The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, November 25, 2008 -5 The art of improvisation grew up with a recording studio in the guest room, complete with a hi-fi ADAT 8-track recorder, an audio mixing table covered in color-coded knobs, a synthesizer that came with over 300 sound options and a $1,000 'microphone my uncle kept in a varnished maple box. It was state- of-the art for the '90s. I was six years old. I lived in the room next door WHITNEY to the makeshift POW studio and in the evenings my mother, a music composition major and an accom- plished songwriter, would write and record songs. I could hear the muffled sounds of the piano coming through the walls as I fell asleep, my mother singing along with the music, stopping every few seconds to jot down the newly-written notes into her book of blank sheet music. My uncle worked for a recording studio and sometimes came to visit us. When he arrived, the music production in our house would'sud- denly begin to move quickly - my uncle would be over for several weeks, and they had to get the recording done in a short amount of time. I remember waking up at night, opening my eyes in my dark room and hearing the two of them harmonizing in the small storage closet they had emptied out and begun to use as a singing studio. My mom and her brother impro- vised and made use of the space and materials available to them: I remember my uncle using a set of pantyhose stretched over an embroidery hoop to serve as a spit screen for the microphone. And many, many hours later, they ended up with several polished, finalized songs. Their improvised recording studio included an unexpected sound engineer: me. They'd call me in sometimes when they needed another hand to turn the volume knob at just the right time to fade- in and fade-out the microphones when they were busy with the vocals and piano. I would stand* there, clutching my teddy bear and feeling terrified, because when I turned it too slowly or too quickly, they looked at me, wide-eyed, and told me to do it again. And again And again, until I would run scared back to my room after a satisfac- tory job, and my mom and uncle continued their work. Improvisation is important when it comes to creating art. Not just in the sense of off-the- cuff solos in jazz (Miles Davis), or in the "random" assortment of objects or paint strokes in graphic art (Jean-Michel Basquiat), but as a way of thinking. Improvisation is less about thoughtlessness and randomness than about know- ing the rules and possibilities and stretching them. It's about creat- ing something out of the materials on hand, be it the circle of fifths and a brass trumpet or a storage closet and a good microphone. It's about not letting structure or the possession of the "ideal" recording space, musical instrument or art materials keep you from making the art you want to make. Impro- visation, in short, is about free- thinking. A pioneering force of the 20th- century music movement was this urge to break the rules, to re-define the idea of music and what's pleas- ing to the ear. Take composer John Cage and his infamous piano piece "4'33," which consists of four min- utes and 33 seconds of complete silence as Cage sat there, doing nothing at the ivories. The live audio recording of the piece con- tains complete silence that quietly bleeds into the sniffling, coughing and siieezing of the audience mem- bers as they become increasingly restless when they realize they're not getting any audible tunes until Cage finished performing his silent piece. John Cage was also a progres- sive art theorist who used music to dabble in conceptual art. My mother attended one of Cage's concerts when she was in gradu- ate school. At the concert, she and a large group of people sat on the floor in a quiet, dark room. Then Cage gave the introduction (this is a paraphrase): "If you listen care- fully and adjust your ears to listen- ing toa certain frequency, you'll be able to hear my composition ... that is being played ina building several blocks away from the building you are now sitting in." My mother said that she and everyone else sat there in silence, straining to hear the sounds that were most likely not getting to their ears (I don't believe they got to my mother's). She said some peo- ple left the performance transfixed and changed, praising the sounds they "heard"; others muttered about how ridiculous the event was and criticized the music they just pretended to listen to. Either way, Cage was innovative in his subversion of musical expec- tation and his stretching of musical boundaries. Other pieces of his include "Inlets (Improvisation I)," which consists of several people playing water-filled conch shells for 10 minutes; and "Address," which is a performance where five people with audio tape players play Free thinking plants the seed of musical experimentation. recordings of music and speeches simultaneously for 45 minutes. Cage never lacked ideas or material because he didn't let traditional thinking inhibit him - music was whatever he wanted to compose, and it could be played by any instruments (or sound machines) he had on hand and had the imagi- nation to use. In the same way, improvisation can be done on a much smaller scale. Experimentation seems to be the key to this concept: Play with what you have; make the best out of it. My mother improvised her recording studio and used our guest room as a space to create music. The recording studio has now been moved to the basement, but every so often when I'm home I can hear the sounds of the piano drifting up the stairs and I'm six years old again, turning the knobs of the mixing board, an improvised sound engineer for a day. Pow left four paragraphs out of this column to emulate Cage. E-mail her at poww@umich.edu. "Hey, is that Whitney Pow? 'Bolt'not so supe Ir Like its namesake, new Disney film doesn't quite fly By Emily Boudreau I Daily Arts Writer Talking dogs and hamsters aren't supposed to appeal to people over the* age of 10. Somehow, "Bolt" does. Bolt (voiced by John Travolta, "Pulp Fiction") AtQualityl6l believes he has special and Showcase powers. The titular canine Disney star of a fictional TV show, Bolt operates under the misguided belief that his TV super pow- ers exist outside of a Hollywood sound- stage. Believing his human owner Penny (Miley Cyrus, "Hannah Montana") has been kidnapped, Bolt escapes from the studio to find he'r, but is accidentally shipped to New York in the process. He then discovers that his super powers no longer work and must come to terms with the fact that he's just an ordinary dog. All the same, he is determined to return home to Penny. Along his trip back to Hollywood, he encounters an amusing group of characters: a declawed, cynical cat named Mittens (Susie Essman, "Curb' Your Enthusiasm"); Rhino (Mark Walton, "Chicken Little") the overly enthusiastic hamster; and a cast of pigeons. "Bolt" isn't a nail biter. It's a G-rated animated movie, so there isn't a lot here that will move someone to the edge of her seat. It does have a wholesome charm, but it never quite achieves the charisma of other successful family films like "Find- ing Nemo." The story is fairly predictable and a happy ending is guaranteed from the start. The plot doesn't take any unex- pected twists, and yes, the hamster does get a bit annoying. Yet the movie is gener- ally funny and well written. It's not some- thing to be taken too seriously. "Bolt" is a major step up from some of Disney's less impressive animation efforts like "Chick- en Little." The voices of each character fit per- fectly. Even though Miley Cyrus has a part in the movie, there's no trace of Han- nah Montana in Penny's character. The human characters, especially, are wittily crafted and manage to make the audience laugh even before saying anything. Both the woman in the trailer park with mil- lions of hamsters and the animal control officers are fairly true to their stereo- types, but they seem to add more humor than insult to the film. The movie does have an appeal for all ages, probably to the credit of the hilari- ous pigeon characters. They're fairly slow in an endearing sort of way and definitely deliver some of the best lines accompa- nied by some funny twists of animation. one of the most memorable scenes is when Bolt comes across some Californian pigeons that only eat whole grain bread crumbs, not whole wheat bread crumbs. The pigeons make the movie. Then again, maybe its appeal stems from the fact that this is a Walt Disney production and most people have got- ten used to being happily swept away by brightly colored, eerily realistic animated worlds with talking animals. No one can ever get too- old for that. Once'Glow' fades, band bores By DAVID RIVA For the Daily Anathallo has to be one of the most appro- priately named bands of all time. The name is Greek in origin, but in English, its transla- tion is "to renew, refresh or bloom again," and the band's music is a perfect embodi- ment of this sentiment. Canopy Glow, Anathallo's AnathallO second full-length record CanopyGlow since its formation in 2000, Anticon features telling songs like "Northern Lights," "The River" and "Noni's Field," which all paint strong images of nature presented in a liber- ating fashion. More relevant to the renewing and refreshing feeling is the sound itself. Gen- tle piano and delicate acoustic guitar parts combine with violin and cello arrangements to create an open and airy sound. After the initial awe of the natural-sound- ing songs wears off, the music conveys an unmistakable familiarity. Anathallo sounds remarkably similar to indie-pop hero and fel- low Michigan native Sufjan Stevens. Unfor- tunately, Canopy Glow is difficult to listen to without qualifying it as a sub-par Sufjan knockoff. Frequent harmonies, an abundance of aux- iliary percussion and the baroque pop-meets- high-school-marching-band feel are all traits thatthetwoartistshaveincommon.Butwhere Stevens sounds effortless and breathtaking, Anathallo sounds forced and unoriginal, and the group overworks songs that should thrive on their simplicity and free-flowing nature. Despite all this, there are a couple of redeeming tracks on the album. The afore- mentioned "The River" flexes its chamber- pop muscles with a well-crafted musical arrangement that includes clever usage of the mandolin and vibraphone to create a whimsi- cal ambiance. Lyrics like "Rolled like a felled tree / With arms as useless as such / Death's WANT TO GET CLOSER TO YOUR FAVORITE BANDS? WORK FOR DAILY PHOTO. E-mail photo@michigandaily.com for more information. panic came, a calmness stayed /You couldn't do much," complement the mood. The song is focused and doesn't force its musical ambition. "Italo" also masters a complex but uncompli- cated sound, as it commands in a cheerful and invigorating manner to "Put your hands up- / organic melodies fail to bloom. Pick yourself up / And you pull yourself up / Underneath the dugout cubby enclave of the sidewalk overhang." But not all the tra'cks have this sort wonder- ment. "Cafetorium" is an unbearably obscure narrative that connects the religious ritual of baptism to everyday objects like Cool Whip and drinking fountains. Lines like "I was still unborn / But I have heard the first hand ... and the hearts thereof can be baptized in the heads of their own sweat / Salt rings like the outlined shroud on the tomb of your skin," severely complicate the matter. In addition to this lyrical ambiguity, there are random and unnecessary trombone and trumpet interjec- tions. "John J. Audubon" tries so hard to make beautiful harmonies, but the odd rhythm and abrasive drums take away from the effort. With 2008 coming to a close, looking for a good "sleeper" album is a customary task for music fans. Canopy Glow is a sleeper in the most literal sense of the word: Heavy eyelids and uncontrollable yawning might be side effects of these light and vapid tunes. i