The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, March 3, 2008 - 5A COURTESY OF PARTIAL MUSIC Newcomb will play tonight at 8 p.m. at the Kerrytown Concert House. PERFORMANCE PREVIEW After dropping out, guitarist back in A By KATIE CAREY or the waves or the screaming Daily Arts Writer in the kitchen and deconstruct the math of it." After his first semester at This "deconstruction of the University, Robert Spalding sound" has led Newcomb to Newcomb did what many ide- experimentwith integratinghis alistic musi- knowledge of computers into cians and his music. Switching between artists fanati- Robert ambient reverb and brash and cize about but $palding electronic clamor, Newcomb's never gather sound is dictated by the envi- the courage to NeWCOmb ronment he's in, making each do. Newcomb Tonight at performance completely differ- walked out of 8 p.m. ent from the last. his Psycholo- At the Kerrytown The freedom the combina- gy 101 lecture Concert House tion opens up for him comes and moved $5 with student ID through in his music. It is evi- to New York dent that he isn't falling back on with a guitar, learned chord progressions, but, two pairs of blue jeans and a rather, he's makinganew kind of hundred dollars. improvisation. This new method Newcomb spent time in New isfocusedonthebeliefofhuman York learning to program com- interconnectedness. Through puters, devoting his nights to his improvisation, Newcomb playing music and writing poet- takes the people and praces that ry. Years later the pattern con- surround him and manifests tinues. Newcomb now works them into a collective sound. as the program manager of "Playing jazz feels like I'm in business information network a box. It's a big box, but still, a security in the School of Music, box," he said. "It gives you the Theatre and Dance during the basic architecture of an emo- week, and puts on amplified tional flow." sitar and electric classical gui- What Newcomb finds as his tar concerts on the weekends. main challenge is not -falling But Newcomb's path to his back on the comfort of classical musical career was shaped musicalstructure,the sitar play- much earlier. As a child, New- ingalarge partinthis. Newcomb comb sat by the family stereo admires the instrumentbecause where he would listen to Char- it creates a large pool of mate- lie Parker, Mozart and Woody rial but has little demand on Guthrie. And while Newcomb how it is sequenced. Pairing this has created music in all these with technology has allowed musical veins, from old time Newcomb to explore an infinite banjo, jazz, folk and electronic, amount of space, while concise- he has no particular influences. ly moving within the controls of Rather, everything is an influ- his own vision at the same time. ence to Newcomb. By listening to his compositions, "I don't walk around with an it's easy to notice Newcomb's iPod," said Newcomb. "I don't belief in technology. It permits listen to anything, but I try his music to move beyond the to hear everything. Actually, physically restrained and trans- that's kinda stupid, it could go forms it into a more transcen- either way. I listen to the wind dental experience. "Did you see that? I sure as hell didn't.' OB STRU CTIED VI EWL Ne bele; destr b( Did y nize- a bomb a an ai assassin machine an iPh you did that's be can't. B ently no anyone with chi "Vantag could b released The i one of find in behind1 the sam w action film's ist attack on a peace summit from eight different peoples' point of aguered concept view. Sounds like it could be an .oys its chance of innovative concept, but you'll dis- cover that "Vantage Point" beats it iing enjoyable to death pretty quickly. Dennis Quaid ("Flight of the Phoenix") and Matthew Fox (TV's By PAUL TASSI "Lost") are Secret Service agents in DailyArts Writer charge of protecting the president (William Hurt, "Into the Wild") ou know that you can orga- at a peace conference in Spain. In terrorist cell, detonate a attendance is a video-camera tot-. nd direct ing tourist (Forest Whitaker "Last uto-turret King of Scotland"), a media direc- ation tor (Sigourney Weaver, "The Vil e with Vantge lage") and bevy of shady characters one? No, that look vaguely Middle Eastern n't? Well, POft but mostly turn out to be Spanish. cause you At Quality16 One of the major players is secretly ut appar~ and Showcase a terrorist, which is supposed to be one told the film's big twist. But if you can't involved Columbia guess who it is in the few minutes urning out after the first shots are fired, you're e Point," which very well either a complete idiot or asleep e the dumbest action film - and no one would blame you for in years. the latter. Phone mastermind is just Speaking of twists, the other many idiotic things you'll "big" one is that the president isn't the film. The gimmick actually shot, it's a double. This the movie is that you see wouldn't normally be given away e 20 minutes of a terror- in a review, but for some inexpli- cable reason, they decided to put ending that leaves everyone coio- this scene in the trailer. Guess it fused and no one surprised. Really, would have portrayed the film as -he was a bad guy? The only guy too shocking and revolutionary if who's "vantage point" they hadn't the audience went in thinking the showed yet? Who could have pos- president had actually been shot sibly guessed? - in a movie, which isn't real. The terrorists in the film are Amid the unnecessary plot either the smartestor dumbest peo- twists are 15 minutes of action ple you'll ever see. They manage to goodness, where a terrorist goes infiltrate the most tightly guarded all "Metal Gear Solid" on a hotel event on the planet, plant an ageht full of Secret Service agents, and inside the administration and blow then a climactic car chase a' is up and shootsiozens of people wit4 is up there with anything found an iPhone. Unfortunately, their in the "Bourne" films. But without entire master plan is unraveled by these scenes, the, rest of the film a series of coincidences thateange is an exercise in frustration, with from "thank goodness that ran- more plot holes than "Jumper" dom camera was there to see that" - and that whole movie was a plot to "it's lucky an idiotic person ran hole. out into the street at that moment." That each person has a "vantage Not to mention they feel that kid- point" is a shtick that gets old real napping the president is somehow quick. After the first three repeti- accomplishing more than simply tions of the same scene with only a assassinating him. By overcompli- hint of new information each time, cating their attack plan they man- exhaustion begins to set in.Atabout age to turn their elaborate scheme the fifth repetition, even the film into a hot mess of shit. It's kind of gets bored, abandoning this format like this movie. What could've beon and showing the perspective of all a straightforward, solid action flick five terrorists at once. Finally all thinks it has to go beyond, and the characters' cliffhanger stories ultimately doesn't accomplish any- are combined in a clusterfuck of an thing at all. AL Indie-pop troupe finds its stride By ALEXANDER ITKIN For TheDaily In the last two years Beach House has crafted a comfortable niche for itself, somewhere between atmo- spheric indie-rock and baroque pop. This Baltimore duo, consisting of child- **** hood friends Vic- toria Legrand and Beach Alex Scally, burst House onto the indie-pop scene in 2006 with Devotion their self-titled Carpark debut. In many ways, Beach House is the antithesis of the burgeoning indie scene. Avoiding electronics and experimentation on Devotion, their latest release, Beach House crafted beautiful melodies with nothing more than a guitar, an organ and Legrand's croon. Equal parts home- liness and heartbreak, the songs swirl around you in a languid haze of beauty. Not wanting to waste any time, Beach House opens Devotion with one of its most driving songs to date, "Wedding Bell." With the trade- mark haunted drum machine in tow and hypnotizing guitar lines mix- ing with Legrand's voice and organ, Beach House gives us a glimpse of its new direction. While the songs are still all mid-tempo, the chord progressions have become more interesting and there's a stronger rhythmic backbone than before. The melodies are more developed, sometimes recalling old R&B and sometimes echoing '60s and '70s pop. One of the album's highlights, "D.A.R.L.I.N.G.," owes as much to the Beach Boys as it does to Cat Power. The first single, "Gila" demon- strates Scally's newly developed confidence in his guitar. Whereas on Beach House he usually took a back seat to the organ and vocals, on Devotion he crafts his own leads and takes charge. Even among all the reverb, he's able to cut through and forge his own way. One of Beach House's weaknesses was the monotony that tended to grow and overcome some of the songs on its debut. HoweverDevotion has a greater variety of songs, making for a much better listen. Beach House gets you over that mid-album-hump by Beach House: Indie rock that hates indie rock offering "Heart of Chambers." With a rousing chorus and an epic feel throughout, it serves as an anthem for the broken-hearted hipster, and Music American electropoppers employ Euro image on latest EP Solid Gold Who You Gonna Run To? Self-released It must be tough trying to make it as an American elec- tropop group these days. With the success of Justice and the stateside interest in Fabric music compilations, electronic music is almost entirely Eurocentric. So it's not surprisingto see an American band try to incorporate some subtly Euro- pean details in its album artwork or press photos to give itself a little bit of leverage. Solid Gold does just that. The collage of bright colors, crystals and laser beams that adorn their EP Who You Gonna Run To? seems like a deliberate effort to make the listener forget the group is based in Minneapolis., Who You Gonna Run To? is safe and relatively inoffensive. Opening track "Bible Thumper" plays on a mid-tempo beat with wordless falsetto crescendos. It's a total rip off of The Notwist's "Pilot" minus Markus Acher's affecting vocals. The other two Solid Gold originals on the EP are straightfoi- ward if ultimately uninteresting cuts of electropop that slow down the pace to give the boys more time to harmonize. The one bright spot is the Mgatp remix of the title track that plays up the melodrama by successfully adding some surprisingly effective hip-hop stomps and "My Love" synthesizer. Solid Gold still has a lot of ground to cover if they want to play with the big boys. They've got the image down, but that doesn't really amount to anything. Really, how hard is it to slip on a tight leather jacket and a striped scarf? GABRIEL BAKER They love long walks on the beach. we all feel like a broken-hearted hip- ster sometimes. The cover of troubadour Daniel Johnston's "Some Things Last A Long Time" acts as a nice interlude before the album's home stretch. On the last three songs of the album, Beach House experiments with new dynamics. "Astronaut" has an appropriately spacey feel and "Home Again" displays Beach House's new penchant for interesting percussion with its reverbed-out tambourine. The aforementioned"D.A.R.L.L.N.G." is real gem inthe style of'60s psyche- delic pop. Signaled by its sepia-toned cover, Devotion sounds like an aged album by a band coming into its own. It's the perfect companion for these short winter days and long winter nights. h A A