I 2B - Thursday, March 20, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com REDUCTIVE REASONING Picking one and one apart. The Daily Arts guide to upcoming events Today 3.20.08 Face-to-Face: Bruno Monsaingeon and Photographer Peter Turnley 7 p.m. At East Quadrangle Room126 Free Tomorrow 3.21.08 Looks Given / Looks Taken 8 a.m, - 5 p.m. At Institute for the Humanities Exhibition Space (room 1010) Free Man Man 9:30 p.m. At the Blind Pig $10/advance, $12/day of,18+ Saturday 3.22.08 The Full Monty Presented by Musket 8 p.m At the Power center for the Performing Arts $7/students, $13/others Patty Larkin 8 p.m. At The Ark $20 Enchanting Ruin Art Exhibit: Tintern Abbey and Romantic Tourism in Wales 10 a.m. At the Harlan Hatcher Grad Library, 7th Floor Free Sunday 3.23.08 "Inge Morath and Arthur Miller: China" Presented by UMMA 10 a.r; At 1301 South University Free Please send all press releases and event information to artspage@michigandaily.com. H , I CHUMBAWAMBA 'PICTURES OF STARVING CHILDREN SELL RECORDS' (1986) Not just one-hit anarchists SINGLE REVIEWS WALE "BACK IN THE GO GO" INTERSCOPE Wale's signing of a joint label deal with Inter- scope and Mark Ronson's Allido Records is impor- tant for two reasons. First, the simple fact that Wale, who has a Gilbert Arenas-size presence in the nation's capital, done got signed! Second, and more importantly, is the fact that we now have a timetable for what is sure to be an earth-shatter- ing moment when the album drops next fall. Wale has an impressive record for someone who was unsigned until last week. With only a couple of mixtapes under his belt, Wale has nonethe- less performed on the MTV Video Music Awards, toured with Justice, collaborated with Lil Wayne and BunB, and established some kind of relation- ship with Nike after his ridiculously triumphant "Nike Boots" single. "Back in The Go Go" continues to up the ante. Producer Best Kept Secret unleashes a dynamite and noticeably overstuffed beat with breakneck drum rolls, record scratches, sped-up chants and xylophone - pretty much anything he can get his hands on. And yet amazingly, Wale cuts right through it with top-dog bravado and more hockey references than, well, probably any hip-hop track ever. Bun B and Pusha T similarly deliver confi- dent, witty verses that match the force of the jam- packed production. For those unfamiliar with Wale, "Back in The Go Go" is as good a launching point as any of his other singles. It shows his knack for pop refer- ences, honed lyricism and flow that should make Kanye extremely jealous. And then of course there are the ubiquitous D.C. references: "DC hip hop get my U street on / Cops acting funny see / They get their Blue Streak on." Wale's emergence will certainly jump start a once faltering D.C. hip- hop scene, but don't be surprised if it changes the entire hip-hop landscape in the process. GABRIEL BAKER By MATT RONEY Daily Music Editor Chumbawamba. Yeah, that's right - the "Tubthumping" band. The group responsible for one of the most obnox- ious guilty-pleasure, one-hit- wonder singles in pop music history. "Tubthumping" was maddeningly ubiquitous in 1997. The irony of the song's massive success was never lost on the band that wrote it from a radical perspective. Fans still debate whether the song is about the drudgery of wage slavery interrupted by weekend bouts of drinking or the Irish Troubles. The con- textualizing liner notes were removed from the U.S. release of Tubthumper, but make no mistake: Chumbawamba is an anarchist, radical band. If you would be so kind as to direct your attention to the release date of Pic- tures of Starving Children Sell Records, you will notice that it appeared a full 11 years before Tubthumper. Released on CD in the early 1990s as half of the compilation First 2 LP's (along with the follow-up, the equally vitriolic Never Mind the Ballots), and originally on vinyl in 1986, Pictures is Chumbawamba's savagely biting debut full-length. The albu iis a critique of the per- ceived hypocrisy of the ultra- hyped Live Aid festival, Live 8's predecessor. Pictures of Starving Chil- dren Sell Records begins with the sprawling "How to Get Your Band on Television." It's a sort of manifesto, attack- ing the "fashion for charity, not change" mentality. The track builds slowly, beginning with a character introduced as "the boss of the company" explaining the "economics of supply and demand." After a few samples of old pop music it STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS MARCH 19-20 INTERESTED IN NINTENDO'S NEXT MOVE? SEE THE FILTER FOR A PREVIEW. Check it out at www.michigandaily.com/thefilter and opening beer cans, the 8-minute track launches into its second part, a dramatized variety show on which the major pop stars of the time are called out by name, one by one, for complicity. Musically, it shifts from driving game- show music to slow, mournful acoustic guitar. And it only getsbetter. "Brit- ish Colonialism & The BBC" is an indictment of sensational- istic news coverage, backed by hand drums and a groovy bass line. The track itself is deceptively chilled-out, given the subject matter. "Unilever," with its sharp snare hits and smooth distortion, gives some You know their name, but not their politics indication of the band's future as (temporarily) an electropop band, but also, through speed and descending bass riff, man- ages to be one of the punkiest tracks on the record. "More Whitewashing" is catchy, qgoet-loud pop rockp with a Fat Wreck Chords-worthy final blast. "Dutiful Servants and Political Masters" opens as a calm, sarcastic narrative, but ends with one of the band's few forays into true hardcore, with vocalists Alice Nutter and Danbert Nobacon screaming breathlessly over each other. The album ends with "Inva- sion," a pounding, acidic rant against colonialism and capi- talism, with a laid-back, reg- gae-style interlude and final call to action. Pictures of Starving Chil- dren Sell Records has aged amazingly well, and has far more to offer present-day lis- teners than the inevitable "Holy shit, this is who, again?" response. At the peak of fash- ionable punk - not to mention Margaret Thatcher's tenure as British prime minister - Chumbawamba managed to put together a record with an undeniably punkish DIY ethic and uncompromising politics while pushing themselves for- ward musically. I'm not sure if the album's still-current sound is due to Chumbawamba's tal- ent or to the stagnancy of the punk-rock genre, but either way, it works. The band avoids the rep- etition of unrestrained, vague rage that plagues a lot of politi- cal punk, opting instead to embrace catchy pop hooks and tongue-in-cheek irony. Take "Commercial Break" for exam- ple. The song is a spoken-word, almost nursery rhyme-style track that's an obvious pre- decessor to Propagandhi's "A Public Dis-Service Announce- ment from Shell" - but it's a decade older. The album's genre-bendingprogressionand little bits of borrowed sound - samples of songs, commercials and Nobacon vomiting wetly - give Pictures a collage fee It's the musical equivalent of a Crimethloc. flyer. So what happened to Chum- bawamba after "Tubthump- ing" launched them to international fame? Frankly, not a lot. They continue to make music and experiment with various genres, having released the beats-heavy Un in 2004 and the folk-inflected A Singsong and A Scrap on their own label in 2006. And after 25 years, they're still one of the most politically radical groups in rock, whether you know it or not. I 4 a VOTE BLUE .1 4 U VOTE AT WWW.MVOTEBLUE ,COM ;4u