'the b -side weekend essentials Jan 15. to Jan.18 CONCERT It's a weekend of non- stop entertainment at the Blind Pig. On Friday night, feel-good indie popsters Mason Proper will be playing with the Javelins and The Mighty Narwhale, And on Saturday night, pre- pare to be pummeled by Aleph-1's spaced- out brand of proggy electronica as they play with Vox Maui. Tickets for each show are $7 ($10 if you're under 21). Doors open Friday at 9 p.m. and Saturday at 9:30 p.m. TV Last May, Flight of the- Conchords delighted Ann Arborites with a concert at the Michi- gan Theatre. Though there's no sign the duo is planning a return to Ann Arbor anytime soon, you can get your fix of Bret and Jermaine on the tube in the meantime. The second season of "Flight of the Conchords" the TV show begins this Sun- day at 10 p.m. on HBO. FILM "Slumdog Millionaire" generated a lot of buzz, and with good reason.'This whimsi- cal romance about a boy from Mumbai is a sure-fire Oscar con- tender. This is the last weekend the film plays at the State Theatre, so if you haven't seen it yet ... well, what are you waiting for? Herb David has hung out with some of the most influential musicians of the 20th century, including Bob Dylan, Iggy Pop and Frank Zappa. "You know who Thurston Moore is, from Sonic Youth?" Charlie Lorenzi, the manager for Herb David Guitar Studio asks. It's almost a rhetorical question. Thurston Moore, one of Rolling Stone Magazine's "Greatest Guitarists of All Time" and founder of Sonic Youth, the groundbreaking noise-rock band of the '90s? "Well, he bought a Ron Asheton signature guitar from us yesterday," Lorenzi says, as if it was an everyday occurrence, as phenomenal as a kid buying a Snickers bar. "And Jack White, from the White Stripes, he buys stuff here when he comes to town," Lorenzi adds. Herb David himself, white-haired and garbed in a turtleneck, is sitting in an office chair nearby, engaged in the conversation. He nods in agreement. "People of the '60s who hung out here were Bob Dylan and Joni Mitchell, Sun Ra, Phil Ochs," he says, listing off names as if these legendary music icons were old friends he bummed around with once upon a time. Which is actu- ally pretty much what happened. "Bob Dylan played here once, and we all thought that he wrote good songs but he can't play worth a darn and he smelled bad," David admits, chuckling. "He was trying to be like Woody Guthrie, a wanderer," he says, suggesting that Dylan's smell was the result of his itin- erant habits and *inability to get a good shower once in a while. Lorenzi and David are talking in the unseen recesses of Herb David Guitar Studio, in a loft with angled wood- en ceilings and walls lined with shelves piled high with Herb David played a huge role in the, 1960s explosion of rock'n'roll in Ann Arbor. He has been a mainstay ever since. <- By Whitney Pow Senior Arts Editor lumber for guitar-making. It's dusty in here, but in a way that suggests loving use - the room is filled with hand- crafted lutes, broken mandolins and works-in-progress still hanging around the workbench. David's guitar studio has been in Ann Arbor since the 1960s, a vital place and time for the cultural and musical revolution of that seminal decade. David him- self was a central figure in the burgeoning music scene. "Music was our life, our literature, our politics - free from conformity," he said. "(It was) a big deal in the'60s. That's the way we felt. Music was going to change the whole world." People came to David's shop not only for the Ann Arbor scene, but to hang out with David, a local celebrity himself. "Newsweek did an article about me, and I was on the front page of a lot of newspapers across the country and other magazines," he said. He says he has been written about in The Washington Post, and he's made appear- ances on popular, TV shows including "The Today Show." After all that press, word quickly got around about David and his workshop - the then-central hub of the music revolution that once met in an Ann Arbor basement. The city hosted a completely different scene back then. Jimi Hendrix played at the Fifth Dimension, a now-defunct club that used to be at Huron and Main Street. The Grateful Dead put on shows at Crisler Arena. Frank Zappa played at Hill Auditorium. And the Can- See HERB DAVID, Page 4B READING Author Michael Shil- ling, writer, UM lecturer and ex-drummer of The Long Winters is read- ing from his new book, "Rock Bottom" at Sha- man Drum today. The novel tells the story of a rock band called The Blood Orphans that is bothered by random problems like nagging Buddhist preachers and eczema. The reading is at 7 p.m. and will be followed with a signing. 0