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Saturday, June 20
The Indiana Daily Student

Community Arts


The Indiana Daily Student

Hey, at least Tolcher was good

Friday night's Jim Beam Live Concert Series in Indianapolis could've been great. Sadly, though, it left the audience with a good sound in their ears but a bad taste in their mouths. Maroon 5, the concert's headliner, was celebrating the recent news that their album, Songs About Jane, has been certified gold, and Indianapolis was introduced to up and coming stunner Michael Tolcher.


The Indiana Daily Student

Jucifer is Livengood and playin' loud

There are different kinds of loud. There is 12-year-old-girl loud. There is hey-whippersnapper-turn-it-down loud. Then there is the Athens, Ga., rock duo Jucifer.


The Indiana Daily Student

Classic rockers Plant a 'Hit' or two

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A growing trend in musical anthologies is that bands and artists are splitting the difference between the usual greatest hits and box set arcana as the following sets prove.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dog puppet comedy album a Triumph

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Fans of "Late Night with Conan O'Brien" will be elated to know that his foulmouthed, cigar-chomping puppet foil has finally been given his just due. As such, Triumph the Insult Comic Dog (voiced and created by renowned "SNL" staple Robert Smigel) has released his own comedy record, titled appropriately enough, Come Poop with Me.

The Indiana Daily Student

If it makes you happy, buy Crow's Very Best

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She is one of the few that hasn't sold out. And even though back in 1994 all she wanted to do was have some fun, Sheryl Crow apparently had a blast and a number of hit records without selling out and turning into an ass-shaking sex symbol.


The Indiana Daily Student

McLachlan fumbles, but not toward ecstacy

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Although Sarah McLachlan's new one, Afterglow, is hardly better than ice cream, it's more like an Italian ice. That said, you have to be the Italian ice kind to really appreciate it.


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P.O.D. hardly on deathbed

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Following its second album Satellite, the Christian-minded rock group P.O.D. has released another album that is surprisingly heartfelt and melodic. Using their traditional style of rap-metal-hip-hop-reggae, the band raps and sings melodies that preach morality over corruption.


The Indiana Daily Student

Dear Iggy Pop: stop releasing records

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Even street-walking cheetahs with hearts full of napalm get old and desperate to remain relevant. If it wasn't cringe-worthy enough to hear Iggy Pop's 1977 ode to heroin addiction "Lust for Life" used in a Royal Caribbean commercial, perhaps his new album (which features collaborations with Green Day and Sum 41) will succeed at invalidating all of Pop's past credibility, something he's been trying to do since he sang "Candy" with B-52's singer Kate Pierson in 1990.


The Indiana Daily Student

Against some fans

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About six months ago, I picked up Crime As Forgiven by, an outstanding EP of raw angst (mainly political) as interpreted through an acoustic guitar and drums (no cymbals). Tom Gabel (guitar/ vocals/ songs) screams into a microphone and strums with all his might over a snare drum that marches better than Sousa. It was the stripped-down basics of song.


The Indiana Daily Student

Wyclef sings; guests rap

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Ever since the Fugees more or less disbanded after the release of The Score, Wyclef Jean has been proving himself time and again as a solo artist. In fact, it now seems that traditional bounds of rap are a format Wyclef finds too limiting.


The Indiana Daily Student

Rapper 'rules' with street rhetoric

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It's ironic Ja Rule and Louis Farrakhan's interview based on the overblown battle between Ja and 50 Cent aired on MTV the same week Blood in My Eye dropped, since Ja's main direction is assaulting back at hip hop's hottest act, 50 Cent.


The Indiana Daily Student

English comedy attempsts spaghetti western

To say Once Upon a Time in the Midlands is a western would be a stretch, but throw in some horses and guns and all the elements would be there.


The Indiana Daily Student

Christmas comes early with 'Elf'

Sometimes Christmas cheer can come at surprising times from rather unexpected people -- Elf is one such example. Forget that it's not even two weeks past Halloween and that the picture stars hot comic of the moment Will Ferrell (big after streaking his way through the rollicking campus caper that was Old School) and is directed by Swingers/Made alum Jon Favreau. Elf's head and heart are unabashedly in the right place.


The Indiana Daily Student

Not just another Guitar Player

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Even before the commercial success of musicians such as John Mayer and Jason Mraz, finding a young, struggling acoustic guitar player to listen to was as easy as finding a rapper with "Lil" in his stage name.


The Indiana Daily Student

Rock N Roll may never die, but Love is Hell

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There is no stopping Ryan Adams. He released his first album with his band Whiskeytown when he was 21. His first solo effort, Heartbreaker, a stripped down folk/country album about his broken heart, burst with sincerity.


The Indiana Daily Student

LFB Women to Rock

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With the recent surge of women in rock, females are firmly establishing their position in music history. Singers such as No Doubt's Gwen Stefani, hip hop artists Lauryn Hill and Missy Elliott and Grammy winner Norah Jones are just some of the female musicians dominating the charts. But it doesn't stop there. Women are influencing the local scene as well, introducing a new flavor to a variety of musical styles.


The Indiana Daily Student

Panel presents alternative views on state of world affairs

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Several IU faculty members held a panel regarding the "current state of world affairs" Sunday afternoon at the Monroe County Public Library. The panel said its goal was to offer alternative views that do not get coverage in mainstream media. Religious studies professor Jim Hart gave a disclaimer at the beginning of the program.


The Indiana Daily Student

Turks remember former president

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Each year, Nov. 10 is a somber day for Turks around the world. Sixty-five years ago Monday, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the modern state of Turkey, passed away. Faculty members and students were among those who gathered at the Leo R. Dowling International Center Monday evening to honor Turkey's first president.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Sex' writer talks on campus

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The IU Auditorium was full of women Tuesday night as writer Candace Bushnell took center stage. Bushnell, the author of the popular book "Sex and the City," spoke to the audience about her inspiration for the book and her experiences as a young woman working in the glamour industry in New York City. Bushnell shared accounts of her childhood and going to college at Rice University in Texas. She described her culture shock when she moved from the East Coast where the feminist movement had already taken place, to the South where women didn't go out without having a date.


The Indiana Daily Student

Is IU a politically correct campus?

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Intellectual diversity may be at stake on college campuses across the nation, panelists told a Senate Committee last month. The panel said there was a "broad threat to the free exchange of ideas at colleges," according to an article in the Chronicle of Higher Education. Panelists cited examples such as the disinviting of politically incorrect speakers, politicized instruction by faculty members and one-sided teach-ins. Members of the IU community have strong opinions as to whether IU is following the trend of decreasing intellectual diversity.