Smokestack
"You can go your own way, but you can't be gone too long." That lyric from the first track on Smokestack's 2001 CD It's Coming Down is a fitting description of this jam band's approach. Serving up...
Read MoreJan 1, 2003 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
"You can go your own way, but you can't be gone too long." That lyric from the first track on Smokestack's 2001 CD It's Coming Down is a fitting description of this jam band's approach. Serving up...
Read MoreJan 1, 2003 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Timmy P (Parkkila) is serious about comedy. The Chelsea-grown WMU grad with a background in radio, real estate, and "lots and lots of restaurant work" started promoting comedy two years with hopes of creating a...
Read MoreDec 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Well-educated jazz pianists tend to play like well-educated pianists — all chops and no gravy. Canadian-born Brooklynite D. D. Jackson proves that this does not have to be the case. His classical and jazz training, which...
Read MoreDec 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
The last annual concert mounted by the Huron Valley Chapter of the Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barbershop Quartet Singing in America and its performing arm, the all-male Huron Valley Harmonizers, lived up...
Read MoreDec 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Everything about Joce’lyn B is big — her band, her nails, her heart, her knockout voice, everything. Since age five, when she went to Rev. C. L. Franklin’s church and heard Aretha Franklin sing, she’s known she...
Read MoreDec 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
The audience for the University Choral Union's annual performances of Handel's Messiah seems to consist solely of those folks for whom attending is a traditional part of their families' seasonal celebrations....
Read MoreDec 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
According to his new album, A Little Pain Never Hurt, local singer-songwriter Dick Siegel wants to be remembered as a "real Renaissance man." He also wants "to be six thick strips of Canadian bacon." How...
Read MoreNov 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
The first time I saw Dan Bern, in 1997, he cracked up the crowd with his wild, clowny lyrics, shock played up for laughs, and comedic monologues set to solo acoustic guitar, their words spilling over the ends of lines. In one...
Read MoreNov 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
In 1938 Thornton Wilder's famous play about dead people, Our Town, hit the stage. It quickly became one of America's best-loved classics, so accessible that it has been fondly performed by high school after high school...
Read MoreNov 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
When Full takes the stage, you wonder what the heck these guys are gonna sound like. While the electric bass and trap set are familiar, the vibraphone, trumpet, cello, and African drums suggest a strange combo. And when they...
Read MoreNov 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Among the jazz pianists who came to prominence during the 1960s, perhaps none has had the staying power of Herbie Hancock. His early stint with Miles Davis allowed the young pianist to develop his unique style and exposed him to...
Read MoreNov 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
For most of the last fifteen years now, Ann Arborites have had the opportunity to watch the remarkable talent of Bob Hicok grow and mature. It wasn't long after he started writing poems to perform at the monthly local Poetry...
Read MoreNov 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
It’s been said that people travel to reinforce what they already know, not to discover anything new. This theory may also explain the appeal of pictures that strengthen visual perceptions of a specific place. Such is the...
Read MoreNov 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
At thirty-two years of age, and weighing in at 320 pounds, comedian Kevin McPeek proudly claims that "I've been gaining ten pounds a year since the day I was born." The math may be fuzzy, but McPeek's...
Read MoreNov 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
It is seven days before the year 2000. A Kafkaesque plague is sweeping across Taiwan, an end-of-millennium virus that causes its victims to behave like cockroaches — crawling around on the floor, avoiding light, seeking...
Read MoreOct 15, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
The experts disagree about Riders in the Sky. Do they offer "the loving re-creation and perpetuation of a myth," as country-music historian extraordinaire Bill C. Malone opines in his liner notes for the album...
Read MoreOct 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
When you head out for a night of live music, sometimes you want to be challenged by new bands and cutting-edge sounds; other times you simply want the relaxing comfort of familiar tunes and dependable talent. Laith Al-Saadi...
Read MoreOct 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
Based on Petru Dumitriu's short story "La Salade," Lucian Pintilie's 1994 film An Unforgettable Summer evokes the insanity and moral outrage of war, Balkan style, from the perspective of an officer's wife....
Read MoreOct 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
There's a new film group on campus — thank god — that calls itself Projectorhead. On Halloween, at the Modern Languages Building, it will screen the 1942 Jacques Tourneur classic Cat People. Simone Simon stars as...
Read MoreOct 1, 2002 | Event Reviews, Uncategorized |
During the swing era the clarinet was king in the public eye, but during the postwar years, as small combos took over in jazz, it was eclipsed by the louder saxophones and trumpets in the front line. The instrument may have lost...
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