The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, January 23, 2007 - 5 The Ives of today By DEREK BARBER Daily Arts Writer We live in a musical climate where the Sufjan Stevenses, Rufus Wainwrights and Andrew Birds approach popular music with increasingly complex *** arrangements. It's too easy, however, to get swept up in Charles Ives the grandeur of these cur- Ives Plays Ives rent artists without know- New World ing the origins of American classical. For some history on the matter, look no further than the music of Charles Ives. Ives Plays Ives, the recent collection of his complete solo piano recordings, is a good place to start. Ives is now widely considered one of the most original and distinctly "American" classical com- posers. But during his lifetime, Ives's experimen- tal and often-dissonant music was practically shunned by the concert halls. So what do you do when an audience doesn't "get" your music? You become an insurance salesman to pay the bills and compose in your free time or at least that's what Ives did. The majority of the pieces on Ives Plays Ives were recorded as a way for Ives simply to be a lis- tener of his own music. While the recording qual- ity can be somewhat substandard, the real magic Some hats never go out of style. is found in the rare glimpse at Ives's emotionally intense and deeply personal solo performances. Inspired by the spirit of transcendentalism, "Four Transcriptions from 'Emerson,' No. 1" is uniquely provocative. Although there are seven takes of "Emerson, No. 1," not a single perfor- mance is identical. One rendition finds Ives's adventurous sense of improvisation taking hold, as he spontaneously extends measures with dark flourishes of dissonance. In yet another version, Ives breathes out an audible moan in response to playing an unexpected tone cluster. Given the context, it'd be easy to mistake the inflection for a cry of pain rather than pleasure. This type of ambiguity makes the collection a difficult listen. While Ives Plays Ives offers a unique look into the world of this important American artist, an unfamiliar listener might find the work difficult to understand. The prob- lem originates from our musical presumptions. Perhaps if we all had practiced piano scales in one key while singing in a different tonality simulta- neously, as Ives had, our concept of dissonance would be considerably different. But the secret to understanding compositions like "Emerson No. 3" is found in the listener's ability to "stretch their ears." By accepting the dissonance of Ives's music as intentional, there is a certain comfort in this dissonance. Eventually, the music becomes less and less unfamiliar. Although this collection isn't exactly the most polished of records (several takes are abandoned within the first 30 seconds), the final recording of "Sonata No. 2 for Piano: Concord, Mass mvt. 3 'The Alcotts' " is worth the wait. Employing his signature use of quotation, the opening fig- ure from Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, Ives's plays with startling sensitivity and the utmost grace. The track showcases an open-minded experimentalism (within the third movement, Ives employs a 14 inch piece of wood to create a massive cluster chord) yet the sustained chord evokes feelings of longing instead of unsettle- ment. Current artists like Sufjan, Wainwright and Bird may not yet be composing pieces using polytonal harmonies, but the Ives influence has clearly shaped their work. As American musi- cians continue to follow Ives's open-minded attitude toward composing, listeners will undoubtedly be prompted to "stretch their ears" for years to come. 'The Hitcher' is all thumbs, no free ride By KAI QIN Daily Arts Writer It opens serenely on a quiet field. A single rabbit appears. It casually hops along, eventu- *-&,., r ally stumbling upon the side The Hitcher of a highway. At the Showcase Unsuspecting, and Quality16 the innocent Rogue bunny wanders onto the road, where it is promptly blindsided by a car and pulverized into a bloody mess. Though this comically transpar- ent symbolism, orchestrated by director Dave Meyers, is a refer- ence to the impending doom of "The Hitcher's" hapless protagonists, the allegory would be better applied to the film's viewers - having been unwisely lured into the theater by the undeniable attraction of shame- less commercialism, their subse- quent fate is as intellectual roadkill. "The Hitcher," a remake of the 1986 thriller, tells the story of Jim Halsey (Zachary Knighton, "Cherry Falls") and Grace Andrews (Sophia Bush, "One Tree Hill"), a young couple on their way to a promising spring break. During a downpour, they stop at a remote gas station and foolishly pick up a hitchhiker by the conveniently emblematic name of John Ryder (Sean Bean, "Lord of the Rings"). When the stranger quickly turns hostile, Jim and Grace nar- rowly escape and - again, foolishly -think they're safe from the psycho- path. Ryder, of course, still has mor- bid plans for the couple, and before long they, and we, are in the middle of a never-ending nightmare. It's now safe to say that the ubiq- uitous and typically villainous Sean Bean must hate his career. After a role in arguably one of the most suc- cessful trilogies of all time, Bean has somehow involved himself in such cinematic mishaps as "Flightplan" and "Silent Hill." Agreeing to play a serial killer in a teenage horror romp, however, is the grand-daddy Sadistic evil just for evil's sake?. BO-RING. of Hollywood blunders. Especially with a director known only for his MTV music videos (Creed's "With Arms Wide Open," Britney's "Lucky") at the helm. Newcomers Zachary Knighton and the beautiful Sophia Bush are forgettable as the hapless duo, but it's not as if they have much to do anyway. "The Hitcher's" inevitable downfall is its total idiocy - OK, so the mysterious hitchhiker is a psy- chopathic stalker, but what drives him to kill? We're not asking for serious psychological depth here. It's enough that the antagonists in "Hostel" just want money and that the "Saw" trilogy's Jigsaw is simply an obsessive vigilante. John Ryder, on the other hand, is motivated by nothing. He stares, growls and seethes as an empty, and ultimately dull, embodiment of evil, and for the modern audience already desensi- tized to senseless violence, it's sim- ply not enough when villains kill just for the sake of killing. An iPod nation ofmillions N otto sound melodramatic, graphic designers and musicians. but sometimes it seems I don't belong to any sort of spe- my entire life could fit cialty field, but as someone who into a little white box. And for Mac used to be boggledby a seemingly users, what a beautiful box it is. separate digital world locked away Yesterday marked the 23rd anni- in my HP desktop, Macs make versary of Apple's famous launch sense to me. Over the past two commercial, where a sea of futuris- decades, Apple has evolved from a tic drones stare blankly at a screen technological minority group into a of Big Brother's face professing cultural phenomenon. his apocalyptic manifesto. That is Don't argue. We've become an until a sexed up woman iPod nation, and Apple isn't hurls a sledgehammer going to let you forget it. through the air and the "We started out to get corporate slogan scrolls a computer in the hands onto the screen: of everyday people," Steve "On January24th, r Jobs told Time Magazine, Apple Computer will "and we succeeded beyond introduce the Macin- our wildest dreams." tosh. And you'll see Mac has gradually why 1984 won't be like CAROLINE taken hold of the highly '1984."' HARTMANN coveted technology mar- The irony of a mass- ket, and for true blooded produced commodity representing followers, that isn't changing any- individualistic expression is too time soon. From computers and rich to ignore. Hidden beneath music players, to webcams and cell layers of artful advertisingApple phones, Apple has become the Stan- pressures its pliable audience into dard oil of the new millennium. believing that technological inno- They're almost as bad as Comcast, vation is paramount. Remember who single-handedly control the those ingenious "Think different" country's phone service, cable ads that paved the way? Creative television and high-speed internet. visionaries - Jim Henson, Picasso Television is one of the few forms and Ghandi among them - became of media that Apple hasn't nabbed more than just profitable endorse- from Sony or Samsung, but iTunes ments, they were Information-Age happily fills in the gap with current icons. I can vividly recall the maga- shows on sale for download. zine tear sheets taped to my sister's Jobs, Apple co-founder and CEO, bedroom wall for inspiration. once said he "wants to put a ding in And really, who's going to say no the universe." Jobs has been fired to Ghandi? once and charged with multiple Apple might appear innocent, lawsuits, but thathasn't stopped but don't be fooled by its welcoming him from making a lasting impact faade. Their trendy ad campaigns - not to mention billions of dol- and stylish logos are essentially lars. And the ding isn't a small one making a mockery of free-market either. More like a massive crater capitalism. Since its establish- formed by an asteroid speeding ment, the company draws clear and toward Earth, "Armageddon"-style. simple boundaries for us to follow: But Apple's runaway success There are Mac users, and then hasn't left much damage in its there's everyone else, stuffed into a wake, save our delicate egos that junk drawer awaiting conversion, feel diminished every time we enter OK, maybe that's a bit harsh, one of those annoyingly contempo- but my love-hate relationship with Apple extends both ways. There are few sounds more comforting than Not just a laptop, the gentle restart of my iBook G4,a and I'd be lost without a dashboard but a full-blown to fill me in on weather updates and song lyrics. Now might be a lifestyle. good time to tell you that I'm a full- fledged, born-again Apple junkie. That's right, a native PC user sucked into the black - or should I rary stores. I'm sorry, but anyone say white? - hole of Steve Jobs and who names their customer service the Macintosh empire. desk the "Genius Bar" deserves No, I'm not obsessed with tobe shot. The company is on a GarageBand, and I don't know how mas- media power trip, and why to transform my rough home videos wouldn't it be? That cute apple into cinematic masterpieces, but my logo has been branded on our own heart throbs at the mere mention of internal hard drives, and it's easy innovative design work. If nothing to adopt the air of pretension that else, Apple has provided the con- comes standard with the fashion- sumer with technology that isn't able machines. coated in a thick, depressing layer It's hard to say whether Apple of chrome. Compared to other cum- would still defend its original bersome machines on the market, commercial debut if pressed for Apple's seamless and understated the truth. Call me paranoid, but I look is undeniably enticing. Conve- wouldn't be surprised if 20 years nient ergonomics, elegant icons and from now will find miniature iSight a user-friendly interface are just the video cameras installed in our fam- beginning. ily rooms so that Apple - the capi- I've heard from PC enthusiasts talist dictator of the future - can that Macs are impossible to figure track our every move. out, counter-intuitive and down- right irritating. The basic formula - Hartmann, infact, watches is simple: PCs are for engineers your every move. E-mail her and accountants and Macs are for at carlineh@umich.edu. Vs it -Usat WintrfeR[ . aEpi b The good, the bad and the not quite By MATT EMERY Daily Arts Writer Damon Albarn is a side-project dynamo. Though he was surrounded by talent with Blur, the group was very much his brainchild. Almost more notable these days for leading the rock/rap group The Good, Gorillaz, Albarn has again The Bad & stepped outside of his com- The Queen fort zone with The Good, The Good, The The Bad & The Queen. Bad & The Queen From Blur's Brit-pop and Virgin occasional grunge feel and Gorillaz's tight orchestral movements mashed together with overproduced background noise and rapping, Albarn has moved on to a more downtrodden and melancholy sound. The problem with being involved in so many side projects is that, inevitably, there's going to be a stinker. This puts The Good, The Bad & The Queen at a disadvantage from the start if every track is meticulously examined by an Albarn fan with a Gorillaz and Blur filter. Then again, to call The Good, The Bad & The Queen a mere side- project would be the equivalent of calling The Arctic Monkeys the best group out of England. This band is a fucking supergroup. Along with the inexhaustible Albarn, the band is comprised of The Verves' guitarist Simon Tong, former Clash bassist Paul Simonon and legendary afro- beat drummer Tony Allen. If that line-up weren't enough, Albarn also enlists the help of Danger Mouse, one half of Gnarls Barkley and the pro- ducer of Gorillaz's last effort Demon Days, to oversee production. For the side projects of Damon Albarn, the third time's not the charm. So The Good, The Bad & The Queen is its own entity, but many of their songs bear resemblance to those other projects of Albarn's. No track stands out from the rest - a song like "Northern Whale" begs for Del tha Funkee Homosapien's vocals, but instead is dull and lifeless as Albarn rambles alongside a subparcomputerized beat. The downfalls in The Good, The Bad t The Queen come not in what is produced, but rather in what isn't created. Having the talented Tony Allen go underused on such a large scale is frus- trating. "History Song"unfairly tricks the listener into thinking that Tony Allen's afrobeat influ- ence will be evident on the album - this is not the case. The track starts with a quick, finger-pick- ing acoustic guitar interlude met with Albarn's strained and downright depressing vocals as he screeches, "Shiver'cross /The estuary/Sunday's lost / In melancholy." The song ends with tribal- like chanting coupled with Allen's African drums beat before heading into a chaotic mess of reverb and crashing instruments. The ghost of Blur may sometimes loom large, such as in the album's closing track, when it's impossible not to expect a blistering guitar solo out of Graham Coxon. But it's ultimately Tong who strangleholds the guitar section while Albarn's ferocious, quickening piano riffs hold down the song's seven min- utes. Standing on its own without the comparisons to Blur and the Goril- laz, The Good, The Bad & The Queen would be a fine album with a lot of prom- ise for future recordings. 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