The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4B - Thursday, November 17, 2011 VINYL VICTORY Encore Records survives on second chance How the A2 record store staple is keeping up after ownership shuffle By VERONICA MENALDI Daily Arts Writer Nowadays, the moment a new song or album is released, the natural instinct is to log on to iTunes, download it and enjoy. But listeners still need some- thing real to hold, something tangible, something timeless. They need a vinyl record. Ann Arbor's record store community nearly lost a member last summer when the owner of Encore Records on East Liberty retired, leaving music aficiona- dos unsure of the shop's future. But then two employees stepped up and took over ownership in order to ensure the store's continued existence. Back in July, Bill McClelland and Jim Dwyer decided they couldn't let Encore disappear after the original owner announced his retirement. This deci- sion might seem like quite an undertak- ing, but surprisingly McClelland and Dwyer didn't think it was a big deal at all. Records had become their life and they couldn't imagine doing anything else. What started as a learning experi- ence quickly became a way of life for the employees, who are passionate about keeping vinyl alive within the music community. "You can feel the grooves," employee Michael Dykehouse said. "(Records are) a piece of history in some ways. It's tan- gible, and I think there will always be a place in the market for them-- they're tiny art objects." Employee Dustin Krcatovich said it was unfortunate that more record stores don't stick around for both the custom- ers' and employees' benefit. "You learn so much right away (work- ing in a record store), and you learn that you'll never know everything," he said. "It knocks any know-it-all tendencies out of you. It may be trivial, but it can be enriching, too." Dwyer said having a store like Encore disappear would be detrimental to the community because the store establish- es a powerful connection between the music and the customers, newcomers and regulars alike. "Musical memories are one of peo- ple's strongest memories," Dwyer said. "Maybe music is about more than just the song itself, it's the whole culture of the people who follow music." McClelland said there are customers who bring their children into their store to "start them young," hoping they'll catch the vinyl record bug. He said when he was a kid, he loved being able to stare at the covers. "It's more visual," McClelland said. "It's something you can hold. It's like art you can hold in your hands." Encore is also home to regulars who stay loyal to the store to find certain records or just to spend hours talking with the staff about music. Amy Stillman, a longtime customer, has been shopping at Encore since she moved to Ann Arbor in 1998 and became a self-described "hardcore vinyl collec- tor" in 2004. Stillman comes into the store roughly four to five times a year, usually leaving with an irreplaceable sense of satisfaction and $100 worth of records. "(Encore) is a record collector's nir- vana," Stillman said. "It's just a lot of fun to come in and look at all of this and the potential it represents." Regardless of modern technologies, the power of the Internet and easy access to digital media, employees at Encore feel these options can't replace experiencing music firsthand. Krcatovi- 6 0 ERIN KIRKLAND/daily Encore Records faced the prospect of closing in July, before employees took ownership of the shop. ch said music becomes a part of the Ann Arbor community. "A record store is like a field you can run around in and go from place to place," Krcatovich said. "I think that's why a town like Ann Arbor, or any town at all, benefits from having stores like (Encore). You can look around, find what you like and in a way, that's more organic and ultimately more satisfying." The fictional Kit Kat Klub sets the scene for the 1966 musical "Cabaret." CABARET From Page 1B cabaret in the late 19th century in Mont- martre - then a small town outside Paris. At first the cabaret acted solely as a gath- ering place for Salis's bohemian friends to share their poetry and songs. But cabarets eventually spread throughout Europe, evolving into more elaborate political shows and having a big impact on Berlin. DePuit said these Berlin cabarets were political and satirical, blending an eccen- tric fantasy life with what was going on at the time in the country. Intellectuals and liberals would attend these shows not only to learn about what was going on in Berlin in the early 1900s, but also to poke fun at the political climate. MT&D senior Roman Micevic, who is directing the MUSKET performance, said "Cabaret" actually parallels the cab- arets of the past because there would be performances with a dialogue and a song or skit that would relate to that scene. In cabarets, an emcee, or master of ceremonies, "bookends, transitions and presents everything" like a narrator, according to Ryan, who plays the omni- present, provocative and anonymous Emcee in the musical. Ryan's character re the characters' relatio Bowles and Cliff or th and Jewish lovers Frau Herr Schultz, while al the world outside theK "You're kind of tra two worlds, the real li pening with the charac you're an audience mer in Berlin in the '20s," R And All Th Being an audiencen or 1930s Berlin-base have been different th today. Ryan compares old modern-day variety sl day Night Live" that taining and informativ "I believe that it gav( what TV gives people "Back in the day, it w newspaper, only it's a s But compared to th the past, the televised less snarky and control "It doesn't quite h bite or political bite t Germany," DePuit sait because of the rise of the Third Reich, people were aware that their world was falling apart. So it got almost militant at times." Cabarets have also evolved into the simple singer-and-pianist show, in which the singer takes on the role of the enter- tainment and the emcee. The lavish cab- arets of the past were made up of large orchestras, full ballets and even lantern shows. The costumes were made of sequins and glitter, makeup was heavy but col- orful and women were scantily clad in fishnet stockings, garters and bustiers. The show halls were decorated with wealthy show-goers in the finest of suits and dresses. Though cabarets may seem kitschy and vulgar, they were actually an elegant place to be. The musical operates on a similarly grand scale. AUSTEN HUFFORD/Daily "I think 'Cabaret' is just one of those shows that doesn't really fade into the background," said MT&D senior Laura veals the truth of Reed, who plays Sally Bowles. "It was so inships, like Sally groundbreaking when it came out. It's a te German gentile concept musical." lein Schneider and "Cabaret" was such a game-changer so commenting on because the subject matter is dark and it Kat Klub. deep. It may have been difficult for some nsported between audiences to watch and appreciate it. ife of what's hap- The show includes debates about abor- ters and then as if tion and anti-Semitism - in MUSKET's mber at the cabaret production, one of the main characters is yan said. bisexual. When the show first came out, all of these subjects were barely spoken atJazz about, let alone presented on stage. And the show's setting is not exactly a member in a 1920s Broadway-friendly atmosphere. d cabaret would "If someone just said the words 'musi- an witnessing one cal theater' in your head, or 'go see a Broadway musical,' I'm sure the first -time cabarets to thing you wouldn't think of was World bows like "Satur- War II and the Nazis," Ryan said. "You'd are topical, enter- think a chorus line of the Rockettes." e. Ryan also believes that, though there e people back then are flamboyancies to the show, it digs now," Ryan said. deeper than just spectacular numbers. as like reading a "It's not about the smoke and mir- how." rors and dazzling, beautiful women and e stage cabarets of dance numbers," he said. "It has ele- form of cabaret is ments of that in it, but it's really about versial a story about these people living in that lave the satirical time." that it used to in And though that time no longer exists, I. "Of course, also there is still a connection to be made between 20th century Germany and con- temporary society. "I think the repercussions of Nazi Germany and World War II is obviously something we are still living with," Reed said. "The mindset of pushing away the problems of the world and choosing to ignore it is absolutely relevant today." She added, "We're always sort of faced with that choice of accepting who you are and going with the flow and not wor- rying about it. ... Or choosing to open our eyes and view the world and the mess that it may be." Devon Perry, MT&D junior and musi- cal director of "Cabaret," said not only does the setting of the show cross over to today, but the music does too. The composers, John Kander and Fred Ebb, wrote the music after World War II, but it reflects the sounds of the '30s. European oompah-pah horns and jazzy vocal runs grace the score. "As soon as you hear it you'll realize it's not contemporary by any means," she said. Perry is planning to bring modernity to the show while harking back to its era by using a keyboard to play instruments that are either out-of-date or hard to find, like the accordion. The accordion was one of the main instruments used in 1930s Berlin, but it was too expensive and difficult to find one to play for the production. Micevic found not only musical rele- vancy in "Cabaret," but also a connection to today's politics and economic state. "It's a timeless tale," he said. "There are so many parallels to Weimar Germa- ny and today." According to Micevic, there's also a correlation between the rise of the Nazis in post-World WarI Germany and rise of the Tea-Party today - he claims a simi- lar economic situation and scapegoating tendency. The musical is also notable for break- ing the fourth wall and directing com- mentary toward the audience. This style is very imitative of the way cabarets are performed today and were performed in the past. "At the end of the evening, the audi- ence feels that they know you as a person as well as a performer, so there's no hid- ing behind a character," DePuit said. "A good cabaret performer really makes you feel that you've been sung to directly and you really know them by the end of the act. It's a very personal art form." 0 Maybe This Time Though it's a social commentary, "Cabaret" is still a show with lights, cameras and action. It still involves deep, fictional characters, direction and talented actors. Actors need to dig deep to find a con- nection to their character. Reed latched on that connection - and she loved it. "I sort of feel like Sally is absolutely this side of me that exists and that I'm getting to explore," she said. "I was sort of surprised at how similar we were in some ways, so I'm just having a lot of fun playing her." Ryan, too, feels a personal connection to the Emcee. "I have been singing this show in the shower since I was seven," he said. "It's really the reason I wanted to be an actor. ... It has been a dream of mine to play this role forever." Actors leaving their real lives to transition into fictional, entertaining characters resembles how the cabarets transcribed real life into engaging num- bers. For the MUSKET actors, this is just something they do for fun - block out real life and live in a fantasy world. But for some, it's a way of living. "There's this idea of this decadent sort of dream world that we're living in today," Micevic said. "We're all plugged into our own music with our iPods, we can choose to follow the news, we have a lot more information through the Inter- net. It's so much easier for us to ignore this sort of news, and that's exactly what this cabaret is all about." Cabarets put on an air of lightness, and some people, like Sally Bowles, get swept up in its charm. But Micevic said we should open our eyes to what is going on in front of us and not ignore it. "We should be aware of this dream world, this happy-go-lucky place that we can go to," he said. This is the essence of "Cabaret," a show that embraces history and glitzy escapism but also grounds itself in reali- ty. This is the life, old chum, of a cabaret. 01 "Cabaret" is set in Weimar Germany, where the characters of The Emcee and ca