Dec. 3 at 8 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 4 at 2 p.m. Tickets $10430 At Hill Auditorium Courtesy of UMS be held at Hill Audito- rium on Dec. 3 and 4. This festive yearly tradition marks the 127th performance of Messiah by the UMS Choral Union. The piece describes redemption through Christ in a series of movements taken from the Bible. Under the direction of their conductor, Music Prof. Jerry Blackstone, a 220-mem- ber chorus made up of Ann Arbor com- munity members and University alumni, as well as four lead vocalists, will perform this famed concert. One talented musi- cian returning to Hill is lead tenor Robert Breault, who has entertained audiences worldwide. Breault attended graduate school at the University and completed a doctorate degree in 1991. "It is a thrill to come back after 15 years and perform at Hill again," he said. He's no stranger to Handel's Mes- The UMS Choral Union at last year's event. siah; the piece was one of his first major performances with the Lansing Symphony Orchestra over a decade ago. Now, back in Ann Arbor, he has the chance to recon- nect with the community he was a part of before his music career went international. Breault commented that he could use this opportunity to perform in this UMS tra- dition "to tap into a lot of memories and personal experiences." Each year, UMS brings together four new leading vocalists to transform Han- del's music and add variety to the annual performance. For Breault, these musicians and the chorus create a "live and wonder- ful community spirit." Regardless of listeners' religious affili- ation, the music of Messiah still possesses a universal appeal. According to Breault, "If you have a strong Christian faith, it can be an illuminating piece and liturgical in your heart. You can be an atheist and enjoy it because of the drama and music." Because the piece has been so popular since its first performance in Dublin in 1742, it stands out as a great milestone in Western music and a holiday tradition. Attendance at this performance allows University students and Ann Arbor resi- dents to become a part of this long-stand- ing UMS tradition. Breault especially encourages students to see a classical con- cert before their college career ends. "If you don't see a live musical performance, it's like not seeing the Wolverines play in the Big House," he remarked. If Hill Auditorium is like the "Big House" of outstanding concert venues, then Handel's Messiah serves as an excel- lent kickoff to the holiday season. CAITLIN KEIRDail y LSA sophomore Marty Stano at the opening of a Darfur exhibit in the Pendleton Room in the Michigan Union Thursday night. EYES OF A CHILD DRAWINGS REVEAL A NEW VIEW OF TURMOIL IN DARFUR Joel's catalog wears thin on Lies By Kimberly Chou Daily Arts Writer "For the longest time ... Billy Joel fans have been waiting for the ultimate collection," declares the album cover. "This is it." Key word: fans. At some point Billy Joel in every piano man's career - after My Lives attempts at classical music, sobriety Sony and marrying a college co-ed - a five-disc epic of a hits collection is inevitable. My Lives is Billy Joel's attempt at summarizing his career, thus far, in recordings. Four audio discs and a DVD span his greatest pop music hits as well as his not- so-essential piano compositions. To give Joel credit, his ability to churn out piano ditties people want to hear has kept him on the radio for the last three decades. "New York State of Mind" is pretty hard to resist with it's sentimental, lyrical imagery, especially when re-released live after Sept. 11. Taking advantage of his star-power, Joel duets with Stevie Winwood and the late Ray Charles on My Lives and also records versions of Elvis Presley and Bob Dylan standbys. However, a more concise double-album would have been adequate - the concert DVD, with 15 of his most celebrated tunes, is easier to swallow for casual Joel listeners. While it's nice to hear the original recordings of "Piano Man," listening through the reverb on numer- ous demos is more of a headache than an exciting bonus. With many of the songs on My Lives, Joel is either making a valiant attempt at including the breadth of his catalog or trying to make as much money as possible. It's as if Joel couldn't decide exactly which songs were his By Andrew Klein Daily Arts Writer The representation of catastrophic war and its deface- ment of humanity is not only a necessity, but a moral obligation. Mass media and independent activism, whether at odds or in collaboration, provide Darfur Drawn: the public with the majority of The Conflict in its information. Another avenue Darfur Through of interpretation that has provid- Children's Eyes ed profound insight despite fre- quent marginalization is artistic At the Michigan Union expression. At the Michigan Student Union Arts Lounge and running through the end of the month, "Darfour Drawn: The Conflict in Darfur Through Children's Eyes," allows visitors to understand the pressing situation in Sudan through possibly the most cathartic way avail- able: the children living in the eye of the storm. The exhibit is made possible by the national student group "Students Taking Action Now: Darfur." Founded by Alison Barral in 2004 at Georgetown University, STAND isin the words of RC Junior and group mem- ber, Margaret Glass, "a group of students committed to bringing more awareness to campus about the geno- cide." The group is collaborating with Human Rights Watch researchers Dr. Annie Sparrow and Olivier Ber- cault, who were sent to Sudan to document the ongo- ing atrocities resulting from attacks on the Fur, Masalit, Zaghawa and other ethnic groups. The government is believed to be involved in at least some of the attacks, since there have been air raids and other acts of violence utilizing machines of war that are probably under the government's control. The ram- ifications of these actions include scores of decimated villages, countless rape cases and the disenfranchise- ment of at least two-million Sudanese. During Sparrow and Bercault's interviews with parents, teachers and refugee camp leaders, the researchers asked children to draw whatever they felt. It produced a highly emotional body of art that directly deals with the war through children's eyes. The exhibit consists of reproductions of the chil- dren's art, and has been circling through the country with Human Rights Watch. Each image is as emo- tionally intense as the next. Their simplicity and straightforwardness only enhance this feeling. Com- mon images throughout the drawings include planes unloading bombs on villages, camels and horses car- rying machine gunners and general scenes of soldiers pillaging and murdering. There are even direct refer- ences to rape, seen in 13-year-old Mahmoud's drawing of government soldiers taking women by the hand, with dead bodies littering the foreground. The realization that these images are inspired by eyewitness accounts is heartbreaking. The viewer is unavoidably drawn into the nightmarish world these children must live in, and the overwhelming sense of despair in these drawings looms over the display. The children's names have been changed to protect them, but such a measure seems pointless if the scenes represented in their art are daily realities. The images are monumental in their appeal to the basic human concern for children and for the inno- cent. Personal security seems trite when regarding the illustrations, and the exigency of the situation is clear. Although Glass admitted, "It's really difficult to be able to relate to people we have nothing in common with," she went on to emphasize that "there is (a sense of) a shared humanity." An exhibit such as this might not seem ideal for a quick stop after a cup of coffee, but students and locals alike should understand the importance of this exhibit and what it represents. In his "Letter From a Birming- ham Jail," Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote, "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." This rings especially true with this exhibit in mind. As long as atrocities such as the crisis in Darfur continues to go unchecked, the children of each generation will contin- ue to produce images such as these and carry memories of blood and hatred for the rest of their lives. 0 Courtesy ot sony "I love scotch. Scotchy, scotch, scotch." greatest hits and instead incorporated as much as possible to cover all the bases. Most of Disc 1 and Disc 4 is unnec- essary, though some of the collection's most interesting moments come with Billy's bar band days and "Amplifier Fire" with heavy metal group Attila (Yes, heavy metal, and yes, Attila as in "the Hun"). Unless you're a huge Joel fan, listening to these CDs will involve a great deal of skipping. "Only the Good Die Young," "She's Got a Way," "New York State of Mind," "Movin' Out," and "Christie Lee" are separated semi- chronologically. "Allentown" and "We Didn't Start Fire" - possibly the strangest, Ho Chi Minh-referencing song to hit the Billboard charts - only show up on the DVD. My Lives is "ultimate" in the sense that nearly every phase of Joel's career gets its due, but more than five hours of the piano man is an easy-listening overdose. 0 Ohioans emerge with help from D-town scene : John Mayer revels in live blues side-project By Kimberly Chou Daily Arts Writer Banking on a talent and their skinned- knees gritty sound, The Greenhornes are trying to make it as one of the harder- rocking bands to come out of Cincin- nati. They'd make a very good Detroit band - and they The Greenhornes Sewed Soles V2 except maybe a little beer spilled down their shirtfronts for appearance. Guitar solos jangle and ring through the chorus, turning acidic when they mesh with per- cussion. Vocals are yelped as often as pos- sible, as if howling "(I) Can't Stand It" and "Don't Come Running To Me" makes the sentiment somehow more effective. But it's not difficult to detect the band's pop sensibility. Witness how the mournful female vocalist on "The End of the Night" nearly steals the song, while a surfer lilt sneaks into "Stay Away Girl." Patrick Keeler's kit steers Sewed Soles in a snarky, boy's-club direction. When songs verge on delicate, The Greenhornes back off - Keeler's drumming either pushes ahead of the beat or slinks seductively behind, keeping Motown call-and-response pas- sages unfinished and off-kilter. Although certainly not inexperienced, supporting everyone from Loretta Lynn to Kim Deal for the past decade, The Green- Courtesy of V2 Dude, I know the hair is tricky, but you gotta stop thinking he's a girl. By Luke Gyure For the Daily almost are, with local boys Brendan Ben- son and Jack White as producers. Hell, if they weren't from the Buckeye state, they would have undoubtedly been blessed and cursed as a member of the Detroit garage- rock revival. The Greenhornes want you to think they're completely stripped down: three guys, three instruments, no pretense hornes play with an enthusiasm much like a kid-garage group playing its first show. For all of their potential, The Green- hornes actually have the same factors going against them as they do in their favor. V2 Records labelmates and produc- ers White and Benson also happen to be their bandmates in the Raconteurs, and they're currently opening on the Stripes's European tour - it's not exactly satisfy- ing to be forever associated with'someone else's side-project or backing band. The sound is raw, but the band isn't by any means green - another few years touring for Jack and Meg and The Greenhornes should be able to emerge out from the shadow of their friends from the Motor City. Try!, the third live release from pop-guitarist John Mayer, features the John Mayer Trio. With drummer, Steve Jordan and bass- ist, Pino Paladino, John Mayer Mayer swerves Trio into the realm of jazz, which he, a classically trained Aware guitarist, has a long, oft forgotten affinity for. Jordan and Paladino have worked with every- one from James Brown to Phil Collins and D'Angelo. To say the very least, Mayer is in good company. The three dance around each other, filling in the musical gaps with aston- ishing clarity of purpose. It is the dynamic of a jazz group with a rock vocabulary - a tribute to the timeless trio format of acts like Cream, The Jimi Hendrix Experience and The Police. From the first few bars of xhe open- ing track, "Who Did You Think I Was," it is clear that if nothing else, this album will showcase a rawer, funkier side of Mayer. In this song, which follows his trend of cocky, self- 01 FOK.U.S. opens up artistic discussion on AIDS original track, but derives from slow, dirty, behind-the-beat blues tunes. "Another Kind of Green," is slightly closer to typical John Mayer songs, but is right out of the Hendrix school of rhythm guitar. The trio even cov- ers the Hendrix tune, "Wait Until Tomorrow." Though they play the hell out of each of these songs, the musicianship is futile without an interesting context. The most compelling songs are those without multiple guitar solos. "Grav- ity" is a poignant ballad in which Mayer channels a Martin Sexton vocal nuance. On "Vultures," Mayer struts over a "Billie Jean"-inspired beat and bassline with the bouncy electric guitar approach he honed on his last By Anthony Baber Daily Arts Writer All over the world. the AIDS enidemic is taking Black & Brown and the Black Student Union, is host- ing "Hear Me," a night dedicated to honoring, remem- bering and educating the University community about the worldwide AIDS/HIV epidemic today at 9 p.m. at the Michigan League Underground. F.O.K.U.S. is an organization founded at the Univer- Executive member of F.O.K.U.S. and the show's organizer Allison Maritza Lasky said the group's main goal is to encourage people to share their art among peers as a means to bridge various gaps. "We will be featuring poets, members of our U of M com- munity who have been directly affected by the epi- I