The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, December 11, 2007 - 5 The, Eden of multiplaTer TV time to brush up on bio Success through better song choice and an epic multiplayer platform By MICHAEL PASSMAN Daily TV/New Media Editor You might want to take a seat. Ready? OK - don't say I didn't warn you. EA's "Rock Band" is the greatest multiplayer video game of all time. There, I said it. Rock Band Just mention- Xbox 360 ing classics like "GoldenEye 007," EA "Mario Kart 64," "Halo"and "Super Smash Bros." will generate mildly embarrassing, nostalgia-enhanced responses from loyal players, but "Rock Band" is a beast on a different level. It's "Guitar Hero" times four - literally - and it's one of the most entertaining gaming experiences I've ever had. At its most basic level, "Rock Band" is "Guitar Hero" plus drums, vocals, bass and a superior track list. For instrumental simulation, colored rectangles flow down from the top of the screen and players hit the corre- sponding buttons to "play" the music. Vocals are more or less karaoke, with lyrics scrolling across the top of the screen and players matching their pitch to a moving horizontal line. But to judge "Rock Band" as merely a sum of its parts would be a mistake. Played alone, each instrument offers an experience comparable to "Guitar Hero," but when combined to create a fake four-piece band, the game enters a new realm of co-op playability. All players are equally involved, and unlike "Mario Kart" and "Golden- Eye," everyone is working toward a common goal: rocking the fuck out. Maybe you'd be better off learn- ing a real instrument, and playingthe game could look a little ridiculous to onlookers, but this kind of fun just doesn't need an excuse. LIKE CLAPTON'S "BLACKIE," BUT FAKER: "Rock Band's" guitar is mod- eled after the Fender Stratocaster and looks borderline real from across the room. "Guitar Hero" regulars may be put off by the guitar's strum bar, which doesn't click when pushed up or down, but most players will grow accustomed to it. It's actually more conducive to fast, repeated notes. The only real drawback is the guitar's lack of wireless connectivity, but both Xbox 360 "Guitar Hero" guitars - including "GH III's" wireless Les Paul guitar - are compatible with "Rock Band" on the Xbox 360 and can serve as either the bass or guitar. HOW TO OUTSOURCE RYAN SEACREST: "Rock Band" is bundled with a wired USB microphone that has a nice, weighty feel to it. The mic works surprisingly well, broad- casting vocals through the TV while accurately judging pitch. This may or may not be a good thing, though, which you'll discover the moment your male roommate attempts to belt out the sky-high backup vocals on "Gimme Shelter." Let's just say Let it Bleed has been taken out of regular rotation for a while. WANTED: "MOBY DICK" FOR "ROCK BAND 2": The drums are the unequivocal star of "Rock Band." The kit comes with four pads and a pedal simulating a bass drum. According to EA, playing the game on expert is like playing a song on a real kit, and it doesn't feel too far off. Playing the guitar in "Rock Band" is nothing like playing a real guitar, but while play- ing the drums, I feel as if I'm learning an instrument. Legitimate musicians will likely dispute this, but if nothing else, it's one hell of a good time. ROADIES NOT INCLUDED: Although each instrument offers its own career mode where players can burnthrough the game's 58 included tracks in a methodical manner similar to "Gui- tar Hero," the real meat of "Rock Band" is in the multiplayer world- tour mode. The world tour includes two to four players and involves play- ing various venues around the world. Each venue offers new songs to play, but also includes a combination of pre-set and self-determined set lists of varying length. Band members can Radiohead's simpler triumph By SEAN MICHAEL FLAX For the Daily Two months after unveiling its lauded seventh studio album, In Rainbows, Radiohead has released eight bonus tracks that continue to develop the band's sound and reputation. Like In Rain- bows, the bonus disc is simple Radiohead and bare, but satisfies with In inbows impressive pro- CD 2 duction, experi- Self-released mentation and creative ways of addressing relevant political and social issues. The albumopens with a continu- ation of "Videotape," the final song on the first disc, and then flows smoothly into "Down Is the New Up," a song frontman Thom Yorke recently recorded himself and put out on iTunes. The track's cut- ting piano changes, coupled with high-energy drums, makes for an upbeat dance-along though, ironi- cally, the song is about the demise of unskilled workers in the face of globalization. Yorke's attempts to champion socialism with lines like "Ladies and gentlemen, without a safetynet," "I shall now amputate" and "Because down is the new up" are reminiscent of activist songs by The Clash and The Jam in the '70s and '80s. The last track is similar in its juxtaposition of touchy issues and pleasant melodies, "4 Minute Warning" is a beauti- ful, featherbed lullaby addressing the dire consequences of global warming. A muted bass backs choose to play at a comfortable level of difficulty, but to gain more fans, everyone has to step up their diffi- culty level. THE CLASH, RADIOHEAD AND PIX- IES ... : All have a presence in "Rock Band" and are noticeably absent from any "Guitar Hero" title. Plus, most of the artists on both "Rock Band" and "Guitar Hero" have lent their bet- ter tracks to EA's game: "Suffragette City" over "Ziggy Stardust," "Gimme Shelter" over "Paint It Black" and "Won't Get Fooled Again" over "The Seeker," to name a few. And this isn't even including "Rock Band's" already robust downloadable catalogue, which is adding new content on a weekly basis, including full album releases promised in the coming months. $169.99 FOR A VIDEO GAME?: Yeah, and it's worth it. For that price you could buy three regular games, but you'll have a lot more fun with "Rock Band." It's the perfect game for a col- lege house and will quickly put your month-old copy of "GH III" out of commission. A night of rotten and leathered flesh By ANDREW SARGUS KLEIN Managing Arts Editor In an act of mass catharsis, the University community will slip and slide across campus in an effort to ase into Winter Break with all the ubtlety of an anvil falling from the sky. )n your car. Right Zombie efore you're about Carival to drive home. While I'm not not Night :ondoning run-of- Friday at :he-mill "school is 9:30 p.m. >ver!" parties/bar At the Blind Pig :rawls, you have it least one killer $818+/$521+ >pportunity to encil into your schedule. It involves zombies. Clown ombies. And a burlesque troop. Fire ;pinning, too. This Friday, The Blind Pig will 01st "Zombie Carnival Night," od it's every bit as titillating as its tame implies. It will consist of three >ands and three carnival acts, and >nce it gets started at 10 p.m. (which See ZOMBIE, Page 8 What's not to love about the arrival of winter? Everything is covered in salt. Finals are eating up your life. And seasonal affective disor- der is kicking in just in time for the holidays! OK, so _ maybe "love" wasn't the word I was look- ing for, f but winter r l isn't a total bust. SMA Time off for the holidays is definitely welcome. Winter sports are a nice diversion if the condi- tions and location are right and holiday-themed TV episodes can be fine in mod- eration. But typically TV takes a backseat to the film industry this time of year for a mix of generally crappy Christmas movies - "The Santa Clause" not included - and Oscar hopefuls fill up theaters. In recent years, the biopic in particular has been increas- ingly popular this time of year, with at least one land- ing an Oscar nomination for best picture every year in the past decade. While some genuinely good biopics have emerged recently, the genre often fails to capture the minutia of its subjects. This is understand- able - complicated people can't be boiled down to 120 minutes very easily. But who says they have to be? Television has made sig- nificant strides in exploring new territory in recent years, but somehow the television bio-series has been largely ignored. ESPN's forgettable "The Bronx is Burning" is a pseudo example of this, but was just eight episodes long. And "Rome" and "The Tudors" of HBO and Show- time, respectively, key on real figures, but they're more historical fiction than biog- raphy. Still, there's huge poten- tial in the TV bio-series genre, as long as the right subjects become the focus and the right network devel- ops it (read: HBO and no one else). Logistical roadblocks aside, here are my three surefire TV bio-series hits. Feel free to steal these ideas, suits; I want to see these shows. "THE BEATLES": This would be too perfect. No one is willing to tackle a Beatles feature. And for good reason. There's simply too much to cover, so why not give an ambitious show runner four seasons to lay it out. Each season could highlight a different era of the band and use a unique cast, aila "I'm Not There," but let's stick to white, middle-aged dudes - a 12-year-old Afri- can-American child playing mid-'60s Ringo could be problematic. Ideally, the first season would cover the band's preparations for their trip to the United States in the early '60s and would end with the band walking on stage at "The Ed Sullivan Show." Subsequent seasons could tackle the band's other eras/haircuts and include episode titles like "The One Where Bob Dylan Made Them Smoke Pot in the Del- monico Hotel." "THE FAB FIVE": We've got the Fab Four covered, so now it's time to move on to the Fab Five. According to my Michigan Basketball media guide, these guys might not exist, so we may have to write this off as historical fiction, but whatever. Season one will tentatively tackle the "recruiting" process and end with the team coming together in Ann Arbor just prior to their freshman cam- paign. Season two will cover their freshman season, and the third and final season will document their sopho- more campaign and end with Weber's gaffe. This could be based on Mitch Albom's book "Fab Five: Basketball, Trash Talk, the American Dream," with some of the Why the biopic craze would work better on TV extracurriculars he didn't cover thrown in. But his ego doesn't need another appear- ance on "The Oprah Winfrey Show," so maybe we'll just give it to one of Weber's former confidants who has stories to tell. "SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE (1975-1979)": Yeah, this is kind of similar to "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip," but that show didn't work for two reasons and they won't come into play here. The "Saturday Night Live" bio- series won't premiere at the same time and on the same network as "30 Rock," and it will focus on real people that audiences already know. NBC would never go for this, so HBO would probably have to change the show's title but keep everything else authen- tic. There are a lot of stories/ drugs to cover here, and fol- lowing the early days of the show through the spring of '79, when Dan Aykroyd and Jim Belushi left, would be a dense four-season arc. These shows might not be entirely feasible - at least at the moment - but if done well, they have the potential to offer a lot more than their film counterparts. Spielberg's upcoming Abraham Lincoln biopic sounds good, but a David Milch Lincoln bio-series sounds even better. Someone make this happen. - E-mail Passman at mpass@umich.edu. Especially if you have a job lined up for him. In the TV biz. Perfect in the studio, perfect in silhouette. Yorke's vocals and the ethereal lyr- sounds like a David Bowie track ics suggest we all need to wake up in its climb from minor to major, and stop ignoring our responsibili- along with its use of only piano and ties as human beings. acoustic rhythm guitar. The edgy "Bangers & Mash" The band is experimenting with relies heavily on aggressive per- more conventional songwriting, cussion. It never abandons its in- while at the same time letting fans your-face attitude as a post-punk know it's still Radiohead. Yorke's electric guitar creates noticeable background hums are cut off and changes in tempo. Other than somewhat uncharacteristic as "Down Is the New Up," this is the leading tones, but they do mesh only track that might elicit danc- with subtle synth rushes to mark ing, so it acts as a breath of fresh air changes in moods. Lead guitarist despite building unresolved antici- Jonny Greenwood rarely solos, but pation for a harmonic chorus. his thick, prominent sound is the The album's transitions are foundation for several tracks. nearly seamless. Although in no Radiohead continues to trans- way one long song, there's a peace form itself by making new sounds and tranquility to its production with purpose and unique form. that can't be ignored. Diehard OK Computer fans may Some tracks, however, use no be disappointed with these eight advanced mixing and production bonus tracks based on their sim- techniques in order to establish plicity, but Radiohead fans in a primary focus on Yorke's voice general will be happy to hear fur- and the roles of traditional instru- ther innovation and an effective, ments. "Go Slowly" features only a hauntingly beautiful approach to quiet, echoing electric guitar and the idea that less is, almost always, cushyvocals, while "LastFlowers" more. I. CORRECTION The Qdoba ad in the Dec 6 Michigan Daily contained an error. It should have read: "Chicken Burrito & Regular Drink $5.00. Queso, Pesto, Guac extra. Valid thru Dec 23, 2007. 2252 S. Main (near Busch's). 3279 Washtenaw (near Whole Foods)." 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