Arts & Culture
Column: Forgetting the deal
Arts & CultureApril 29, 2010
There’s a lot of talk about the book industry in the press lately. While some find its future prospects grim, others aren’t so pessimistic. “It’s the best time in the history of the printed word to be a publisher or a writer,” said Dave Eggers, author and founder of independent publisher McSweeney’s, last weekend at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books.
Studio 301 to present Hair: The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical
Arts & CultureApril 29, 2010
Studio 301 will put on a production Hair: The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical from April 28 to May 2, and from May 5 to 9. Tickets are $12 for students, but the preview show on April 28 will be $11. All shows begin at 8 p.m., except for Sunday shows, which begin at 7 p.m.
KDVS transforms living rooms into music venues
Arts & CultureApril 29, 2010
It’s a Thursday night in Davis and there is nothing to do. Or is there?
Roving Reporter
Arts & CultureApril 29, 2010
“I think it would be easier for students to take notes and read PDF documents in classrooms.” – Andrew Stern, junior food sciences major
Unite for a Davis experience
Arts & CultureApril 29, 2010
On the night of May 8, a sold out crowd will be preparing for a night of non-stop dancing to thumpin’, bumpin’ electronic music. That’s right, the student-run spring electronic music dance event called Unity is back, thanks to the efforts of Electronic Music for Change (EMC) and the ASUCD Entertainment Council.
KDVS Fundraiser continues until Sunday
Arts & CultureApril 22, 2010
KDVS 90.3 FM’s annual fundraiser is currently underway, and will continue until Apr. 25. Visit fundraiser.kdvs.org for more information and donations, and tune in to 90.3 FM for more opportunities to support our community freeform radio station.
An Arboretum Tree Party
Arts & CultureApril 22, 2010
There’s no better place to celebrate Arbor Day festivities than at the Arboretum, UC Davis’ gem of a gorgeous plant and tree garden collection. On May 2, UC Davis and the City of Davis will be co-hosting Oak Discovery Day at the Shield’s Oak Grove. The event, funded by a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, will be unveiling the Art/Science Fusion projects as well as the newly installed Oak Discovery Trail.
Artsweek
Arts & CultureApril 22, 2010
MUSIC Dead Western Trio, Cole Moldy, Poppet, Ghost to Falco Today, 7 p.m., donations to KDVS encouraged 802 Villanova Ave. Support campus radio station KDVS 90.3 FM and be there for Dead Western Trio’s album release party and performances by Cole Moldy and Ghost to Falco. Visit the bands’ Myspaces for previews. Jib Kidder, Megazord, Grandmother Ham Today, 8 p.m., $5 Technocultural Studies Building
An interview with Creedence Clearwater Revisited’s Stu Cook
Arts & CultureApril 22, 2010
Stu Cook, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer for his bass playing with Creedence Clearwater Revival, turns 65 this Saturday. And he’s still rocking. Cook and fellow Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Doug “Cosmo” Clifford are on tour with Creedence Clearwater Revisited – the original band’s reincarnation project. The Aggie had a chance to chat with Cook before the band plays in Dixon on Saturday, May 8.
CD Review: The Wild Hunt
Arts & CultureApril 22, 2010
Kristian Matsson, better known as the Tallest Man on Earth, has released a second full-length album that has garnered him comparisons to the legendary Bob Dylan. The Wild Hunt features elements of ragged melodies and engaging lyricism that highlight the striking similarities.
CD Review: Making Up a Changing Mind
Arts & CultureApril 22, 2010
In the massive move toward computer-based sound, it is easy for soul to escape most electronic music. Yet there is something incredibly raw, affecting and organic about Pretty Lights. Pretty Lights is producer Derek Vincent Smith, and his new EP continues and furthers his use of complex sampling but includes a more defined, funky edge. Whereas musicians like Girl Talk and the Hood Internet make mash ups out of just a few songs, Smith layers many different individual music samples and voice clips to create a whole new sound.
CD Review: New Amerykah Part 2 (Return of the Ankh)
Arts & CultureApril 22, 2010
An album dedicated to misery and emotional stasis isn’t what we’d expect to see from an artist like Erykah Badu, whose repertoire is founded on a persona of a self-empowered neo-soul earth mother. In New Amerykah Part 2 (Return of the Ankh), Badu all but abandoned the politics and revolutionary drive of Part 1 and opts instead for a sound that is atmospheric and intimate – dripping with pathos and melancholy.

