8A - Monday, November 13, 2006 The Michigan Daily - michigandailypcorr 'Born' into boredom By MATT KIVEL Daily Arts Writer There once was a time when Damon Gough was the most prom- ising singer/ songwriter in the United Kingdom His Badly majesticdebut, Drawn Boy 2000's The Hour of Bewil- Born in the UK derbeast, was a Astralwerks/EMD major artistic statement that had no contempo- rary. Gough shuffled effortlessly through an impressive arsenal of styles: Chamber-folk ballads gave way to abrasive guitar rockers while disco-pop anthems sat comfortably between lilting country and sloppy New Orleans brass-band sing- alongs. His wry lyrics were oblique in meaning but heartfelt, warmly inviting listeners into the record's deeply personal world. With such a fully realized first album behind him, Gough has been hard pressed to produce an ade- quate follow-up. 2002's About a Boy soundtrack was elegant and under- stated and has proven to be his best non-Bewilderbeast full length, while Have You Fed The Fish? was a fun if overly ambitious record that emphasized Gough's wackier lyrical tendencies and larger-than- life Badly Drawn Boy persona. But it was 2004's One Plus One Is One that marked a major artistic decline in his musical output. Its drab arrangements and unimaginative song structures were strikingly dis- appointing, void of all the personal- ity and idiosyncratic charms of his earlier records. Born in the U.K., a supposed con- cept album about his homeland, descends further into the banal world of modern mainstream pop. The songs are boring ruminations on life, love and intimate relation- ships that contain none of the lyri- cal intrigue or musical ambition of Gough's earlier work. His words constantly mine cliched territory: "Simple pleasures to be found / if you reach the overground / sun- shine, rainfall, making love /you see a rainbow." It's difficult to believe that this isthe same songwriter who once wrote with such pastoral ele- gance on Bewilderbeast's "Camping Next to Water": "The stars above shine on me / I beckon them to fall on me / 0ll catch and save them in a jar / my feet a mass of blisters / col- lecting frost on whiskers / as I taste 0 6 Gough fails to recapture any of 'Bewilderbeast.' forward arrangements sounding like they were recorded in expen- sive studios with disinterested ses- sion musicians. "Walk You Home Tonight" provides a brief glimpse of the giddy disco pop that Gough used to cultivate, but the song's joyful sentiment is crushed by half- assed synth-strings and heavy- handed drumming. The lyrics, as in many of the tunes, deal with death and loss, and when Gough says "I feel old," we can't help but believe him. This album will be the turning point for devoted Badly Drawn Boy fans, marking the time when the dream of a second Bewilderbeast officially died. On a more personal note, I came to The Michigan Daily my freshman year with a sample five-star review of Bewilderbeast tucked under my arm. I was mocked and chided by some of Ann Arbor's finest music snobs for my undying supportof the scruffy singer songwriter. I literally cried at the Daily's meetingto select the top 50 albums of the new mil- lennium when my pleas for Bewil- derbeast's selection fell upon deaf ears. With this new record Iam left to question the quality and integ- rity of the man I once so ardently defended, but I can't forget his glo- rious debut. It has heart, something Born in the U.K. is sorely lacking. ALtXSDZIADOSZ/Daily LEFT: Broken Social Scene leader Kevin Drew, caught mid-croon. Drew called out for alcohol reinfrcements as the show waned. ABOVE: A view of the dancing crowd that was invited onstage, from behind the drum kit. "It's our last show - we're all gonna get sued!" Drew yelled. By KIMBERLY CHOU Associate Arts Editor If Broken Social Scene frontman Kevin Drew's words were at all close to truth last Sat- urday, the group's date at The Michigan Theater was nothing more than a close to its current tour: "As a band, we'd never do our last show in a place where you can't drink," he said. The theater was packed as close to the gills as possible for a venue with designated seat- ing, crowd members kept leaving their seats, against the orders of the disgruntled security staff, in search of a better view of what was rumored to be the indie-rock goliath's final outing as an 11 (sometimes 12 or more)-piece collective. "Our last show will be at some kid's bar mitzvah - and we'll all be on acid." Whether Drew's jokey reassurances were a veil or not, the band certainly seemed prepared to make Ann Arbor its last gasp. The perfor- mance was lined with a noticeably exhausted passion, but "Hotel" still glowed with a lan- guid, seething sexuality and BSS even pulled out the rarely played "Canada vs. America." At points any other band would have used as an escape - after Drew and Brendan Canning pulled kids onstage to dance, after the lineup was stripped down and built back up - Broken Social Scene continued to play. "I can't go out after fucking up 'Pacific Themet' "Drew howled at one point nearly two and a half hours into the show. He checked for time, noting the number of songs the group could fit in before the theater's 12 a.m. curfew - "one more song" became two, became three. Co-founder and bassist Canning came out to meet fans after the set, making small talk and tiredly squeezing a few shoulders before tak- ing off. Canning's girlfriend, lingering by the stage after Do Make Say Think's opening set, alluded that the band's upcoming hiatus would The last anthems for the indie-scene kids - at least for a while. be indefinite. It'd be difficult to ever again put together a lineup like the one on You Forgot It In People, she admitted. Whether Saturday night's performance symbolized the end of a tour or the end of Bro- ken Social Scene in its current evolution, Ann Arbor should consider the show something for the books. The war in Iraq in another package By JEFFREY BLOOMER "Uncovered: The War in Iraq," the ManagingEditor response from filmmakers ra Ever since the war in Iraq began, has alterna- Ier a parade of documentaries and fic- tively been S iers tional films from directors both somber and Saying No amateur and legendary has sought polemical, to War to examine the greater effects of an attempt to Tonight at 8 p.m. the war beyond the politicking and find answers At Angell Hall combat typically singled out by the-.where perhaps Auditorium B American media. From groundo there are none Free zero testimonials like "Gunner to be had. Palace" to searing indictments like Tonight at 8 p.m. in Angell Hall Auditorium B, one of the most acclaimed of this stock will offer a divergent perspective on the war as part of the program "Iraq: Soldiers Saying No to War" pre- sented by Michigan Peaceworks. The documentary "The Ground Truth," a hit at Sundance this year, follows a group of soldiers from the early stages of recruitment to their return home from combat, offering a bird's-eye view of the war's cost on those who are fight- ing it. Although its political edge is never in question, the documentary offers a view overlooked by many in this season of political campaign- ing and growing public disillusion- ment with the war: the men and women who have already been part of it, and the broader picture veter- ans face once they return home. After the screenino Bob Wata- da, whose son, an Army lieutenant, is currently awaiting court martial in Washington after refusing to deploy to Iraq, will give a talk about his son's case. Following an election that has Docurentary takes- a hatdlook at soldiers' lives. sparked the most serious discus- sions of change in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion, this timely event will challenge attendees to imagine what can be done now and espe- cially what might come next for soldiers affected by the war. So. You want one good reason to earn a pharmac degree from the University of Michigan? Here are 12 good reasons, for starters: 1. Unparalleled career choices 2. Continuous growth potential 3. Job security in economically uncertain times 4. Unlimited opportunities to improve people's lives 5. Outstanding pay 6. Life and career mobility 7. The power to apply medical knowledge at the forefront of technological innovation 8. Financial support unequalled by any F other U.S. pharmacy school 9. Membership in an influential alumni network spanning the globe 10. The prestige of owning a degree from one of US News & World Report's top-ranked pharmacy schools 11. One-to-one learning with world-renowned faculty 12. Respect If you've had health-care patient experience, and if you've taken Chemistry 130, 210, 215, or 260; Biology 162, 305, 310, or 311; Physics 125, 126, 140, or 240; or Calculus 115 or 116, you're already on your way to a pharmacy degree at U-M. To learn more about the PharmD Program at the University of Michigan, visit the University of Michigan College of Pharmacy Web site at www.umich.edu/-pharmacy. Or contact Assistant Dean Valener Perry at 734-764-5550 or by e-mail at vlperry@umich.edu. Your future never looked brighter. Hanna Play Doctor? 800-2Review PrincetonReview.com Corner of S. University and S. Forest 9 -4