. }try Fo . ;; ; . g ;M1. y t. 3 The Michigan Daily ( michigandaily.com ( Thursday, February 7,2008 ' asa a + _. . r I The Daily Arts guide to the best upcoming events - it's everywhere you should be this weekend and why. Predicting = - -the U Grammy - -* 0 W : U_ 'kIN T I ' Ue 3- Eu - - --- a1i - - V winners ... ,, . , "++ .M +4 ,.. - - - - - m~ - - - - - - x5,a - - - 1 vi 0 m Of W z Q 0 z Q W V E- z Q J F.. Q z W W W W W , a I , .- <,t .. ' .a AT THE PIG o It's that time of the year again. Hash Bash.is still a few months away, but that doesn't mean you can't celebrate Bob Marley and his lifestyle. o Join headliner Turbulence in celebration of Marley's o birthday at the Blind Pig's 10th annual party on o Saturday. Doors open at 8 p.m. and tickets are $25 in advance or $30 the day of. AT RACKHAM Make sure to check out By CHRIS GAERIG I MANAGING ARTS EDITOR and MATT EMERY I ASSOCIATE ARTS EDITOR RECORD OF THE YEAR "Irreplaceable" - Beyonc6 "The Pretender" - Foo Fighters "Umbrella" - Rihanna ft. Jay-Z "What Goes Around... Comes Around" - Justin Timberlake "Rehab" - Amy Winehouse Should win: "Umbrella" - Rihanna ft. Jay-Z Will win: "Rehab" - Amy Winehouse In a year when the charts have been completely domi- nated by R&B and hip-hop songs, "Umbrella" stands as the unchallenged best. Despite the track's unfortunate bastard spawn - the version of "Umbrella" that features Chris Brown - Rihanna's masterpiece has solidified her as a pop force. The song's cascading chorus and shuffling, sharp beat make it an instant classic. The Grammys need to look past its adult- rock stint and finally choose a pop R&B track for this award (which is misleadingly named and actually goes to the best song) - recent winners include the Dixie Chicks, Green Day, U2 (twice) and Norah Jones (twice, though one was awarded for a duet with Ray Charles). That said, "Rehab" is a close sec- ond, and given Winehouse's headlines, expect the voting to tilt towards her. ALBUM OF THE YEAR Echoes, Silence, Patience ft Grace - Foo Fighters These Days - Vince Gill River: The Joni Letters - Herbie Hancock Graduation - Kanye West Back toBlack - Amy Winehouse Should win: Graduation -Kanye West Will win: Graduation -Kanye West What a rag-tag bunch of hopefuls. Finally, though, the man catches a break. Take it for what it's worth when he complains on MTV about never winning anything, but Kanye West deserves this. It's been a few years since anything remotely related to hip hop took home the award (OutKast in 2003), and Kanye is much more of a household name now than ever. He's cementing himself as a stalwart in the mainstream. He doesn't pull too many punches and has flash without the over-the-top generalizations of the genre that would turn off the Academy. The Foo Fighters might give him a run, but if Kanye doesn't win this year, he has the right to scream bloody murder about a racist Academy. SONG OF THE YEAR "Before He Cheats" - Josh Kear & Chris Tompkins (Carrie Underwood) "Hey There Delilah" - Tom Higgenson (Plain White T's) "Like A Star" - Corinne Bailey Rae (Corinne Bailey Rae) "Rehab" - Amy Winehouse (Amy Winehouse) "Umbrella" - Shawn Carter, Kuk Harrell, Terius Nash and Christopher Stewart (Rihanna ft. Jay-Z) Should win: "Hey There Delilah" - Tom Higgenson (Plain White T's) Will win: "Before He Cheats" - Josh Kear & Chris Tompkins (Carrie Underwood) An unabashed song of longing, "Hey There Delilah" put Plain White T's on the map - for better or worse. The track is comfortably soft and immediately recognizable. Born from emo tendencies, the track has a heart, something missing from contemporary radio. Carrie Underwood's defiant and rambunctious "Before He Cheats," however, will almost certainly take the category. Its sadistic subject matter will be overlooked for its catchy chorus and sheer popularity. BEST NEW ARTIST Feist Ledisi Paramore Taylor Swift Amy Winehouse Should win: Feist Will win: Feist We're all pretty sick of "1234" by now, but still, Feist's on a roll. Easily one of the most accessible and vocally pleas- ing releases of the year, The Reminder was played just about everywhere during 2007 - local malls, Pottery Barns, your house party. Winehouse could creep in and snag this from old Ms. Broken Social Scene. But the legal problems, overall image and insanity level of Winehouse should kill any chance she has of winning considering that the last few winners in the category have been squeaky clean and overrated. Feist is pretty damn innocent, but it's time the underrated label in this category disappears. This has Feist written all over it. BEST FEMALE POP VOCAL PERFORMANCE "Candyman" - Christina Aguilera "1234" - Feist "Big Girls Don't Cry" - Fergie "Say It Right" - Nelly Furtado "Rehab" - Amy Winehouse Should win: "1234" - Feist Will win: "1234" - Feist This year it should really be called the "Lamest/Most Unoriginal Song Title" category. It could also be one of the toughest categories to call. Everyone's heard "1234." Feist should have this on lockdown, but maybe Apple's incessant advertising killed her. Or maybe it helped her. Again, Wine- house is a tough pick with her career suicide moves, and "Say It Right" by Nelly Furtado with the aid of Timbaland had an understated, sizzling Cyndi Lauper edge. But Christina Agu- ilera is a classy Academy favorite, winning the award last year. Fergie doesn't have a chance. She might not even be real. In the end, the addictive, eclectic and sparkly "1234" probably gets the nod over the slightly more risque "Rehab" and the underrated "Say It Right." BEST MALE POP VOCAL PERFORMANCE "Everything" - Michael Bubla "Belief" - John Mayer "Dance Tonight" - Paul McCartney "Amazing" - Seal "What Goes Around... Comes Around" - Justin Timberlake Should win: "What Goes Around... Comes Around" - Justin Timberlake Will win: "What Goes Around... Comes Around" - Justin Timberlake Justin Timberlake has a lock on this category. Aside from his dominance of anything mainstream this year, Timber- lake stands as the only category nominee that isn't over the hill or a long shot. McCartney and Seal are both too far past their respective primes - McCartney's only shot at another Grammy is a pity you-were-once-part-of-the-Beatles award (which he'll probably get in another category). And Michael Buble and John Mayer have both pulled themselves too far from the mainstream to take this award home to their trophy shelves. See GRAMMYS PAGE 4B the Chicago Classical Oriental Ensemble as seven musicians from countries as far as Syria and Morocco perform tomorrow night. Selections include music from three Egyptian composers. The performance starts at 8 p.m. and tickets are $20 to $40. AT THE LEAGUE Have you ever thought you've got what it takes to be on American Idol? If so, your first stepping- stone should be Michigan Idol. You have the chance of winning $500, it's free and Simon Cowell won't be there. Tryouts begin at 9 p.m. and run until 11 p.m. tonight in the League Underground. A band defined by its crowd By GABRIEL BAKER micks stick around for more than just a Boerma admits that halftime is an ever- DailyArts Writer year. Sometimes they become tradition, evolving creature. Each year, he and the whether you like it or not. other heads of the band look to the stu- If you haven't already noticed, tradi- Nowhere is the tension between tra- dents, band members, alumni and their tion infiltrates nearly every aspect of dition and progressive experimenta- families for new musical and thematic our university. But as much as we like tion more evident than in the Michigan inspiration. to think all customs were introduced in Marching Band. Balancing the historic "Every halftime show is kind of an the 1800s by mustachioed, trapshooting "fanfare"repertoire withupdated crowd- attempt to connect with some faction of old men, tradition is actually something conscious halftime selections is a tricky the audience, because you're not goingto more tangible and vulnerable to change. feat, especially considering they have to please everybody ever," he said. It's something in which we play a part. satisfy100,000 plus onlookers and anoth- And it's extremely hard to please fans Every year, the University finds new er half million alumni in the process. But of all ages when the concept of halftime ways to bend its conventional values to the strategy is relatively simple: Keep the has changed so dramatically. Nowadays, keep up with the times. It throws some- pre-game traditional and leave the new when we think "halftime," we casually thing into the Michigan crowd and sees spectacles for the halftime show. imagine fighter jets soaring over upper- what sticks. And sometimes these gim- New Michigan band director Scott See BAND PAGE 4B AT THE ARK With its all-women- of-color cast and men as props, "The Vagina Monologues" has courted controversy in recent years. It visits The Ark on Sunday without any of that. But it's still an important piece of theater. One show is at 2 p.m. and the other at 7 p.m. Tickets are $25. Crowd favorites include "Livin' On a Prayer."