12 Monday, July 14, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com ALBUM REVIEWl Gillis delivers wild mash MER PREVIEW Art Fair in A2 I By MATT EMERY Daily Arts Writer Gregg Gillis will never make a bad album. That said, the man behind the Girl Talk moniker will never make a great album. It's just the nature in the world of mash-ups, and probably part of the reason Gil- lis is makingthe album available in the name-7 your-own price Gid Talk format on the Illegal Art Feed the Animals website. It's Illegal Art not completely original work, but it's still worth a lot, and it also doesn't mean the man can't throw down some ballsy party bangers that trump just about any singular artist's original dance record out today. Feed the Animals isn't quite Night Ripper 2.0, but if you've been to a Girl Talk live show in the past six months, most of the mashes aren't too new. Gillis noted that he wanted to make the album more cohesive, not using quite as many samples and cuts on this album, rather stick- ing to longer samples. This is partly accomplished here, with a fair num- ber of tracks drawing on 30-second portions-of more popular tracks or hip-hop verses. But that same rapid- fire mentality still exists in the back- ground of even the longer samples, creating the ultimate party ecstasy ries's "Dreams" on "Let Me See You" we've been used to all along. could go together in sonic principle, The same, semi-ironic lyri- but the tracks don't quite mesh in cal juxtapositions in female vs. the smoother manner of his other male dynamics are here (Sinead samples. And the ironic bit can be a O'Connor's "Nothing Compares 2 little much when Gillis tries to use U" against Too Short's lyrics of "I something like Phil Collins, Wilson was gettin' some head, gettin'gettin' Pickett or Ace of Base. It's good for a some head" on opener "Play Your rare glimpse, but some of the inclu- Part (Pt. 1)), along with the mixes of sions are just Gillis trying a bit too our parents' favorite tracks against hard to impress. hip-hop staples (Webbie against A nod to the indie crowd, Girl The Band on "Still Here"). From Talk's albums have always been a Radiohead going againstJay-Z ("Set sort of indie take on Where's Waldo. it Off") to Public Enemy with, yes, Part of the fun for hipsters was to Len ("No Pause"), Gillis is still the run through the album and pick out party music master, and Feed the which indie tracks from their favor- Animals shows that Gillis still has ite obscure bands Mr. Gillis had a lot of tricks up in his laptop. It's thrown into the equation against that touch of irony that Gillis really something like T.I. or Ludacris. capitalizes on and what often is able That element is still here - Peter Bjorn and John, Yo La Tengo, Beck, Air and many others slipping into a Fusion of number of spots - but not quite as prevalent as on Night Ripper. disparate songs But all this is just nit-picking on an album that still throbs in equals success. an unprecedented, undated party anthem way. Feed the Animals is still the perfect album for any house party, with a strong enough mixture of tracks to appeal to just about any- to draw in both the indie and main- one (He mixes Soulja Boy and Thin stream crowds. Lizzy, and makes it too addictive The only problem with trying to for words!). It's nearly impossible to be a bit too ironic is that sometimes compare to Night Ripper, but to say the combinations just sound silly that it's no better and certainly no and rushed. The combination of worse is still saying an awful lot in M.ILA's "Boyz" and The Cranber- terms of partyability. By BEN VANWAGONER Associate Arts Editor This is not your grandmother's art fair. That's the message the Ann Arbor ArtFairs wantyou to believe, and truth be told, they're right. The phrase "art fair" may call to mind kitschy wooden dolls or intricate- ly bent wire sculptures - more an excuse to spend cash on Ann Arbor "summer col- Art Fairs lectibles" than anything else. Julyl6-19 But the Ann Campuswide Arbor Art Fairs are more than that. Perhaps, to differentiate, we can take advantage of their proper noun status and call them just "the Fairs." They've earned it. The Fairs are widely recognized commercial exhi- bitions of some of the finest art, H alf a both professional a and amateur, to art uf be found in the country. They will be filled to overflowing with artists in every medium imagin- able: clay, jewelry, printmaking, mixed media, wood, glass, fibers, photography, drawing and sculp- ture. Between the four loosely collaborated fairs, there will be more than 1,000 artists sprawled practically everywhere on campus. On Ingall's Mall, the Ann Arbor Street Art Fair; on State, East Lib- erty and Maynard, the State Street Art Fair; on South University, Ann Arbor's South University Art Fair; and on State in front of the Union, The Guild Ann Arbor Summer Art Fair. The artists themselves are only the tip of the iceberg: The Fairs are expected to draw upwards of 500,000 people over the course of three days - that's more people, three days inarow,thanare inAnn Arbor for football Saturdays. For residents of Ann Arbor, it's a mixed bag. It means great.business, but it also means unavoidable artistic chaos for three long (long) days. Streets so lately punctuated almost solely by the treading of the few remaining med school and summertermstudents willbecome on Wednesday the . i. lively playground m iliion of the imagina- s 2 tion. Our advice? sinA .Resist harboring the cynicism of a local and let your- self enjoy it.With staged music and performances punctuating the 3- day fair in addition to the rich art on displayand sale, there should be something of interest for just about everyone. If all else fails, sell your parking space and hunker down - for these three days, art rules. 4 r f 4 6