The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, March 20, 2012 - 5 Falling for pop radio "Did you miss us?" Returning to The Shins are back he belongs - fronting the Shins. With a few minor changes to r from a five-year their previous makeup (there's a girl in the Shins now?) and hot h hiatus, little changes on the heels of an "SNL" appear- ance, they release Port of Morrow n By EDITH FREYER today, a 10-track album that's DailyArts Writer pretty darn good, considering a that they're really out of practice. f Do you realize how long it's The record opens with a sound s been since the Shins released that is strikingly familiar to Shins their last album? Five years. We fans - "The Rifle's Spiral" deliv- p college stu- ers upbeat guitar chords sprin- a dents were kled with chimes. James Mercer t still in high croons, "You're not invisible now n school - or The Shins / You just don't exist." Ahh, nos- o worse, middle talgia. This stuff feels good. g school. Yikes. Port of The album's single, "Simple ( Thankfully, Morrow Song," is a huge success. It has just i they're back, Aural Apothecary/ the right amount of energy for a e and sounding Columbia perfect first-song-back-from-hia- r as good as ever. tus. It's enough to reassure fans S But the Shins that everything is alright, and the haven't exactly grown up along Shins have a whole lot of future t with us. Their music sounds just ahead of them. This song also li about the same as it did in 2007. features what may be the most e It's comforting, in a way - but stereotypically Shins-ish lyrics of I borderline underwhelming. the album: "You tell me with your 1 James Mercer, arguably the tongue / And your breath was in most influential member of the my lungs." c Shins - OK, who are we kidding, The Shins take on their version ( there's no argument - has still of a ballad with "It's Only Life," a got it. Since 2007, he has been drooping, sentimental track that floating around the alternative pairs effortlessly with Mercer's y music scene, most notably form- nasally falsetto. The song picks up c ing the semi-successful band steamas itprogresses,toyingwith c Broken Bells in 2010. But he's syncopation and hard-hitting per- n back where all alt-lovers think cussion, which add just enough a quirk to help the band achieve its ecognizable pop-rock sound. "Fall of '82" has an ear-catch- ng guitar opening and allows Mercer to experiment with his range a little - he sounds phe- nomenal. Throw in abrass bridge nd soft, echoing vocals into the formula and voila! It's a Shins ong. With an updated sense for publicity - iTunes streamed the lbum for free for a week prior o the release - the Shins seem eady to boogie on this next leg if their musical life. They've got an international tour ahead and they're coming to Detroit n June!), and fans seem to be nthusiastic about Port of Mor- ow - or maybe it's just about the Shins being active again at all. Because when it comes down o it, there's not a whole lot to dis- ike about this album, but it's not xactly the most fulfilling, either. t's good, it's solid and it's clear- y another brainchild of James Mercer - everything we have come to expect from these guys and girl ...). But if they continue making music - hopefully fans won't have to wait another five 'ears - it would be nice to hear a change or risk of some kind. They an give us something different row - we already know that we'll lways love them. Tn a previous column, I lamented the rebirth of Detroit's 107.5, WGPR. At the crest of the new year, the radio station switched program- ming from R&B/Gospel/ Soul/whatev- er-you'd-like- to-call-it, to Radio One's less exotic chaff of hip- hop-top 40 JOE (their web DIMUZIO page claims to "target" African American/urban con- sumers - a market-ready verb I don't find particularly endear- ing in any sense). Pre-2012, I had listened to GPR hoping to hear the ghost of the legendary Detroit DJ Electrifying Mojo and others kicking around some great disco, acid house and techno on weekends. I remained content to ignore an otherwise tepid array of what they played throughout most of the week - a mix of what will pass for "grown 'n' sexy" these days with some disorienting health, economic and religious advice on Sunday afternoons. I would pre-set GPR into my van's number-three button, jug- gling between WCBN, assorted top-40 alternatives, WDET/ WUOM and the occasional wave of static. Despite the jarring shift in programming, I've chosen to leave it locked in, a button push away. And like any serious rela- tionship, I'm learning to harbor the flaws and patience necessary to find true love. The station is more or less anonymous now and less adven- turous than the "old" GPR. In a one-hour stretch it manages to play the requisite two to three Drake songs, amid the rest of a limited stable of charting hip- pop. I could probably count the numbe on the hands. got wh Yet! little ti to ende who ac utterly air hor drop - but no' daffy, s ers' tw by thei screen GOTTi and "D PART during always And music. played and ali listena Re H r of songs I have heard bride (cocaine), hustling, bailing station with four or five him out of jail, warming his bed. You can get what they've Third, and most importantly, is erever. the petulant drone tailing the there are little habits, ends of Jeezy's phrases, peaking cs that have snuck in blissfully in the hook "I said I do, ear me. Particular DJs I do, I do, I do, I do /You know I tively spin (usually in an do!" leaving him sounding par- adequate style) and drop ticularly like Kel on an orange ns into everybuild and soda bender and a whiny, infatu- a trick that annoyed me, ated child. w makes me smile. The Drake, whose comicallybela- spitfire readings of listen- bored "softness" marks him as eets on-air, accompanied an outlier (he sings and raps!) r typically ridiculous is far less endearing even when names. The inane "YOU his tracks intoxicate. For all the A GET DOWN HERE"s "sensitivity" flack, he is usually ETROIT'S HOTTEST a relentless misogynist (par- Y!"s shouted over crowds ticularly on the supercilious and live broadcasts - almost fantastically rhythmic "Make >held out a bit too long. Me Proud (Proud of You)," which of course there is the leaves me singing along to ahook Practically all of it over- I despise thematically but other- ,much of it uninspired wise dig). most all of it relentlessly Some part of me demands ible. some sort of transgressive politics with my pop, making me resistant to the net impact of Jeezy's predictable thug-drug- romance and Drake's "sensitive" )7.5 W GPR. condescension ... but I'm torn. Can simple, predictable ideas thrill and satisfy just as much as nuance and subtlety? Need ng Jeezy's "I Do" is a we endorse the entirety of our never skip and manage to favorite pop singer's idealized least daily. It's sort of an identity? Can our comfort food ruous mess with a charac- be gourmet? ally labored Jay-Z verse, a At this unholy pop matri- teristically celestial run- mony we may stomp on wine Andre 3000 (both of which glasses, stuff cake in each other's etter on paper than they faces, slide rings on fingers and r M16's Southern belle of a trade vows (this column being nd Jeezy being Jeezy. And a particularly tipsy and verbose zy's verse and hook that's example) before staring each ed me in spite of what other straight in the eyes, maybe s enthused about. First, smiling, trading "I do's" without s Jeezy, ready to ride or irony, swagger or confliction. rd and strapped and pen- With honesty (or at leastsignify- n ode to the crack game ing it) and eyes tearing up, whis- d as an ode to marriage. pering, "I do. You know I do!" You] track I hear at incong teristic charac on byA read b do ove' beat) a it's Jee charm I'm les there i die, ha ning at cloake Second he's ca ment a tion, w I, there's the lovely zone ught in, between commit- nd the fantasy of devo- here he can idealize his Dimuzio is starting his own radio station. To tune in, e-mail shonenjo@umich.edu. One Direction can't quite capture boy-band nostalgia Tanlines just skin-deep By KATIE STEEN DailyArts Writer Minus the tornado-y hail, it's probably safe to say that spring has arrived in Ann Arbor. Time for the return of Wayfar- ers, frenzied joggers, Arb Tanlines excursions and Tanlines. Mixed Tanlines, Emotions the electro- pop duo from True Panther Brooklyn, has arrived just in time with their debut LP Mixed Emotions. While the guys - instrumentalist Jesse Cohen and vocalist Eric Emm - released a compilation album and an EP in 2010, this marks their first LP. They've made plenty of remixes and some surprisingly popular singles, but Mixed Emo- tions serves as an examination of whether Tanlines can create an album that stands on its own. Mixed Emotions is an album created while in motion: Emm and Cohen began it while on tour in Europe, continued in a Brooklyn studio, migrated to various apart- ments and ended up in Miami to seek the aid of production genius Jimmy Douglass. Oddly enough, Emm and Cohen, in an interview with electronic news publication The Daily, expressed dissatisfac- tion about the collaboration with Douglass. Apparently, their work with the four-time Grammy win- ner resulted in something that began sounding "pretty terrible" and "ended up somewhere in the middle." Too often, the compro- mise is uncomfortably apparent in the album - it's a sunny and danceable record, but as the boys admitted, quite average. While in Miami, Emm and Cohen would go earn their tan lines every morning swimming in the ocean, then record for the rest of the day. This explains the beach-inspired sound found in the first track "Brothers," which begins with wave noises and adds in some bongos and pulsat- TRUE PANTHER "Do you want to come to a plaid party with us? It's on a farm." ing bass that begs to be blasted, an alluring lowness to flirty high resulting in what sounds like notes, combined with a simple, a rave on an island. But Mixed adorable xylophone solo. Mixed Emotions goes beyond techno - Emotions is obviously poppy, but the album features more of the its cheery charm overweighs the deep voice of Emm than Tan- substance that could make this lines devotees may be used to. album something more than a His throaty vocals could poten- collection of poolside tunes. tially give Tanlines an advantage While profound messages over the babyish singing of simi- may feel slightly out of place in lar African-inspired bands like an album like Mixed Emotions, it Vampire Weekend, but unfortu- still calls for lyrics a little more nately, the majority of Tanlines' original than "sky so blue" and tracks have lackluster melodies "green grass" (in the song "Green that serve more as background Grass," of course). For an album music for tanning on the roof. with the name ofMixedEmotions, most tracks sound as happy as a sundrenched beachgoer. Some Not enough songs, such as "Abby," attempt to experiment with moodier emo- brooding tions, but these tracks end up sounding forced and confused. Perhaps Tanlines simply needs to be inspired by a bit That's not to say that all of more than what they've found Mixed Emotions is forgettable. exploring Europe, Brooklyn and "Brothers" is one exception, Miami beaches in order to create along with the addicting steel a more genuine album. Emm and drums of tracks such as "Real Cohen have proven their techno Life." "Green Grass" seems to be talents with an impressive array created for the sole purpose of of remixes,but if they're going to frolicking through meadows on try to make any larger of a mark ecstasy, while the sound of "All as musicians, maybe they should of Me" evokes images of Mickey pull a Bon Iver and go brood Mouse hugging kids on cruise pretentiously alone for a winter. ships. But the strength of this While it's tempting to include album comes from its ability to the band in the same category as have a collected vivacity, simul- groups like Vampire Weekend, taneously catchy and cool. The ultimately, Tanlines pales in vocals of "Yes Way" shift from comparison. By GREGORY HICKS Daily Arts Writer Without a doubt, One Direc- tion's debut will have 15-year- old girls jumping for joy all over the United States. This group could get a number-one One album from remixes of Direction "Happy Birth- Up All Night day," as long as the cover art is Columbia included. The success of the group is surprising, espe- cially given that- One Direction was formed from the failure of its individual members to make it through the UK television sing- ing competition "The X Factor." If only the content of its album Up All Night were as bold as the mere presence of the group seems to be. Whoever put the album together for One Direction - facing facts, nobody in the clan is capable of more than making noise and jumping - was playing it very safe. Three of the album's songs, including its biggest hit "What Makes You Beautiful," were writ- ten by Rami, famous for his work with the Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC. This means that there will be no whining about how One Direction shouldn't be com- pared to '90s boy bands, because clearly, it's trying very hard to be one. To complement this over- used '90s songwriter, "Save You Tonight" was written and pro- duced by RedOne, who seems to be on every album nowadays. Overall, the tracks on the album aren't bad, they're just not interesting. Nothing jumps out at the listener when going through the record, especially not the physical sound of the voices. Unlike the carefully auditioned boy bands of the '90s, One Direc- tion was formed on a "Hey, let's just do this" basis and is therefore lacking distinct vocals. Essential- ly, it will alwaysberecognized for its song and not its sound - even COLUMBIA A buffet for teenie-boppers. if that one guy does sound a lot their songs through stellar per- like Zac Efron. formances or iconic videos to Not only is there nothing spe- accompany them, like Beyonce's cial about the majority of the "Single Ladies." This is not the album's tracks, but a few actual- case with One Direction. Watch- ly resemble past hits from other ing the music video for the lead artists. For example, the song single on the album, "What "One Thing," which is yet to be Makes You Beautiful," is basi- released as a single in America, cally like watching a Levi's com- has a chorus with a striking mercial. similarity to Simple Plan's "Shut Though its lasting success Up." in America is up in the air, One Direction definitely seems to have staked its claim in England since the band's November debut Believe it or there. However, sometimes the musical tastes of England tend not, this band to be too different for America to handle. It's not as if the British needs more have spawned another Beatles group - its more of a British Big m anufacturing. Time Rush without a TV show to humiliate themselves with. The album is simple at best. Album titles like Back To Basics One of the more original or Basic Instinct would have songs on the album is "Tell Me been more fitting, if they hadn't a Lie." It's catchy, it has lyrical already been taken by Christina value and more importantly, the Aguilera and Ciara. Instead, the production quality of a modern world gets to be Up All Night in song. In a sea of basic tracks, fear of how this group will wea- this one does manage to rise a sel its image onto any and every tad above the others. It was also piece of media in existence. But co-written by the fantastic Ms. then again, the name "One Direc- Kelly Clarkson. tion" captures its musical com- Some artists gain success with plexity pretty accurately. AI I