s The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, November.12, 2013 - 5 How I learned to stop worrying and love rap INTERSCOPE How do you write "ridiculous" in binary? Gaa'g ARTPOP burns then fizzles To be blunt about it, I never thought I would be a fan of rap, hip hop or anything in between. I have a very specific memory of a middle- school Elliot Alpern par- ticipating in a rap vs.rock argument, conveniently in the midst of a "rock 'n' roll history" class. ELLIOT "Rap ALPERN doesn't take any musical skill!" shouted a friend, and, at the time, I was sure I agreed. As the son of a rock aficionado - and, likewise, ageneral rap-music shunner - I was completely immersed in my world of guitar licks and drum solos. To me, and to the other rock champions on my side, hip hop was simply talk- ing over a beat. Yes, I was aware of the lyrical complexities, but you can find that kind of intricacy in any genre. And I still believe that today - to sayotherwise, I think, is to say you simply haven'theard enough. But everything changed when, arriving attcollege, I downloaded Kanye's The College Dropout on a whim. I had begun to accept a few rap hits, like "Jesus Walks"(look, I know, I'm not quite a rap hipster) - and so, it made sense to me to investigate if there was anything else worthwhile. A few days later, and I was listeningto the album from end to end. It didn't stop with Kanye, and I soon realized that I was growing into something I never expected from myself. I was mixing Dr. Dre into my bouts of Foo Fighters, and Kanye lyrics were swirling around my head as much as any Black Keys verse. For better or worse, I'd become the personI was arguing against all those years ago. But, still, Iwasn't sure why I actualli "Get E withou what's The be it perce specific some w failed t It to of con hip-ho a recor everyt I'd hea from f despite recogn "The n album and se rap fat myself piece c Co Evei I reme lesson, me wh truly A "Coun dumb on to d countr own. B is justr only no good ki that. At it more a story,a brutal (often) leading Tot ingly h coulde y liked rap. I could go over American story. Sure, there in High" a dozen times are rock-oriented tracks about t being able to point out the tragedy of life in America, suddenly appealing to me. about making ends meat or cold at? Sure, it's cool, but was winters without a job. But can rption-breaking? Did the any of them wax poetic on the c style of lyricseget to me in daily warfare waged in Chicago ray that rock had suddenly streets? o do? And, look, I'm not saying 'ok me a few more years that it's the potential to tell fused-but-grateful that specific storyline that 'p appreciation before makes rap such a great genre. rd dropped that made But, rather, it's rap's potential hing oh so much clearer. to maintain such a deep, com- ird whispers about it plex storyline, all told within riends and writers, the framework of a catchy, e the fact that I didn't danceable song, that suddenly ize the artist's name. made it so appealing. iew Kendrick Lamar That, too, helped to sway my leaked!" they cooed, opinion. I'd never been into the eing my own lack of "dancier" songs, usually relying miliarity, I took it upon on catchy riffs for all my moving to explore this new melodies, but as my time in college tf material. progressed, it became impossible to ignore that influence of "party" songs. Not that I was looking for llg ro o t one of those "Pull up, DRANK" LIege DrIopyo L tracks everywhere I went, but all it took. simply that I suddenly was able to appreciate when the beats were designed to appeal to a dance floor full of fun-seeking music-lovers. rything fell into place. I still shy away from a decent mber once, in a drums amount of rap. Sometimes, it when my teacher asked seems to me that a song is made at I thought was the solely for the basis of "making merican genre of music. a rap song," instead of making try?" I offered. It was a music. You can probably rec- guess, sure, and he went ognize those too - tracks that escribe how no other emphasize all of the typical fare y could claim jazz as their (booze, drugs, money, women) 3ut I'd argue, now, that rap over a simple beat with a slight as American as jazz - you twist. But you can also tell when eed one listen-through of a hip-hop track actuallytriesto id, m.A.A.d city to realize excel as a composition, even if the instruments themselves are made :s heart, Kendrick's sopho- up of synthesizers and electric lbum tells the American drumsets. And, even though I still a diatribe against the listen to my fare share of rock hits, life that millions of poor you can officially count me as a minorities are forced into convert to rap music. Pop star takes on too many sounds on latest effort By GREGORY HICKS f Daily Arts Writer Now, art .and pop culture can meet.But, is this third studio album a mixed basket tailored to all lis- tening needs, or a jumbled set of B stylistic inco- herency? ART- ARTPOP POP ties the Top-40 form of LadyGaga The Fame to the Interscope abstractions of Born This Way, depicting Gaga in her most, prevalent musical insanity while shuffling to her most reductive radio-friendly styles shortly after. Production team announce- ments garnered the most antici- pation for this record, despite a final farewell to Gaga's established right-hand man, RedOne. DJ White Shadow seemingly struck a chord with the pop performer's tastes on Born This Way, seeing as he has reappeared alongside the long-awaited (and much under- rated) producer Zedd. Organized chaos is the game Zedd plays, and his productions that seems as if it fell onto Gaga's for ARTPOP detonate in a bizarre album from a 2 Chainz record. DJ electronic bang, particularly on White Shadow fell back to circa the record's lead track, "Aura." 2008-Gaga for ARTPOP's second This Middle East-characterized single, "Do What U Want," which piece releases its tension-built cho- precedes the album's title track, rus with an assortment of dirty "Artpop"- a dissonant piece with synths, pops, kicks and ghastly an airy minimalism relative to vocalizing. other tracks. The futuristic vibe of Zedd's handiwork is messy on "Artpop," the retro-Gaga styling of occasion, but is by far the most "Do What U Want" and the obnox- immaculate sound on the record ious hip-hop outburst of "Jewels n' - speaking for ARTPOP's abstract Drugs" is too much genre variance tracks. The extraterrestrial intro to inhale, even for a character like. of "G.U.Y." seamlessly partners Lady Gaga. with the talk-sing build of the ARTPOP aims to please a few chorus and the (once again) eerie too many people - including vocalizing that wanders behind Gaga herself - but still retains the track. most of its artistic integrity. The Other imaginative components record has its blatantly obvi- of ARTPOP, however, dramatize ous written-for-charts tracks tracks to more of an artistic implo- like "Do What U Want" and sion than explosion. Fitting, given "Applause" - as did much of The that "Swine" is the record's slop- Fame - but also has a captivat- piest track, but Gaga could afford ing unpredictability (particu- to familiarize herself with the larly with "Aura" and its sibling term "moderation." The vocals songs) that doesn't appear to be are staggered and shouted to near written for any demographic. A incomprehension, and the backing strong third record, but given melody is indistinguishable due to ARTPOP's strengths and vision, its obnoxiously low-octave synth. Zedd would have been bet- The album's divergences come ter suited as the album's lead swiftly, inviting in some unpleas- producer over DJ White Shad- ant stylistic abruptness. "Sexxx ow. White Shadow's influence Dreams" - a characteristically becomes a tad monotonous, and pop-heavy track - is pitted against lacks instrumentation as iconic "Jewels n' Drugs" - a hip-hop song as that of Zedd. g. ne, it has become increas- ard to argue that rock ever tell such a veritably Alpern is nolonger yelling at rap lovers. To congratulate him, e-mail ealpern@umich.edu. 'Nebraska' cast talks characters Lost' rides on Redford By BRIAN BURLAGE Daily Arts Writer The old man and the sea against him. Man in his most primitive form. An experienced actor in a director's soph- omore experi- - mental film. Despite such All is Lost refreshing ver- satility, "All Is At Rave Lost" draws the and State solitary portrait i Wi ofm Luscious locks. of a ma: maritit age. TI explor of the ultima master tide rec sails A film er gle wit I, unsga e tn and his He was simply there on his boat, me voy- the Virginia Jean, weathering the hough it may be varied and elements, manning the helm - atory, the different aspects becoming as tough and rugged as film's radical storytelling the ocean swells that pummel him. tely come together with in his second directorial effort, ful grace. And when the J.C. Chandor ("Margin Call") opts cedes, the wind dies and the to tell his story through careful lacken, the essence of the film techniques and environmental merges: Man and his strug- factors rather than through dia- h the deepblue. logue and personal drama. Instead of guiding Redford's character, he uses free-moving camera work to S v rfollow him through his task. We Mr~an versus travel with him into the water, the sea. under the deck, into a life raft and to the top of the mast. We wake up with him at the beginning of the movie when a steel shipping con- hard to imagine anyone but tainer slams into the side of the Redford ("The Company boat. We plunge into the water with eep") filling such a role. As him when an onslaught of tower- ily cast member, he bears ing waves hurls him from the deck. e responsibility of breaking Chandor permits us to explore tural monotony of the plot's every corner of the yacht, revealing alistic approach. With little problems as they come, allowing us ue and no human interac- to think critically along with Red- edford's character is left to ford's character about how to sur- ith oblivion alone in silence. vive and stayafloat. kstory was provided for his The film's greatest challenge ter, no surrounding circum- perhaps is finding ways to manage no motive, not even a name. the only other major cast member: d the ocean. From the first minute to the last, the ocean forces itself upon the ship - leaking through cracks, sloshing foam on the deck, surging upward, downward, side- ways in attempt to upheave the ship and swallow it whole. And while the unpredictable nature of the sea is indeed imminent and unavoidable, its constant aggressiveness throughout the film (accentuated only by the lack of other major players) eventu- ally feels contrived. Despite his impressive, if not superhuman, effort to beat the odds, Redford's character can't sway the momen- tum even a little. But this one-sided struggle makes you root for the character. Odysseus had his cunning; Aeneas had his piety; Achilles his martial ability. Redford's character has his resourcefulness - his inex- tinguishable ache and instinct for survival. And though everything that could go wrong did go wrong, though his resourcefulness could only keep him going until the next immense challenge set him back, Redford's character showed the man could still be a hero. By MAYANK MATHUR Daily Arts Writer It's immediately clear that "Nebraska,"Alexander Payne'slat- est film, holds a special place inthe hearts of its main cast. As part of the "New York Film Critics Series," Bruce Dern, June Squibb and Will Forte sat down with Rolling Stone critic Peter Travers to discuss the film and their roles in it. The event took place in New York, and wasbroad- cast live and screened for audi- ences in the Michigan Theater. Similar events will be available in the future at the Michigan The- ater. The actors spoke on a number of topics in the 40-minute interview, ranging from the casting process, to the acting process, to their future plans. Though they fielded a variety of questions from Travers and an online Twitter audience, the personal importance of the film was a persistent theme in each of their answers. "Of the three roles I've played in my career that are personal to me, this one is the most personal," Dern said. Dern plays Woody Grant, a delusional and stubborn old man who believes that he is entitled to a million dollars and forces his son, played by Will Forte, to travel with him from Montana to Nebraska to help claim his prize. Though Dern acknowledged that he bears little resemblance to the charac- ter on the surface, he said that he found commonality in his charac- ter's detachment and subsequent estrangement from family. Grant's detachment stands out especially since his family mem- bers are so concerned about his mental and physical health. June Squibb plays Dern's hardy wife, who nurses a deep love for him despite her frustrations at his increasing inability to cope with reality. Even she was emphatic in noting how close her character hit home. "When I read the script, I knew who thi me in h Betw dramat ter kno than dr Forte'sc himself relative film, he sonalla how he ing toI type an film. "This me, bec nuanced Forte playing he rece Payne's' actorsv that Pay "Alex the role, to prove Al dis dr This resonan their ch one wor a family they we before how th know e "Eve getting house fr was just The: closer tc film is s ca, andi imports film hat that au whom# s woman is. There's a lot of well, formed an integral part of the er," Squibb said. supporting cast. She said that the 'een these two established film had increased her respect for it actors sat Will Forte, bet- the state of Nebraska and the Mid- wn for his comedic chops westingeneral. amatic acting. However, in Dern said that the film was case, the contrast between Payne's tribute to the growth and 'and his character, and his history oftheheartland ofAmerica. inexperience in such a "I admire the, monumental lps transform it into a per- courage of those people staying ndmark. Fortetalked about and working on the land that their ultimately found it liberat- ancestors came to in a covered play a different character wagon. They don't leave because d how much he valued this they're honored to carry on tradi- tion,"Dernsaid. was a different role for When asked about his best ause this required a more moments on set, Forte referred to d performance," Fortesaid. the time that he spent with Dern attributed his success in between takes, in whichthey spoke the character to the help about Alfred Hitchcock and John ived from Dern as well as Wayne, among many other things. skill as a director. All three "The experience of shooting in were conscious of the trust the car forthe trip to Nebraska was 'ne placed in them. amazing. Itis somethingthat Iwill ander (Payne) knows you're treasure forever," Forte said. Dern said. "You don't have "Bruce provided with me patient anything." words of encouragement and made me feel at ease,"he said. Dern reciprocated Forte's rever- ence in his constant praise ofForte. l-star actors "Will is an actor with a tremen- cuss fmily- dons amount of courage," he said. According to Dern, being coura- iven dram a. geous was important for Forte if he was to subdue his affinity for com- edy for "the benefit ofthe movie." The comfortable chemistry movie went beyond the between the actors was evident ce that the actors felt with when Squibb was asked who was aracters - it brought every- the "biggest pain in the ass" on set -king on the film together as between the other two actors. She . The cast talked about how immediately pointed to Dern in nt on road trips in the week jest, while remarkingthat Forte is a shooting commenced and very affectionate person. ey used that time to get to The interview closed with Trav- ach other. ers asking the actors to choose the ry single day, I felt I was scene inthe filmthatpersonally res- up and going to somebody's onated the most with them. Unsur- om the crew," Dern said. "It prisingly, the cast picked various fun." intimate moments that stressed the film also brought the actors importance of family ties. Dern said o the Midwest. Much of the that ultimately, family provides you et in the heartland of Ameri- with the belief and confidence you ts cast membersstressed the need to live your dreams. ince that the location of the "God dammit, you can pull d to them. Squibb informed them off if you work hard enough dience that local farmers, at it!" he exclaimed, as the audi- the cast got to know very ence applauded. 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