————————I I ■ II I ■ III ■ ■■■ ■ ■■■■■■ II I ■ I ■■ II I ■ II ■ ■■■ .M — — ' !■■■■ ■ ■ ■■ ■ 1 + Arts ©Entertainment Monday, February 19, 1996 Page 9 Cliff Hicks '% ■ Noir music has become part of past Read the following two paragraphs. Imagine them as being read by Humphrey Bogart and try to imagine the music playing in the background. “It was wet outside. And raining. The dame had come to me, asking to take her case. She had long legs and a pair of blue eyes I just couldn’t resist. “She told me she had a case that needed doing, and didn’t know who else to turn to. She put her hand on mine, and it was all over. Falling for the skirt was my first mistake.” Can you see it? Detective, private investigator, gumshoe, dressed in a trench coat and fedora, carrying a thick stogie. Now find that music you were asked to imagine. Anywhere. Go on, look! Call a fcw music stores, ask around at a few places, then pick this column back up. Back,eh? Didn’t find any,eh? Now you know the frustration of trying to locate noir music. The film style is known as noir. It means black. Perhaps the description applies to the very bleak tone that these films take. Or perhaps to the fact that the heavy shadowing made these black and white films more black than white, something uncommon. They really don’t make these things anymore. No more Sam Spade films. It’s kind of saddening, really. The clos est popular film anywhere close was “The Usual Suspects.” So what does one do to find the music that summons Raymond Chan dler to mind? Search, and still it may not be enough. You might need your own gumshoe to find any. My personal quest has seen no frui tion. It began by asking several em ployees of many different stores—in a couple of different cities. One store’s employee recom mended John Zorn, a jazz musician. After little more than five minutes, it was obvious that this wasn’t too far off. If the musicians would remove the caffeine coursing through their blood and the thrash from their music, it ! might have worked. Needless to say, it was not right, j What makes detective noir music? A piano, first off. Not some flashy keyboard, but just a plain piano. And a saxophone. Gotta have sax. Without good sax, I’m left unsatisfied. Plus bass. No electric. A big stand-up, slappable bass. Oh yeah, there should be a guy in t he back going “yeah!” when they play the more upbeat stuff. Where to look? It’s probably in the jazz section somewhere, but the ques tion is where? The jazz section of any music store is a big area. Have you got 30 hours to listen to all of Blockbuster Music’s selections? So, what is there to do? “The Mal tese Falcon” doesn’thaveasoundtrack, or, at least, not one that I could find. There are about 40 seconds of noir music on the “Scores of Humphrey Bogart,” from “Casablanca.” I’m sure you know the line. Can you play it again, Sam? ...... ; ’ Hicks Is a freshman news-editorial and English major and a Dally Nebraskan staff reporter. Kt. Fhoto courtesy of Castle Rock Entertainment John Cusack (left) and Al Pacino get to the point in the new political thriller from director Harold Becker, “City Hall.” Chaos consumes ‘City Hall’ By Cliff Hicks Film Critic No matter what a politician does, someone is going toeomplain. Some complaints, however, arc louder than oth ers. In “City Hall,” the complaints are about as loud as they can get. Mayor John Pappas, played by A1 Pacino (“Scent of a Woman,” “The Godfather”), is sitting pretty. His popularity rating is extremely high, he’s made the cover of Time magazine ... things couldn’t be better. His deputy mayor, Kevin Calhoun, played by John Cusack (“Bullets Over Broadway,” “Say Anything”), is an idealist who be lieves politics is black and white. Then, on a rainy morning, a cop and a drug dealer get into a shootout that results in three dead bodies. The third is that of a 6-year-old black child. Suddenly, Mayor Pappas is not sitting pretty any more, and the line that Calhoun thought he knew isn’t so clear anymore. “City Hall” is a fascinating movie. At the beginning, things start to move slowly. Very slowly. That’s perhaps the movie’s biggest flaw. But once the plot does get roll ing, it becomes messier than a plate of spaghetti. Things get confusing and motives get blurred. Pacino gives a masterful perfor mance as Mayor Pappas. He is pow erful, moving, angry, inspiring, un derstanding and forceful. The subtle ties of politics arc well-captured by Pacino, as are the different coats a mayor puts on for different people. Even though the main focus of the story is on Calhoun, Pappas is central to the movie. He is the axle around which the story revolves. Cusack’s performance isn’t bad; there arc times when his southern drawl simply becomes too much to be believed. Beyond that, however, Cusack portraysa Boy Scout fairly well. His character is about as naive as they come when it comes to politics. Ac Film: “City Hall” Stars: A1 Pacino, John Cusack, Bridget Fonda Director: Harold Becker Rating: R (language, violence) Grade: B Five Words: Politics is a dirty word cent aside, Cusack also is convinc ing. Why Bridget Fonda is a head liner for this movie is unclear. She isn’t on camera a great deal, she isn’t all that essential to the plot and she doesn’t act all that great in the movie. Besides her, other spectacular performances come from actors with smaller parts, namely Danny Aiello, Martin Landau and David Paymer. Landau plays Judge Walter Stem, whose involvement in the parole of See CITY HALL on 10 j i Folk singer Pleasant returning to Lincoln By Cherie Krueger _ Staff Reporter His fans are in for a “pleasant” surprise. Yes, Wally "^7 7 Pleasant is back boncert in Lincoln for Pr6Vi6W second ap pearance in as many months. After a suc cessful maxi mum-capacity concert on Jan. 12, he is return ing once again for two perfor mances tonight at Mudslide Slim’s, 1418 0 St. Pleasant, who is quickly becom inga mainstay in Lincoln’s live music scene, will perform an all-ages show beginning at 7:30 p.m. and a 21 and-over show at 10:30 p.m. The shows are not the only events that Pleasant has planned for today. He will visit KRNU this afternoon and will stop by Homer’s, 1339 O St., around 5 p.m. for a mcct-and grcet with the public before his shows. KRNU is where his popularity in Lincoln began. After playing his song, “She’s in Love with a Geek,” the station received requests for his other witty folk songs. Local music stores started to carry his albums, and now he has an impressive group of followers in Lincoln. Pleasant, a Detroit native, has a great amount of appeal among Lincoln’s young people. Kristi Lankford, a sophomore ad vertising major, said she and her friends had been listening to Pleasant’s music since last year. “He’s really funny, and he’s got great hair,” she said. “His lyrics are just hilarious.” Pleasant is. now touring for his third album, “Houses of the Holy Moly,” which is his most successful album to date. There is a S3 cover for both shows. | Art work j on display tells story : . : ■ ■ ■ ■ • From Staff Reports If you think the story behind art is | as important as the art itself, an exhi- I bition now on display at UNL’s Home ; Economies Building, on East Campus at 35th and Holdrege streets, should have plenty to offer. The Cultural Survival Project is a collaboration of the works of recent immigrant and refugee children with that of Shelley Fuller, assistant pro fessor of art and art history, and Wendy Weiss, associate professor of textiles, clothing and design. In addition, a guest exhibition by Linda Anfuso will document the de sign process behind the creation of jewelry. The Cultural Survival Project will be on display through March 7. Gal lery hours arc 10 a.m. to4 p.m., Mon | day through Thursday. Academy ends tour with thrills By Emily Wray Music Critic Many came to the Lied Center hungry for classical perfection on Saturday. A Isold-out crowd __ were thrilled by _M the Academy of _L St. Martin in the _L Fields’ presen tation on the flT ensemble’s last tour stop. Concert The ensemble |^0^l 0\\f offered inspired _I energy and tech nical know-how for all in attendance at the Lied Center for Performing Arts. The energy level was evident throughout the entire concert, mani festing itself many times with the performers barely able to stay seated. Artistic Director Kenneth Stillito led the ensemble by setting tempos and providing cutoffs. But St. Mar tin in the Fields went for the most part without a conductor, developed to reflect a performance practice of the Baroque era. This technique afforded the en semble an almost effortless famil iarity with the audience. It seemed that the performers were engaged in playing for the sheer joy of it; the audience was not a burden. Quite to the contrary, the audience rightly acknowledged the ensemble’s offerings many times. The first piece, written by Johann Sebastian Bach, set the tone for the entire evening’s performance. Writ ten for three equal choirs of violins, violas and cellos, with double bass and continuo, the concerto swelled over the audience, enveloping it in a brilliant sound. The “Suite from Don Quixote dcr Lowenrittcr,” continued with the exuberant feel of the concert. The 20-piece ensemble had no difficul ties infusing the piece with a for ward motion and adding the appro priate texture and artistic feeling, while excelling in telling the story found in the piece. Dmitri Shostakovich’s powerful “Chamber Symphony in c minor, Op. 110a” was next on the program. Fortunately, Stillito warned the au dience by moving the intermission to after the piece instead of before. He said that everyone would need a break after this piece, and he was right. Powerful, terrible, brilliant and horrible do not even begin to de scribe this piece. Having experi enced it is akin to the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., or watching documentaries against any number of social injustices. In fact,, this piece may be the most musical^ indictment of the Soviet Union’s regime. The final piece, by Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, was slightly anticli mactic. Of course, almost anything is anticlimactic after Shostakovich. There were a couple of technical lapses, but overall, it was quite solid. After three short and swe^t en core pieces, the crowd’s hunger w^s satisfied through the classical per^ fection of the Academy of St. Mar tin in the Fields.