a 6A - Friday, October 8, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com a Mariinsky Orchestra to take on Russian giants at the 'U' The Walkmen just released their sixth album, Lisbon, Walkmen bring crunchy guitar riffs to Detroit Americana veterans sound like "guys in pants on the beach" By MIKE KUNTZ Daily Arts Writer In the few short weeks since its release, The Walkmen's sixthstudioalbum,Lisbon, has been showered with critical praise. The Walkmen For a lot of bands these days, it seems like Sunday at 8p.m. that elusive breakout The Magic Stick recorddoesn'thituntil Ticketsfrom$12 well after the first or second try, giving art- ists time - for better or worse - to tinker with and perfect their sound before larger audiences start tuning in. The New York vets have come close to a breakout a few times, most recently with 2008's critically lauded You a Me on the back of its single "In the New Year." But the band is still a little stunned it hit the jackpot on the sixth try. "We were incredibly surprised," organ- ist Peter Bauer said in an interview with the Daily. "I don't think we've ever had a record received this well." The band has been putting out records steadily since 2002, back when all things in the rockun'roll tent revolved around garage-rock acts like The Strokes, leaving room for little else. But nowadays, when more slow-burning bands like The Nation- al can generate a #2 record, it's not sur- prising that their New York counterparts aren't far behind. "I think, in general, the music that's semi-popular right now is a lot better than it was like four years ago - that a band like Animal Collective could get so big nowadays is great," Bauer said. "In 2003 or 2004, it seemed like four-on-the-floor rock was the popular thing, it was almost like anything else was annoying to peo- ple." This time around, people seem to be catching on. After an enthusiastic recep- tion of their fittingly rainy set at this summer's Lollapalooza, the band seemed poised. They even made the trek to Eng- land last May for the Pavement-curated All Tomorrow's Parties festival - with a mid-set shout out from Stephen Malkmus, no less. "I don't know what happened, but they dissed us in 'Range Life,' " Bauer said. "They put'The Walkmen' in there after we played the first night." (The original lyrics target the Smashing Pumpkins, resulting in a lot of huffing and puffing from vocalist and guitarist Billy Corgan when the track was first released.) "You know, they ask us to play this thing and then they diss us like two nights later," Bauer laughed. "I'm dying to figure out what happened!" For Lisbon, the band actually spent time in the Portuguese capital - a whole three- days - and found enough inspiration there to create the record's damp mood as well as its namesake. "There was something in the quality of the city that reflected the music we were making, so we named the record after it," Bauer explained. Tracks like "Angela Surf City" and "Victory" contrast Hamilton Leithauser's scorched vocals with layers of rain-dam- aged guitars - all delivered with just the right amount of gloomy, room-generated reverb to keep everything foggy. "The whole time we were there it was raining. When we were standing on the beach and it was raining it kind of seemed similar to what we were doing," Bauer said. "I was trying to explain it to this guy in Portugal: It's like guys in pants on the beach, you know? That sort of sounds like our music." In making the new record, the band enlisted producers John Congleton (Mod- est Mouse, Okkervil River) and Chris Zane (Passion Pit, Tokyo Police Club), both alt- rock veterans whose old-school ethic and ear for vintage sounds seemed tailored to The Walkmen's new material. "John's really into these old Soviet microphones," Bauer smirked. "They look like the Soviet equivalent of what you're used to." Despite its cohesive final mix, the record went through a number of different phases See WALKMEN, Page 7A By JOE CADAGIN Daily Arts Writer The Mariinsky Orchestra is big - big sound, big talent, big names, big home- land. Since the time of Peter the Great, the Orchestra of the Mariinsky Theater has been an artistic treasure and a source of national pride for Rus- sia. Having survived The 200 years in a nation of political upheaval and instability, the Mariinsky Orchestra Orchestra has reached S worlwide . . Sunday at worldwide recognition thanks to its most recent4 and ambitious director, Hill Audioim Maestro Valery Gergiev. Tikes fom$10 This Sunday, Ann Arbor audiences will witness this powerhouse of an orchestra in a concert at Hill Audi- torium. Gergiev and his orchestra have toured the globe extensively, resulting ina recent resurgence of interest in Russian music. Gergiev and the Mariinsky Orchestra have made 10 UMS appearances, most notably their five-concert cycle of 11 Shostakovich symphonies in 2006. For the first half of Sunday's program, the Mariinsky will perform the luscious and passionate Piano Concerto No. 3 of Sergei Rachmaninoff. With its full chords and dazzling solo cadenzas, the concerto is regarded as one of the most difficult and technically demanding works for piano. However, in the hands of a skilled pianist, Rach- maninoff's Third can be a moving experi- ence. The Mariinsky may have found just such a pianist in soloist Denis Matsuev, who will join the orchestra for Rach- maninoff's Third at the Hill concert. The winner of the 1998 International Tchai- kovsky Competition, Matsuev has been compared to legendary Russian pianist Vladimir Horowitz by The London Times. The second half of the Mariinsky's program is devoted to Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 5. As the 2011 centennial anniversary of Mahler's death approach- es, orchestras have been honoring the composer in their season repertoire. For Ann Arbor audiences, the Mariinsky's performance will be a unique live sym- phonic experience. "There's something really exciting about listening to Mahler's music live," said Residential College associate profes- sor Naomi Andre, who teaches a seminar on the history of the symphony. "It's really hard to get that same sense when you're listening to your CDs or your iPod. And all music, I believe, is wonderful when you get to experience it live. But there's some- thing ... wonderful with Mahler." Composed between 1901 and 1902 (the same, decade as Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3), Mahler's Fifth Symphony is a massive orchestral work in five move- ments. The piece is primarily known for its romantic fourth movement, the Ada- gietto, which was dedicated to his wife, Alma Mahler-Werfel. "It was literally a love letter he wrote to Alma," Andre said. "It's just a wonderful moment to take a deep breath and be pen- sive ... It's just so lush and so sensuous and beautiful." Along with his eight other symphonies, the Fifth marks an important point in a symphonic history that began with Franz Joseph Haydn in the18th century. "In terms of the well known sympho- nies - what's become canonic - Mahler represents the end of the Germanic tradi- tion that had dominated the symphony," Andre said. "It's interesting to be a hun- dred years from that and looking back." For listeners new to Mahler, it can be difficult to adapt to his often slow and Celebrating Mahler and Rachmaninoff. expansive compositional style. In fact, Mahler is famous for his comment to fel- low composer Jean Sibelius, "A symphony should be like the world. It must embrace everything." Andr6 pointed out that when listening to Mahler, "you really have to slow your pulse down" to enjoy the composer's rich and complex orchestration. She went on to assert that Mahler's music has a univer- sal appeal because of its "all-embracing" nature. "This is where it all comes together - life, and thought, and who we are, and falling in love, and (our place) in the world and in nature - all of this comes together in Mahler's symphonies." 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