Monday, May 17, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 9 Drawing out the secret We got these hipster bitches wrapped around our finger. Semisweet 'Treats' By ARTHUR VELEZ Daily Arts Writer Rising from beneath the ever- saturated waters of today's indie-band blogosphere is no easy task. Whether due to . the sheer volume of music being Treats written or the NSEE.T Internet's murky conglomeration of media outlets, it seems that most bands are destined for the shadows before ever making that first MySpace page. That being said, in the quest to be heard, it is certainly helpful to have an established artist on your side. So, having recently signed to M.I.A.'s own label, N.E.E.T. Recordings, noise-pop band Sleigh Bells has nowhere to go but up. On the surface, the latest act to be vaulted from Brooklyn's ever-teeming music scene seems destined only for its 15 minutes of fame. Comprised of guitarist/ producer Derek Miller (formerly of Poison the Well) and pop vocal- ist Alexis Krauss, Sleigh Bells is an unlikely duo, but one that uses its potential shortcomings as creative fuel. After the first listen, Treats, the band-of-the-moment's debut album, is, in a word, volatile. Clocking in at just under 35 min- utes, this 11-track LP sets its blis- teringpace from theveryfirst drop of the bass. Album opener and lead single "Tell 'Em" is bathed in dis- torted guitar. Its heavy bass drum hits pound so strongly that by the time Krauss's cooing vocals enter, it feels as though she is a child in a thunderstorm, still too naive to see the danger. The band continues at this aggressive rate until doing a sty- listic 180 with the summery "Rill Rill." This both acts as a necessary interlude from the frenzied punk feel of the album and - for once - gives Krauss's feathery vocals center stage. As she repeats the line "Have a heart" behind a lush soundscape of affected guitars, it becomes obvious that Sleigh Bells doesn't simply hide behind distor- tion, but can occasionally use it to create truly beautiful pop music. This duo exemplifies how, musi- cally, opposites sometimes do synthesize and go on to produce decent work. In terms of genre, these two hail from directional extremes, but Miller's experimen- tal songwriting brings their sound into cohesion. From ubiquitous handclaps, to the use of actual sleigh bells, Treats is an interest- ing juxtaposition of angular, hard- core guitar work, club-ready beats in the vein of M.I.A. and bubble- gum vocals with a tinge of angst. Sleigh Bells ring with bo-fi spirit. Though repetitious and at some points a bit too abrasive, Treats is for the most part a success- ful effort from a unique tandem. With all of the hype surrounding this album, it's easy to get swept into the hipster bandwagon. But in reality, this is a solid effort from a fledgling band that might actually have staying power - not merely those 15 minutes of Internet star- dom. By JENNIFER XU Daily Arts Writer The biggest surprise of the past year's Academy Awards wasn't the triumph of Kathryn Bigelow or the ominous inclu- sion of "The Blind Side"* to the Best Picture line- up. Rather, it was the The $ecret nomination of a little Irish film known as of Kells "The Secret of Kells,"A which had barely any screenings to its name, Michigan in the Animated Fea- GKIDS ture Film category. The question at the tip of everybody's tongues became: What was the Acad- emy thinking? Yet once "Kells" emerged quietly onto the moviehouse scene, audiences understood. In a year where 3-D glasses and grand IMAX screenings dominated the box office, one can't help but feel that the Academy members who voted for "Kells" were on to something - a form of silent rebellion against all things big and explosive. "The Secret of Kells" finds young Brendan (newcomer Evan McGuire) living behind the walls of the Abbey of Kells, guarded aggressively by his uncle Abbot Cellach (Brendan Gleeson, "In Bruges"). As Brendan befriends master illuminator Brother Aidan (Mick Lally, "Alexander"), he stumbles upon The Book of Kells, a religious manuscript with the most intricate hand-drawn paintings ever seen. In what becomes a classic brawn-versus-art showdown, Brendan ventures deep into the Gaelic underbelly of the forest searching for ink, feathers and a glass eye, encounter- ing a few mysteries on the way. TANGO From Page 8 MATC keeps busy with much more than the bi-weekly dance les- sons. Each year, the group organizes three national (and sometimes inter- national) festivals that are basically a 72-hour "tango bubble," according to Heinz, as well as three smaller-scale workshops with guest instructors. Earlier this month, a festival enti- tled "May Madness" brought Buenos Aires tango professional couple Ari- adna Naveira and Fernando Sanchez and fellow professional Eriqueta Kleinman to campus. MATC's festi- vals attract tango-ers from all over the country - and sometimes even attract dancers from abroad. "It sounds really snobby, but I would say Ann Arbor is very well known (in the larger tango world)," Heinz said. It's rare that the visual components of a film can completely saturate its entire being. Indeed, the Irish fairytale story- line seems to exist wholly for the sump- tuous drawings depicting it. A flighty little nymph sprite, with her white hair blowing spiritedly in the wind, guides ribbons of smoke along the geometric curlicues of the screen. Armed with nothing but a pencil, Brendan battles fearsome villains as he catapults him- self within a milky plasmatic nebula. And then there are the montages: some whimsical, like filigreed clockwork, some impressionistic, like a smudgy Renoir painting, and some brilliantly naturalistic - think jeweled leaves with verdure smeared all over the surface. Yet although "Kells" features scenes heavily laden with Irish mysticism and subversively Pagan rituals, the film could essentially double as a social allegory for the modern film industry. Brother Aidan says dishearteningly to Cellach: "You've forgotten how impor- tant it is. All you want forus is this wall!" Just replace "it" with "hand-drawing" and "wall" with "hyper-explosive 3-D graphics," and you've got yourself the perfect antidote to James Cameron and his devoted followers. Quick, put on your 2-D glasses. With a runtime of little more than an hour, "Kells" is a refreshingly different take on classic animation, lovingly and defiantly flattened into two dimensions. It's inspiringly simple and more than a little trippy. By paying homage to an ancient time where beauty and patience inevitably won out over brute force, the film blends a straightforward moral- ity with sophisticated hand-draw- ings to stunning visual effect. Truly, "The Secret of Kells" practices what it preaches. COURTESY OF GKIDS "You look magically delicious, and I just happen to be a cereal lovemaker." "Which is why it's so cool to organize a festival. People are just drawn to us, because they know the quality of dance is really high, but our tickets for these festivals are literally a sixth sometimes of what tickets are elsewhere." "We advertise (for our festivals) all over, and we have dancers from all over the country, outside of the coun- try, come and dance with us," Garcia said. "It's a total mixing pot of all these different, amazing people. And we try to host as many of the out-of-towners as possible in our own homes, to try and reduce their costs." Aside from the larger festivals and workshops, the group also organizes milongas - or dance parties - every other Saturday. Sometimes the milon- gas have special themes for outreach efforts - last summer, the group part- nered with the LGBT community and held a "Rainbow Tango." It has also been raising money for earthquake relief in Haiti since Valentine's Day, when it threw a milonga with proceeds all allotted to Haiti. The group is still accepting dona- tions for Haiti. Proceeds from pro- spective events will continually be sent to Haiti medical support group "Partners in Health." Their goal is to raise at least $2,010 throughout the course of the year. Garcia commented that even though the act of tango doesn't direct- ly relate to MATC's philanthropic efforts, group members enjoy using their time spent together to benefit a larger cause. "Often I feel like (tango) is the central answer to a very rational life that we lead, you know, with Ph.D. and master's and bachelor's degrees," Heinz added. "And the only way that this is possi- ble is that everybody does everything for free."