The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, April 3, 2012 - 5 Thm ihgnDiy-mciadilcmTedy pi ,21 The tension in disco keeps us moving YOUNG MONEY From Minaj's audition tape for 'The Muppets.' M in a briso ' njbnsRoman Reloaded' I've always admired disco for its flexibility. Tethered by the birthmark tempo of 4/4 - the austere canvas upon which it lives, moves and has its being - disco tells stories. In the hands of its most leg- endary DJs, the music transcended slick segues for sprawling JOE narratives, DIMUZIO high drama - and grand- standing camp. Larry Levan, David Mancuso, Daniele Baldelli and countless other DJs across the world crafted - through a performative, ritualistic combi- nation of physical space, sound and atmosphere - weekly expeditions into lush fantasias of physiological catharsis, God- forbidding they be coherent, cohesive or direct. The best disco songs revel in the tension between chaos and order. Maceo Parker called disco "Funk with a bow-tie," making a racial statement (and effectively defining the vocation of Chic), but unintentionally offering a more valuable characterization of the genre. Where funk's muscle lies in its ability tofunk - i.e. stink, jiggle, loose and enact its own continuum - disco took the revelatory pulse of funk and re-posited it as an international salmagundi. Afro-Cuban poly- rhythms, studio orchestras, bomb-ass bass, high-flyin' flutes, glac, oscillatingsynthesizers ... all barely reined in by the unify- ing bea seethir ers fro all in t sions o strut a refusin And that rh commC songs t for ma and trt for cor with e drumI ups ov string, was aE could s at. Airy waifs, soul-belters, urbane American cheese. ng automatons, rock sing- From the opulentyearn- m hell - disco subsumed ing of "Bourgie," I'd turn to he infinitesimal subver- Cerrone's "Give Me Love," a f the kick drum, snare French silk-shirted romp over nd cymbal shuffle. It hits, Afro-Cuban bongos, mantric g to quit. sleave (in which the song's title it's that beat, thatgroove, languishes between a question ythm that carries the and a demand) and gut-churning a, giving the most disparate bass. And to answer the demand, heir bond and potential Tom Moulton's lustrous Philly nipulation, for queering Soul stomping mix of Double ansformation in collage, Exposure's "My Love is Free" ruption and communion fits the bill, promising devotion ach other. From 12-minute and granting you a purgative breakdowns to gospel rave- breakdown to dance and return er 64-tracked polyphonic the favor. strokes ... disco, at its best, Lest we get carried away, bottomless toolbox you Linda Clifford's "Runaway Love" weat and sing along with. can restrain us. It's spare diva- gospel with Linda cast as the scorned lover, the winded dancer, the bummed and neglected lover who has had enough. "Stop mes- stories sin' with my heart if you don't mean it!" she cries, left with her "tears, heartaches and devo- tions," letting us call and respond ford & Simpson's "Bourgie with the Jones Girls backing her ie" is a prime example of up, playing Greek Chorus to our characteristic friction. It tragedy. taple of Larry Levan, the We can spin the story for I DJ of NYC's fabled Para- hours, decades and beyond. The arage (a name that fittingly best DJs still do it, crafting some- osed blind idealism with thing greater than atmosphere my, the seedy, the human) and mood, stirring their audi- i uncharacteristic instru- ence's feet and emotions - sober I track for the husband- or otherwise. And in the creative, ife duo that penned so tumultuous, globe-trotting olio of Motown's lithe domestic of this music, disco or otherwise, s. The title, truncating is a tapestry of what movesus - geoisie" for boo-zjhee, and place to place, grief to-ebullience, epeating it twice, tells you life to death. D Nicki balances pop and rap on latest release By GREGORY HICKS Daily Arts Writer Nicki Minaj is the biggest hyp- ocrite and conformist the music industry has seen in years. She raps about how 'cause (she's) still hood, Hollywood Nicki Minaj couldn't change (her)." Wrong. Pink Friday: Once you Roman realize RedOne Reloaded produced nearly a third Young Money of her newest album and two other songs were produced by Dr. Luke, too many other pop artists come to mind. Jennifer Lopez, Lady Gaga and Katy Perry are just a few of the acts who abuse the popularity of these writer-producers to no end - and clearly it works out for them. Promotion for this album began with a rocky start, to say the least. The first song released to promote the album, "Roman In Moscow," doesn't even appear on the official track list (coinciden- tally, it wasn't very popular). The second attempt to build up the album, "Stupid Hoe," was a song and video with negative feedback rivaled only by Rebecca Black herself. This cleverly titled masterpiece left many fans with doubts regarding the quality of the upcoming album. And let's not even discuss that atrocious excuse for a Grammy perfor- mance. Even with all this being said, this album is one of the best albums that has been released this year, if not the past few years. It incorporates everything: the rap, the pop, the dubstep, the collaborations with other famous artists and the image. Minaj's embarrassingly silly alter ego actually does the album a lot of favors. Its rap-heavy half pleases all the Young Money fans, while the pop-heavy half is music to the ears of the electronic main- stream crowd. And luckily for Minaj, RedOne seems to have put a great deal of effort toward incorporating a new dubstep sound into his pro- duction, not previously typical of his work. Given the lasting suc- cess of the album's first official single, "Starships," this touch appears to be working. In songs like "Automatic," the up-tempo melodic catchiness can't be denied - complemented with a creative hint of dubstep like most other tracks on this half of the album - but the presence of the artist leaves little to be desired. The nearly complete lack of rap in the song might be cross- ing a little too far into pop terri- tory for Minaj. Logically speaking, the album should be a two-disk record with one side containing the nutcase personality and the other con- taining the conformist, but Minaj would be under heavy fire for pulling an IAm...Sasha Fierce. Speaking of album titles, this is another aspect of the work that is a tad confusing. Understand- ably, rappers enjoy having some chronology to their albums (e.g. The Carter albums), but Pink Fri- day: Roman Reloaded sounds like a rereleased version of Minaj's debut album Pink Friday. And with good reason, seeing as that's what Rihanna's Good Girl Gone Bad:Reloaded was. Up until the release of "Star- ships," Nicki Minaj has continu- ally made a fool of herself and a fool of her work. With any luck, a few spoiled tracks in combination with Minaj's antics won't stop the album from shining through. Ash Bourgi disco's was a s storied dise G- juxtap the gri and an menta and-w manyt drama "Bour coyly r everyt has pla low-en tral sw hing you need to know. It aintive piano and a slippery td at odds with its orches- vells and sweeps. Pure, Dimuzio is practicing his John Travolta moves. To join, e-mail shonenjo@umich.edu. FOLLOW DAILY ARTS @MICHDAILYARTS 1Fwt*k 5rdham Summer Session 2012 Session'1: 29 May-28 June Session 11: 3 July-7 August - Day and evening classes at three - Competitive tuition rates convenient New York locations .L " SUMMER LOVIN' HAPPENED SO FAST ... AT DAILY ARTS. WRITE FOR US THIS SUMMER. 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