The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, November 10, 2006 - 5 A little 'Dedication' goes a long way By BRIAN CHEN complement. DailyArts Writer In "Goin Hard," C-Rayz Walz, best known for his freestyling Hip hop today isn't a pretty skills in the Bronx, proves he's just scene. For every genuinely tal- as comfortable in the studio and ented star like Li' Wayne and delivers a riveting affirmation of T.I., there are the album's titular theme: dedica- still dozens of *k*k* tion. "I'm going hard, I believe in insignificant my soul / I will take control, I will entertain- Dedication not fold / I'm going hard, Belief / ers like Yung Belief Everything that they showed me / Joe and D4L Worker B Had me chasin' that yellow brick crowding the road." airwaves. As if to galvanize the doldrums Needless to say, this shouldn't of rap, he reminds us that the sit well with any self-respect- product of hard work is always ing rap connoisseur, not least of progress. all with up-and-coming produc- Meanwhile, in "Runs the er Belief. Born in Los Angeles, World," Wordsworth lambastes schooled in New York City, he's the current state of society, rap- lived in the diametrical hearts of ping: "The strongestnation doesn't hip hop - rationally, he should be have options to lose / It's beyond the first to lament rap's fall. But his searching for arms /As they plant- debut album, Dedication, is at once ed the bomb / It's ticking at home a remembrance of rap's better days / And now it's too late for them to and a buoyant hope for the genre's try to defuse." future. Instead of targetingthe govern- Belief makes no attempt to hide Broken Social Scene: Um, or broken sausage fest? Ain't Scene nothi EVER-EVOLVING INDIE COLLECTIVE TO END TOUR By KIMBERLY CHOU AssociateArts Editor It's 15 minutes into a hastily arranged phone interview with Broken Social Scene founder Brendan Canning, shooting par-for-the-course, and the Broken expository questions have Social Scene been covered ("So, how's the tour?" etc.). There's a Tomorrow lull in dialogue, and just at 8 p.m. before the mild unease of $25.50 forced interview familiar- At The ity sets in, Canning starts Michigan Theater talking about synchronism and happenstance - travel occurrences, tour- stop fortuities, pretzels. Giant jars of pretzels. Sometimes, when you've been out on the road all season, staring out of your nth hotel window or out at industrial buildings as they zip past your bus window, you start seeing things. "You know what's strange?" Canning said. "There's a big Utz tower right over the side of here by the expressway." He revealed his approximate position (seated, close to a formidable jar of sourdough pretzels) and location (back of the tour bus, downtown Baltimore). "I'm looking out the window here and there's this big building with Utz written on it and a little girl is their little symbol - and there's a big four-pound jar of Utz pretzels," Canning continued. "I think they call that synchronism." There's a beat. He surmises "you would have to be here" to comprehend the holistic depth of the situation. if "Here," for the last several months, has been the road for Canning and the many other members of Broken Social Scene, the indie- rock supercollective of which Canning is the co-founder and core. Almost as well known for their sizeable lineup as for their heady, layered experimentalism, Broken Social Scene origi- nated as duo Canning and Kevin Drew. Unable to achieve the desired effect in concert as they could in the studio, the pair invited its friends to perform with them. Veterans from the Toronto indie scene - Andrew Whiteman, Bill Spearin, Jason Collett and Leslie Feist, among others - began guesting on stage and on releases, too; Broken Social Scene has expanded exponential- ly ever since. After barnstorming through the majority of the European festival giants (Berlin's Zitadelle Spandau, Reading, Leeds) late this summer, BSS set off on its fall American tour; the Toronto group finishes its string of stateside dates at The Michigan Theater tomorrow night. "It feels good to be back down here," Can- ning said. "It feels like we really only went out for a few weeks at the beginning of this record's release ... like we neglected coming down here a little bit this year." The band's return to the United States has been pleasant overall, Canning said. Broken Social Scene discovered a surprisingly large, reverent fanbase in Florida. They played with the Melvins. They went to Dallas and Austin, ate some memorable Mexican food. This leg of the tour conveniently coincides with the theater run of "Half Nelson," an indie film that's received a limited release but also a i '" in' yet AT MICHIGAN THEATER healthy smattering of accolades. Ryan Gosling is the primordial cause behind much of it for his performance as a 20-something white junkie teaching junior high in Brooklyn. The Michi- gan Theater showed "Half Nelson" through last month, and BSS fans will notice the presence of the band's material in the film and its corre- sponding soundtrack album. "With this particular (film), we were intro- duced to the directing/writing team, Ryan Fleck and Anna Boden," Canning said. "It was kind of strange at first, you know, because you just watch this movie and it's like 'Oh my god, I think there are 17of our pieces in this film.'" Previously, the members of Broken Social Scene have scored entire films (see the U.K. flick "Snow Cake," starring Carrie-Anne Moss and Sigourney Weaver), but with "Half Nelson," instead of expressly composing for the movie, BSS served in more of a "music supervisor" capacity, Canning said. "(Fleck and Boden) came up to Toronto and we hung out and we all watched the film togeth- er," he said. "It was sort of 'Maybe we can take that in there, take that in there or replace that with something else' ... it ended up coming (out) in a different kind of way" than the norm. Parts of more than a dozen songs appear in the movie; the soundtrack features "Da Da Dada," "Sham- poo Suicide" and "Stars and Sons." While Canning and his band have been involved to a greater degree with other films, such as "Snow Cake" and their next project after the tour's culmination (a score for an his love for rap's beginnings. He taps into hip hop's early develop- ment, sampling Afrika Bambaata's "Looking for the Perfect Beat" in "Let's Go." The same sample was used in DJ Khaled's "Holla at Me Baby," but whereas Cool and Dre modernized the sample into an energetic club banger, Belief preserves its retro charm. It's an unfair comparison, seeing as the producers are worlds apart in both approach and popularity, but it's an important distinction: Belief isn't aiming for a mainstream audience. He's trying to resurrect America's last grassroots move- ment by bringing it back to where it began. The attempt is admirable, but ultimately futile, especially when the MCs steal the spotlight away from Belief. Logically, it makes sense - when you have underground stars like Murs, C-Rayz Walz, Word- sworth, and Vordul Mega (of Can- nibal Ox), it's always going to be difficult to make your presence felt. Not surprisingly, Belief's pro- duction is relegated as the lyrics' Working hard against the popular grain. ment, he forces us to look at our own hypocrisies. At last, political commentary from a rapper with more thought than an off-hand "George Bush doesn't care about black people." The past is gone. It's an obvious statement, but acceptance is still hard. The hip hop of yesterday has been replaced with self-deification and an obses- sion with cars, the chocha, the corner, etc. So for Belief, born and raised in the hearts of rap, accep- tance must be especially hard. In his debut, however, he not only accepts the harsh reality, but also demonstrates his love and hope for the genre. To admit that hip hop sucks? That's tough. To continue to love a rap game that isn't worth shit anymore? That's dedication. See BSS, Page 8 I Prof earns top gov't award By ANDREW SARGUS KLEIN ManagingArts Editor For an average musician, a Pulitzer Prize and three Gram- mies would normally equal a full, highly successful career. But for the University's own William Bol- com, a Music prof. since 1977, such awards are only part of a continu- ously growing list of accomplish- ments. Yesterday, in Washington, D.C., amid the turmoil of a congressio- nal change-over and the resigna- tion of former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, President Bush presented Bolcom along with nine others with the National Medal of Arts. Traditionally, 12 medals are awarded each year. The award is backed by the National Endowment for the Arts, and is the highest award given to a single artist by the government. Meant to recognize artists from all fields, past winners include Robert Duvall, Ray Bradbury and Buddy Guy. Perhaps his best known work, Bolcom's interpretation of Wil- liam Blake's "Songs of Innocence" and "Songs of Experience," earned him the aforementioned Grammy hat trick in 2006 in the categories of best choral performance, best classical contemporary composi- tion and best classical album - a resounding victory. Bolcom told the Detroit Free Press he was "so numb that I haven't sorted out my feelings HOMELEsS NEXT FALL? C IECk OUT OUR FALL REALTY PAGE NOVEMbER 16Th [OR Th E BEST LEASES ON