REVIEW: North Campus Photo Competition

Photos from the first North Campus Photo Competition, sponsored by Living Arts, were on display in the Duderstadt connector from March 12-16. Students were given the opportunity to capture North Campus as they see it in a photo, and submit it to Living Arts to be judged for the competition. Winners were given cash prizes–first place was given $300, second place was given $150, and third place was given $75. 125 photos were submitted, and only three winners were chosen!

First place went to Peter Shin, for his beautiful depiction of the nature and culture of North Campus.

Peter Shin
Peter Shin

Second place was awarded to Daniel Chern, for his depiction of the North Campus fountain at night, the still water reflecting the lamps and the trees like glass. (As a North Campus resident myself, the fountain, especially at night, is a really cool place to hang out in the spring and summer!)

Daniel Chern: Reflecting Pool
Daniel Chern: Reflecting Pool

Third place went to Jerald Shi, for capturing the North Campus Belltower, surrounded by the fall foliage, and of course, the most sure sign of fall having arrived, a student walking to class with his backpack.

Other favorites of my own include:

A beautiful mosaic wall (though I’m not sure where this is located on North!) by Nadine Dyskant-Miller,

Nadine Dyskant-Miller
Nadine Dyskant-Miller

the shadowy modern lines cast upon the stairs on North Campus, by Daniel Chern,

Daniel Chern
Daniel Chern

and the architectural “Reflecting Upon the Reflecting Pool” by Nathan Hartmann,

Nathan Hartmann
Nathan Hartmann

Though the exhibit in the Duderstadt hardly did these photographs justice, I hope that anyone who sees these photos recognizes the beauty of North Campus that many students never take the time to appreciate. Come see the beauty of North Campus for yourself, through your own personal lens!

To find out more about the North Campus photo competition, check out the website: http://livingartsatum.wordpress.com/2012/03/12/living-arts-photo-competition/

REVIEW: Jazz Jam

Last Thursday, March 15th, from 8-10 p.m. 4 music students took the stage at Pierpont Commons, performing improvisational jazz for students in the lounge.

Pierpont Commons was transformed into a quaint coffee shop/lounge, with the lights dimmed and a spread of free coffee, tea, and delicious fudge  brownies and fruits. The musicians, students in the Department of Jazz and Improvisation Studies, were incredibly talented. They rarely took a break from playing, obviously enjoying playing music together. The evening didn’t feel like a performance, but rather the opportunity to sit in on a jam session. The informality and playfulness of the performance reminded me of a blues bar I visited in Chicago, but college-student style. It was really enjoyable to sit in the comfy chairs in Pierpont Commons, listen to the relaxing jazz music, and work on some of my homework. (While drinking FREE coffee and eating yummy FREE brownies I might add!) The opportunity to hear some live music in a relaxing atmosphere makes for a good night of studying.

Jazz Jam happens every other Thursday at  Pierpont Commons on North Campus. If you’re looking for a change of pace in your studying routine, or just something relaxing to do on a Thursday evening, come check out Jazz Jam! For more information, check out the website: http://www.umich.edu/~uuap/programs/performance/jazz.html

Review: Michigan Youth Band and Michigan Concert Band

This past Sunday, the University of Michigan’s School of Music, Theater, and Dance, presented a collaboration between the Michigan Youth Band and the Michigan Concert Band. Both groups, under the direction of Rodney Dorsey, assistant director of bands at the University, each presented a 45 minute set of music.

As a musician myself, I must say I was quite impressed by the level of musicianship present in these young musicians. It was very rewarding to hear such young artists excelling so beautifully at their craft.

When the concert band took the stage, however, there was a completely different aura about the concert. The level of professionalism seemed to rise as the Michigan Concert Band opened their portion of the concert with a piece by George called “Firefly”. Virtuosic runs and effortless elegance filled the sound.

The concert took a very interesting turn as the Michigan Concert Band performed a piece by Schwantner entitled “From a Dark Millennium”. I guess it is safe to say that the title should have been warning enough. Between eerie singing, high pitched whistling, and non-chordal harmonines, the piece indeed felt like it was, well, from a dark millennium.

The fun began when the band performed a very lively rendition of Frank Ticheli’s “Blue Shades”. The highlight of the piece came in with the bluesy clarinet solo halfway through the piece. Okay, sue me, I might have a slight clarinet-player bias. Really, though, it was amazing! The ease with which the soloist ripped through runs was absolutely beautiful.

A band concert would not be a band concert without a good ol’ Sousa march. The Concert Band closed the concert with a crowd pleasing rendition of “Pride of the Wolverines”. It was nice to move away from the atonal and arhythmical structure of the Schwantner to the toe-tapping ease of Sousa.

I definitely recommend these concerts to everyone. They’re fun, and free! And most of them have a pre-concert lecture which helps in understanding the pieces to be performed.

PREVIEW: Things Both Hushed and Grand

Performance Ark presents

Things Both Hushed and Grand


Performance Ark is a U of M “student-led hub for developing artists looking to collaborate.” As part of a two day event, the group is producing its first ever evening length performance, titled Things Both Hushed and Grand. According to the artists, “this performance applies ‘dance party colloquialisms and tailored contemporary technique to a lo-fi bedroom pop sound to investigate the courage it takes to be “an absolute nobody.”

The piece is choreographed by U of M Department of Dance students Tehillah Frederick, Julia Smith-Eppsteiner and Katy Telfer. Dancers include Tehillah Frederick, Edith Freyer, Allie Harris, Natalie Niergarth, Maddy Rager, Molly Ross, Julia Smith-Eppsteiner, Katy Telfer & Cara Zonca, also students in the department. The show is paired with music by funky, up-and-coming local band Fthrsn (click here and here to get a sonic taste test).

I asked Julia Smith-Eppsteiner a few questions about her collaborative work and she gave me a hearty glimpse into her process:

Is this related to school at all? Yes and no. We have established ourselves as a student organization at the University, all the dancers we’re using are in the dance department of SMT&D, as is the musician, and we are partially funded by Arts at Michigan mini-grant. But in a lot of ways it is independent from the school … Firstly, we met Macklin Underdown (fthrsn) at a music concert/dance party at Arbor Vitae. Secondly, we also are funded by independent donors via Kickstarter. And most importantly, we’re doing this production on our own time. This isn’t our BFA Senior Thesis, we’re not getting any credit for it and aside from the assistance and encouragement from faculty members we approached, this project is independent of our departments.

How did you get the idea to make this performance happen?
The three of us (Tehillah, Katy and I) have been interested in each other as collaborators/choreographers/movers for a long time and sort of joked about making a show together at the end of our freshman year (we’re all juniors currently). Tehillah brought it up to us again at the end of this past summer and until we saw Mackie perform at a party in October we didn’t get concretely going on anything. Once he was on board and making songs, we were pushed to make it actually happen and create deadlines for ourselves to generate movement phrases and keep us moving forward (deadlines such as Collage Concert and a Telluride Lecture Series we did titled Defining Movement). We’ve been seriously working on Things Both Hushed & Grand since November, us four responsible for everything on both the creative and business sides of the production.

Who did the posters? Jessica Ford, a BFA student in the Art and Design School, with a focus in painting. She’s been a dream.

All performances are free of charge and open to the public. For more information on the show, check out the Performance Ark Facebook page. One of the exciting and novel things about this particular performance is that it will shift venues with each of the three iterations:

Friday, March 23rd

Studio 1 black box theatre in Walgreen Drama Center on North Campus

Doors are at 4:30pm, performance at 5 pm.


Friday, March 23rd

Ann Arbor Art Center, 117 W. Liberty St

Exhibition Gallery

Doors at 8pm, performance at 8:30


Saturday, March 24th

Campus Chapel, 1236 Washtenaw Ct.

Doors at 1:30pm, performance at 2pm




PREVIEW: University of Michigan Men’s Glee Club

University of Michigan Mens Glee Club - Fall 2012
University of Michigan Men's Glee Club - Fall 2012

In May of this year, the University of Michigan Men’s Glee Club will be traveling to the continent of Asia and embarking on a two week tour of China. As they prepare to depart, they will be presenting their send-off concert in Ann Arbor on Saturday, March 31st, at 8:00pm in the beautiful Hill Auditorium.

The men of the Glee Club will be performing music from the upcoming tour, including the musical theater classic “Luck Be a Lady” as well as a Motown Medley consisting of many favorites like “I’ll Be There”. They are also collaborating with a select group of men from the Chicago Children’s Choir in this semester’s final installment of the Chicago Brothers-In-Song program. We hope you are able to make it.

For tickets, visit ummgc.org.

Student tickets: $5
Mezzanine: $15
Main Floor: $18

REVIEW: Tree City & The Contraband

Tree City & The Contraband

Last  Saturday night, Ann Arbor hip-hop group Tree City took the stage at The Blind Pig. First real night of spring break and what better to do than get down to some local sounds with some super funky musicians? The group performed to a crowd of happy college spring breakers freshly released from exams. The atmosphere was relaxed and comfortable but hype enough to feel the spirit of freedom.

Tree City was formed in Ann Arbor in 2005 by 3 MC’s and a DJ/MC. By day, they are known as Evan HaywoodKyle Hunter, and Jacoby Simmons. By night, as Clavius CratesGeneral Population, and DJ Cataclysmic respectively. The group originally included two others- Mike and Cheeks– but both have fled to the west coast, and then there were three. The trio supplies “eardrums with a  unique brand of hip-hop” via live shows around town (including last month’s Eighth Annual Midwest Hip-Hop Summit at The League) as well as through their recordings. The complete discography includes The TreE.P. (2007), Black Trees (2008), Say It Again (Single) (2010), and Thus Far (2010), and most recently Definement (2011). And luckily, you can hear samples of everything they’ve got to offer on their website!

The show at the Pig on Saturday opened with sounds from DJ Charles Trees, Thrills & Saul Good, Passalacqua, and Tunde Oliniran. And finally, headliner Tree City, as a combined act with The Contraband. The combo is an extension of other local artists that have been playing with Tree City as a group for a year. Musicians include UM students and grads Ben Rolston on bass, Julian Allen on drums, Yuma Yesaka on the saxophone and electronic wind instrument, Keaton Royer on the synthesizer and Michael Malis on synthesizers and keyboards.

The performance featured all original material. Definitely danceable; definitely a good time. The main act was worth the ticket, but the openers also warmed up the crowd nicely. Most original, in my opinion, was Tunde Oliniran, whose performance included some level of experimental/interpretative dance (click here to get a taste of what I’m talkin’ about).

A golden moment of the night, bass player Ben Rolston said, “was experiencing the audience interaction that is a major part of hip-hop. Evan or Kyle would start a chant and the crowd was right there with them, giving that energy back to us. Coming from mostly playing music where the audience connection is less direct its really wonderful to be a part of.”

I got to drop in on a rehearsal at The Neutral Zone a few nights prior to the show. It was exciting to be able to watch the evolution of the performance from practice to a complete work of art. Even in a trial run, without the lights and crowds, the group has really got it going on. Nothin’ like some good old fashioned local music to get down on over Spring Break.

Look out for more Tree City shows happening around town. In the meantime, get connected! Check out the Tree City: homepageFacebook pageTwitter, and Soundcloud.