The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Wednesday, November 21, 2007 - 5A MUSIC COLUMN Bob Marley: More than a poster and a spliff B ob Marley is probably the most famous black person in the world. Why? Because he's dead. There's obviously more to it than that, but the fact that his dreadlocked semblance has now become a symbol standing for something much different thanheactuallyintendedplaces him in the league of appropri- ated heroes, somewhere amid Che Guevara, Marilyn Monroe and John Lennon. When once his music was the rallying cry of the oppressed Jamaicans who saw in him a revo- lutionary who would bring peace to a torn country, it's now the soundtrack to hazy bro- LLOYDIH downs in CARGO just about every insti- tution of higher learning in the world. Because Marley is dead, his image and, more important, his art, is contested space, gaining renewed cultural rel- evance while new fans are simultaneously (and in fair- ness, unwittingly) losing sight W of the context that made him such a luminary in the first place. Sure, it's good for sales of his 12 million-plus-selling greatest-hits albumLegend. But the insistence to transform the icon from a roots radical rocker that the C.I.A. allegedly wanted dead to a nappy-dreaded Dave Matthews is a downright insult to the man and all the good he did for this world, let alone his remarkable music. And if he was alive, he certainly wouldn't stand for it. So, before I substantiate that incendiary claim at the top of this column, let's set the record straight about where Bob Mar- ley came from and what his work meant to the people he loved most. Robert Nesta Mar- ley was born in 1945 in the small Jamaican town of Nine Mile in Saint Ann's Parish. His father was English and white. After he passed away from a heart attack when Bob was 10, the remaining family relocated to Kingston's most notorious slum, Trenchtown, where he earned the nickname "Tuff Gong" defending his mixed race and diminutive height. It was there that he met friends and musicians who would come to be known as Bunny Wailer and Peter Tosh, and, collectively, The Wailers. Success in Jamaica came quick- ly, but that was nothing com- pared with what was to come in 1973. Catch a Fire was the spark that ignited reggae's popular- ity worldwide, piggybacking on Jimmy Cliff's successful turn in The Harder They Come to introduce new, rebellious music. Those rough and tough sounds coming out of Kingston represented a gritty version of urban black authenticity the rest of the world was eager to experience vicariously, but in typical record-industry fash- ion, not before being watered down a bit. The marriage between third- world roots and first-world pop was Island Records executive Chris Blackwell's mission, and his plan to cross Marley over to the masses was ingenious. As Marley's star rose, first in England with "No Woman, No Cry" and then later in America with album Rastaman Vibra- tion, he ignored the trappings of celebrity, instead focusing on peace in the streets that raised him. As tensions rose and vio- lence between rivaling politi- cal parties increased, Marley agreed to record a song, "Smile Jamaica," that would cool down the ghettoes, then perform a concert of the same name two days later. When Prime Minis- * ter Michael Manley heard, he moved up the election and sent armored guards to Marley's house in a transparent attempt to appear to be endorsed by the country's most influential per- son. Marley was incensed, and two days later the guards mys- teriously disappeared, followed minutes later by the arrival of six armed gunmen. Marley's wife Rita was shot in the head, and his manager Don Taylor took five bullets aimed at Mar- ley before the sixth struck the musician in the arm. Resilient, Marley performed for a crowd of 80,000 anyway, before leav- ing Jamaica in self-imposed exile. He spent the next few years as he'd spent much of the last: touring. It's estimated that Bob Marleywas directly responsible for the livelihood of more than 6,000 displaced Jamaicans at his Hope Road residence, and the pressure of economically supporting them kept him on the road despite his diagnoses of cancer. Life on the road took its toll on him, but Marley had one more triumphant return to Jamaica left in him. In 1978 The Wailersareturned to headline the One Love Peace Concert, intended to raise money for the most suffering ghettoes.Duringatranscendent performance of "Jamming," Marley called the country's two rival political leaders onstage, clasped their hands together, lifted them over his head and proclaimed "Love, prosperity be with us all. Jah Rastafari. Selassie I." With the power of his music and devotion, he united a nation. On May 11, 1981, he died. Since then his visage has donned countless tapestries and hemp necklaces. That mega-selling compilation, Leg- end? Released three years after his death. The worst part is the hardestto understand: Douche- bags and Time magazine con- tinue to herald his worst music, the former by blasting his later, more smoothly produced fare and the latter for naming Exo- dus the album of the century. Bizarre doesn't begin to explain Your bong and this man are not a perfect match. that decision; at best, Exodus is Marley's ninth best album. The result: Some people, such as hipsters, tend to dis- miss Marley entirely on the basis that his fans suck. I'm partially guilty - it took me an abnormally long time to come around. Unfortunately, not everyone does, and a lot of the above-mentioned hipsters turn into tastemakers, and thus false impressions become real. Furthermore, a lot of his ethnicity has been stripped from him. Reggae is still gen- erally filed under the vague "world music" label, a cat- egory that Marley himself is largely responsible for creating. Worse, the urgency has also been stripped from his music. The image of Bob Marley in our world now is one of ganja and peace, love and acoustic guitar jamswithyourbestbros.Where is the blood and suffering? The cries for burnin' and lootin' or revolution for all men? Because Robert Nesta Marley is no longer with us, his name and image are entrusted to us to protect and his message to spread. So put down the bong, put on Catch A Fire and figure out how you're going to make a difference in the world. - Cargo is still wondering where all the blood and suffering is. E-mail him with tips at lhcargo@umich.edu. Filmmaker Todd Haynes is confident in his choice to have six actors portray Bob Dylan in his biopic "I'm Not There," which opens tonight at The Michigan Theater. The Dylan of his eye n 2000, when writer-direc- tor Todd Haynes ("Far From Heaven") approached Jeff Rosen, Bob Dylan's manager, about the prospect of makinga film on the unparalleled musician, he had every reason to believe Dylan would flat out say no. Dylan had notoriously shunned filmmakers from taking on his legacy, and for Haynes, his subject's approval was crucial. "I wouldn'thave even considered going forward with the concept if I wasn't gonna get music rights from Dylan," Haynes said in a telephone interview. But much to Haynes's surprise, Dylan agreed, and eight years later, the director's vision has finally come to fruition with "I'm Not There." The film, which opens tonight at The Michigan Theater, is no ordinary biopic. It tackles Dylan's different personas through six separate roles played by a variety of actors, among them Marcus Carl Franklin ("Lackawanna Blues"), a young black boy, and Cate Blanch- ett. "People can think it's gimmicky, and then they have to go see the movie," Haynes said. "From what I continue to hear from people who see the film is that that just disappears and you, and it sud- denly makes complete sense that a woman would be playing Dylan in 1966." Still, even after he allowed Haynes to secure the rights to his be as "risky" as his subject. In striving to succeed, he was forced to recognize the contrasting cultural states of Dylan's era and the present day. "The amazing thing is just that he had a kind of culture in the 1960s of audiences that kind of wanted to have their minds blown all the time," he said. Though that wouldn't necessarily be the most apt description of today's viewers, he said he didn't want to short- change them of the "unique results of that time." Haynes said that every time someone makes a movie, not to mention one as complex and high profile as "I'm Not There," "you kind of feel you're naked again and you're kind of figuring it all out from scratch, as if you never had done it before." But he refused to allow that vulnerability to threaten him on "I'm Not There." "I made a pact with myself that I was going to allow it tobe complex and allow it to be combustive and exciting," he said. "Like the music and like the period, I also wanted it to be fun and full of emotions and desires." Haynes said he made the movie he intended to make, but he isn't sure if it would be a movie that befits a contemporary audience. "I didn't really know how today's world - which is very different from the '60s - would respond to it." "So far," he said, "I've been kind of blown away." How Todd Haynes made the first real Dylan biopic By Noah Dean Stahl Daily Arts Writer music, Dylan remained at bay from the production. "Dylan himself has pretty much been being Dylan," Haynes said, "doing his own thing." Haynes said his goals for "I'm Not There" were "high and mighty." "I had this, this, this unbelievabfy famous, beloved artist, popular American artist, and his massive, beguiling, rich and varied body of work, you know, to put into a movie for the first time." Haynes said his concentration was fueled and inspired by Dylan's work. "I really took my cue from the adventures that Dylan himself, um, uh, embarked on in popular music," Haynes said. He said he wanted to Second installment drowned by lyrics By BRIAN HAAGSMAN Daily Arts Writer There are the "Indiana Jones" and "Star Wars" trilogies - but a Saves the Day trilogy? With Under the Boards, Saves the Day releases the middle piece of its self-described trilogy that start- ed with last year's Sound the Alarm and will be com- SaVeS the pleted with next year's Daybreak. Day But what makes Underthe this trilogy espe- Boards cially remarkable Vagrant when compared to the band's other work is unclear. The New Jersey quartet keeps its basic formula: dismal lyrics on top ofeffervescent pop punk. And Chris Conley's words are seriously dismal. Not even 30 seconds into the album, vocalist Conley sings "Iwanna crawl under the ground and not come out / For 37 years when my life runs out / The demon in my mouth that spits words out / Made everybody hate me make me kill myself." It accurately sets the tone for the rest of the record. With only a few exceptions, Conley's words shift between roundabout metaphors for loneliness and desperate pleas. On "Getaway," he cries, "I don't wanna live another day... The pain won't let me get away." He avoids the graphic descriptions of destroying his body that colored most of the songs on Sound the Alarm, and even tones down his trademark violent fanta- sies about dismembering enemies. The only instance is on "When I'm Not There": "Cause I loveto wonder how you'll look without your teeth." Unfortunately, what Conley also leaves out is a compelling storyline and other characters that could make the trilogy cohesive. Instead the depression grows until the finale "Turning Over in My Tomb," which features him - you guessed it - turning over in his tomb and still reporting on the desperation of himself and everyone else. Even Conley's voice has gotten whinier. Whereas pre-Sound the Alarm his croon was vulnerable and clear, the words now are often spit out through a nasally yelp that sounds as if he's being punched in the stomach when he stretches a note. The band is also pulled between the simple pop punk of its past and a larger, richer sound. This holds true even on tracks like "When I'm Not There," which begins with a swell of airy guitars and noise before the band dissolves into the surging drums, jangly bass and palm-muted guitar. The song alternates between He might look good on stage, but his lyrics are another story. bouncy of layer Thro as if the A fiddling Fortuna ditchin up and mer Du amusement and explosions the changes with the perfect fills. ed sound. While slower than Sound the Alarm ughout the album, it sounds overall, Lang keeps the energy up in members are enamored with two-minute anthems like "Because You Are No Other" and creates ten- sion in the poppy piano-lead "Lone- ly Nights." paves the Day A bit gloomier and more experi- mentalthanothers, Under theBoards power-pop is still undeniably a Saves the Day record, and as such, it's really not trilogy? disappointing. Where the lyrics fail iu l(and they fail hard), the new musi- Serious y? cal directions pad it, and the mood varies enough to keep it engaging. But considered as a chapter of the greater trilogy, it fails to find a cap- with their pedal boards. tivatingnarrative. The endingtothe ately, they change it up by trilogy may rely on Daybreak, but g them to let loose and pogo it won't be able to undo the dam- down. Meanwhile, drum- age done on the lyrics of Under the arijah Lang naturally meets Boards. THINK YOU CAN HANDLE A COLUMN? 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