4B - Thursday, October 21, 2010 The Michigan Daily -- michigandaiiy.com 4B - Thursday, October 21, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 0 POETRY COLUMN usiCians: stick to lyrics, leave poetry to poets DELICIOUS DESIGNS Cake is their canvas ack when I taught high school, a student - let's call him Dude wandered into my contemporary poetry class with a beef to settle. Dude wasn't actually in my poetry class, but he heard I had maligned the artistic integrity of his favorite poet. His ethical and aesthetic code required that he skip his stats class in protest. The poet in ques- tion? Jim Morrison, DAVID legendary frontman of LUCAS the Doors. Morrison __C __ was certainly a liter- ary sort, naming his band after Aldous Huxley's "The Doors of Perception," which was itself taken from a William Blake phrase. Of course, neither Huxley nor Blake ever writhed around half-naked on stage, calling himself the Lizard King - which may be why there are so few posters of a shirtless Aldous Huxley in dorm rooms across the country. But take away Morrison's brand of cha- risma, mystery and danger, and what's left of rock'n'roll? Well, lyrics, for starters: The old get old and the young get stronger May take a week and it may take longer They got the guns but we got the numbers Coonna win, yeah we're taking over. ("Five to One," 1968) As poetry, that's decent. I like its jaun- tiness, the brash ambition necessary for so many young artists to start careers. I like it much better with Ray Mazarek's fuzzy bass lines and harpsichord, and Morrison's voice sounding lost in an echo chamber. Lyrics are one thing. Now try these lines from Morrison's poem "The Opening of the Trunk" (1967-1971): I'm Me! Can you dig it. My meat is real. My hands-how they move balanced like lithe demons My hair-so twined and writhing The skin of my face-pinch the cheeks My flaming sword tongue spraying verbal fire-flys I'm real. Some of this is OK - the internal rhyme of "lithe" with "twined and writhing" - but the rest is an egomaniacal mess. My meat is real? A tongue - wait, a "flaming sword tongue" - that sprays ... what was it? Oh yes, "fire-flys." Flaming sword tongue? Is this "Dungeons and Dragons?" It's not just Morrison. My personal musical hero, Bob Dylan, is just as guilty. I don't know of a lyricist better than Dylan, whose lines have shown up in everything from the scholarship of Oxford don Chris- topher Ricks to the written opinions of Chief Justice John Roberts. From the sec- ond verse of 1965's "Subterranean Home- sick Blues:" Look out kid Don't matter what you did Walk on your tiptoes Don't try "No-Doz" Better stay away from those That carry around a fire hose Keep a clean nose Watch the plain clothes You don't need a weatherman To know which way the wind blows Now look what happens when Dylan tries to write poems - or an experimental novel - or whatever 1971's "Tarantula" is supposed to be: aretha/ crystal jukebox queen of hymn & him diffused in drunk transfusion wound would heed sweet soudwave crippled & cry salute to oh great particular el dorado reel & ye battered personal god but she can- not she the leader of whom when ye follow, she cannot she has no back she cannot ... And that's how it starts. It's just not the same without the screeching harmonica, the nasal sneer Philip Larkin called "that cawing, derisive voice." Whatever the reason, pop musicians seem obsessed with poetry. In the last 15 years, we've seen books of poems arrive from Billy Corgan of the Smashing Pump- kins, Paul McCartney, Tupac Shakur, Wilco's Jeff Tweedy and, of course, Jewel. The results have been mixed. Luckily for musicians, lyrics aren't bur- dened with having to make sense. They have music to support them. Take my favorite lines from Elton John: La Laalalala Lalalalala Lalalalala ("Crocodile Rock," 1972) That's not much on the page, but the music will have you crocodile rocking well past your own threshold for annoy- ance. This, of course, is the secret. A good melody can support and redeem even the most nonsensical babbling (see Dave Mat- thews Band). Poetry, on the other hand, has nothing to support it but the language it's made of and the sound of the human voice. So poets must be much more par- ticular about choosing words that are not only "deep," but also make music by sounding beautiful. Maybe that's why the most successful crossovers start with poetry and move into music. The best of these is probably Leonard Cohen, who possesses the voice I imagine God to have. Cohen published a book of poems, "Let Us Compare Mythol- ogies," at the age of 22, before he ever stepped into a recording studio. Pulitzer Prize-winner Paul Muldoon collaborated with the late Warren Zevon, and David Berman of the Silver Jews received an MFA from the University of Massachu- setts. His book of poems, "Actual Air" (1999), is actually good.So are Patti Smith's poems, but then she does just Please put away your flaming tongue. about everything right. So I'm sorry, Dude, but you'll have to go back to matching up Dark Side ofthe Moon with "The Wizard of Oz," or scouring the cover ofAbbey Road to learn whether Paul's really dead. (He's not - just really lame.) Maybe, if you listen closely, you can even discover who shot Tupac. There's poetry in these mysteries, and even music could use a little poetry sometimes. Lucas is busy working on his seven- minute iambic pentameter solo. To hear him shred, e-mail dwucasumich.edu. Cupcake Station and Cake Nouveau indulge A2's sweet tooth ByJENNIFERXU Daily Arts Writer A walk inside Cupcake Station on East Liberty Street in Ann Arbor feels like a scene out of a Brothers Grimm fairytale: the hand-chalked sign outside announc- ing "Monday Madness" and "Frosting Friday," the aroma of fresh vanilla bean and cake batter that hits you once the door swings open, the giant tubs of col- ored icing stacked against the wall, the miniature bar stools lining the counter. And the centerpiece - the row of neatly lined cupcakes beneath the display case, tipsy with sprinkle-flecked frosting, with little paper tags announcing their flavors: "Fall Into Pumpkin," "Southern Red Velvet," "Vanilla Petals." Cake decorator Sarah Ternes sits at the counter, wielding a massive tube of icing in one hand and a tray of newly frosted cupcakes in the other. Ternes scoops up a cloud of white chocolate buttercream from the tub behind her. It drops softly into the icing tube. She holds the tip vertically over an unfrosted chocolate cupcake, easily swirling the frosting onto the cake's sur- face in a matter of seconds. "We can pretty much do anything (customers) want," she said, crafting a purple buttercream flower off to the side. "We can do letters, roses, drop flowers, petals, leaves, grass, fruits, dots. It just depends on what they want." While the Cupcake Station special- izes in daintier confections, Cake Nou- veau on North 4th Avenue, owned by Food Network star Courtney Clark, has elaborate tiered wedding confections. Cake construction begins with a series of sit-down or e-mail sessions between the client and one of Cake Nouveau's consul- tants. Clark then takes the sketches from the consultation and tries to replicate them in cake form, sometimes adding a bit of her own inspiration into the mix and making her cake decorating an artform. For Ternes at the Cupcake Station - which also sells cakes - decorating baked goods is more ofa family tradition, she explained while putting the finishing touches on her sample flower, the petals looking like little pearl droplets curling atop the wax paper. "My great aunt was actually a cake decorator, so I got started when I was pretty young," she said. "I would go to her house to hang out, and I would start to pick up on a couple things ... Then when I moved here, I found a job on Craigslist that was advertising for a cake decorator, and I was like, 'I'd like to get back into that!'" Ternes typically comes to work when the store opens with a huge batch of unfrosted cupcakes waiting for her and steadily works her way through them until the end of the day. The cupcakes are made earlier that morning by the store's bakers, but while warm cupcakes may sound delicious, they usually don't end up being the prettiest. "If the cupcakes are a little warm from the oven, you just wait until they're cool to the touch," she said. "If they're too warm, the frosting will start melting all over the top, and it's just a big mess." Instead of frosting, Cake Nouveau Cake Nouveau is owned by Food Network star Courtney Clark. promises each client a custom-designed cake rolled in mounds of stretchy fon- dant and finished off with a series of molding chocolate or gum paste sculp- tures. "Fondant is basically sugar Play-Doh," Mayfield said. "It comes in a bucket. You can stretch it, twist it, roll it out, make it into a ball - you can literally do anything with it." "The difference between gum paste and fondant is that fondant doesn't dry hard," she added. "Gum paste is meant to dry hard so you can make separate sculp- tures with it." The cake is generally baked 48 hours before the date of the order by a special pastry chef. The interior is usually filled with a buttercream or chocolate ganache frosting. "It's really just your typical sponge cake, chocolate or vanilla," she said. "But we can add additional flavors - lemon or lime or mint." All of Cupcake Station's frostings are homemade and usually consist of a but- tercream or cream cheese base. The tubs behind Ternes read "Peanut Butter But- tercream," "Lemon White Chocolate" and "White Chocolate Cream Cheese." The cupcakes are then finished with a decorative topper - usually a butter- cream flower, a few douses of multicol- ored sprinkles or a drizzle of caramel. "Sometimes we mix different things in the buttercream in order to get dif- ferent flavors," Ternes said. "The butter- cream is easiest to work with. The cream cheese is a little thicker, so sometimes it's a little more difficult to use." Cupcake Station also provides peo- ple with a special custom cupcake ser- vice for weddings, holidays and special events. People who come in for wedding tastings get six to eight cupcakes for free to try some of the different flavors and frosting combinations. The store also bakes larger cakes on request, which can be tiered or unilay- ered. Ternes outlined the difficulties with decorating each type of cake. "It depends on what you want to do," she said. "Cupcakes can be easier because they're smaller to work with and a lot of times people just want something really simple - you put something on there and it looks really cute. But if they want something bigger, like flowers or letters, it's easier to do it on a cake." To achieve the exquisite intricacies found in Cake Noveau's creations, Clark does not use the kinds of cake tools that one would find at IKEA or Williams- Sonoma. "This one she uses to thin the fondant out so that can get ripply and crease- y. This one she likes to use when she's doing indentations for a person's face," Mayfield said, pulling out a bevy of cake tools that resemble large plastic tooth- picks. "They're all just - there's no name for these. They're just special cake tools." Whatever the tools or ingredients or sizes involved in fashioning their respec- tive cakes, these two locally owned des- sert stores have won the hearts of Ann Arborites, not just through their outside decorations but also for their decadent flavors underneath. One bite into Cup- cake Station's "Boston Cream Cake," a cupcake covered in a dark chocolate ganache and drizzled with white choco- late and a sweet pink buttercream flow- er, reveals an even sweeter vanilla bean interior soaked ina rich creamy custard. If only all artwork were this delicious. QUIDDITCH From Page 1B attention with its equipment. A woman asked if the players were playing broomball at an early practice. When she heard it was Quidditch, she just had to watch. "She said, 'My son would love this,' and so she and a couple of other families came to watch the game with their kids," Byl said. "Obviously for us, it's to bring the books to life. It was cool to bring the books to life for them as well." The team hopes to attract a fan follow- ing for its upcoming games against Eastern Michigan and Michigan State. The EMU game will be in the Arb on Oct. 34 at 3 p.m. Michigan will play MSU on Nov. 7, same time and place. "It's very entertaining to watch. We really love having crowds. People do try to get into the role of being wizards and not Muggles," Byl said. Before the big games, official tryouts will take place Sunday, Oct. 24 at 3 p.m. in the Arb. Until then, players practice by scrimmaging each other with the names of Quidditch teams from the books. "Our first game was Gryffindor versus Slytherin," said LSA sophomore Danica Whitfield, who plays the position of Beat- er. "People come dressed up; we have Sly- therin people who paint their faces and make t-shirts, and we have Gryffindor people who decorate brooms and have that whole house rivalry going on." In the followingweek,teams were named after professional Quidditch teams from the world of "Harry Potter": the Applebee Arrows and the Chudley Cannons. Byl and her teammates enjoy these subtle nods at Rowling's universe as a reminder of what brought them all together. "Everyone here is really pumped to play Quidditch," said LSA sophomore Camille Duet, who plays Chaser. "No one's here because they have a Quid- ditch scholarship," Duet added. "You just get to nerd out with other people," Whitfield added. "You can't really express your love for Quidditch so much in a classroom. When you're on the field you can be like, 'Oh, this is just like in the book!' ... and you can actually do it because you're playing." Byl agreed that actually playing Quid- ditch is a great way to make Rowling's fic- tion into reality. "I have tried to bring the books alive in many different ways. This is kind of the easiest way because when you're caught up in the game it's easy to kind of -" "- immerse yourself," Whitfield fin- ished. "When I was first conceiving this idea I definitely did go back and reread some of the Quidditch scenes in the early books," STUDENTS, NOW IS THE TIME! ADVERTISE YOUR SUBLEASES IN OU[.R aim OSOER28 Ided. "Just when they were describ- uidditch to Harry for the first time, .se it is such a bizarre game." the same time, the team welcomes players regardless of their level of st in "Harry Potter." a not the biggest 'Harry Potter' fan," an said. "I know people who know than I do. I've read all the books. I rent to the mass meeting and thought nded like a good time." onestly, anyone should just come out >lay," Duet said. "Even if you don't (the books), it's such a good time. 's a nice edge of competition but no so gung-ho about it that we've had to inyone to the emergency room yet." Meanwhile, the competition is what drives Morgan. "I'm really excited to play MSU," he said. "You may have beat us at football, but we can beat you at a fictional sport." CAN YOU DRAW A MAZE IN ONE MINUTE THAT TAKES TWO MINUTES TO SOLVE? JOIN DAILY DESIGN STAFF. E-mail annaz@umich.edu for information on joining. 0