Year: 2008

  • Also Noted

    Traditionally, Minnesota Opera presents its big American premiere in March; this year, it’s a 297-year-old rediscovered treasure from Germany: Reinhard Keiser’s The Fortunes of King Croesus (March 1–9) … The Guthrie’s production of Heather Raffo’s 9 Parts of Desire (March 1–23), a one-woman play about nine Iraqi women’s lives during war, packs a considerable double-punch of talent, with director Joel Sass behind the scenes and emotional powerhouse Kate Eifrig as the lone performer … Over at Mixed Blood, resident playwright Aditi Brennan Kapil premieres Love Person (February 28–March 22), a romance fluent in no fewer than four languages: Sanskrit, English, American Sign Language, and—wait for it—cyberspeak … For an alternative perspective on what it means to “let loose”: Jawaahir Dance Company will peek behind the mashrabiya (the screen traditional Arabs use to isolate women’s quarters) in Girls Night Out IN (Southern Theater, March 20–30).

  • Framing Suzan-Lori Parks: Directing Challenges and Discoveries

    Things could get interesting when the English and Theater departments at the U of M embark on a joint investigation of Suzan-Lori Parks’s oeuvre. This Pulitzer- and MacArthur Genius Grant-winning playwright boasts a body of work that’s rich in poetics and historic awareness, yet audacious enough to confront issues of emotional brutality head-on. (In other words, beware of over-intellectualizing.) The series kicks off when Frank Theatre, the local company with the most Parks plays under its belt, excerpts its productions of The America Play, Venus, and Fucking A (Rarig Center, February 26). Frank’s founder and artistic director, Wendy Knox, also joins a panel of experts to discuss what it’s like to direct Parks’s plays (Rarig Center, March 4); and the series culminates with Parks in the flesh at Ted Mann Concert Hall on March 26, where she will lecture, play her guitar, and “show her ass,” as she likes to (metaphorically) put it.

    University of Minnesota, 612-626-1528. 

  • Austin Hall’s Playlist

    Austin Hall’s hands have been viewed more than 14,040,442 times. But really, who’s counting? YouTube, the website where Hall’s video Daft Hands—Harder, Better, Faster Stronger got over 3,000,000 hits in its first couple months of play. The video, which showcases Hall’s extreme dexterity, is a self-choreographed hand jive performed to the Daft Punk song referenced in the title. Like the best pop culture phenomena, the Carleton College sophomore stumbled into the limelight quite by accident. He opted to make the three-minute forty-second film last spring instead of studying for a final history exam. Needless to say, he failed the exam, but got an A+ in YouTube notoriety: The video won a spot on Time magazine’s “Top 10 Viral Videos” list and a nomination for “Favorite User-Generated Video” at the 2007 People’s Choice Awards, and Hall himself performed on the Ellen DeGeneres Show. Daft Hands even made history in less than a year on the net, ranking fifteenth on someone’s YouTube list of favorite music videos of all time! In a world where Heidi Klum’s legs are insured for a million dollars a pop, we suspect it’s time Hall considered a similar policy; he should at least take better care of his cuticles. Before heading to New York to rub elbows with other YouTube celebrities at the website’s national convention, Hall made a list of YouTube videos whose makers would leave him starstruck—this month, at least.

    1. “Japanese Toilet Training for Kids(with English subtitles)
    In a hilarious jingle about bodily functions, a tiger sings about overcoming toilet training to become the infamous PANTSMAN! No, I don’t know what that means, either.

    2. “Amateur” by Lasse Gjertsen
    This guy can’t play either the piano or drums, but using the magic of editing, he manages to make a pretty rockin’ song.

    3. “Weird Japanese Video
    Another Japanese treat, this exercise video teaches women how to handle a mugger.

    4. “Just 2 Guyz
    Two kids, one party, and a killer original tune, all about having fun when you have no other friends.

    5. “El Cumbanchero
    An eight- and ten-year-old play a surprisingly great rendition of “El Cumbanchero” in their living room. They duet on guitar and mandolin much better than my younger siblings ever could (not that they ever could).

    6. “Daxflame BEAT” by Daxflame
    Daxflame is famous as a video diarist (check out “BerniceJuachTalk”), but he’s really a musician at heart.

    7. “Stairway to Heaven” by The Beatnix
    This Beatles cover band plays “Stairway to Heaven” as the Beatles—the early Beatles—would have written it. It’s pretty catchy, and they made an effort to make the video look forty-some years old.

    8. “Thriller” (original upload)
    A group of 1,500 Filipino inmates performs the dance to the Michael Jackson hit. They are surprisingly well-choreographed despite being a big army of prisoners.

    9. “Internet People!” by The Meth Minute 39
    This is a montage about internet fads. I would’ve ranked it higher, but I’m mad they forgot to include me.

  • Ways to Behold and Sentry

    One of the most literate, thoughtful choreographers in town, Stuart Pimsler presents a double bill of protest art late in the month. Ways to Behold, a world premiere with accompaniment by spoken-word artist Tiyo Siyolo, juxtaposes the realities of a U.S.-initiated—yet somehow invisible—war overseas with the comforts of daily life on our own shores. Sentry is a reprise from the Reagan era; it was created during Pimsler’s days in New York City, when he was active with Artists Against Nuclear Madness. Set to a medley of ’60s protest songs, the piece is based in part on military orders that one of Pimsler’s students smuggled out of the Air Force Academy.

    Ritz Theater, 345 13th Ave. N.E., Minneapolis; 612-436-1129.

  • Also Noted

    Bob Mould hits town at his old First Avenue stomping grounds (March 5) with a resplendent new disc, District Line, that mixes an occasional electronic dance tune with the molten pop-rock … Two substantial (as in deep and dense) jazz bands for the price of one are on the docket when both Ravi Coltrane and Roy Haynes front ensembles at Northrop Auditorium (March 6) … Ditto the Prezens Quartet (with Craig Taborn and Tim Berne) and Drew Gress’s 7 Black Butterflies at the Walker (March 28) … L.A. punk never topped the slattern charms of X, who will churn up the beer-drinking faithful at the Cabooze (March 22) … Finally, fans of vocals and attitude shouldn’t pass up stormy soprano Kathleen Battle at Orchestra Hall (March 30).

  • George Jones

    For those who prefer the hunks in the big hats and tight jeans, well, it’s time you learned it ain’t the meat in a man’s voice, it’s the motion. And even at age seventy-six, the pipes of The Possum will have you moving with him into chasms of loneliness and epiphanies of grace and gratitude that are emotionally closed off to most every other singer. Jones is generally regarded as the greatest country vocalist who ever drew breath. Age has undeniably shortened his phrasing and weakened the fiber in his tone, but when your signature song is a goose-bumper like “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” and you tour with some of Nashville’s finest musicians, you can play for posterity at a casino and still pack a mighty wallop. —Britt Robson

    Mystic Lake Casino, 2400 Mystic Lake Blvd., Prior Lake; 651-989-5151.

  • Jonathan Richman and Vic Chesnutt

    This odd but spectacular double-header pairs two veteran singer/songwriters from opposite sides of the emotional spectrum. At one end is the naively optimistic Jonathan Richman, known for his playful and charmingly inane simplicity. Even if he doesn’t dive into his classic songbook from his days with the Modern Lovers, he can draw upon nearly thirty years of consistently wonderful solo albums. At the other pole is the noted cynic Vic Chesnutt. His albums are significantly darker and deeper, traits stemming at least in part from his perspective as a paraplegic. This date will be an intimate solo appearance, without the members of Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Fugazi, who helped transform Chesnutt’s latest record into a moving and chaotic masterpiece.

    Cedar Cultural Center, 416 Cedar Ave. S., Minneapolis; 612-338-2674.

  • Maceo Parker

    One of the last things you expect out of Maceo Parker is a new wrinkle, and that’s OK: As the saxophonist for the Godfather of Soul, he’s the man who blew the horn that popped the sweat out of James Brown’s pores. He went on to play with two of Brown’s most renowned heirs to the funk tradition, Parliament/Funkadelic and Prince. New tricks aren’t normally a priority for an old-timer who still slathers the fatback this well—even after turning sixty-five on Valentine’s Day. But then Parker starts to croon on his new disc, Roots and Grooves, and he turns out to be the best Ray Charles doppelganger since Brother Ray shed this mortal coil four years ago. The ballad “Georgia,” the sprightly “Hit The Road Jack,” and the funk workout “What’d I Say” are all daringly faithful tributes that don’t embarrass Parker vocally. But if you’re worried he’ll abandon that big tenor sax sound, a 17:48 version of “Pass The Peas” on Roots and Grooves will lay it to rest. Expect to hear both the voice and the horn at the Dakota.

    Dakota Jazz Club & Restaurant, 612-332-1010.

  • It's the Bomb!

    SPECIAL EVENT
    Gallery Grooves

    Join us tonight for Gallery Grooves, The Rake’s monthly art, jazz, and
    wine event. Socialize and discuss the latest jazz with Kevin Barnes
    from KBEM, peruse the art, and enjoy the wine samplings. This
    month, view a collection of artworks based on the techniques of Pablo
    Picasso — all by adolescents between ages 11 and 17. Artists Like Me was
    done in partnership between the Walker Art Center and Free Arts Minnesota,
    a nonprofit dedicated to bringing the healing arts into
    the lives of abused, neglected, and at-risk children. —Jennifer Havrish

    7-9 p.m., Whole Foods Market, 3060 Excelsior Blvd., Minneapolis; 612-927-8141; free.

    STYLE
    Hottie Patrol

    The DIVA MN
    organization, which produces the big, annual

    DIVA MN
    fashion show and fundraiser to
    benefit research on HIV/AIDS (in
    March), is hosting a well-intentioned auction and MCTC student runway show this evening. But
    the event’s real draw, no doubt, will be an appearance by Jack Mackenroth, that ridiculously beefcake-y (but
    gay – wah!) contestant from Project Runway Season
    4
    . Mackenroth is kindly lending his
    services to judge the students’ designs. And now, here’s a
    tangential time-killer: We
    just visited Mackenroth’s personal website and discovered
    the reason for his Herculean build: He’s a former All-American
    swimmer with, in fact, his own world record! —Christy DeSmith

    6-9 p.m., Epic Nightclub,
    110 N. Fifth St.,
    Minneapolis; $50.

    FILM & DISCUSSION
    Face to Face with Dr. Strangelove

    Stanley Kubrick’s satirical, sinister Dr. Strangelove, or: How I Learned to
    Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb

    somehow made comedy from "accidental" nuclear attacks and all the
    apocalypses that inevitably followed. Released into the Cold War
    intrigue and Communist paranoia of 1964, it was meant to mock all
    participating, power-hungry military leadership; forty-four years
    later, it feels perhaps more eerily relevant than ever. Part of the
    Weisman Museum’s film discussion program, this free screening—broken
    down into the best clips—invites viewers to contemplate over pizza (free pizza) our
    current state of affairs and how they parallel Kubrick’s time period
    turned upside down. Led by University of Minnesota anthropology
    professor Michael Wilson, the dialog appropriately runs alongside the
    museum’s current Paul Shambroom exhibition Picturing Power, a series
    of color photographs depicting manifestations of community, industrial
    and military control. —Haily Gostas

    4-6 p.m., Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum (in the WAM/Shepherd Room), 333 East River Rd., Minneapolis; 612-625-9494.

    ART
    Robyn Horn & Ann Ginsburgh Hofkin

    Downtown Minneapolis’ Nina Bliese Gallery represents a horde of
    international artists in the fields of contemporary (painting,
    sculpture, monotype, photography) and wood arts, so it makes sense that
    each exhibition highlights the best of their, well, categorical
    best. Fascinated by wood’s initial resistance to and eventual
    materialization into stone-like shapes, Arkansas artist Robyn Horn adds
    her immaculate, highly acclaimed wood art into the mix (the gallery’s
    current collection is apparently the most prominent in the Upper
    Midwest); while the infrared photographs of Minneapolis’ own Ann
    Ginsburgh Hofkin
    have been featured in the prestigious CameraArts
    magazine and Israel-based solo shows. Both women use the aspects of
    life most out of our control as fuel for artistic fire, and tonight’s reception celebrates their contrasting-yet-harmonious
    results. —Haily Gostas

    5-8 p.m., The Nina Bliese Gallery (exhibition runs until Friday, March 28th), 225 South Sixth St., Minneapolis; 612-332-2978.

     

  • The Short Side of the Oscars

    At this year’s Academy Awards, there will be films that — believe it
    or not — are actually judged on their artistic merit. No one will
    remember them a year from now, or probably even a month from now, but
    these reels contain imaginative innovations and emotional depths that
    surpass those evoked by any nominee for Best Feature-Length Film. I’m
    speaking of course (of course!) about the nominees for short films.

    As every year, ten movies — five animated and five live-action — have been selected from around the world to vie for the golden
    trophies in a lesser-known, lesser-cared-about subset of the Oscars.
    None of these films was ever widely distributed; none took any sort of
    cut from the box office; none will fetch big DVD sales. For the most
    part they bounced around festival circuits, garnering praise and niche
    attention. Still, they range from dreamy to lifelike, uplifting to
    devastating — all of them (except one) mini-masterpieces.

    By and large, the animated shorts were more creative than the
    live action vignettes. This isn’t so strange — cartoons are inherently
    more imaginative than life; one might say a photograph is a fact, a
    painting an interpretation. And while all the animated shorts take
    pains to tell a story, some of them seem more preoccupied with their
    medium, and feel like odes to animation itself. Which is totally okay.
    One of the great joys of these films is their cinematic lawlessness. There is
    no obligation to plot, and no actors to placate. As such, the directors
    and animators enjoy a freedom to do as they please. Not incidentally,
    this is stuff that makes Persepolis and Ratatouille look like fare for Saturday morning television.

    My Love, a Russian film by Alexandre Petrov, is
    literally a breathing Impressionist painting. An October palette of
    watercolors smears the screen as we watch a sixteen-year-old boy,
    Anton, fall in love variously with his maid and his neighbor. "She
    stepped out of the novel as if from a dream," Anton says of his current
    infatuation, and indeed, the entire film seems to have sprung from
    Petrov’s subconscious (and completely in tact). The story — a
    straightforward tale of peasant courtship – runs too long, but this
    seems deliberate, as if Petrov wanted to extend the movie just so he
    could keep painting it.

    The likely winner (or at least the most buzzed-about), Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf,
    is another labor of love. A thirty-minute exhibition of stop-motion
    animation, it allegedly took 100 artists, sculptors, and animators five
    years to make. Can you imagine someone spending five years on Alien vs. Predator?
    Clearly this is not art for the sake of entertainment. It’s a realm
    where attention to detail is revered above all-every eyelash is molded
    anew for each frame of the film. Set in modern-day Russia, (and thus
    giving the story a fresh twist, as the scenery includes a heavily
    graffiti’d urban center), we watch Peter as he tries to escape from his
    grandfather’s backyard into the wilderness beyond. The interplay
    between boy/duck/cat/wolf is as tense and intricate and heartfelt as
    anything in No Country for Old Men.

    Rounding out the animated nominees, Madame Tutli-Putli and Even Pigeons Go To Heaven
    are exhibitions of computer effects. The figures look so human that at
    times it’s easy to forget one is watching something animated. Which is
    why, in the Canadian Tutli-Putli, one is so viscerally scared as we watch some beast of the night cut out a person’s kidney. I Met The Walrus,
    a recorded interview between then-fourteen-year-old Jerry Levitan and
    John Lennon finishes off the group. In it, every single word Lennon
    speaks is turned into drawing, so the dialogue becomes this sort of
    visual representation of itself.

    Between each film, much whispering ensued amongst the
    audience, as if there was a need for instant discussion and digestion.
    And there’s a lot to be talked about. When one leaves the theater, the
    emotional and intellectual impact really is the same as if having sat
    through five features. The way a good short story is said to contain
    the same elements and even the same depth as a novel, so these short
    films imprint themselves upon the faculties.

    What they lacked in visual imagination, the live action films
    made up for in storytelling. Though the narratives were fairly linear,
    they all worked to expose their characters’ emotions, stripping them
    barer and barer until, in each short (save one) there was no more
    sentiment to be squeezed. In these films, it’s as if the narrative is a
    predator, its prey being emotion, and the narrative will not stop
    hunting until it’s sure it has tracked down and strung up and tortured
    and exposed its target.

    At Night,
    a Danish film, because apparently Danes make films now, is more morally
    complex than all the feature-length nominees combined. Three young
    women are in the oncology ward of a hospital, awaiting their imminent
    deaths. There is Mette, who at this point can barely move anymore;
    Sara, who is to undergo an operation that could either cure her or kill
    her; and Stephanie, whose illness has made her suicidal. It is December
    30th,
    and together they celebrate the New Year because they are unsure
    whether Sara will survive her surgery the next day. Here in the U.S.,
    we take a sort of Mary Poppins approach to our dramas, wherein, for the
    past few decades at least, the genre of ‘tragicomedy’ has emerged and
    taken precedent. We temper our heartbreak with humor, and tell
    ourselves it’s because the absurdity of pain is funny at times. Really,
    though, it’s because we simply can’t stomach anguish without a sugar
    coating.

    Director Christian Christiansen (love that name) has done away with the patina. At Night
    is kind of like a bruise you keep poking and it just gets bigger and
    bigger and bigger, more painful, and finally you just know it’s going
    to bust. Its very lack of levity may prevent it from taking the Oscar,
    though in terms of affecting filmmaking, it certainly deserves to win.

    All the other shorts, though, are just a tad too cute. Tanghi Argentini
    is about a guy who meets a woman online and ostensibly wants to learn
    the tango to impress her, but really he’s trying to hook up his lonely,
    tango-savvy co-worker. Il Supplente presents us with a man who
    poses for a few minutes as a substitute teacher and wreaks havoc on a
    high school class, only to be belittled like a child when he goes into
    his own office. Actually, these two in particular, though clever and
    charming, feel a bit like extrapolated Super Bowl commercials.

    The Mozart of Pickpockets is similarly cute, and goes
    maybe a little deeper than the two films mentioned above. In it, a pair
    of bumbling miscreants accidentally adopt a deaf-mute boy, who turns
    out to be a master thief. He, the boy, scrambles under the seats at
    movie theaters and steals purses from women caught in a cinematic daze.
    The two men are apparently gay, which is artsy, and they really seem to
    care for each other and the boy, which is also artsy. But at the end of
    the film, I just don’t know what the message is, whereas after At Night, there is a haunting sensation that pervades for days.

    Finally there’s The Tonto Woman.
    For the life of me I can’t figure out how it picked up a nomination. It
    is the only film with breasts in it — unnecessary breasts, I would
    argue, which turns them into gimmicky breasts, which may have then been
    enough for the nod. Or maybe there were only five short films made all
    year, so they had to let it in the running.

    Here’s how it goes: A woman was enslaved by a group of Mojave
    Indians and they tattooed her chin, so that when she returned to
    ‘regular’ society she was an outcast. In comes Ruben Vega, who
    immediately falls for her. One wonders what sort of psychological
    condition Vega has that he should instantly become infatuated with the
    town’s exile. Clearly he’s a sadist, too, as he parades her around town
    to her obvious embarrassment. In the end nothing is really solved,
    except for that the credits role and the next film comes on, which is a
    good thing.

    Remarkably, The Tonto Woman
    was the only American output in the live action category. The others
    hail from Denmark, Belgium, France, and Italy. If you include the
    animated shorts, the country list includes Russia, Canada, and England,
    too. Considering the heavy bias toward American films in the ‘regular’
    categories, it’s kind of amazing how international this particular
    group is. Especially if you’re of the mindset, as I am, that these are
    the best films being judged in the entire ceremony. It shows, I think,
    that cinematic artistry, and cinematic mastery, transcends the U.S.
    border — is even rare within the U.S. border, the evidence would suggest.

    In short (no pun intended…okay, yes it was), these films
    function as the true artistic center of Academy Awards. Their very
    existence lends Oscar night the legitimacy it needs to keep from
    devolving into the mere popularity contest it so badly wants to be.

    Written for realbuzz.com, by former Rake intern Max Ross.