[he C 2B - Thursday, September 4, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com CA LENDA R The Daily Arts guide to upcoming events Today 9.4.08 Gerald Cleaver's Violet Hour: Jazz Music 8 p.m. At the Kerrytown Concert House $10 Craig Gass, Comedian 8p.m. At the Ann Arbor Comedy Showcase $17 in advance or $20 at the door Tomorrow 9.5.08 Dance2XS Hip Hop Workship 8:30 p.m. At the Michigan Union Ballroom Free Friday Night Swing Dance 8:45 p.m. At the Dakota Building Ai POLARIS 'MUSIC FROM THE ADVENTURES OF PETE AND PETE' (1999) The indie backbone of '90s television (1785 W $5/$3i Hand Mozz and T 3pm At Morg Free Serioi Danci 9 p.m. At danc (1785 W $5 Tai C 9 a.m. At the C Free Kerry Artsa Prese 11a.m. At Holla Free V. Stadium) with student ID Saturday 9.6.08 -Stretched Fresh arella Demonstration asting tan &York us About Salsa Latin e Party eRevolution, Dakota Building . Stadium) Sunday 9.7.08 hi at the Cube ube town BookFest: Book and Bookbinding ntations nder's (410 N. 4th Avenue) Please send all press releases and event information to arts@michigandaily.com. 82 year-old Cloris Leachman breaks her hip on "Dancing with the Stars" Y 4:1 Kim Kardashian's ass explodes, injuring partner, on same show 7:1 New film, "Shitty Movie," spoofs "Disaster," "Epic" and others 10:1 "The Real World XXI: Betty Ford Center" featuring seven recovering alcoholics 800:1 Bristol Palin stars in the straight-to-DVD hit "Juno 2: Labor Crisis" 400:1 Michael C. Hall of "Dexter" hospitalized for "murder addiction"/found guilty of seventeen murders 1,000:1 Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag Murder/Suicide pact 6,000:1 PHOTOS COUREtSv OF YAHOO, PERFECT PEOPLE, LIONSGATE, EiSHOWTIME, NhTIONAL LEDGER By MATT RONEY Daily Music Editor If you grew up watching Nickelode- on in the 1990s, you remember "The Adventures of Pete & Pete." The show, which ran for three seasons between December 1993 and May 1996, was an oddly surrealistic piece of situational comedy focusing on a teenager and his pre-teen brother, both named Pete. The series's fictional Wellsville is an exag- gerated chunk of Americana where kids have personal superheroes, families compete in impromptu road trip races and teachers are either benevolent and dim-witted or bloodthirsty and domi- neering. Looking back, "Pete & Pete" had a weirdly "indie" aesthetic for a series aimed at children and teens. Many of the show's recurring characters were portrayed by semi-underground music mainstays like Iggy Pop - who played a very young Michelle Trachtenbeig's dad - and R.E.M. frontman Michael Stipe as second-rate ice cream man named Captain Scrummy. Independent film regular Steve Buscemi was a recur- ring character as well, as the father of BigPete's girlfriend, Ellen. It shouldthen be noasurprise that, needing a theme song and score, the show's creators approached Mark Mulcahy, leader of college radio veter- ans Miracle Legion. Mulcahy liked the idea, but Ray Neal, Miracle Legion's guitarist, did not. The new three-piece side project was named Polaris, and Mulcahy took the job. That's Polaris you see jumping around the yard at the beginning of each episode in their plaid flannel, Mulcahy joyously mum- bling the lyrics and shouting "ai yai yai yai!" That theme song is "Hey Sandy," and it opens Music from the Adventures of Pete & Pete, the only collection of Polar- is's music aside from the cassette single that used to come in boxes of Frosted Mini-Wheats. Comprised of re-record- ings made in 1999, it chronicles the brief existence of this made-to-order side project. Miracle Legion constantly received comparisons to REM., and the similarity is apparent here. Most of the lyrics are unintelligible, as Mulcahy loves to sing in a Stipe-style mush- mouth. One quickly recognizes the lyr- ics are of secondary importance on this record. When they come out, they're suitably nostalgic and wide-eyed. Mulcahy distinguishes himself from his more famous contemporary by singing in a bright, slightly nasal tenor that has a lot in common with Live's Ed Kowal- czyk. He sounds younger than Michael Stipe ever has. It's in its hooks and wonderful jan- gle-pop that Music from the Adventures of Pete & Pete really shines, and where Polaris's/Miracle Legion's other influ- ences really show. The lone bass line in "Ashamed of the Story I Told" is very Pixies, as is the vaguely ska guitar in "Summerbaby," a song which, inciden- tally, becomes Little Pete's favorite in the episode "A Hard Day's Pete" after he briefly witnesses Polaris jamming in a garage. It's Nickelodeon, but with more bass and fewer talking crustaceans. There is little, if any, music on this recordthatcouldbe called "innovative." Polaris was a one-off gig; the members preferred to experiment with their main project. But it is this very lack of experimentation that makes Musicfrom the Adventures of Pete & Pete so essen- tial. The songs all sound like any decent pop group of the early '90s playing with nothing to lose. This album would never be a part of Miracle Legion's dis- cography, which allowed Mulcahy and company to simply write a collection of no-pressure pop songs. There are standouts, to be sure - "Waiting for October" is incredibly fun and upbeat, and, of course, "Hey Sandy" is itself a pop gem - but they're not the point. For a'90s kid, this record sounds like child- hood. 4 4 4 4 4 I I I I oan subject to credit approval and is available to officer candidates within 18 mon ready commissioned. Automatic payment from, and direct deposit of pay into, aU ill increase to USAA's standard unsecured loan rate in effect at that time. 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