5A - Wednesday, September 5, 2007 Bring on the party Ann Arbor will neverbe Brick Lane or Sunset, Lan Kwai Fong or the Meatpacking District. Our bars will not rival those on the Bund in Shanghai. And our liberal arts-loving, Big House- packing American university - as a now New York-based alum tells me - is too big for bold-faced names d is Page Six. But that doesn't mean we don't know how to throw killer parties. Or enjoy them. Case in point, what to do when a super vigi- KIUUBERy lant police force CHOU collides with overeager under- classmen, resulting in the best par- ties getting rolled by the witching hour? Get wet. In the inflatable kid- die pool on the front lawn of your favorite South Campus haunt - on a Wednesday at 3 a.m. Even bet- It's time to bring your weekend gems into the light. ter when the one passerby you and your friends manage to snag turns out to be a U of M swim team mem- ber intercepted on his way to a late- night pizza. Or maybe you were harshly accused of stealing a stranger's "Teal Beach Cruiser" at a random house party - if you have any idea what that is. Whatever happens, we want to know about it. Welcome to High Society. We're here to be your Gawker, Names & Faces, CitySeen and Ivy Gate, too - minus updates on new secret soci- ety inductees. Well, maybe. Tell us your stories. It's the best four years of your life, after all. Someone has to document it. - Chou is as psyched about this as you are. E-mail her your greatest party moments at kimberch@umich. edu. Please, no libelous material. The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com that defined 'Quality' Dailv Arts Writer n 2002, a young Brooklyn MC broke out with a flow that made heads bob and provoked listeners on a new level. But Talib Kweli couldn't match his remarkable debut, Quality, and got ahead of himself on his sophomore effort The Beautiful Struggle. With a disappointed **** public and no immedi- ate follow-up, his cry Talib Kweli for a revolution was left unanswered. But in Eardrum his time away from the Blacksmith charts, Kweli made a killing on the mixtape circuit, took control of the underground rap scene in New York and started his own label, Blacksmith. Now Kweli returns as the fine-tuned and mature lyricist stand- ing amongst the speakers on the cover of Eardrum. Talib Kweli has grown in a way that Jay-Z couldn't have if Hova made three more "post-retirement" albums. Eardrum offers a bullet-proof cast of producers, a dedicated list of collaborating artists and a style that grabs socially conscious hip hop firmly by the reigns. Eardrum essentially picks up where Quality left off. The album blends gospel vocals, R&B swoons, amusing pop motifs and the unsung voice of the streets to engage listeners. What's most impressive is the astute confidence he exudes with every line, refusing to be underestimated: "I believe / Scratch that I know / This ain't my full potential / Only using 10 percent of my mental on instrumentals." The album starts with "Everything Man," opening with the spoken word poetry of prolific African-American poet Sonia Sanchez over bongos and an emerg- ing bass beat. The smooth train of words reverberates with Sanchez's audible emotion, as she tries to recall the first time hearing Kweli. Following the unan- swerable question of "What happens to a dream deferred?", Kweli hints that the rhythmic heartbeat in the background is actually his own. The track ends with devoted fans looking back on their own experiences of hearing the Brooklyn Blacksmith for the first time. Though slightly narcissistic, it's endearing to hear the testimonials to justify his pride. Kweli has always been skilled at lay- ing his mack down for the ladies, like on previous tracks "Waiting For The DJ" and "Won't You Stay." The best example on this album is will.i.am's pop creation "HotThing," where Kweli serenades with "Ya body like a flick / It got surprisin' twists /I write the script /the main char- acter - your thighs and hips." But even better is the way he's able to speak on a deeper level out of respect for women, contrasting the typical Neanderthal pick- ups at the bar in "Soon The New Day." In clear, unbiased thought he says, "The clan of the cavebear / Used to use the club to hit and drag her by the hair / Still use the club to get her a martini or a beer / Try to get her home and put the smell of sex in the air." There are plenty of unorthodox guest appearances on Eardrum - Norah Jones, Roy Ayers, Sizzla - but the most sur- prising is Port Arthur, Tx., natives UGK on "Country Cousins." Adding onto the trend of Dirty South spitters teaming up with East Coast lyric-smiths, Pimp C and Bun B both mesh easily with Kweli on the big band style melody of wailing trumpets. The song is as catchy as it is rel- evant, with all three contributors paying homage to the common differences and greater similarities of the music scene from the north, south, east and west as it grew from artist to artist. Even with his progress, Kweli still stumbles on some tracks and goes too far trying to get his message across. In "Eat To Live" he starts by painting a flawless portraitof a child living in deplorable con- ditions, saying, "Nothin' in the freezer, nothin' in the fridge / Couple of 40 ounces but nothin' for the kids / Little man know to eat to live but he don't wanna leave the crib / The kid who punched him in his face house right down the street from his." But in the following verse Kweli completely breaks off into random asides, including watching out for ravenous crit- ics and the destructive media, mad cow disease, pork in toothpaste and people starving in Africa - where is the focus? No one said he was perfect, but Kweli's definitely getting closer and has finally reached the upper echelon of lyricists. Despite the success of his previous col- laborative works, Black Star and Reflec- tion, he's able to stand as an established solo artist and deliver something mag- nificent. No 'End,' but plenty to say By JEFFREY BLOOMER ManagingEditor "No End in Sight" begins, as many indict- ments of the United States' Iraq policy do, with a simple, plain-faced shot of a Bush Administration official discussing Iraq and the American military occupation there. The belief behind this device is typically that the official's words, in this case those of Donald Rumsfeld, the former secretary of defense, will be so totally wrong-headed that they speak for themselves. ***' n Nothere. When Rums- feld, referring to the war No End in Iraq, asserts that "it is not well known; it is not well understood; it At the is complex for people Michigan to comprehend," it isn't to trap him in his own Theater wordsintheconventional Magnolia sense. First-time director Charles Ferguson (who also wrote and produced) somberly agrees with him, and though the thesis of "No End in Sight" - that whatever its intentions, the Bush Administration has consistently failed to include qualified minds in its post- occupation Iraq policy - is not new, it's streamlined here in a coolly comprehen- sive way that seeks not only to anger the audience but more pointedly to sadden it. Unlike many Iraq documentaries, this isn't necessarily a call to action so much as an attempt to make clear how exactly we got where we are, and as the film's title implies, it doesn't see much hope for the future. Told in a series of blunt chapters with titles like "The Void" and "Choas," the film begins and spends most of its time in 2003, in the early months of the war where it finds the initial failures that dovetailed and helped create the Iraq of today. It focuses in particular on the Bush Administration's failure after the fall of Saddam Hussein FEARTS NOTEBOOK A different kind of season for art FMAGNOLIA If you had millions of dollars, wouldn't you make an anti-war doe' The film inspires not necessarily anger but sadness. to combat looting, which gutted the Iraqi economy as well as cultural centers, and the decision to disband the Iraqi military, which puzzles and infuriates Ferguson more than any other single disaster of the U.S's Iraq policy. He sees inexplicable inconsistencies in the decision, which left hundreds of thou- sands Iraqis unemployed and vulnerable to a brewing insurgency discontent with the continuing American occupation. The value of Ferguson's film is its effi- ciency and the palatable scope of its rhe- torical ambition. It makes simple sense of. the occupation's failures through a series of interviews with many since-departed gov- ernment officials in power in the early days of the invasion, including a former deputy secretary of defense under Rumsfeld, spliced together with simple charts and fig- ures that illustrate their arguments. There are several interludes with an intense score by Peter Nashel ("Bee Season") that recall Errol Morris, and the film's cumulative effect is a general sense of retrospective astonishment and unease. Most Ameri- can Iraq documentaries employ a certain conceit to that end - the point of view of soldiers on the ground is a recurrent focus - but this is the perspective simply of a bewildered observer who can't believe what has happened in Iraq. That befits Ferguson, whose biography has in many cases trumped the press his film has received. A self-described sym- pathizer with the original invasion, he's a writer, a political scientist and, perhaps most unlikely, a software-based million- aire, and he came to write, produce and direct this film after a conversation with a friend over dinner. (The movie has since gone on the win a special jury prize for doe- umentaries at the Sundance Film Festival.) Ferguson's path to this material, though unexpected, is clearly reflected in its sim- ple rhetorical sensibility. The information is public, the future is stormy, and "No End in Sight" is the disturbing product of just how far awry this invasion went from its very first days. By ABIGAIL B. COLODNER FineArts Editor Leisure time is a beautiful con- cept. Summer tends to be the sea- son when precious free time finally makes an appearance in a big way. Business is done, (brief)case closed. With the weather finally cooperat- ing, the world outside people's tra- ditional stomping grounds - the office, the favorite coffee shop, the apartment - is open for exploration. Most places thrive on the increased foot traffic of vacation- ers looking for novel and attractive sights. Public parks and street cor- ners come to life with people blink- ing in the bright light, still adjusting to longer days. Though class has begun and summer is ebbing into Fall, Ann Arbor is still enjoying the rapture of free days. The days where weird fountains, parades, impromptu bands, plein air painters, earthworks and other unlikely types of artistic expression emerge - in the sudden safe zone of a town enraptured by warm eve- nings. Summer art often has the appeal- ing quality of being free. When a city erects sculptures in a public park or closes a side street for a car show, nothing is demanded of the casual observer but attention, and that's only suggested. But the opportunity to capitalize on swarms of people who have shed their usual business and opened their minds and wallets is also golden. The art that becomes more prevalent during the summer often plays on this general willing- ness, monetary and otherwise. With public art, the more casual summer setting means it becomes something you can touch or take photos next to or walk through. When the difference between the viewer and the owner (ina museum, for example) is no longer reiterated by the hushed atmosphere of a gal- lery, the public can gain a sense of ownership toward works that let the viewer explore them in a relaxed setting. People have the opportunity to get up close and personal with something priceless. A current exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, a major attraction for tourists, shows the monumental works of the American artist Richard Serra. His enormous sculptures formed from beautifully oxidized sheet metal are the bulk of the exhibit. Visitors make their Art, like certain molds, needs plenty of sunlight and foot traffic. way slowly through the nautilus-like walls of iridescent metal. The two Serras in MoMA's outdoor sculpture garden were surrounded all summer by people wandering to find the best photo angle - another perk of the outdoor sculptures being on exhibit during the warm weather months - in addition to the incredible acci- dental views of skyscrapers through the sculptures' walls. No summer visitor is likely to buy a Serra on a whim, but local artists and artisans give eager vacationers ample opportunity to get permanent ownership of artworks more within their range. In the past four months, Ann Arbor has had its share of summer- specific art events. Be it the book fair in May or the infamously overrun Art Fair in July, the city taps into See LEISURE, Page 11