6 - Tuesday, April 9, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 1927 to bringdark comedy show to A2 4 'The Animals and Children' to take on noir aesthetic By GRACE PROSNIEWSKI Daily Arts Writer Art is an amazing thing. It can whisk an audience away to an entirely different place and time. It can create complex 1927: The worlds and riv- eting charac- Animals and ters completely Children unique to the T work at hand. It can be an Streets escape from an all-too-often Wednesday boring and and Thursday monotonous at7:30 p.m., life. Some- Friday and times these Saturday at 8 worlds are p.m., and Sun- pleasant; other dayat2 p.m. times, not so Performance much. 1927, a Network London-based performance $45 company, takes the audience through a grim and humor- ous realm in "The Animals and Children Took to the Streets," a production with a narrative marked by suspicion and decep- tion. 1927 was co-founded in 2005 by Suzanne Andrade and Paul Barritt. The company's journey to Ann Arbor started a few years ago, when they impressed a University Musi- cal Society employee. Mary Roeder, associate manager of community engagement within the education and community engagement department of UMS, saw the production at the Fringe Festival in Edinburgh and petitioned to bring it to Ann Arbor. "The Animals and Children Took to the Streets" takes place in a part of the city known as the Bayou, where a large dilapi- dated tenement block known as the Bayou Mansions houses a host of unseemly characters. One night, the optimistic Agnes Eaves and her daughter come to stay, much to the curiosity of the other tenets. "As a whole, it's one the best conceived and most fun pieces of theater I've ever seen," Roed- er said. "It is, as I said, a graphic novel come to life. You feel a little bit like you're trapped in a cartoon when you're watching it. It's a combination of anima- tion, video and a live cast inter- acting with that video." The animation and video play an important role in conveying the darkly comic setting of the work. And for those who feel that electronics distract from the performance, fear not. "It's done so seamlessly that you sort of forget they're actually live actors. You think they're a part of this film you're watching," Roeder said. All creative members of 1927 come from different artistic backgrounds and are known for their unique combination of artistic mediums, employ- ing a diverse array of both pre- recorded and live material. "That's really their aesthet- ic," Roeder said, "combining performance with animation. It's something that you'll see in all of their work." The styling of the actors and the setting is a nod to the early days of film and lends the pro- duction a noir feel. "They're really inspired by silent film and cabaret, so there's a sort of nostalgia to it," Roeder said. "The Animals and Children Took to the Streets" is sure to intrigue theater lovers, film buffs and casual audience mem- bers alike. "I honestly say that it's one of the best things I've ever seen," Roeder said. "It's going to be 70 minutes of the most fun some- body could have in the theater. You completely lose yourself in this world that they've cre- ated." I A This kind of looks like John Lynch. Blake finds his voice on genre-bending album Jam in ele course short Blake gated of dubste a sin, writer ByJOHN LYNCH ity, increasingly incorporating Senior ArtsEditor his own voice among the synths and samples of his production. ses Blake is an anomaly In 2011, he completely aban- ctronic music. 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The album's title track opens the record by immersing the listener in a gloomy atmosphere of plinking keyboards before Blake appears, showcasing his potent lyrical and vocal abilities with the line, "I don't want to be a star, but a stone on the shore / Long door, frame the wall, when every- thing's overgrown." Kanye and Jay are big fans, so you should be, too. * With the the exception of the song "Voyeur," the glitchy vocal loops of Blake's 2010 self-titled debut are mostly absent on Over- grown, replaced by (relatively) traditional song structures and the ascendance of Blake's un- manipulated vocals. "Voyeur" begins with a looping of Blake's bleak melody and slowly inflates into a trance-like dance anthem for The xx generation. "DLM" and the closer, "Our Love Comes Back," combine the heartbreaking vocal into- nations of Blake's Joni Mitch- ell cover with subtle electronic production. Both songs presum- ably yearn for the return of a former lover and represent the pensive, cathartic form that Blake has slowly mastered over the years. Overgrown's two featured performances provide further diversity on an already genre- bending album. Blake takes the backseat, for instance, on "Take a Fall For Me," a sullen track which finds rapper RZA rumi- nating on marriage and lost love for 48 bars over some eerily Wu- Tang-esque production. Simi- larly, on the track "Digital Lion," Blake recedes and allows the ambient synths of guest Brian Eno to carry the heft of the mes- merizing song. The album's lead single "Ret- rograde" is a stunning bal- lad that enters delicately with minimalist production - a repeating hand clap and some somber humming from Blake - and builds to a remarkable clash of synths with the song's chorus. At this point in his career, "Ret- rograde" is Blake's masterpiece - the culmination of his various talents packaged within a futur- istic pop hit. In his four-year career, James Blake has blurred the lines of electronic and R&B music and picked up some notable fans in the process (Kanye West, Jay-Z and Stevie Wonder, to name a few). Though Overgrown is like- ly too dark and sonically per- plexing to become a Billboard hit, the album certainly estab- lishes Blake as a groundbreaker - the leader and sole inhabit- ant of an "overgrown" genre, a shadowy pop revolution that's matured too far ahead of its time. .0