The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.coma Friday, October 23, 2009 - 5A A conceptual 'World' By SASHA RESENDE Daily Arts Writer Musician John Darnielle probably didn't expect to make his TV debut on the set of a satir- ical Comedy Central show. *** But then again, what kind of The artist wouldn't Mountain want to ben- efit from the Goats famed "Colbert The Life of the bump"? World to Come Darnielle, the creative 4AD force and the only constant behind The Mountain Goats, was recently a guest on Stephen Colbert's late night comedy show, revealing the host to be a huge and border- line nerdy fan of the indie-folk outfit. Despite recent main- stream appearances, the band has maintained a relatively low profile throughout its career, releasing a series of albums with little recognition outside a small music community. With the band's 17th (yes, you read that correctly) release The Life of the World to Come, the band explores its poppier roots while solidifying its rustic sound. The result is The Mountain Goats' most accessible album yet. Darnielle has made a career on exploring the darker compo- nents of human emotion, devot- ing whole albums to an array of themes ranging from failed relationships to methamphet- amine addiction. His band has perfected the art of the concept album and its latest release is no exception. Each of the album's 12 tracks is titled after a differ- ent biblical verse, providing the framework for the record's over- arching religious theme. The album opens placidly with a slow-strummed acous- tic downer that pontificates on self-help tapes ("1 Samuel 15:23") before progressing into a mix of pop-rock guitar anthems and keyboard-based hymns. "Samuel" is an odd choice for an opening track, but it succeeds in orientinglistenersto therecord's introspective core. While many of the album's songs maintain a more upbeat progression, they preserve the opener's somber ruminations, continuing the band's tradition of exploring melancholy subject matters. By rotating between raucous screaming ("Genesis 3:23," "Romans 10:9") and cal- culated crooning ("1 John 4:16," "Genesis 30:3"), the album pro- vides measured diversity with- in the confines of its theme and Darnielle's self-conscious lyr- ics. Ultimately, The Life of the World to Come is a varied jour- ney through Darnielle's self- discovery, relying on religious symbols to help its author tell his story. "Philippians 3:20-21" strad- dles both the band's boister- ous and subdued aesthetics with a quirky but fairly low-key drum beat pulling together the song's light acoustic strings and dreamy keyboard flourishes. Darnielle hums the track's typi- cally caustic lyrics in a voice barely above a whisper; profess- ing "Well the path to the palace of wisdom that the mystics walk / is lined with neuroleptics and electric shocks." Although there are positive qualities to both sides of the group's sound, The Mountain Goats truly shine when heavy words are contrasted with uplifting guitar progressions, all accompanied by Darnielle's passionate vocals. To that end, the charged "Psalms 40:2" shines as the album's strongest track and a testament to the Darnielle's ability to incorpo- rate intricate storytelling with powerful instrumentals. Heavy guitar strings and a persis- tently strong drum beat frame its heavy-handed words before exploding into a tantrum of Diverse yet confined. musical soundscapes, illustrat- ing the emotions transmitted by. Darnielle's screaming. It's a classic Mountain Goats ode, and after 17-plus recording ses- sions with the project, it's what Darnielle does best. When The Mountain Goats performed "Psalms 40:2" on Stephen Colbert's broadcast last week, the band gelled in front of a national audience for the first time. With the group's latest tri- umph on The Life of the World to Come, Darnielle's inspired song- writing should certainly win over folk enthusiasts. "Richard II" plays three times this weekend at the Duderstadt Video Center. ' Richard' lives This campus production of the Shakespeare classic lets audiences enjoy the fun up close By Molly McGuire I Daily Arts Writer There's something illuminating and fun about the privilege of see- ing actors rehearse. Before curtain, the charming chaos that's usu- The Rude ally restrained to the wings bursts McChanicals forth and threat- present ens to overcome " 11 the stage, only Ridiard to be cunningly At the tucked away again Duderstadt as the lights go Video Center down. Wednesday's Todayat 7p.m, dress rehearsal of p.m.oand 1p.m. the Rude Mechan- icals' "Richard $3 for students II" had all of the pre-performance bustle that characterizes the week approach- ing opening night: prop mishaps, actors all around the auditorium lunging with swords and practicing death scenes. But from the open- ing scene onward the student-run Rude Mechanicals' adaptation of Shakespeare's history play was pure professionalism, and a pol- ished, poignant, almost relentless retelling of a British king's journey from opulent robes to prison garb. The audience is masterfully inte- grated into the play, surrounding the 'H'-shaped stage on all sides. As a venue, the modern Duder- stadt Video Center is a bit uncon- ventional for a classical play, but staging the production there sig- pifies a commitment to audience involvement. The seating configu- ration nearly puts the audience in Richard's place, receiving visitors and settling onto his throne. You're close enough to see the actor's sali- va fly through the air during some particularly impassioned speeches. And the actors are not limited to the stage - they wander the floor, making eye contact with audience members with such intimacy that it's impossible to escape from the action of the play. "I want a play to hurtle into an audience from all sides," LSA senior and director James Mangan- ello said. "It's not just in-the-round for the actors, in that they're being viewed from all sides - the play also surrounds the audience." Also surrounding the audience are video screens bearing images mainly collected from Russian montage films. Black and white scenes of industry and urban land- scapes accompany the action on stage. "The projections were a way to envelop the audience - to give them a sense of a larger world outside the play," Manganello said. "I love the montage aesthetic, the way they make you put two seemingly dis- tinct things together. That's a bit what I hope to do when I direct: to be unconfined by 'realism' and depict a deeper truth that pulls upon the audience's own cognitive maneuvers." This idea of melding two dis- parate things together resonates throughout the play. The precise time period is difficult to discern (there are trench coats and bowler hats, swords and guns), but the set- ting references the Industrial Rev- olution, which coincides with the political revolution demonstrated through Shakespeare's words and characters. "(There's) a shift from wealth being demonstrated by luxury goods from faraway, exotic places to a more commodified economy, in which quantity and profit deter- mines value," Manganello said. "Both (worlds) are always in nego- tiation with each other." The play examines this shift while focusing on the more per- sonal journey of a king becoming simply a man (with Richard) and an average man becoming a king (with his successor, Henry Bolingbroke.) The play opens with King Richard in a majestic robe, holding an exot- ic drink, a parasol draped over his throne - a tableau unimaginable at the end of the play. The downfall of the young and poetic, yet smug king is sympathetically portrayed by LSA senior Alexandra Clement- Jones, especially when he breaks down, coining in contact with his mortality in the famous speech that ends "How can you say to me, I am a king?" But the king who swag- gers and smirks in the face of oth- ers' emotional pleas (the moving deathbed speech by Manganello's John of Gaunt comes to mind) can- not be too sympathetic, and Clem- ent-Jones balances the two well as Richard's childlike arrogance turns to poignant self-awareness. Like "Hamlet," "Richard II" has a legacy of actresses playing the title role, and Manganello maintains Clement-Jones was simply the best performer for the part. "Alex said something to me very early on in the process-that became our touchstone for moving ahead," he explained. "She said we shouldn't play Richard as a man or a woman, but as a creature. That's what we've done and I'm very, very proud of her enormous achievement." Perhaps the most remarkable thing about the Rude Mechani- cals' production of "Richard II" is that it takes a play that could be so easily dominated by one character and turns it into an ensemble piece, with standout performances by even the actors with the smallest roles. After all, "Richard II" is the first in a tetralogy of history plays, and the other characters must be left able to carry on the torch. Set- ting an inauspicious tone for Rich- ard's successor, the production both presages what's to come and represents a self-contained world, one that depicts Richard's rise and fall in a fresh and intriguing way. "It's artistic because the wax is melted." Science's smartest By ANT MITCHELL DailyArts Writer The Science Channel's first and only game show "Head Games" is not simply guilt-free TV on an "educational" network. And it's not just another show to watch in lieu of doing homework with only minimal self-reproach. Instead, it manages to funnel *** genuinely intriguing informa- tion and humor into a short half- Head Games hour slot.S In "Head Games," contestants compete to answer a variety of at9 p.m. questions covering a range of sci- Science Channel ence-related categories including natural science, inventions and the sexual practic- es of a specific type of octupus. The executive pro- ducer is none other than Whoopi Goldberg, who also produced "Hollywood Squares" (an old guilty pleasure of a game show that lasted five seasons). Greg Proops ("True Jackson, VP") hosts with hair as spiked as ever, ready to access a collection of innuendos for all occasions. And the show gives him ample innuendo opportunity (probably inten- tionally) with its content. One of the greatest strengths of "Head Games" is that it is not geared only to science lovers. Some might find the show attractive purely out of the nostalgia induced by the fourth-grade egg and vinegar trick, and all can appreciate a look at a genetic trait found in goats causing them to faint as a survival mechanism. Basically, "Head Games" manages to hold view- ers' attention almost entirely because it builds curiosity. The want to know the-answer to the questions is more gripping than the competition on the show. That's not to say that some of the con- testants aren't quirky characters, though next to a host like Greg Proops they seem less strange than would in other settings. In all honesty, Proops tends to alternate between hesitantly lovable and somewhat obnox- ious throughout, never quite slipping permanently into either description. As a host he fills a central role, and commentary from him is a given. Clearly he wasn't chosen for his experience and interest in scientific information - he holds onto his note cards quite tightly. Rather, he was picked for his background in game shows (which is extensive) and for his wit. Those who don't find him amusing even while he's in his "hesitantly lovable" phase will almost certainly lose some patience with his flamboyant banter and monologues. Still, whether Proops makes a positive impres- sion or not, the competition itself lends a certain amount of low-key excitement to the whole affair, albeit excitement without too much breath-hold- ing. If "Head Games" filled an hour time slot like "The Price Is Right" rather than the taking up its Nostalgic, funny, brainy and full of innuendo. half hour more commonly seen in game shows like "Jeopardy," the show would likely suffer, possibly even degenerating into monotony. Luckily this is not the case, and apart from a few momentary lapses when the questions get a bit simple. The show fits well into the time allotted to it. Audiences will be able to watch "Head Games" without feeling shame or embarrassment, even when they're watching it out of sheer enjoyment rather than for procrastination purposes. During the show, semi-useless fun facts pop up almost con- tinuously along the way, which is never a bad thing. ARTS IN BRIEF DID YOU JUST READ THE 'RICHARD II' REVIEW? PRETTY SWEET, HUH? WRITE FOR FINE ARTS. E-mail battlebots@umich.edu for an application Film Remaking garbage "The Stepfather" At Quality 16 and Showcase Screen Gems If there's one token rule of filmmaking no filmmaker should ever forget, it's that sequels, remakes and rip-offs of remakes are rarely viable as theatrical material. Unfortu- nately, the allure of easy money has apparently induced amnesia in certain members of the film industry, and we are now con- fronted with the unfortunate consequences. "The Stepfather" is many things - generous parts "Dis- turbia," "The Shining" and of course, the original "Stepfa- ther." All of these films contrib- ute to the abhorrenthodgepodge that is the sequel, but neither "scary" nor even "mildly thrill- ing" would describe the film. The story begins when Michael Harding (Penn Badgley, "Gos- sip Girl") returns from military school to reconnect with family and friends.Upon arriving,he dis- covers that his mother Susan (Sela Ward,"HouseM.D.")hasfallenfor a new lover named David Harris (Dylan Walsh, "Nip/Tuck") and has remarried. At first, Michael's homecoming follows the status quo until he begins to suspect that his new stepfather may be hiding sordid details of his past life. Every aspect of the movie is slow, boring, and trivial from start to finish. Even the purport- edly "shocking" sequences have no marked effect other than begging the question, "Haven't I seen this before?" Unfortunate- ly, that nauseating sensation of ddj vu is perfectly justifiable. TIMOTHY RABB