TOPlORVIDEOGA GE2B DAILY SPORTS GETS DOWN PAGE 2B. PURPLE PARROTS?NO. SHOWS WE MISS PAGE 4B. B THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1,2007 Finding salvation in music ately I've been struggling with a spirituality crisis I've had all my life. Here I am, a self-loathing WASP who was raised in churches, but is embarrassed by Christianity - and yet black gospel sends chills up my spine. I can't recite the Lord's Prayer at Christmas without a twinge of guilt, yet the Soul Stirrers' "He'll Welcome Me" LLOYD H. stirs up feelings CARGO of ecstasy. I'm skeptical about Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, but the gospels of Sam, Stevie, Donny and Marvin speak to my soul as only soul music can. Maybe I've already lost you; why should you care? Well, have you ever thought about the role of music in your life? Have you been touched by a song or sought salva- tion in an album? I was reborn the first time I listened to Sam Cooke. He comes from a strong gospel background, a soul pioneer by way of crossing over to popular music by changing the meaning but keeping the feel- ing. That feeling is the same feeling thatwe grasp at every day of our lives: love. In Arthur Maslow's 1943 paper "A Theory of Human Motivation," he describes a hierarchy of needs, represented by a pyramid. Basi- cally, the idea is that once humans meet "basic needs," they're driven to examine "higher needs." At the base of the pyramid are physiologi- cal needs (breathing, food, water, sex, sleep, excretion) and safety needs (shelter, resources, property, employment) that are the basic cri- teria for simply staying alive. After those needs are satisfied, the next most important tier is love/belong- ing. The idea is that before you can even get to worrying about your self-esteem or self-actualization, you need love. Sexual intimacy, friends and family all come before morality, creativity, respect and confidence. Soul searching is done only after the depths of the heart have been plumbed. Music hits you at that primal level. It's nut more imporrn than survival, but when it's done right music can provide that sense of belonging we crave - it can take away pain, it can inspire, motivate and ease stress and tension. For a long time music has been used as a means to transcend worldly suf- fering. Religion has used music as the most direct line of communication to a higher force since its founda- tion. At the basis of it is underlying beat. These days it seems like the groove is fading a bit - the music industry is sanitized of emotion, let alone grit. Even in a nation ruled by conservatism, spirituality scares people - and as a result the mes- sage has gone from love to fear. The focus is outward, as if examining your problems on any deeper level is frightening. It's tremendously sad and indicative of our current generation that blues is dead and its spirit is masquerading in a bastard form called emo. Musicians will tell you nothing is better than the feeling you're chan- neling music from a higher place. The beautiful thing is we're all capable of it with a little hard work and an open mind. It's not easy, but fortunately we've been blessed with a handful of prophets did us the favor of recording their moments of transcendence. You can't tell me that there wasn't something greater than man speaking through Sam Cooke or Stevie Wonder's voice or See CARGO, page 4B .LIST Feb. 1 to 4 The Daily Arts guide to the best upcom- ing events it's everywhere you should be this week and why. BOY-NA, hat do you remember from childhood? Innocence and personal discovery, wide- eyed imagination and idealism - all those things, of course, along with video games, TV shows and comic strips. You don't sit around with your friends discussing the magic of childhood. No, you talk about the best Nintendo games, where to get a piece of the Aggro Crag, etc. That's the magic. We grew up with this, the dreck and the gold. It's what defines our genera- tion. We don't have phonographs, Bob Barker an"The Price is Rig " we hav 5, Olmec and " ends of the den Tem ple." This week's B-side f ips through our back pages, reminiscing over the shows, games and songs that filled our child- hood days with joy. -Andrew Saraus Klein 'It's a magical world' The enduring quality of Bill Watterson's 'Calvin and Hobbes' ByANDREWSARGUSKLEIN ManagingArts Editor Scene: A mother yells from off screen "Who made this mess in here?!" Your average blond-haired, white-bread kid jumps in surprise. "It wasn't me, Mom! It was ... uh ... it was ... " Here you could fill in a superfluous and boring joke. Kids are cute, right? They say the darndest things to get out of trouble. "It was a horrible little Venusian who materialized in the kitchen! He took out some diabolical high-frequency device, pointed it at various objects and..." Where did that come from? What the hell is a Venusian? Thank God for Wikipedia - a Venusian is an inhabitant of Venus. The mother didn't buy it, and so our clever protagonist is sent off to his room where he laments, "Mothers are the necessity of invention." Doesn't sound like an epi- sode of "Leave it to Beaver" or "Pete and Pete," does it? Our protagonist is Calvin from Bill Watterson's iconic comic strip "Calvin and Hobbes," and this scene is but one of countless others that demonstrate the ingenuity, sarcasm and wit that makes "Calvin and Hobbes" so important to our generation. He's our Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer, our Dennis the Menace. And he has an unbelievable vocabulary. Watterson's "Calvin and Hobbes" took the American comic strip and transformed it into a vehicle for humor and intelligence. We know the very medium of a comic strip is meant for kids - think "The Family Circus" and "Zits." Strips such as "Non Sequitur," "Doonesbury," "Get Fuzzy" and "Pearls Before Swine" are kids' flick. This "mature" other examples of hyper-liter- humor is meant specifically ate comic humor (sometimes for the adults. It flies right over with an absurd edge), but no the unassumingheads of unas- strip has been able to bridge suming children. the generational gap as well as When did we stop giv- "Calvin and Hobbes." ing our youngest generations Look at it this way: Movies credit for being intelligent? like "Shrek" and "The Incred- "Calvin and Hobbes" is based ibles" are solid examples of on the unfailing assumption films that, while intended to that children have a limitless pull in the youngest of movie imagination. Monsters under crowds, nonetheless incorpo- the bed, alternate personali- rate "mature" humor obviously ties, transmogrifier machines meant for Mom and Dad, who - the list stretches on. Cal- would otherwise be trying vin's world is based solely in their patience sitting through See CALVIN, e 4B yet another inane animated , pag ON STAGE The University Dance Company will bring together choreography by Martha Graham, guest artist Leyya Tawil and School of Music, Theatre and Dance faculty this weekend with "Rituals & Reveries." The eveningwill include Graham's 1931 work "Primi- tive Mysteries" and more. It will take place at the Power Center, tonight at 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. Buy tickets at www.music.umich.edu. AT THE PG All the way from Glasgow, Scot- land, indie-pop outfit Camera Obscu- ra will make a stop in Ann Arbor tonight. The band, which formed in 1996, first released their music in the United States on the Merge label in 2004. This marks their second tour in the States. Look for an interview in Friday's paper. You can hear them at The Blind Pig with opener The Essex Green. Doors at 9:30 p.m. $12 cover for those 18 and up. N CONCERT Spice up your night and start the weekend off right. The Big 3 Palla- dium Orchestra will bring its horns and Latin rhythms to Hill Audito- rium tonight. Conducted by Jose Madera, the group includes the sons of Latin Greats Tito Puente and Tito Rodriguez, who performed at New York's Palladium Ballroom in the 1950s and early '60s. Tickets are $10 to $60 and are available at the Mich- igan League Ticket Office. AT THE MIC Need a Friday-night date idea? Try "Citizen Improv" at Improv Inferno. During this show, an audi- ence member volunteers three impromptu - monologues that range from personal anecdotes to thoughts on the news. The inferno comics then improvise a series of scenes based on the monologues. The show happens every Friday at Live atPJ's, 102 South First St. Tick- ets are $10. 4