The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, November 11, 2013 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Monday, November 11, 2013 - 7A James Blake talks Overgrown' tour HIM COLUMN Finally, we have a film like '12 Years a Slave' English artist the likes of Brian Eno, Justin Vernon of Bon Iver and Wu- discusses latest Tang Clan's RZA. In recent years, especially on Overgrown, musical ventures he has found the confidence to thrust his voice toward the By JOHN LYNCH forefront of his songs, placing Senior Arts Editor his songwriting on par with his established level of production. On the front cover of James "I'm getting more and more Blake's second album, Over- comfortable with (singing grown, the English producer live)," Blake said. "I look back and singer-songwriter stands to shows that we even did six in the center of a snow-covered months ago and say, 'Oh, I terrain, surrounded by an oth- could have done that better,' erworldly, blue mist. Much and everyone wants to improve like that mist, Blake's music themselves. But I'm trying to is enveloping and ethereal, an make it natural and also take inventive mix of synthesizer, out all the things that might piano and crooning vocals that stop me from being able to be strikes as poignantly in a live natural and good at the same setting as it does through a pair time. So, cutting out a few of headphones. things, like trying not to drink On Monday, Blake will bring too much and stuff like that, his North American tour to but still trying to have fun." Ann Arbor for a performance at With an already diverse cat- Michigan Theater, which will alog of music to play live, Blake feature a diverse setlist with continues to explore a vari- material from Overgrown, as ety of musical styles, and his well as songs from his self-titled approach to song-making var- debut album and earlier EPs. ies according to where exactly in between shows in Los he's recording. Angeles late last month, Blake "If I'm at home, I'll go in sat down for a phone interview with some lyrics and try to sing with The Michigan Daily to them and put some chords to discuss his recent works and them, wrap them up in a blan- examine the role that environ- ket of sounds that might make ment plays in the creation and them seem more interesting," consumption of music. Though Blake said. "And when I'm his music is more commercial- away from home, I mostly start ly successful in the UK, Blake experimenting with samples feels that Americans have an and beats, and that's how a lot apt appreciation of his music of the time I come up with the and finds great worth in their 'Harmonimix'-type sound or reception of his work. maybe remixes or things like "I grew up with American that." music and, therefore, to come to The live performance that America and play my music feels Blake will to bring to Ann culturally important," Blake Arbor looks to balance both of said. "It makes sense that when these approaches. Differenti- I go to Atlanta - and I grew up ating his set from any other in listening to Outkast - it makes music, Blake and his live band sense that I would want to go shift seamlessly from pound- and play in that area." ing, EDM-style music to piano A classically trained pianist, ballads, to layers of peaceful Blake has covered Joni Mitch- synth. ell and Feist and worked with "We've got quite a few dif- ferent moments in our set; it's not always one thing," Blake said. "It's not always dance-y, it's not always sentimental, it's not always quiet. I think we try not to push and pull people too much. We want to give peoplea while where they can feel like they're not just surrounded by bass the whole time. "If you go to a club tonight, eventually you will inevitably get bored of hearing every- thing building up (to this) ... tension-and-release thing that is actually very predictable. If you really wanted to make the impact as fresh every time, then maybe don't do the same thing over and over again. But that's the kind of ethos I have with the show, to try and give people a certain amount of time in each space. To me, when I look out and see people danc- ing to 'Voyeur' and then stand- ing still and maybe looking off in the distance when we play 'Lindisfarne', I love the differ- ent moods and transitioning between them." Nonetheless, Overgrown is the culmination of all of Blake's artistic endeavors - a compel- ling record that manages to strike a newfound sentimental chord with songs like "Retro- grade." It's a surreal collection of tracks that seemingly tran- scends space and time while still feeling undeniably enjoy- able in any listening setting. When asked how he would hypothetically prefer to have a person listen to Overgrown for the first time, though, Blake playfully described an elabo- rate, English-centric scenario: "I'd put them at the back of the N29 bus from Wood Green to Enfield Town," Blake said, "and they'd be listening to it on an iPhone with no headphones, just through the iPhone speak- ers. And it'd be a packed bus, so they'd be obnoxiously playing my album through it." No one stood. As the screen cut to a con- clusive black and the credits rolled, we stirred uncom- fortably in our seats. Our eyes sank toward a pair of still knees, and though our breaths were steady, shak- ing hands pressed away the tears. The applause never came. In those AKSHAY SETH brief moments of just sitting there, letting the finality sink in - in the pause before we'd get up and walk back into our lives - no one wanted to acknowledge what they had just seen. This wasn't a trip to the movie theater; it was a front-row seat to that infamous break in humanity, smeared in history, one we've spent cen- turies trying to forget. It took a digital projector and a life- less cinema hall seat to make us remember, but there was beauty in that. The applause never came because we didn't want to judge. In the week since "12 Years a Slave" debuted at the Michigan Theater, we've all heard the exclamations of award-worthy brilliance, decade-defining cinematic quality and unvary- ingly stirring acting. Every review has been a gushing tes- tament to how director Steve McQueen's masterpiece per- fectly gives voice to a forgotten era. According to any worth- while Oscar pundit, the race for the golden statuettes is already over, the time finally here for a Black man to be deemed Best Director by the Academy. But here's the thing: This movie is more than just a con- sequence of the yearly exercise in picking the best. It's accu- rate - the most unyielding depiction of the horrors of slavery we've seen released in this medium, and it doesn't sympathize. It draws a clear line between right and wrong, and in doing so, sets itself apart from many of the other pieces of cinema that have tried to tackle the same subject matter. Most movies that attempt to categorize race into two hours do it by exalting white- ness: A person of color gets into trouble, usually attributable to a lack of restraint, and a Cau- casianr to bail t dest pa anythin Indian- who sti ries of 9 dead in "go bac - had n that Af comple Mounta about p the Civ I did the onl tion in the mos of whit Blind S when I Wind": most do since "J made it ple coul on the c scrapsc white o T des exp a I did Not b films I sidered reproac of the s about r sonaliti involve feature Blind Si selectec they ca reiterat mentali to the r enjoys f especia "12 Y enjoyab you wit the end of how movieg to face( the con laid out Whit suprem develop crushes male is generous enough dehumanizing them to the :hem out. Yet the sad- point that they're asked and rt is how no one notices willing to forget their own ag is wrong. Even I - an names. Yet the most nuanced American immigrant verification of the film's bril- ill has childhood memo- liance is how effectively it not 9-year-olds looking me just enlivens, but anchors that the eye as they said, viciousness to a particular way k where you came from" of life. Slaves are displayed to issue with the fact nude, like furniture for sale in rican Americans are a homey, white-washed set- tely forgotten in "Cold ting. Rich, white couples stroll ain," a film supposedly around casually, leaning in on ersonal trials caused by occasion to inspect particular ii War. "specimens," stripped of their n't shake my head when clothing, that may make worth- y real source of resolu- while investments. "The Help" became The film pokes harsh fun at st beat-down aspects the docility of its predecessors, e saviorism since "The transitioning fluidly between ide." I didn't bat an eye that sense of comfortable watched "Gone with the domesticity to torrents of cru- showcase slavery in the elty. Minutes after Paul Gia- cile manner I'd seen matti's character, a slave trader, rezebel." Both movies finishes showing off his newest look like the Black peo- "property" arrivals to poten- ldn't mind toiling away tial buyers, McQueen hits us cotton fields, waiting for with a violently detailed scene of approval from their in which amother is yanked verseers. away, screaming, from her two children. Before long, we're listening to someone playing a hough it's violin and the sense of hysteria has disappeared. Everything erved, don't registers because of that cru- cial transition, the normalcy of ect applause it all. The film boasts multiple it the end. scenes of heartbreaking beauty, interspersed with wistful shots of classically Southeast- ern United States, but the one n't even notice. that perfectly summarizes its ecause the last two relevance is of a slave funeral. just mentioned are con- A man is being buried after classics and beyond collapsing from overwork in h, but because so many a cotton field. As his compan- tories we choose to tell ions gather around and finish ace marginalize the per- saying their cursory prayers, es of the colored people one starts singing "Roll Jor- d. Even "true" stories dan Roll." The weight of the d in fare such as "The gospel visibly ripples through ide" and "The Help" are the gathering. People pause, d to be retold because reflect, but soon they're all n be shoehorned into singing, praying, leaning on ing that basic, ugly each other in their pain. It's a ity of "white people cathartic moment, watching escue." Why? No one these strangers brought togeth- feeling needlessly guilty, er through anguish, celebrating illy at the movies. their own humanity. ears a Slave" is not an "12 Years a Slave" is a wave tle movie. It strangles of that humanity. It crushes h its honesty and, by you. It forces you to look evil , becomes a brutal test in the face. Don't look away, able we are, not just as because when the credits roll, oers, but as Americans, you won't applaud. You'll think evil truths, festering in about half a century of mis- fines of history, finally representation. And you'll say clearly before us. "finally." Small-town joys in 'Nebraska' By KAREN YUAN For the Daily "Nebraska," directed by Alex- ander Payne ("The Descen- dants"), feels like coming home. Among all the chaos within and around the universe, it seems to say there will always be the father and the son, driving along a wide, open road, side by side watching the asphalt tip into the horizon. Payne shrinks our universe A to include only these two and Nebraska the scruff that small town At the America offers, Michigan but the scenes Paramount are familiar to any viewer, Vantage tinged with nostalgia the way a fresh apple pie set on a windowsill is. Woody Grant (Bruce Dern, "Django Unchained"), a cantan-, kerous alcoholic, receives a letter claiming he's the million-dollar winner of Mega Sweepstakes Marketing. He wrangles his sigh- ing and head-shaking son David (Will Forte, "Life of Crime") into a Montana-Nebraska road trip to collect his winnings, Don Quixote-style. It's a journey to top off a life. There's a scene, right before the trip, where we see Woody lying in a flea-bitten couch, every line on his face vis- ible in the film's monochrome lensing. He almost becomes the couch with the way he's sunk into it, and the audience realizes this is a man who needs purpose as his life slowly curtains. The trip is beautifully shot in black and white. Their car rattles along the infinity vistas of the Midwest - plains stretching left and right and flat tongues of roads guiding the way - before making a pit stop in Woody's hometown Hawthorne. There, word quickly spreads of his new affluence. He's the man of the hour. A little boy squeaks by on a bike to take his :e privilege reigns e. It dictates every little ment in the plot and the slaves beneath, Seth is actually noticing things. To congratulate him, e-mail akse@umich.edu. Back to the Future IV. picture for the local paper. Every Toward the end, Woody Hawthorne citizen goes out of his reveals his ultimate motive. With way to shake his hand, ask how the same vaguely offended tone he's been, and congratulate him. he uses throughout the movie, at "What are you going to buy first comical and later tragic, he with that mill-yun dollars, says to his son David, "I wanted Woody?" to leave something for you boys." He's been a piss-poor drunk of a father, and his son, reflecting on the fact, only chauffeurs him to Nebraska to humor his obstinate gold again w ith will. No one quite takes Woody seriously - not even the audi- latest film. ence. Once he springs upon David this confession, however, the truck comes into significance. Out of anything he could buy for "A new truck," he replies each himself, he only asks for atruck, a time with a perpetual frown. way to move on his own. The rest Several family members and of the lottery money, in a feeble so-called friends also come out of attempt to atone, is for his boys. the woodwork for their share of Dern's acting is heartbreaking. the money. The sleazy mooching At once frail and exasperating, isn't much of a plot, but it bares he creates a character who puts the heart of small town Ameri- all his faith into righting his path ca, those places that have been before it runs out. By the end of reduced to pit stops and memory. the movie, the audience, too, has These are people descending into put all their faith into the charac- their proverbial couch, stagnant ter. We're with Woody and David and dusty. To them, Woody rep- in the car as they pull away from resents what's beyond the hori- Hawthorne, praying at the edge zon. They elevate him to a beacon of our seats for those sweepstakes of hope. His dream becomes their to be genuine. "Nebraska" is an dream. ode to the windmill dream. SPEND ALL YOUR TIME AT THE UMMA? WANT TO GET PAID TO WRITE ABOUT IT? APPLY TO BE A FINE ARTS WRITER! REQUEST AN APPLICATION AT ARTS@MICH IGANDAILY.COM II I Buy one sa nd wich g et one FR EE!I Limit One offer per customer with coupon. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Valid at Barry Bagels Ann Arbor location ONL Y BAGELS Barry Bagels Westgate Shopping center 2tt5 Jackson Ave, Ann Arbor, Mi 48t03 734) 62-2435 www.barrybageils.com Expires: November 17, 2013