The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, April 2, 2013 - 7 E 1 CMUSIC COLUMN The signs are on the wallfor a Bieber demise We hope that's a gord. ODD FUTURE Lone'Wolf' Tyler back with less offensive album Rapper grows up with emotional, narrative lyrics By ANDREW ECKHOUS DailyArts Writer He's the man who earned fame for chewing up a cock- roach, shouting homophobic slurs and gen- erally just stir- B+ ring shit up. But Tyler, the Wolf Creator was only 20 years Tyler the old when he Creator catapulted Odd Future to stardom, and his public profile and immediate popu- larity put him squarely in the spotlight. Unsurprisingly, crit- ics and advocacy groups alike derided Tyler as a homophobe, misogynist and proponent of rape. Tyler is an odd bird, though. While he tosses gay slurs around pretty regularly, he was extremely supportive of Frank Ocean when he came out as bisexual, and the DJ in Odd Future, Syd tha Kyd, is a lesbian. People know him as an anger- filled rapper, but he also spends much of his time addressing his loneliness and vulnerability in his raps. He's a man of contra- dictions, and this depth of per- sonality is on full blast on Wolf; his newest release. Last year, in an interview with "Spin," Tyler expressed the urge to grow up a little bit: "Talking about rape and cutting bodies up, it just doesn't interest me anymore. ... What interests me is making weird hippie music for people to get high to." Did he achieve this goal, though? Not quite. Tyler goes 30 seconds without offending anyone on the album's first song, but, in quintessen- tial Tyler, the Creator style, the first two words he utters are "fuck you." Admittedly, 'Tyler spends much less time describ- ing his perverse fantasies this' time around, but not too much else has changed. If you were offended by him before, you'll likely still be offended, just this time you might only dry heave, not puke. Surely there are people who only like Tyler for his NC-17 lyrics, but others appreciate the candidness with which he raps. He's never been shy about his lack of a father, emotional issues and what seems to be at least a mild case of depression. His rap is his therapy, which becomes even clearer consid- ering that he plays a therapist character on quite a few of his songs on Wolf "Pigs" encapsulates this side of Tyler. Half-misplaced anger and half-unresolved emotional issues, the song mixes a narra- tive about a bullied boy getting violent revenge with candidly depressing lines ("I got 99 prob- lems, and all of them's being happy"). The boy in the song, Wolf, is the main character throughout the album and may as well be named Tyler. He has no father, few friends and a twisted sense of what life is like. Wolf also gives listeners insight into Tyler's new life as a celebrity. On "Colossus," which is essentially his version of Eminem's "Stan," Tyler tells the story of his meeting with an obsessive fan. Like Tyler, the kid p Iof even ti ten tol an arti on top game- at thes time, o of the And thoug. would call m Timbe connoi I'm de nitely. So it st friend sugges berlak writea it mad. aboutl two in I'm1 no, not lauded achiev best "c and pi the Bie minute emerg Just slow, a cultur I ab Bieber most p moder and ca en mas a mult throw, the yot the ma losingi gets bullied and has emotional problems, but adores Tyler to the point of infatuation and worship. The song will sadden you, but it illustrates what Tyler has come to represent for some people. He seems reluctant to accept his crown as king of the freaks and just wants a little bit of privacy. Tyler produced the entirety of Wolf, and it contains a fairly consistent tone throughout. His attempts to mix his influ- ences and create something new gives birth to a uniquely unhinged sound, something that can only be described as a vision quest through Tyler's dement- ed psyche. "Jamba" sounds like N.E.R.D meets New York boom bap, and slower songs like "Answer" and "Slater" showcase Tyler's love for jazz and jazz- fusion. And one can never ignore the influence of angry rappers like Eminem and D12, as Tyler does his version of their abrasive beats and lyrics periodically. Wolf won't convert anyone who is easily offended, but Tyler has grown a lot from his last album, and it looks like he might be more than just a flavor-of- the-month fad. my last column, I waxed presses it against the glass. oetic on the dominance Bieber touches the glass in the f Justin Timberlake. And same place, and then sprints hough I don't usually uIs- away, tears streaming down his pop, I have to admit when face. Hollywood, I think you st is know where the next Oscar of his paydirt is. - and But it didn't stop there: It same also came out that Bieber has n top since been banned from an world. Austrian nightclub for smash- ing paparazzi cameras. I mean, h I if I had a pet monkey hanging n't ELLIOT out with me, I'd probably feel a yself a ALPERN bit rebellious too, but he should rlake _______know he's in the spotlight. He sseur, needs to quit ... (place sun- fi- glasses on head, Roger Daltrey a fan of the guy himself. screams intro to "Won't Get ung even more when a Fooled Again") monkeying read my JT column and around. ted, "Jeez Elliot, Tim- Ultimately, the events e? You might as well just (which, I repeat, all occurred about Bieber." Ouch. But within one week) seemed to cap e me think ... I never write off an already rough year for pop. So why not make it the artist. It looks like every- a row? thing began with his publicized here to talk Bieber - but break-up with Selena Gomez, quite in the same way I and the tabloid-frenetics try- Timberlake's mounting ing to document his affairs, ements. When I made my but does anyone remember the hallenge accepted" face last time the singer actually ugged away to research made headlines for his music? bster, it took only a few The only one I remember from es to witness a pattern this year was his "extreme" ing. displeasure at the fact that in Bieber is beginning his Believe wasn't nominated for a lbeit hilarious, spiral into Grammy. al obsolescence. To be clear, I'm not evena solutely agree that celebrity-gossip follower. I can't oni is still one of the name a single Selena Gomez opular performers of the song - in fact, I actually had n era, selling out concerts to look up the name of Bieber's using tweens to swoon most recent album. But I do fol- se. I'm sure there's still low news, and for some reason, itude of fans ready to the Bieberini makes headlines cash at anything with every time his birthday isn't up ung star's name on it. But to his standards. It's gotten to n(-child) is completely the point where Bieber-bashers it. like me get material from The Huffington Post's most read articles. "And thought liko joke Lree fiascos about the scrawny munchkin, i one week I have to admit I'm concerned about him. Think of all the teen Bieber's idols of the past decade - how many have dignified themselves !eping busy. in their transition to adulthood, especially after beginning a tab- loid headline-fueled descent? Let's compare him to, say, week seemed to culmi- some other pop success story, n already rollercoaster no one in particular - oh, how r Biebster - first, the about Justin Timberlake? When roke that the Bieb-man was the last time you remember ely getting prosecuted JT punching paparazzi and tting at a neighbor. walkingshirtless through air- might be expected for port security? How many capu- star, but the neighbor chin monkeys does Timberlake portedly a father of three seem to be smuggling on his ned that Bieber was tour? ng around the residential None. Because he's not a orhood at over 100 mph. child, and he probably real- ike to think that, if I were ized that even before his solo d maybe consider cool- career took off. Fame can be o at least the low 50s. But fleeting, but talent and poise 's alleged response? make an icon. And just like all t the fuck out of here! I'm of the other tween pop-idols fucking kill you!" Cue before him (Lindsay Lohan, Miley Cyrus, Hillary Duff), the n, word from Germany maturity to achieve lasting fame d that Bieber's pet mon- just doesn't seem to be there for hich he tried to smuggle Bieber. -h security) would be So unless you're a Belieber tined in the country or a hardcore sympathizer, take urther notice. I can only a few tips from me: Pull up a e the heart-wrenching chair, kick back and watch the where Bieber sits on entertainment unfold. TI ii A longtime book lover takes an up-close look at e-readers By MAX RADWIN Daily Arts Writer I consider myself an avid reader, if not a shamefully pre- tentious one. I'm very choosy about which authors I read in my down time and which books by those authors I ultimately end up committing to. This also means that the mode by which I choose to read the stories I do is, in a sense, as important as the stories themselves, which is why I was so shocked to have recent- ly found myself reading from a Nook, Barnes & Noble's e-reader tablet. As a traditionalist of sorts - if reading books can even war- rant such a title - the thought of sitting down without the physi- cal pages, but instead a piece of hardware, always seemed like a distant impossibility. But at least now my dislike for e-readers is justifiable. I can fairly say: "Yes, I tried it, and I don't like it." I didn't go out and buy an e-reader - I wasn't that curi- ous. My mother bought a new computer, and I guess Barnes & Noble was trying to dump off some of the soon-to-be-obsolete models on people naive enough to invest in an HP laptop, so it was just lying around the house. It was break, I needed to read a book for extra credit (which I the reading experience consider- really did need) and I didn't have ably. I was a more comfortable - an actual copy of it at my dis- and faster - reader because of it. posal. I didn't feel like driving to On the other hand, when I had the library, and I didn't want to finished the book, I felt sort of ... buy it either. But as my mother incomplete. I couldn't put the informed me, a copy of it came book back on the shelf (a shelf I free on the Nook, which she had have been expanding for years, registered and installed but had and which I pride myself on never actually used. Sure, why greatly), and I needed that clo- not? sure. Instead, the text fell into an obsolete, virtual nothingness: It became a file on my computer, Nooks are OK not a physical emblem of the knowledge I had culminated but pages from being with and owning it. Is it going too far to say that I are forever, missed that temporary relation- ship that develops between the outer contours of a book's bind- ing and my hands? The texture To be honest, it makes read- of the pages as I turn them? ing a book a lot easier, but only in The smell of the book while I the laziest possible sense. Instead progress through it? I say no; of adjusting your position as the and these little details seem to weight of the book shifts from the carry a greater weight than I ini- front of the book's binding to the tially anticipated. Who would've back with each turn of the page, thought that there were so many you've just got one unchanging physical factors at play in such piece of square tablet, so once an interior, mental activity? you've found a comfortable posi- There are environmental fac- tion, you really don't have to move tors that comelinto play, too, which until the book is finished. This are potentially worth consider- seems like the smallest, most ing in light of one's own intimate detailed and nit-picky complaint reading preferences. The carbon about the state of the book that footprint left from the production one can think of, but it changes of one e-reader or tablet is equiva- lent to that of 100 books. But if you use a Nook, Kindle or iPad for an extended length of time as is intended, they easily become the cleaner option. The conversation almost becomes moot; there are other, more impactful pieces of technology whose environmental impact is more relevant and press- ing to its expansion and develop- ment - tablets might not be one of them. I don't know whether e-readers are a fad or the way of the future. There's talk that Amazon wants to put, somehow, the Kindle in your car; Barnes & Noble Inc. has landed new content-licensing partnership deals with Viacom and Paramount, among others, in an attempt to expand their Nook Video library. But these devel- opments point less toward an enhanced reading experience and more toward a consolidated tech- nology, something that functions more like a computer or a smart- phone than as a true e-reader. Even if e-readers remain prominent as their own entity, and continue to get more glam- orous, user-friendly and porta- ble, I don't see the physical book ever falling into total obsoles- cence. My books may get dusty over time, but they'll never go out of style. This nate as year fo news b was lik for spii Which a rock was re concer speedi neighb I'd li him, I' ing it t( Bieber "Gel gonna; saliva. The arrive( key (w] throug quaran untilft imagin scene, one sid teleph monke monke le of the glass with a one, and his capuchin y on the other side. The y extends a paw and Alpern is Beliebin in love. To interrogate him, e-mail ealpern@umich.edu. DO YOU HAVE CHARACTER? WE HAVE 140 OF THEM. Follow @michdailyarts! Visit michigandaily.com/the+filter for 'Game of Thrones' recaps. $