Review: El Ten Eleven – they did infact begin at Eleven

While many people were cheering on the Victorious Wolverines on Saturday night (Go Blue!) a crowd of music enthusiasts traipsed across Ann Arbor to flail and bounce to El Ten Eleven’s masterful instrumental compositions.

El Ten Eleven have been creating music since 2002. An LA based “indi or post – rock” group with Kristian Dunn on a fretless bass or 1977 Carvin guitar/bass doubleneck with loop pedals and various methods of sound modulation and Tim Fogarty keeping the beat on electric drums, acoustic drums and drum pads.

This duo are, in my personal opinion, some of the most talented musicians and composers working in music today. Their songs are heavily layered with contrasting melody, harmony and rhythm. singular pieces can range from 5-15 minutes in length and time seems to slide right on by as Dunn and Fogarty weave their way from melody to melody.

The Blind Pig is a perfect venue for this group. The small space, intimate proximity to the artist and one’s fellow audience members, creates a relaxing yet thrilling experience of the brilliance these musicians bring to the stage. El Ten Eleven performed at the Pig last fall as well. There were many returning fans as well as some who had only explored BandCamp and SoundCloud (https://soundcloud.com/elteneleven) to experience a taste of what these musicians are capable. Each walked away from this event in awe of the talent, dedication and musicianship of El Ten Eleven.

Video: El Ten Eleven \"Living on Credit Blues\"

Preview: Annie Hall – Life in Techni-Awkward

What: Annie Hall, a film by Woody Allen
Where: Michigan Theater
When: Monday the 9th of September 7pm
Cost: $8 with student ID, $10 general

Annie Hall marks the kick off of Michigan Theater’s “Monday Funny Film Series.” Every Monday from the 9th of September to the 9th of December, Michigan Theater will screen a previously released comedy.
Film List: http://www.michtheater.org/series/monday-funnies/

Annie Hall, starring Dianne Keaton and Woody Allen is a wonderfully comical, charming and excruciatingly awkward film about relationships. If you have never seen this movie you must do so promptly! It is a favorite of many a Allen fan, as well as others who aren’t so keen on the bespectacled comedian/writer/director/actor.

PREVIEW: HomeGrown Festival

HomeGrown Festival

Tonight, the Kerrytown Farmer’s Market welcomes students back into town and townies back into downtown with the sixth annual Home Grown Festival. From 6-10pm this evening, the usually bustling market place will be even more crowded and lively. With booths, vendors, food carts, live music, and a craft beer tent for those who are of age, this is a wonderful way to reintroduce yourself to Ann Arbor for the fall. The entire event is coordinated and run by volunteers who support regional foods, drink, and music. Many restaurants from downtown will be serving their cooking, and several farmers will be offering samples of their special crop, like heirloom tomatoes and exotic strains of garlic. Again, for those who are of age you can observe and even sample the home-brew competition. Don’t miss this cozy and celebratory townie event! For more information on performers, location, vendors, and more, click the image above. See you there!

Preview: “The Audience” – National Theater Live – Helen Mirran

What: “The Audience” – a play
Where: Michigan Theater on Liberty
When: Sunday the 8th of September 7pm and Tuesday the 10th of September 7pm
Tickets: $22
(http://ums.org/performances/national-theatre-live-the-audience)

Coming out of the West End in London, Helen Mirran (The Queen, Red, The Debt, Hitchcock) and Peter Morgan (director of The Queen, The Last King of Scotland, Frost/Nixon) come together once again for a performance about Queen Elizabeth II. Bound to be another spectacular production with Mirran as the head of the British crown.

Michigan Theater’s Website has this to say about the production:

For 60 years Elizabeth II has met each of her 12 Prime Ministers in a weekly audience at Buckingham Palace – a meeting like no other in British public life – it is private. Both parties have an unspoken agreement never to repeat what is said. Not even to their spouses. The Audience breaks this contract of silence – and imagines a series of pivotal meetings between the Downing Street incumbents and their Queen. From Churchill to Cameron, each Prime Minister has used these private conversations as a sounding board and a confessional – sometimes intimate, sometimes explosive.

From young mother to grandmother, these private audiences chart the arc of the second Elizabethan Age. Politicians come and go through the revolving door of electoral politics, while she remains constant, waiting to welcome her next Prime Minister.

The Audience reunites writer Peter Morgan and Academy Award-winning actress Helen Mirren following their collaboration on the critically-acclaimed movie sensation The Queen.

The Audience is directed by Academy Award-nominated director Stephen Daldry (Billy Elliot, The Hours) and presented in the West End by Matthew Byam Shaw for Playful Productions, Robert Fox and Andy Harries.

Preview: El Ten Eleven (most likely on at Eleven)

What: El Ten Eleven
Where: The Blind Pig, Ann Arbor (on first st.)
When: Saturday the 7th of September beginning at 9pm
Cost: $12 advance, $14 at the door
(ticket link: http://www.etix.com/ticket/online/performanceSearch.jsp?performance_id=1736886)
Age: 18+

El Ten Eleven is a self identified “instrumental indi-rock duo” from Los Angeles. These two gents, Kristian Dunn and Tim Fogarty, come together and create wonderfully creative pieces of instrumental music using percussion (Dunn), a beautifully crafted guitar/bass doubleneck and some loop-pedals.

El Ten Eleven came to the Pig fall 2012 to resounding applause and energetic enthusiasm. They are spectacular musicians one can rely on for a good night of musical composition.

Although the starting time for this show is 9pm it is likely ETE will not begin until 10:30/11pm. For those of you who are going to Saturday’s game, chances are you can still make it!!

Video: El Ten Eleven \”Yellow Bridges\”

Review for the Sapphires

I will say that this has been one of my favorite movies of the year. I suppose the main reason it becomes my favorite is because it does such a good job mixing light-heart-ed comedy and depth!

This is about 4 young girls who want to become a girl band. This is by no means an easy feat for any group so young. But this is an universal story among many who are young. After all, I am sure a lot of us know at least one person who started a band in their garage!
It contains some great light-hearted story lines. There is the sister who dreams of kissing a boy in her dreams; there is the story of the youngest, whom the mother won’t let out of her sight; then there is the story of the father who won’t let any of them out of their sight-especially with a “Gubber” ( white) man; then there is the story of the oldest sister who serves as the “mama bear” of the group- but who cannot be the leader in singing; then there is the light skinned outsider of the girl group who is still seen by some with suspicion.

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But as the above paragraph indicates– there is a lot of heaviness in some of those classic light- heart-ed elements you might find in stories of people.
The mother and father not only want to let their daughters out of sight because they are young- but because they are entering a war zone in Vietnam! In addition, the Aboringial Australians are quite hated by the Whites in Australia. A taxi never waits for them. Nobody ever claps for them at a concert-except for one naive White boy. And the outsider of the group Mel, didn’t become an outsider necessarily out of her own volition. She became one do to the cruel entity of Australia’s past- The Stolen Generations. This is when Australian authorities stormed into Aboriginal households to steal. Not to steal gold, money, goods ( as Lovelace’s character naively asks) but their most precious resource of all- the children. Well, the fair skinned children. So Mel was kidnapped and years later she came back for her mother’s funeral in the Aboriginal community- where she said, ” You know you guys could do so much better if you properly fished these waters.” Some in her community, especially her cousins in the girl group- hold that against her. Of course her Mama bear cousin Gail.. eventually gets in a fight with her about it.

Some other interesting twists to this story are that you often hear about Black young girls in the US who started groups in the 1960s. That’s what the Supremes were about. Martha and the Vandallas. The Dreamgirls musical. The Dreamgirls movie. Even Whitney Houston’s last movie-Sparkle was about that. But when do you hear about other Black ethnicities wanting to start a group like that. I have never heard of one such group in the 1960’s coming from England. France. And until this, oceania.

On top of that this movie tackles some other cultures. These girls are going to an Asian country to perform for American men. The movie, didn’t make this a big issue but I thought that it was interesting that they didn’t experience any discrimination from any Viets while they were there. I was also surprised that they didn’t experience more discrimination from the Americans . Except for one scene, there wasn’t any discrimination that the girls faced from White men. I would even say, that some of the Whites had crushes on them! Even the Blacks didn’t question them about their Blackness or made an issue about how they were “different” blacks.

But in perhaps the greatest  moments come from the race-bending that happens in this movie. Or rather I should say the race-bending lines. These girls started out mostly singing county and western music. Then White Dan Lovelace says Country and western sings sad music an about a struggle. But soul he said was about struggle, but the people who sang about it, owned and conquered the soul. It was powerful hearing his explanation. I should add that Chris O Dowd’s acting made this character’s performance really seem like he understood soul. The way he got into it.. it exuded soul through the screen.,, as if soul had a texture. I will add, that it was funny seeing  him trying to explain a genre of music that many might not associate with his race. I say kudos to him, because music belongs to everyone and everyone in does music is inspired by this colorless entity! The girls however question how he knows all this, and he says, I have afro blood in me. I am not sure he did though… but there were definitely many other racial and ethnic bending.

In sum, this is a good movie to see since it has many typical family situations, light-heart-ed comical lines combined with a deep history of a rarely heard of ethnicity in the US. So please see it. Please take a break from finals and go see it. If you are graduating.. go and take your parents to see it! I will say that this a great movie to end my artscene year with. I have loved writing this year as an artscene writer.critic. Thank you all the readers who made this possible.