The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 10, 2008 -5A 'Renaissance'for one of rap's old masters By JOSHUA BAYER Daily Arts Writer With his a cappella tour de force at the start of "Dance On Glass," Q-Tip - ex- member of hip-. hop powerhouse A Tribe Called Quest - proves x-Tip his voice is the The only instrument Renaissance he needs. "Corny Universal Motown COURTESY OF UNIVERSAL MOTOWN rap style niggas / They pedigre when tl me Im hamme ly a sar exquisit intro. Q has an the pot liding tI teringly On T linguist remarke ing the ears wi Ar SCOT spends album b status in hop, he an MC, of the p- Whil Amplife alter eg superfic and bli a welco roots. O "WeFigI upon a ing off flows lu vignette ken ma: ex-girlfr married ment in subjects lack the theory that men join the military e / Deep waters they be in because they feel socially deprived, hey just a manatee / Who, the song could serve as fodder for unaffected, the whale, the an entire feature film. rhead." This zinger is mere- On "ManWomanBoogie," Q-Tip mple slice from the song's tosses government oppression, ely metaphor-crammed racial barriers and gender roles -Tip's lyrics are poetry. He together into an orgiastic melting inexplicable know-how for pot dance party. "The bluest collar ential energy of words, col- onthe brownestofskin/White,yel- hem together in mouthwa- low, red too / They don't care who fresh ways. it is / They're watching you / Con- he Renaissance, he keeps his spiracy so you might as well dance ic virtuosity popping with / Get down Zulu." Q-Tip's songs able consistency, pummel- certainly have messages, though brain while slathering the they're seldom clearly delineated th rhymes. And while he or obvious. Instead, he opts for the abstract, leaving lyrical bread- crumb trails for listeners to follow Tribe Called and form their own conclusions. But, even if Q-Tip were rapping guest alum aboutwipinghis ass,his stylewould be just as captivating. His but- res on return. tery flow morphs to wrap around the structure of each song, the words tumbling off of his tongue effortlessly. Q-Tip doesn't rap over a good chunk of time on the songs; he raps with them. His voice boasting about his elevated becomes another instrument in the a the lukewarm world of hip mix, lending the songs a cohesion does so for good reason: As and authenticity sorely lacking in he's been light-years ahead the world of modern rap. ack for twenty years. On "ManWomanBoogie," Q-Tip e Q-Tip's first solo outing, conducts a question-and-answer d, found him shedding his session with a free-doodling bass. o Abstract in favor of more On J Dilla-produced single "Move," Hal ruminations on booty his flow surfs breezily on a shape- ng, The Renaissance marks shifting ocean of noise. With me return to his cerebral psychedelic neon-synth drones, n the narratively ambitious gurgling backing vocals and blips ht/WeLove," he embarks and beeps that sound as if they're thematic safari. Show- coming from a submarine control his flair for storytelling, he room, the track exemplifies the acidly among three linked vivid production throughout the s The story of a heartbro- album. n on a cigarette break, his With The Renaissance, Q-Tip riend who is now unhappily proves he hasn't lost the slightest i and his subsequent enroll- touch with his philosophical roots. a the U.S. Army. Tackling At a ripe 38, it seems he's growing as sprawling as fate and the even wiser with age. "My name is McLSoin, and I'm an alcoholic." Knowing9 their 'Role' Sharp leads Rudd and Scott propel vulgar, heartwarming comedy By Sheri Jankelovitz I Daily Arts Writer Danny (Paul Rudd, "For- getting Sarah Marshall") is having a pretty crappy day. His girl- friend of seven * years (Elizabeth Banks, "Zack R and Miri Make Role Models a Porno") just At Quality16 broke up with and Showcase him and his job, Universal delivering inspi- rational "stay off drugs" messages to kids while pro- moting energy drinks, just plain sucks. He snaps and, along with his partner in crime Wheeler (Seann William Scott, "The Rundown"), drives his bull-shaped car into a high school's statue. Rather than go to jail, the two men are assigned 150 hours of community service at Sturdy Wings, a center where adults act as figurative big brothers, or "bigs" as thev're known in the filmto younger children, or "littles." The two men are each stuck with kids formerly considered unwanted - Danny gets Augie Farks (Christo- pher Mintz-Plasse, "Superbad") and Wheeler gets paired with Ronnie Shields (relative newcomer Bobb'e J. Thompson, "Idlewild"). Augie spends his days dressed as a warrior from medieval times, "battling" other people in the park, while Ronnie is a foul-mouthed hell-raiser who steals Wheeler's car and slaps him in the face. Oh, will these "bigs" and "littles" ever learn to get along? Even though the kids are total weirdos, soon Wheeler and Ronnie are bonding over their shared love of boobs and Danny discovers that Augie is actually pretty cool, despite wearingacapeandpracticingsword- play on rooftops. It's a cute premise, but the film takes us nowhere we haven't been before. It's "Kinder- garten Cop" with an R-rating and afilthysense of humor. "Role Models" begs the ques- tion: Why hasn't Paul Rudd been given a leading role before? He has all the charm for it, and shows it in a scene in which he attempts to win back his girlfriend by just quoting romantic lines from other films (even "Ghostbusters"). Seann Wil- liam Scott has less to do, basically playing a grown-up Stifler from the "American Pie" franchise. But he still knows how to deliver absolute- ly dirty lines with giddy aplomb. The two young boys more than keep up with their older counter- parts; Mintz-Plasse in particular proves he can definitely play the lovablenerd. It's uncertainifhe can ever break out of such a role, but for now, it works. In addition, every scene with the recovered-drug addict head of Sturdy Wings (the scene-stealing Jane Lynch, "The 40 Year Old Virgin") is absolutely hilarious. Though the film is a faithful fol- lower of typical "slacker boy" com- edies (think "Knocked Up" and "Superbad"),itstillmanagestocarry its own weight. It achieves hilarity without foraying into the gross-out humor that's so prevalent among its counterparts. It's cleverly written, and pulled off by actors who appre- ciate the artof a well-timed line. The joke of the title is that these two men are not even close to what a role model should be. They're crude, selfish and pretty much straight-up douchebags. The best part of the film is that, while the men discover how to be good citi- zens, they never fully change. They remain gleefully vulgar, but with bigger hearts. Snow Patrol's latest pleasant but bland By JACK PORTER crack, every wall / Pick a side, pick a DailyArts Writer fight / Get your epitaph right" Snow Patrol isn't short on poi- Like it or not, Snow Patrol's music gnant stanzas. In "Please Just Take is everywhere. The Irish soft-rock These Photos From My Hands," quintet's songs have been featured Lightbody laments that his memo- on the hit show "Grey's Anatomy" ries are "One gigantic fairy tale / and in blockbuster "Spider-Man 3." Of friends I haven't seen in years / Their doe-eyed Drinking 'til the daylight hurts." ballad "Chasing Elsewhere the band tries to deliver Cars" topped the a sequel to "Chasing Cars" with iTunes down- the somnolent "The Planets Bend load charts and Snow Patrol Between Us," but the attempt is its album Eyes A Hundred too transparent - pianos and fal- Open had strong Million Suns setto don't guarantee high-quality showings on the Geffen songwriting. Sporting soulful and Billboard 200 nuanced croons, "Lifeboats" emerg- in 2006. Even es as a more successful cool-down though Snow Patrol's earnest facade track. deflects criticism, its market pres- But dreamy musings aren't the ence betrays predatory instincts. only element on the disc. "Disaster The band's accessibility guar- Button" is a rocker that sets itself antees it'll be heard for decades apart with cryptic lyrics. What-does to come - in romantic comedies, Lightbody mean when he says "I malls, weddings and supermarkets. am just a ripped up ticket stub," and Confined to the bland genre hell does it even matter? Another head- of "adult contemporary," Snow scratcher is the song's instruction Patrol is often compared to those to "Hit that button there / The one bore-core charlatans, Coldplay. that just says wrong / We'll lose our While Coldplay is an industry jug- lives to all our favorite songs." It gernaut, Snow Patrol is likely an might be subversive, but it's more # E 3 ft. , i r .......... ..... A ' -W E.D101 I extended flash-in-the-pan. It's also more down-to-earth, even when crafting stadium-size singles. A Hundred Million Suns sees the band striving to capture the gran- deur of U2 circa Joshua Tree in its own "look what a sensitive dude I am" sort of way. Thankfully, these energetic pop centerpieces are just emotional peaks in the band's new, varied album. "Crack the Shutters" is one of the more cloying songs on Suns. Spew- ing symphonic bombast and lyrics about how pretty lead singer Gary Lightbody's girlfriend is, it could be stuffed perfectly into hour-long drama programs during sweeps week. On the heavier side, first sin- gle "Take Back the City" is appro- priately addictive - a power-popper with hummable melodies from start to finish. Even so, there's a strange life-or-death undercurrent to its lyrics: "Your city, your call / Every The best music you'll hear in a supermarket and mall near you. likely just nonsense. All told, Snow Patrol is above par in the "adult contemporary" domain, though that doesn't mean much. Lightbody's voice is charis- matic and his songs neatly balance fluff and cynicism. But this tension is also what confuses the album. A Hundred Million Suns isas listenable as it is disposable, and will likely be irrelevant by next year. But people will be listening to it for years to come. 14