The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, September 14, 2007- 5A T ' , . Tt They may look benign. But just wait till you see them with masks. By CHRIS GAERIG Daily Music Editor Animal Collective's latest, Straw- berry Jam, is somewhat of a behemoth. Not that it carries on unnecessarily or that it's held down by too much going on at once, but it's a massive piece of work five years in the mak- ing. Kind of. Every time the New Animal York troupe releases a Collective new album it's criti- cally hailed as the Strawberry group's best (see the Jam universally slobbering reviews of Sung Tongs Domino and Feels). And to an extent, the praise is warranted. Animal Collective always seems to find new ways of reshaping its jammy, uncontrolled sound wheth- er it be more structure, more noise or more drugs. But with each new album, the band abandons the steps it's taken on the previous record, opting to use only snippets of earlier work instead of grounding the album in previous experiments. Strawberry Jam is different in just that regard: The album plays as the summation of everything Animal Col- lective has done before it. A far cry from multi-instrumentalist/vocalist Panda Bear's plodding, cuddly moniker, Animal Collective's movements on this disc are fluid and slithering, rapid and violent. With the raw power of its early work and semi-controlled songwriting of its later material, Strawberry Jam finds a way to weave in and out of its own self-aware existence, striking at just the right moment with bombastic crescendos before settlingbacking into folky croons and light-hearted compo- sitions. It simultaneously breaks the mold of everything they've done before while feeling remarkably familiar. But what can be expected of a group that's abandoned tradition and reason in its live shows, taking the stage with- out instruments in lieu of sequencers and mics alone? On Strawberry Jam, Animal Collective manages to shake even typical notions of songwrit- ing. The debut single "Fireworks" is a masterpiece of percussive guitars, hazy samples and joyous melodies. On previous releases, the track would've devolved into an ecstatic, druggy folk freestyle, but here it holds its structure and proves there's more to Animal Col- lective songwritingthan a dimebag and strobe lights. Album opener "Peace- bone" acts similarly as it pounds along an electronic daze and tribal beat. The track's bouncing melody gives it a sing- a-long ambiance - something unthink- able on previous Animal Collective releases - until the group breaks into a full-on screamfest. But to say that Animal Collective have gone all standard-songwriting on Strawberry Jam would be a gross misinterpretation. "#1" sounds like a Teletubby's nightmare as the bub- bly, raining keyboards are attacked by random shrieks and incomprehen- sible moans. In the same vein, "Cuckoo Cuckoo" sounds like the guys wrote a delicate piano ballad but brought in hyperactive toddlers to pound along on the drums. The real issue with Strawberry Jam is that for all of its astounding tracks, it still feels restrained. Animal Collec- tive sounds ready pounce but wholly unable to when the opportunity arises. Right when the album should really go for the jugular, it settles into a kind of monotonous complacency.' The group has always banked heavily on loops and repetition and almost always succeeded with them, but on this latest release, they build so much into their songs that when they fall into these lackluster sequences the pause in the album's movement is disappointing rather than intriguing. Still, Strawberry Jam is the product of beautiful evolution. Perfectly blend- ing everything they've done previ- ously, Animal Collective artfully craft their most complete album to date. And though it seems that they have nowhere to go from here, that shouldn't be of concern. They're on top of their game and will no doubt find something new. Feist: you can trust the hype By LLOYD H. CARGO Daily Arts Writer The last time Leslie Feist came to Ann Arbor, her crooningcaptivated a packed Blind Pig. This Saturday night she'll break hearts at a considerably larger venue: The Michigan Theater. This time tickets may be even harder to come by. The talented and gorgeous Feist Canadian chanteuse returns in support of The Reminder, Saturday a breakthrough commercial at 8p.m. success for a woman that used $25/$30 to be best known as "one of (Sold out) the girls from Broken Social Scene." With the support AttMichigan of everyone from your localT er record store clerk to the big- wigs at Starbucks and the ad wizards over at Apple, she's arguably eclipsed her former band in terms of popularity in the indie-rock sphere - she certainly has in terms of mass commercial appeal. None of. the newfound attention heaped upon her has seemed to affect the qualities her fans became enamored with in the first place - a humble, almost quaint songwriting style that's extremely personal but still remarkably accessible. Expect an intimate and engaging show that will make The Michigan Theater seem like a small room. Speaking of, tickets may be sold out for Saturday night, but word is she's playing a semi-secret show earlier in the afternoon at Borders that the store is try- ing to keep quiet. Get there early. Through the lens: Japanese culture By KIRA ROSE For the Daily When you enter UMMA's cur- rent off-site exhibit "Out of the Ordinary/Extraordinary," which runs through Sunday, you might be perplexed by the divergent images that return your gaze. The pho- tographs featured in the exhibit range from half-nude androgy- Out of the nous youths and pregnant Ordinary/ men to young Extraordinary women play- fully mocking Running through Japanese pop- Sunday ular culture At the UMMA Off-Site and silhouetted portraits of art- ists. But as different as the pictures of the 11 contemporary Japanese photographers appear in style and content at first glance, their works have more in common than what meets the eye. Prominent Japanese art curator and cultural critic Mishiko Kasa- hara originally curated the exhibit for the Tokyo Metropolitan Muse- um of Photography. It explores the commonalities of art's role in Japan's society, where the cultural fabric is worn thin by recent moral and social crises. A response to current strains on cultural cohesion that resulted from 1997's stock market crash, increased violence rates and nationalism that some viewed as excessive, Kasahara's assemblage of contemporary Japanese work questions the 'roles of diversity, identity and relationships in mod- ern Japanese society. One of the exhibit's highlights is the work of Sugiura Kunie. In "The Artist Papers," Kunie creates life- sized silhouettes of visual and per- forming artists like Yayoi Kusama and Jasper Johns. While the sil- houetted subjects lack defining characteristics like facial expres- sion, the success of the black- and-white portraits rests on their ability to capture identity. Though the images are two dimensional, they're solid enough to suggest their place in a concrete real- ity. Kunie heightens the viewer's interest by combining four frames in two of her portraits. This diver- sifies the arrangement of images and allows for variations in scale. The story behind Yokomizo Shi- zuka's photographs is undoubtedly UMMA's Off-Site delivers. Again. Above: A still from Sawada Tomokos Right: Okada Hiroko's "Future Plan #2." enticing. For her series "Stranger," Shizuka sent letters to random people titled "Dear Stranger," providing a date and allotting a 10-minute time frame for photo- graphs. If the subject agreed to her terms, he opened the curtains at his home and faced the street on the assigned date. The results of Shizuka's experiment allow the voyeur to break the boundary between public and private. Her subjects stare out ofltheir windows directly at the viewer, offering up their domestic space to the viewer. The minimalism and openness of the work appeals to a broader audience, aided by its portrayal of people not exclusively Japanese. Despite the casual appearance of her subjects (one holds a phone in boxers and a hoodie), the photo- graphs retain a performance qual- ity because, in fact, the scene was staged for the camera. Okada Hiroko's works respond to a prominent Japanese poli- tician's suggestion that women become martyrs to reproduction instead of studying and work- ing. Hiroko's proposed solution to raise Japan's reduced birthrate is somewhat unconventional. The hilarity of her photos rests on effi- ciency: males have babies. Com- bining video and photographs, Hiroko shows pregnant men shop- ping for baby clothes and posing in fertility clinics. The men appear to embrace childbearing, despite the clinic's dirty floor and dilapi- dated curtains. If pregnancy were as easy and joyful as it looks, as Hiroko seems to say with her iron- ic productions, then wouldn't the world be a better place if men were' responsible for it? The artists' diverse works, while motivated by current Japanese culture, are relatable to American audiences because they explore issues that are essentially human rather than definitively Japanese. These studies in selfhood, ste- reotypes and sexuality tease the extraordinary out of the ordinary. Welcomes UM Students and Faculty to a Tailgate on Elbel Field, Saturday, September 15th, 11 a-3p, for the UM vs. Notre Dame game. We want to meet you and invite you to come talk to Googlers, enjoy some food and fun, and get some free stuff!! When: Saturday, September 15th, 1.1a-3p Where: Elbel Field Why: A chance for UM students and faculty and Google to get to know each other better Who: All UM Students and Faculty are welcome to attend. **Please bring your UMIdentification** See you there! Go Blue! Information Meeting Monday, September 17, 6:00 PM Michigan Union, Anderson D Room for more information visit our website www.peacecorps.gov or call 800.424.8580