the b-side) 2B - Thursday, January 18, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 So, you want to rock out? By ANDREW SARGUS KLEIN ManagingArts Editor Youandyourfriends aretiredofsittingaround your room struggling with a couple of guitars and a drumset of empty kegs - you want bigger, better things. In the dorms, it's not enough to serenade the same girls on your hall at the end of drunken nights - you know they can't tell the difference between the shrieking in the club and your sultry vocals. It's time you started a band. After a month or so of practicing once or twice a week, you and your mates have finally ham- mered out a decent 45-minute setlist. Your first gig will probably be at a loyal friend's place, but that won't happen every weekend. But the blood is in the water and you're hungry for more. 1Look around you: There are so many gigs offered through the University, it would be ridiculous to list them all here. From Live at Leo's to the U Club to Markley Honors parties, there's more than enough opportunity for your band.to plant the seeds of destiny. Make a demo: In midst of your fierce Uni- versity gig schedule, you'll want to make a demo. After all, the steps of the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library didn't host Nirvana, Iggy Pop and Buddy Guy (they all played at The Blind Pig). Everyone needs a demo, of course. But don't get hung up "r m on finding the perfect studio, or producing the perfect demo for that matter. A crude record- ing of your four best - and by best I also mean tightest - songs is suf- ficient for most bars and low-level gigs. A single mic in a room with decent acoustics will do just fine. To snag one of the satellite studios on North Campus, you can befriend a performing arts technology major or take a short class offered by the Music School. You'll have to provide your The Right Stuff (1983) Directed by Philip Kaufman Starring Sam Shepard, Ed Harris and Dennis Quaid 0 Drop those forties and get your ass in gear - you have a band to get started. own mics, but it's worth the chance to use a room worth more than your crumbling block on South Campus. Get your demo to venues: No shit, right? Don't be afraid to follow up with owners and managers after you drop off your pre- cious piece of music history. People forget about these things, and persistence generally pays off Understand that if your band is under 21, then your audience will also be under 21, and bars want people to drink their cocktails. Again, per- sistence. Keep on practicing: Nothing loses fans and gigs like sloppy playing, no mat- ter how good you think your songs are. Depending on the speed and quality of your band's song production, try to update your setlist with newer originals and tactful covers whenever possible. p Your first album: One alternative to a high-end studio is recording one of your barn-burning live shows. Prices can range any- where from $300 to $1,000 and beyond, k but nothing beats capturing that raw energy. The plus side is potential venues can now hear how you sound live, when it counts. The dream doesn't have to stay inside you. Bring it to life. Keep in mind: A 45-minute show is a larger chunk of time than you think. Hauling your gear to the gig, setting up, breaking down and getting back home will turn into a two-hour affair almost every time. Con- stantgigging will only emphasize this life truth. Significant others will just have to cope with your newfound star status. Starting a band in college can be one of the most rewarding ventures you ever pursue. The appreciative screams from friends and strang- ers alike as you break half your strings on the set's last chord will ring in your ears at night. Bands such as Belikos, Nomo and yes, even Tally Hall are prime examples of your peers taking the initiative with balls. They can do it. So can you. The glory is yours for the taking. - Be sure to look for regular profiles of student musicians, artists and student groups in upcoming issues of The B-side. By BLAKE GOBLE Daily Arts Writer It's the classically courageous image: Several men in matching astronaut gear walk toward the camera, confident and inspiring, about to voyage into the unknown - outer space. No, it's not "Space Cowboys," it's not "Star Wars" and it's definitely not "Armageddon." Although they all tried to match this film's super- human presence, little compares to Philip Kaufman's ("Quills") 1983 sky saga "The Right Stuff." Based on Tom Wolfe's seminal novel, the docudrama is a recap of the United States' role in the Space Race. Argu- ably the last great American hero story, "Stuff" is all about what brav- ery once meant in this country. A flop upon release, the film received four Oscars, was nominated for best picture and has since gained a strong following. The film opens in California at an experimental air base, where pilots bordering on the edge of san- ity are also on the edge of breaking the sound barrier. The narrator forewarns the viewer: "There was a demon that lived in the air ... They called it the sound barrier." Enter Chuck Yeager, never cocky, anxious or attention-seeking like some modern "heroes." Sam Shepa- rd ("Black Hawk Down") brilliantly channels the mysticism, fear and respect that surrounded Yeager. Pilots have a harrowing position - once over 60 people died in one month. But Yeager does what he does best with no-nonsense convic- tion, and as a result, he breaks the sound barrier. Ten years later, Sputnik's in the air and the United States has to compete. So what does the government do? They recruit some of the finest knucklehead test pilots the sky's ever seen. Sure they're educated and marketable, but these guys had something more. Those men included John Glenn, Alan Shepard, Gordon Cooper and Gus Grissom. Legends now, their humanity is' everywhere on screen. Pilot actors Ed Harris ("Apollo 13"), Dennis Quaid ("The Rookie") and Scott Glenn ("Silence of the Lambs") were unknown then, but their eagerness to perform enables their characters to exude energy and likeability. The guys give themselves to their #ir -e cause with proud abandon. Sure, they'd like to be celebrities, and they're working for the sole pur- pose of political sparring with Rus- sia. But that feeling of shameless incentives is mere afterthought. All the astronauts are working togeth- er for the sake of teamwork and pride. The connotations of those motivations have changed greatly since, but in "The Right Stuff," it's actually something that it should be - admirable. The rest of the story is textbook. Yeager kept flying faster. Chimps went up before humans. The Rus- sians were the first to send a man in space. Shepard went up next and Glenn orbited the Earth. These men's stories have lasted the test of time, and "The Right Stuff" is their enduring testament. Boasting some of the greatest montages ever assembled, "The Right Stuff" has some of the first and still most influential uses of the technique. Held together by a Kaufmann's exuberance for the material and Bill Conti's all-Ameri- can score (Entertainment Weekly once begged that it replace the national anthem), these are the best and most entertaining music videos you'll ever see. Throw in the prestigious Caleb Deschanel pho- tography, the ground-breaking and still effective special effects and an exemplar in adaptive screenwriting from Kaufman, and you'll see how this film gets it right. "The Right Stuff" belongs on the short list of great American cin- ema with the likes of "Nashville" and "Gone With the Wind." A deep and immersive experience, this is a truly heroic tale without a shred of dishonesty. Like the cowboys and knights before them, these astro- nauts are probably the best and only real-life depictions of their type that can be found in the movies. It's a smart, sensational, saddening and even hilarious film. This week in entertainment: politics, asteroids GOSSIP Actress Kim Basinger was in court on Monday after allegations of negligence and breaching a custody agreement with former husband Alec Baldwin. Baldwin claims Basinger withheld their 11-year-old daughter and did not tell Baldwin that the child went to the hospital. At leastcthey're still talking. FILM Filmmaker James Cameron is committing. The "T2" director has announced that he will begin pro- duction on his long-gestating proj- ect "Avatar," a love story set against interplanetary war. It's taken Cam- eron 10 years to make a movie since "Titanic" - a not-so-swift transi- tion from icebergs to asteroids. TELEVISION than-veiled di George W. B The White House invited the West Wing co cast of TV's "The West Wing" to there to meet t - meet their real-life complements. ° except me. I w, - Who wasn't on the guest list? Mar- that." Unless' tin Sheen, who played President "fucking enrag - Josiah Bartlet during the show's have been tryii seven-season run. Sheen - who's expressed his affinity for former - Con President Bill Clinton and his less- A soul for Ann Arbor By CAITLIN COWAN DailyArts Editor Think you're a music nerd? Have you ever spent five hours digging through boxes of 45s looking for an exceptionally rare Northern- Soul record? The Ann Do you even know what Arbor Soul Northern Soul is? Club For the betterment of your musical education, Northern Friday at Soul is a style of music that 9:30 p.m. was popular in dancehalls like At The Blind Pig the Wigan Casino in northern England in the 1960s. Kids couldn't get enough of it. Imagine a capacity crowd crushed inside Necto dancing all night to Ray and Dave's "Wrong Wrong Wrong" and Etta James's "Seven Day Fool." If you're ready to experience more glorious soul enlightenment, The Ann Arbor Soul Club will show you the light. Michigan grad student and WCBN DJ Robert Wells and DJ Brad Hales inaugurated what is.now a monthly Soul Club dance party this past December at The Blind Pig. The duo will return to the Pig again this Friday with another night of barn-bruning soul singles and dancing. Soul clubs and obsessions with rare soul records have existed in Europe since the 1960s, but the pop- ularity of old soul records has never been as great here in the United States. In the past decade, though, sdain for President ush - said "all my lleagues were invited heir counterparts. All as very relieved about "relieved" is code for ged," Sheen was must ng to play nice. piled by Caitlin Cowan and Blake Goble. kt e y s orthc vc TASSI From page 1B for everyone between 4 and 6 p.m.). You will never find a larger collection of high schoolers in one place. Literally, they're crawling everywhere at Quality. Not only are they 90 percent of the audi- 4 ence, but they run the damn place. Seri- ously, I've never seen anyone older than 17 wearing a uniform there. The other day I saw akid in a shirt and tie. I thought to myself, "he's awfully dressed up to go see a movie." Then I saw his nametag, and yes, he was a manager. I don't think his voice had even dropped yet. Quality is east a little bit down Huron, but if you don't pay attention you will miss it, guaranteed. I've been there on about 20 different occasions and I still have to double back sometimes. Why? You would think such a large theater would be able to afford an attention- grabbing sign. Instead what they have out front is a Times New Roman, black- and-white, 2.5-by-8 foot joke of a sign that looks like it was made in shop class by one of the high school employees. It literally takes a crew of spotters while driving to locate it, so you don't miss your turn. This is always good for a laugh the first time someone sees it. So to sum up, here's your theater guide in a nutshell: For classics, artsy and indy, go State Street; for things you missed, go Briarwood; for mainstream, go Quality. And fuck Showcase. -E-mail Tassi at tassi@umich.edu. "Do you have soul?" there has been a renewed interest in the genre. Since then, clubs like the Au Soul Club have cropped up in cities all over the nation. What should you expect upon entering this new and exciting world of sweet soul music? Records and rare singles from the 1960s to the 1980s: everything from Tamla-Motown and Northern Soul to cross- over 45s and back. Cover is $8; for those 21 and older, $5 will do the trick. Doors open at 9:30 p.m. for those brave enough to step out of their musical box and dance to some amazing, if obscure, music unlikely to be heard any- where else. Whet our appetite..in a three-session exploration. N v Iooffers a dern, RC Netsh pespectiVeon living in today'scomlicated world. me dBest Thai 2OQa Class~es h a B pecializing * Crispy Duck CaeJ0S i0narvto FexhruaW. "unan &rScalops Galic Basel Szechuan 4xB5 Open ttBeginnerJe rNot. Style. Many H'tTi* pkpa Vi; r;. vegetarian " 2(734) 528-5588o rge,Sp CThor 1110 IContact e a eieth eth.org i&Sat11r4WashtenawAve os. p-1 tw US23 & GNWid) Co-sponsored by te ni ofor Reform Judaism William and Lottie Daniel Commissi oA utreach and Synagogue Comnmunity