The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, November 19, 2010 - 5A First film for First Element Michigan-based production company 0 premieres maiden movie By ANKUR SOHONI Daily Arts Writer Since the passage of the film tax incen- tive program here in Michigan in 2008, the number of creative production crews in the state has reached unprec- edented levels. But with Hollywood films being shot on and around the University's campus and their actors visiting Ann Arbor hotspots in their downtime, it can be easy to gloss over the more important, lasting effects of the incentives: local film production compa- The Art of Power Saturday at 8p.m. Michigan Theater Tickets from $9 nies based in Michigan itself. One such company is First Element Entertainment, a start-up production com- pany in Detroit. Started by University alum Adrian Walker, the company works with film, music and other media, with the goal of gathering industry professionals together to bring original forms of entertainment into the mainstream. Walker described the fateful meeting at the University that propelled him to start the company in Michigan. "I went to a (business) school event where Spike Lee was coming to speak to the stu- dents," he said. "I was able to have a one-on- one conversation with him and he actually suggested that instead of trying to go to Hol- lywood, we should just start up and try to do our thing here." About two years later, the company is prepared to complete its first foray into film production with the release of "The Art of Power," which will roll out its red carpet for a premiere on Nov. 20 at the Michigan The- ater. The film follows Wesley (Scott Nor- man), a young D.C. adult who looks to exact revensge against a powerful senator (Peter Carey), embroiling two women (Erin Nicole and Marisa Stober) into his life as his plan unfolds. Shot on a miniscule budget in both Michi- gan and Washington D.C. and starring new- comers, the film is emblematic of the new Michigan film industry - small, burgeoning and ambitious. . "The production was very large-scale for our budget," said Walker, who serves as writer and executive producer for "The Art of Power." "We ran a skeleton crew in D.C. of about 16 people, but when we came back here it probably went up to about 30 people without extras or actors ... it was basically 12 days production in D.C. and 17 days in Michigan." The scale of the production was made possible by advancements in camera tech- nology, which allowed the filmmakers to achieve state-of-the-art picture quality without investing the time and money asso- ciated with film stock. The crew shot on the Red camera, the premiere digital film-alter- native camera currently taking Hollywood - and particularly independent filmmaking - by storm. "The cost of production would have been over a million dollars if we had used film stock," Walker said. Beyond its production, however, it was important that almost all post-production on the film took place in-state, and not just the incentivized film shoot. "I feel like incentives are just the cata- lysts that spur the industry forward," Walk- er said. "They're not the long-term vision I think this state should have." The exception to the Michigan post- production is the film's score, which fea- tures two different composers. Half of the score was recorded in Chennai, India by The Acoustricks, a group stemming from the KM Music Conservatory, which is run by Academy Award-winning composer A.R. Rahman ("Slumdog Millionaire"). Beyond "The Art of Power," First Element Entertainment hopes to continue producing See ELEMENT, Page 6A By BRAD SANDERS Daily Arts Writer "Aida," MUSKET's first musical of the season, a powerhouse of contemporary music and ancient themes, bridges its extremes with a uni- versal plotline: a love triangle. "Aida" has origins Tonight and in an opera by the tomorrow at same name. The story 8 p.m., Sunday focuses on the strug- at 2 p m. gle of Aida, a Nubian princess and recently Power Center captured slave, and Ticketsfrom $7 an Egyptian captain, Radames, to pursue their romance while remaining loyal to their combating countries. "Aida" fulfilled the producers' crite- ria of a show that was commercial and attention-grabbing, as well as artistical- ly pleasing and comedic. Casting for the show began during the second or third week of classes with rehearsals immedi- ately following. MUSKET is a student-run theater group sponsored by the University Activities Center. "I feel like Aida was a good compro- mise, because it's a big show ... but at the same time not many people have seen it because it hasn't gone on tours," said Patrick Fromuth, a senior in the school of Music, Theatre & Dance and one of the show's producers. With music written by Elton John and Tim Rice, "Aida" covers a broad spectrum of genres, ranging from rock to gospel to disco. The powerful soundtrack will reverberate through the Power Center via a 14-member student orchestra. "The music can be removed from the musical and out of context it is still really relevant, and I think that's just Elton John's genius," said Jake McClory an MT&D senior and music director for "Aida." "There's three songs that (Aida and Radames) sing twice. I thought it was really repetitive, but when you put it with the story, it made sense that they were going through these changes but feeling the same." The choreography mirrors the music's variety of styles, but many of the dancers had minimal previous experience. "It's a blessing and a curse to work with a cast that doesn't have a lot of dance training, but it's been a beautiful challenge," said Edith Freyer, a junior in LSA and MT&D and the show's choreog- rapher. "It came down to looking sharp and keeping things simple and trying to tell a greater story." "Aida" will still show off beautiful choreography with a featured dancer, Sadie Yarrington an LSA and MT&D senior. MUSKET's 'Aida' is modernized with the addition of video projections. "I'm not somebody who really under- stands dance, but when (Sadie) dances, I'm just in complete awe," Fromuth added. "Seeing Sadie and Edith work truly makes me see the value and the tal- ent it takes to do all of that." In addition to the music and dance spectacles of "Aida," the set design is augmented with video projections, which will be operated by two alumni who came back to the University in order to use this equipment. "It's going to be like a movie mixed with theater, but it's more or less high- lighting what's happening in the scene," said Kathryn Pamula, a Business and MT&D junior and one of the producers. "This is where theater is going, and we have the opportunity to take more risks than otherwise." "It's not one of those plays where we black out and there's a scene change - its constantly flowing, kind of like our dreams," added director Richard Gras- so, an MT&D junior. "We're not remem- bering everything, but the big impact moments of the dream." Evoking this dreamlike narrative state, the show begins and ends with a set resembling a modern-day museum. With the aid of video projectors, the audience is transported into the hazy storytelling space that exists for the majority of the musical. The artifacts and pieces in the museum will unravel an ancient Egyptian set in a surreal fashion. "It's book-ended with this museum scene so we can be reminded of the mod- ern day audience and how this musical is still relevant to us regardless of the time period," Grasso said. "It's a timeless story ... and we can relate to that today - whether it be through racial segre- gation, orientation segregation, we can still see that in modern times." Bringing "Aida" to a college stage brings increased relevance, as many of the themes in the show are applicable to students, particularly on this campus with our theme semester, "What makes life worth living?" "Not only is it striking and stirring and sexy, it kind of plays into Mary Sue Coleman's widening your worldview and cultural diversity at Michigan, which we take alot of pride in," Fromuth said. "The show is kind of a celebration of crossing those cultural divides." The title character of "Aida" is a Nubian slave princess. Elton's Egyptian epic Not good music By JASMINE ZHU DailyArts Writer Stereolab - an experimental post-rock band formed in 1990 that created the 1996 sonic gem Emperor Tomato Ketchup - announced in 2009 that it was going on hiatus indefinitely, much to the disappointment of the band's devoted fan ** base. But less than a year later, the group is back Stereolab with a new album, Not Not Music Music. Unfortunately, Not Music's content sounds sragly just as bland and unexcit- ing as the title implies. On Not Music, the songs seamlessly shift from one to the next while Letitia Sadi- er's breathy vocals blend from English to French intermittently - and often ideci- pherably. The album's purpose seems puz- zling - it doesn't really add anything new or innovative to Stereolab's discography, and it's not a fun listen. Kind of an ironic bummer for a band hailed by The Indepen- dent as "one of the most fiercely indepen- dent and original groups of the Nineties." The album does have its bright moments. "Silver Sands," remixed by Emperor Machine, is a 10-minute synth-heavy dance jam that recalls Stereolab's glory days as a krautrock-influenced band. The motorik rhythm is reminiscent of German electron- icband Kraftwerk's repetitious mechanical sound. The song has a denser, more fore- boding feel in comparison to the album's throwaway tracks. However, these enjoyable moments are sparsely found on Not Music. Not that any of the songs are objectionable - it's only that they could be much better if the band returned to its garage-rock roots. "Delu- geoisie" is about as cheery as a deluge. Sadi- er drones on while a sagging tempo and tragic trombone provides the background. Overall, the album is eminently forget- table. The "Neon Beanbag" remix that Atlas Sound provides on the record's final track is a reminder of this. The original, which was the first track on Stereolab's 2008 release Chemical Chords, is just bet- ter. Sorry, Bradford Coix. Through the years, Stereolab's sound has devolved from its more innovative roots toward more inoffensively lighthearted pop songs. Consequently, listening to the 13-track LP feels a lot like swimming through tepid, lukewarm water. It's not an altogether unpleasant experience, but it's still relatively mind-numbing. Likewise, most of the tracks fail to stir listeners' interest and don't leave much of a lasting impression. Instead, the album serves only as a minor ripple in Stereolab's consider- able discography. At UMMA, performance puts the museum on exhibit By DANIEL CARLIN For theDaily When walking through a museum, it's easy to dismiss the mundane and irrelevant elements and focus on a curated journey. How- ever, the conventional Collections: concept of "museum- UMMA going" is challenged at University of Michi- Saturday at gan Museum of Art's 1:30 p.m. latest and one-day- only show, "Collec- UMMA tions: UMMA." Free The site-specific performance includes an impromptu score coupled with a pre-recorded film of UMMA's archi- tecture. The video, created by School of Art & Design MFA candidate John Kan- nenberg, provides a structure for the live improvisational sounds by various musicians, including School of Music, Theatre & Dance professor Stephen Rush. While many Art & Design students travel to UMMA to examine the art- work behind the cases, Kannenberg spent his time listening in the galler- ies. The sounds encouraged him to then seek the visual oddities around the museum. "I've done all of this visual research around the museum - collecting all of these images in the museum, which is everything but the art," he explained. This unconventional process led him to create a piece about UMMA itself. As the project began to unfold, both the environment and the video dem- onstrate a sense of new meets old; the video score is displayed in both the original building (Apse Gallery) and the rscently added Maxine and Stuart Frankel Family Wing (Vertical Gal- lery). In fact, each frame in Kannen- berg's video is sliced and shows one image from each the Apse and Vertical galleries. He primarily focused on the tiniest of details that typically remain unnoticed, like chairs for museum- goers and case work for exhibit pieces. The site and film present a clear dichot- omy between the new and old aspects of the museum, giving this unconven- tional piece a sense of familiarity. "I am setting up a situation where a group of sound artists can react to the look and sound of the space at the same time," Kannenberg said. "So I am thinking of this as an improvisational dialogue, with the sound and the visual aspects of the space, which is filtered or mediated through this situation that I've set up - the video." Kannenberg's interest in the rela- tionship between sound and images brought him into the world of "picture scores," the concept that explores how an image can affect sound, and vice versa, when the two are juxtaposed. In the past, his focus has been on single images, but he has also been working to develop a video that can be used as moving "graphic score." "(A) graphic score is like taking a picture and turning it into sound," he explained, but with multiple images. There is no canvas needed. In addition to the video, the exhibit includes musicians spread throughout each space, forcing spectators to actu- ally interact with their surroundings. "I am directing the gaze of these musicians and sound artists who are going to be forming (music)," he stated. "From there they are going to be both looking and listening to the space and reacting to it in an autonomit way." Though the sound created is unknown until the show, Kannenberg expects quieter music that will not detract from the video or space. Rush, Kannenberg's former professor, said he plans to use an eclectic variety of instruments like the wind instrument ocarina - not the iPhone application - and a sopranino trombone, also known as a slide whistle. "(I don't have) intentionality about the performance, but (I) hope that it is cohesive and provides a good environ- ment," Rush said. In 'Collections: UMMA,' recorded video meets improvised sound. Lisa Borgsdorf, the manager of UMMA, feels that havingKannenberg's piece at the museum is an obvious and appropriate marriage. This symbiotic relationship provides museum-goers at UMMA a meta-viewpoint and a new perspective on the familiar spaces. "It will be an opportunity for audi- ences to reflect on the space in a dif- ferent way because they will be looking at images of the space that they are in," Borgsdof said. "John is looking at it with a differ- ent eye, especially by focusing at the very small details. And I think that will heighten people's awareness of how they are interacting with the space - which is an interesting opportunity for us."