Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Six Hundred and Twenty Three

One of Columbia College's main buildings is located at 623 S Wabash. Often referred to as "623", this building houses ShopColumbia - the school store where current students and recent alumni can sell their art for 75% of the sale price - The Quincy Wong Center - a room full of tables and chairs complete with a small cafe - as well as multiple floors containing classrooms, print shops and computer labs. Outside the front doors are black ledges filled with students sitting, smoking cigarettes, and on occasion - pot. The groups are often 2-5 young adults coming from the same class. The females in and outside of this building are almost always better looking than the ones seen outside the music buildings. The sense of fashion seems high and important. Skinny jeans tucked into knee-high boots. Belts hidden by red peacoats. Shirts and blouses unseen behind yellow scarves. Their eyes focused on the elevator doors, as if to say, "You're not worthy of my time." The boys with knit caps, dark colored jackets and thick black rimmed glasses. All keeping them warm from the cold lake wind coming in from only a few blocks away. Two elevators in the front with a mosaic of the word "Columbia" above. A cafe/study room on each side. Posters for school events scattered and plastered on the walls. It's easy to tell the hiply dressed Columbia students rom the yellow headed construction works and grey haired teachers. Students ride in on skateboards while the staff park their cars. The Columbia Chronicle newsstand covered in stickers. One of which I notice the most, simply cause I designed it. Once inside I hear The Walkmen's song, The Rat, and somehow feel a little more relaxed. This school is anything but orthodox.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

The Science of Chappelle



Dave Chappelle’s Block Party concert/documentary can be seen as a funny rockumentary at first glance. The film follows Chappelle in the summer of 2004 until September of that year when he hosts a Block Party in the Clinton Hill neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. It’s humor is racy, raunchy and true to the Chappelle spirit we’ve come to know from The Chappelle show. Though the concert has appearances from The Roots, Erikah Badu, Kanye West, Mos Def, Common, Jill Scott, Lauryn Hill, Talib Kweli, and surprise reunion of The Fugees other artists such as Cody Chesnutt and Wyclef Jean appear throughout the rehearsal and backstage scenes.
The cover of this film by Michel Gondry has a Beatles-esque Yellow Submarine feel to it, minus the cartoony people. Instead, everyone that appears in the film is shown in black and white in mural form behind Dave Chappelle, who appears in full color with a megaphone in hand. Most of the faces are recognizable and add to the effect of the event looking like a good time.
The fact that Dave Chappelle chose Michel Gondry to direct the film intrigues me for one very good reason; didn’t Michel Gondry direct cult-following art films like Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and The Science of Sleep? What business does he have sticking his nose in a hip-hop neo-soul documentary about Dave Chappelle throwing a block party? I suppose Dave Chappelle gets what he wants… like a $50 million deal to continue his TV show. Gondry’s cuts seem fitting to what I know of his work. The fast pacing with shaky camera work fits in well with Chappelle’s attitude towards things. They both have this sense of carelessness that justifies things and makes it alright for them to be a little rough around the edges because maybe that’s the way some things are meant to be. I enjoyed the way he would cut from the performer, to a mid audience shot, to a shot of an audience member during the live performance aspect of the film. It gave me a good sense of depth for the crowd density as well as the vibe and energy throughout the audience. I also enjoyed the behind the scene shots of them backstage or in prep mode for the event. Some might say the cuts from rehearsal to the live performance were cheesy but I found it gave way to the amount of preparation necessary for an event like this to happen successfully. For instance, when Dave wants the backing band to play accented hits to follow his stand up joke punch lines they show the failed attempt during rehearsal, then a flawless performance on stage.
Cody Chesnutt’s appearance was probably my personal favorite since I’ve always been a fan of his music and technique. His recordings are completely raw and the music translates as something authentic and honest. You might not recognize the name immediately but he has quite the fanbase. The Roots remade one of his songs, “The Seed” which got heavy airplay on music television and even has his song, “Look Good in Leather” on an Axe commercial. Hell, even Thom Yorke, of Radiohead, listed Cody Chesnutt as one of his favorite new acts in a past interview. It was sad he didn’t get more play-time in the film but The Roots, along with the other performers, were so solid and entertaining that it made for an easy distraction.
The location choice was interesting – The Broken Angel House. The place was built by, what appears to be, two burned out hippies still tripping on LSD; their teeth rotten, their clothes old and their spirits high. Some refer to Arthur and Cynthia Woods as artists which is interesting because I’m sure there’s people that would disagree with that the same way they disagreed with hip-hop or rap music being tolerable or worth listening to. I thought it was brilliant of Chappelle to probe and talk to them the way he did because it provided great footage and insight for Gondry to use as he saw fit. The way he cut back to it towards the end of the party after showing Mrs. Woods at the top of the structure, peace-sign in hand was just brilliant. I also found a beautiful tie between them and the other artists that transcended race and all aesthetic value. These were the same people from the streets and communities as the other artists in the film. As different as they appeared I believe a focus was to show what they had it common. In fact, a lot of this film had a positive attitude. When Dave was talking to his friends about the Woods and their place of residence he didn’t use much, if any, negativity. I also noticed this with Wyclef when he’s talking to the band of college students and when ?uestlove, aka Questlove, aka Questo, aka BROther ?uestion, is talking about The Roots and Dave Chappelle sharing this demographic that might not have been what they had hoped or intended their art for.
I think the intended market for this film is older teenagers and adults. While music performances do make up about half of the content, its comedy is extremely racial (while also harmless in some senses) and is not appropriate for a younger crowd that might misuse the jokes. Dave’s closeness to the people around him show a very down to earth side of Chappelle that allows you to remember what you liked about him to begin with. If you only watch this to see Erikah Badu’s wig go flying off on stage, then at least respect the fact that she power-housed through the rest of her performance and didn’t let any sort of aesthetic value ruin what her art was. Check out Cody Chesnutt’s 2002 release, The Headphone Masterpiece (especially the song, “Boylife in America”) and catch Dave Chappelle at a local dive comedy bar.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Party Hard


Miska’s is typically an empty dive bar off Belmont and Leavitt in the heart of West Lakeview. On Thursdays the bar promotes dollar beers and dollar jello shots as well as live music to help lure local patrons in to drink. This past Thursday, October 27, Miska’s hosted four bands (and a DJ to end the night), all of which containing members that attend Columbia College Chicago. The first band, They Face Reaction, was a punk quartet with two members hailing from Brazil. Their sound was loud, raw and energetic. They Face Reaction draw their influences from 90’s rock acts such as Alkaline Trio, Foo Fighters and Weezer.
Shortly after the bar began filling the next act, Late In The Playoffs, started setting up and performing songs. LITPO, for short, is also punk, but sounds more pop punk than TFR. Comparable bands would be Motion City Soundtrack, The Get Up Kids and Saves The Day, which they actually played a few songs of. The crowd consisted of mostly 21-25 year old males sucking on vortex bottles but had its fair share of supporting girlfriends raising their red jello shots for a toast. Other members from the bands were wandering the bar mingling, playing pool or waiting in the line for the bathroom. That’s really all there was to do there. Drink, socialize or shut up and watch some live music from early twenty-somethings.
The third band was much different than the first two. I would describe Beer Hockey as an instruMETAL band. Blending the edge of metal bands, like Between The Buried And Me, with the songwriting styles of instrumentalists, Explosions In The Sky. One of my favorite parts of their set was the fact they were all dressed as Mormons – which could have been confused for early Beatles costumes. Nevertheless, Beer Hockey brought the rock to the table and supplied more than ample heavy, head-banging rock tunes.
The night was closed out with Carbon Tigers and the glitch-infused DJ, Agito. During Agito's set the crowd was lively. The guys were holding a keyboard stand as the girls limbo'd underneath. The bar service was terrible. There was only one beer wench working. They ran out of jello shots and the empty beer bottles collected on the tables instead of disappearing. The atmosphere was unspecific and was a little bit of everything; Irish, NHL, College football themed with Halloween decorations. The music was good and the vibe of the people was what made it worth while. Check out Late In The Playoffs this Wednesday with Hit The Lights at Reggie’s rock club.