The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, February 5, 2007 - 5A Little life down the 'Bloc' By BRIAN CHEN Daily Arts Writer Bloc Party is not a complex band. Its debut, Silent Alarm, was an exceptionally unoriginal work of post-punk rock with few unnecessary frills. It was also one of 2005's best albums, evidence that Sim- Bloc Party plicity, technical skill and keen melodic prowess can A Weekend sometimes be more power- intheCity ful than innovation. Vice Now, two years later, the British four-piece has returned with its sopho- more effort,A Weekend in the City. Conceptually, it delves into darker territory, musing on life in London in the 21st century. The album draws on such themes as the 2005 London bombings, homosexuality and youth subculture. The band retains its trademark angular son- ics, yet the edges have been dulled by the som- ber conceptual content. The kinetics that made SilentAlarm such a fun dance machine have since become sluggish, in part because of the thematic despondency. Immediately, album opener "Song For Clay UM Dance presents dose of avant-garde Courtesy of V You can't blame Bloc Party for going at it a little different on A Weekend in the City - at least they're trying. (Disappear Here)" marks an obvious deviation from the band's previous style. Kele Okereke's guttural shouts and moans are replacedby maud- lin croons, accompanied only by Russell Lissack gently strumming his guitar. The song is unchar- acteristically lackadaisical, suspended in space until the snare forces its way in and lays down a marchingrhythm. Meanwhile, the band experiments by add- ing questionable flourishes to its style. U.K. lead single "The Prayer," supposedly inspired by Busta Rhymes's "Touch It," features stuttering bass thumps and tribal humming (not unlike a Timbaland production or even a TV on the Radio record). Yet other than its chorus, the song fails to stir up any excitement above the incessant vocal buzzing. Nonetheless, Bloc Party's experimenta- tion occasionally succeeds, as in "Hunting for Witches." The track begins with a Steve Reich- like hodgepodge of chaotic sound bites played repetitively. The pandemonium forms the base on which the drums establish a dizzyingly syn- copated and rhythmic sound. From there, the song soars. But the moments at which Bloc Party excels - their energetic hooks with loud, spiky guitars, breakneck virtuosic drums and propulsive bass lines - are conspicuously few and far between. The talent is still here (especially in drummer Matt Tong, whose skills are as impressive as ever), but it remains largely dormant under the grim songwriting. What's most frustrating is that Bloc Party is one of those bands that really doesn't need to deviate from the sound they perfected. Their debut was in many ways the prototypical post- punk record, a smartly constructed album built upon the band's innumerable influences and obvious talent. Instead of trying to eclipse their celebrated debut, Bloc Party decided to create a more sub- dued work. The result is a faulty album of tedium, melancholy and, ultimately, boredom - a disap- pointing follow-up for a band that had seemingly limitless potential. By PRIYA BALI Daily Arts Writer This was not a performance of tutu-clad dancers in neatly stag- gered lines. Instead of set- Rituals and tling for famil- Reveries iar aesthetics, the dancers Friday and and choreog- Saturday raphers fea- At the Power tured in the Center University Dance Depart- ment's "Rituals and Reveries" delved deeper into the intricate business of storytelling through dance, making for impressively distinct and bold performances. A company of more than 60 dancers took on six ambitious pieces. The first of these was cho- reographed in 1931 by the legend- ary Martha Graham. A three-part piece evoking the American South- west, "Primitive Mysteries" fea- tured a dozen women dancing with extreme precision and sustained tension around Dance junior Lind- say Kline, beautifully costumed in stark white. The piece was not concerned with overtly showcas- ing the dancers' skills, but rather with bringing to life the story of the Madonna's coming-of-age and ascent to heaven. Talk about eso- teric symbolism. While audience members unfa- miliar with Graham's avant-garde choreography probably found "Primitive Mysteries" somewhat inaccessible, Graham's innovative technique and lasting impact on modern dance cannot be under- stated. The students actually learned the choreography through Martha Graham Dance Company principal dancer Diane Gray. After the Martha Graham piece, the show's pace picked up consid- erably. Dance Prof Robin Wilson's piece "Blank Spaces" used dream- like lighting and projected images and videos to delve into the pain- ful state of memory loss. Dancers teetered on the edge of carefully constructed light pools, grasping toward the darkness and yelling numbers out of order to further convey the jumbled state of mental deterioration. Live music - flute, clarinet and an eerily manipulated piano - drove the piece. Metal parts had been attached to the pia- no's strings, reverberating as the keys were pressed with the kind of sound usually achieved through a synthesizer. The highlight of the show was easily Peter Sparling's 1990 piece "Witness," a chilling tribute to men whose lives were taken by AIDS. The piece begins with three breathtakingly talented male danc- ers - one shirtless, one casually dressed and the third wearing a shirt and tie - signifyingthe range of men affected by the disease. A dozen men join them, and the stage is suddenly transformed into A package of six ambitious pieces. a kind of battleground, with men falling into one another, grasping for each other and dragging each other to safety. At the piece's end, the stage is littered with bodies, leaving one man standing alone in ray of light. Sparling's piece is startlingly powerful to say the least, and showcases the brimming talent of the Dance Department's male dancers. The evening's final piece fea- tured dancers in brightly colored raincoats strutting their stuff to an upbeat techno beat. After two hours of symbolism-saturated dance, this fun piece was a wel- come closer. The only negative aspect of the concert was the apparent lack of student attendance. On Saturday night the Power Center was bare- ly half full - an embarrassingly sparse attendance that doesn't cor- relate with the professionalism of the department's performance. MTV mocks reality with rich-kid paradise By MARK SCHULTZ DailyArts Writer A reality show built off the model of MTV's popular "Laguna Beach" must involve sun, beaches *** and rich, stupid people. MTV Maui Fever hits all three in Wednesdays "Maui Fever," Wedn:sday the network's t3 latest glimpse MTV into the life of those privileged few with nothing better to do but complain about their love lives. "Fever" follows seven col- lege kids as they waste their parents' Mandy Moore? We say no. By BLAKE GOBLE DailyArts Writer In her middle age, Diane Keaton ("The Family Stone") has uncan- nily embraced the role of the liberated single female Because I with grace Said So and dignity. In casting the AtQuality16 conventional and Showcase role of wacki- Universal ly overbear- ing mother Daphne Wilder, Keaton makes for a natural choice. She seems to understand the struggle of loneli- ness, taking her emotional frustra- tion out on others. But her influence here isn't much of a help. Outside of moth- ers in the 55-to-65-year-old range with an affinity for cooking and a flair for the melodramatic, few may understand or appreciate a film like "Because I Said So," an exploration of the connection between a mother and her three daughters. Youngest child Milly- money, hook up with each other and lie on the beach. It's not much of a premise, but the real draw of shows like this isn't setting or plot - it's the drama of real-life characters. Well, as real-life as other stock MTV "reality" casts. There's Chaunte, a diminutive blonde, who spends her days manipulating dumb boys. Or, Corbin, the laid-back surfer who plans to continue his lifestyle of casual sex and surf-instructing well into middle age. But "Fever" does make some subtle changes to its genre, particu- larly with its casting. The show's males - unlike their counterparts on "Laguna Beach" - are hilariously awkward and, best of all, not even handsome. Main character Cheyne looks like a young Ron Howard, if Ron Howard were a surfer, and his geeky friend Sean hits on tourists with a pathetic neediness that would shame "Laguna Beach's" Jason Wahler (see season 2). The show benefits a surprising amount from using college-age characters; unlike the immature "Laguna" cast, the "Fever" crew seems to have left its petty grudges and childish drunken antics back in high school. The group is alsonotably,100per- cent Caucasian, an interesting social note considering that whites make up only 38 percent of Maui County. But though this fact has drawn com- plaints from native Maui Hawai- ians, "Fever" defends itself with the reminder that it isn't about mixing people of different backgrounds - it's about the uncomfortable delight of watching seven privileged people make messes of each other's lives.. Another pop-culture escape into triviality, "Fever" reminds us that TV can't always take itself seriously. Some have criticized "Fever," like "Laguna," for scenes and conversa- tions which sometimes seem script- ed, but this is fun of MTV "reality" - its focus is on events so trivial that no sane screenwriter would ever revolve a show around them. OUrseru Why would you want to see Mandy Moore when you could see living dioramas' (Mandy Moore, "How To Deal") has a particularly antagonistic relationship with matriarch Daph- ne, being single, promiscuous and capable of cooking a rad souffl6. As the only remaining bachelorette of the sisters, Milly is also the object of the her dedicated mother's many un-asked-for matchmaking attempts. In other words, Daphne is a meddlesome and obnoxious carica- ture of middle-aged women at their worst. She whsines over the use of the word "cheese" during photos, is resolutely ignorant about new technology and liberally sips wine after spending preparing overly elaborate meals. Daphne even interrupts her daughters' musical performance to correct their tone, only to end up - obviously - in a fight. Really, Daphne's just annoy- ing, rather than an addition to the crop of endearingly neurotic char- acters Keaton has played in films like "Something's Gotta Give" and "Father of the Bride." Her poten- tially smart characterization gets lost in a lazily conceived movie. No convention or exercise in Dry family comedy just bitches and moans. bad taste is too taboo for this film, but director Michael Lehmann ("Heathers"), not Keaton, is to blame. Such feminine subject mat- ter may have been in better hands with the likes of Nancy Meyers or Jane Campion instead of the dude responsible for that flick where Josh Hartnett couldn't dick around for 40 days. This attempt at family comedic drama should have been the business of serious women. America's #1 law school for trial advocacy is in sunny Tampa Bay, Florida. 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