The Michigan Daily - michigandaiiy.com Friday, October 8, 2010 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, October 8, 2010 - lA . Stars align at Magic Stick Detroit showcases some of Canada's best pop fare By DAVID RIVA Daily Arts Writer When blogs and webzines bom- bard curious listeners with an endless supply of buzzbands Stars and one-trick ponies, finding Tomor'ow new music in the at8 p.m. Internet Age can The Magic Stick be a daunting $15 and exhausting task. The emphasis on the here- and-now makes it easy to forget about bands that have gradually progressed over the years into a talented collection of musicians. But during a time when steady growth is a lost art, Stars has proven that just because it doesn't appear on a "Best New Music" or "Heavy Rotation" list doesn't mean they're not worth your time and attention. Now in its 10th year as a band, Stars will showcase its extensive catalogue - five full-length studio albums and five EPs - on Saturday night at The Magic Stick. The Toronto natives are part of a Canadian indie-rock insurgence along with the likes of Broken Social Scene, The New Pornogra- phers and Wolf Parade that seem- ingly sparked out of thin air. Bassist Evan Cranley claims the explosion of high-quality tal- ent coming out of the Great White North is no coincidence. His explanation of the phenomenon is two-fold. "We get a lot of government grants to help us make music and endowments through the govern- ment that help fund artists in Can- ada," Cranley said. Although policymakers have made their country conducive to creativity, the nation's massive geographical landmass and the desire for connectivity among citizens have also contributed to the conception of many musical collectives. "The fact that we're such a huge country with a small amount of people, you need community around you to kind of feel a safe- ness and a home," he explained. Stars's one-two punch of co- leadsingers (Torquil Campbell David Cross disappoints on JF*C series Stars splits lead-singer duties between Torquil Campbell and Amy Millan. and Amy Millan) is consistently its most dynamic facet. The two play off one another's strengths and weaknesses - both vocally and emotionally - creating an intimate and sometimes vulner- able relationship that has been essential to the band's success and identity. Campbell and Millan usually divide the songs on a Stars record into an even 50-50 split. Accord- ing to Cranely, sharing the vocal workload isa conscious decision. "The strength of the band is having two vocalists, so we think the more that's kind of equalized between the two in the record, then the more it represents us," he said. Although Cranely isn't part of this unique vocal relationship, he does play an essential role as one of two primary songwriters for the band. For Stars's latest record The Five Ghosts, Cranley noted some of the main musical differences from previous records. "Instrumentally was the big- gest change," he said. "It was alot less ornamental." "It was a big thing for us to try to really push the synthesis and the drums and the keyboards and stuff, because the lyrical content in this record, we thought it was really kind of cold (and) stark," he continued. "We just really wanted to try to talk about these really stark kind of emotions and we wanted to have that really balanced with, you know, stark instrumentals." The emotional content felt throughout Ghosts's 11 songs was a result of recent events in the mem- bers' lives. "We lost some people that were very close to us and we also had babies and started homes, and for us, those were themes we wanted to talk about on the record," he said. "We want to come with per- sonal themes because we want to encapsulate this kind of diary of what we've been doing the last year and a half." These personal themes - consis- tent throughout Stars's catalogue - have caught the attention of a wide variety of people who aren't confined to a specific style or scene. Cranley describes Stars's fan- base as "the people that were first into us 11 years ago, if you could take those same 200 people ... and multiply them by 10," then you would have an audience at a Stars show today. "It's kind of an interesting demographic," he explained. "We don't have people that dress a cer- tain way that like us or (are) into one kind of music that like us." "These are kind of everyday people that like us. The characters in our songs are very kind of day- to-day, everyday people. And our fans are kind of the same people in these stories we talk about." And Stars dedicate a consider- able amount of time preparing a live show to entertain fans. "When you're putting together a show, you really have to be con- scious of telling a story in 90 min- utes between the first song to the last song," he said. "When we put the show together ... we want to be as dramatic and textural as pos- sible to the audience." "It's one thing to scribble a setlist on a piece of paper and try to write it, but it's another to try to create a piece of theater out of it, and that's what we try to do when we put together shows." Although the steady growth of a band is not ideal for the rock'n'roll lifestyle of most musicians, the members of Stars seem to be satis- fied with their place in the music world. Speaking on the band's longevity, Cranely cited patience, trust, work ethic, love and forgive- ness as key elements to the band's long-term stability, the fruits of which can be heard on The Five Ghosts as well as tomorrow night at The Magic Stick. By BRIANNE JOHNSON Daily Arts Writer Rome might not have been built in a day, but14 days were more than enough for Todd Margaret to flip all of Eng- land on its arse. Rack- ing up court The 1w&-asinal charges for "funding POOI DecSIonS a terrorist Of TOd organiza- tion, posses- Maret sion of Fridays at 10 p.m. biological IFC weapons, blackmail and possession of child pornog- raphy with the intent to distrib- ute," Margaret unleashes terror on his new home without wasting one awkward moment. Such an accomplishment may inspire awe in some, but somehow IFC's "The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret" goes from poor to pathetic, making the show com- pletelyunsalvageable. Shipped to England on false faith, Todd Margaret (David Cross, "Arrested Development") eagerly abandons his only companion, his cat, to head a new company in hopes of overcoming his timidness. As a representative of Thunder Muscle Energy Drinks, Margaret builds his new life from a pile of spontaneously bizarre lies. Hired for assumed bravado, Margaret's luck quickly expires (as does the toxic drink he mercilessly forces upon British natives). His hand is scalded, the government blows up his luggage and his plans are manipulated by an ill-deceived assistant. Yet Margaret continues towillinglydesertrealityforafalse sense of success. The show is as realistic as Mar- garet's wildly spun lies, and the result is a total crackpot of des- perate lines and far-fetched plots. It's debatable what's more strange - Cross's attempts to enliven a hopeless character through insane table-hopping rants (insisting that he will "fuck the old out of you") or the fact that anyone, fictional or otherwise, could believe such crap. From a dead company's offer of a $120,000 starting salary to the quaint cafd waitress with a passion for molecular gastrology, "Marga- ret" is worse with each minute. The fabrications seem to force themselves from a fathomless pit of ignorance and desperation as Margaret suffers no other reper- cussion beyond constant humili- ation. The character is a walking mass of insanity, with opportuni- ties only presented by means of the furthered delusion of others. It's obvious by the show's title that Margaret will not develop as a character, for the first minute pres- ents his future call to court. Oblivi- ously self-indulgent, "Margaret" refuses to deliver a likable front- man, despite Cross's best attempts. But at least we can pity Mar- garet, even with his unappealing nature - something that can't be said for the supporting cast. Dave (Russell Tovey, "Being Human"), Margaret's newly appointed and admittedly unqualified assistant is sarcastic and apathetic. As a U.K. native, Dave isn't fooled by his boss's lies and therefore takes advantage of Margaret's fouls and fuels the bizarre behavior. The real charmer is Margaret's unscrupu- lous boss (Will Arnett, "Arrested Development"), a huffing and puff- ing egotistical businessman whose gravelly intonation reflects one too many cigars. Arnett tries for quirky, macho madness, but fails without a clever script. Through- Watching this is a'poordecision. out the episode, it's apparent that each joke aims more for shock value than laughs. The whole cast is at a disadvantage as "Margaret" substitutes actual wit with inces- sant and over-indulgent swearing. As the premiere episode ends, Margaret sulks on the floor of his apartment, exhaustedly pissing his pants while his cat lies dead at home. The show will be lucky to escape the same fate. Allowing the pathetic and unlikeable "The Increasingly Bad Decisions of Todd Margaret" to continue its plight may be the poorest decision of all. Waxing nostalgic on 'Forget' By JASMINE ZHU blown element to Forget that lends Daily Arts Writer the album a larger-than-life retro quality, in stark juxtaposition The setting is bleak, but not against Lewis's beautifully list- hopeless. It's long past summer less, mournful laments. now. The girl is The songs - though backed by gone. upbeat synths - move with a delib- Forget, George erate slowness bordering on leth- Lewis Jr.'s debut Twin argy. The slowness is redolent of LP under the the hazy recollection of memories, name Twin Shad pieced together gradually. Lewis Shadow, is more Forget parallels the album's pace on the about remember- Terrible song "Slow," in which he warbles: ing. The record is "I don't want to, be, believe, in an homage to the love." past, dripping in melancholy and Forget brings to mind very spe- steeped in nostalgia, or, in other cific, visceral images with the words, la douleur exquise, the grati- record's strangely evocative lyrics fying pain of loving someone unat- and topics. A hot sticky night in tainable. August, years ago. Neon street- An '80s aesthetic is pal- lights in a run-down town. Under- pable throughout the record. age drinking and jean cut-offs. The urgent, purposefully dated Things once distinctively illicit mechanical backdrop makes the and exciting now faded over the album comparable to a B-movie course of time and addled memo- guilty pleasure - brimming with ry, to Lewis's detriment. In track hyperbole and unsettlingly out "Castles in the Snow," Lewis of sync with reality. Sharp cym- croons, "Here's all I know / Your bal-heavy drums accompanied checkered room and your velvet by even sharper keyboards are bow /Your Elvis song in my ears / prevalent, and almost painfully That moonlit voice that I hear." bright in sound. There is an over- The unhurried nature of Lewis's silken voice (at times uncannily reminiscent of'80s icon Morrissey) drones on with what appears to be apathy at first listen, but in reality, is a thinly veiled despondency. on "I Can't Wait," Lewis waxes nos- talgic on the halcyon days of sum- mer: "I cannot wait for summer / I cannot wait for June / When all the ghosts are quiet / When every- thing is new." Twin Shadow evokes the '80s. Produced by Grizzly Bear's Chris Taylor on Taylor's label Ter- rible Records, it's no surprise that the recording sounds remark- ably filled out and warm. Taylor's production brings a depth that contributes to the languid, atmo- spheric quality of the record. There are no profound revela- tions to be found on Forget. The album brings nothingnew. A future is never mentioned. Instead, there is unrelenting fixation on the past. WALKMEN From Page 6A before it reached its plaintive, "dark art-rock" sound. In Lisbon's early stages, the band drew as much from the brassy bombast dotting its last record as it did from the one-two scuffle of coun- try songwriters like Johnny Cash. "'Blue As Your Blood' actually started as a country song," Bauer said. "We were playing a lot of minor chords instead of major chords, and with a country beat." With all ofLisbon's (not to men- tion The Walkmen's) modesty, you'd be forgiven for not expecting the five Washington, D.C. trans- plants to pack much of a punch in concert. But make no mistake: the band has a reputation for being one of the louder groups out there, drawing comparisons to the deaf- ening performances of acts like psych-rockers Spacemen 3. "For years, the only thing we would do was try and be as loud as possible," he said, before inter- rupting himself mid-sentence. "And now my wife is shh-ing me because I'mtalkingso loud. Imust be going deaf" The Walkmen perform at the Magic Stick on Sunday. Doors open at 8p.m. Tickets from $12. gse zand the Cftly |pfGraduate Sc-hool A'Education. University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education 3700 Walnut Street I Philadelphia I PA 19104 www.gse.upenn.edu /I(877) PENN-GSE .1 Master of Science in Biotechnology lntergrated training for biologists, chemists, & engineers Earn a graduate degree in only 15 months and prepare for a rewarding career in biotechnology or pharmaceuticals. Apply today at: www.MBP.northwestern.edu NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY be part one enextx reae Lorps volUnteer eneridUon. Special Information Event: Meet Peace Cor ps Director Aaron Witm Thursday, October 14 at 6:30 p.m. Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union peacecorps.umich.edu A pply ihis Fall for programs leaving in 2011 --Peace Corps'50th AnNiversary Year! Life is caling. How far wil you go. fiOO.424.B580 j peacecorps.gov/application