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PAUL MEGNA


The Spectrum
NEWS

Savion Glover takes CFA's breath away

It all began with a jazzy bass line, drifting from the back of the dimly lit stage.Such an understated opening was the proverbial "calm before the storm," with the storm being the hectic yet flawlessly soulful staccato notes emanating from the soles of Savion Glover's tap shoes.Just as he has for well over 20 years, on Friday at Center For the Arts Glover converted the physical motion of his feet and legs into a sonic splendor, playing a finely tuned instrument and giving the performance of a lifetime.Part of Glover's "Improvography II" tour, he was backed by a talented jazz quartet and later accompanied by three fellow dancers who both, while very talented, were clearly playing second fiddle.Glover, who has been a Broadway performer since the age of 10 and has won a Tony Award as well as many other awards, showed a mastery of rhythmic dance, robbing the audience of their breath.With precision, unbelievable speed and musical prowess, Glover told a story without the use of many words, though he did occasionally vocalize some of the emotion transcended through his dance in repeated scat phrases.Glover's set, which lasted over two hours and was interrupted only by a brief intermission, explored an eclectic musical range, improvising on everything from classical music to acid jazz.Perhaps the most impressive quality of his performance was his endurance physically and vocally.


NEWS

He's like Elvis or something

"I feel like f***ing Elvis Presley or something," Derek Whibley, lead singer of Canada's pop-punk outfit Sum 41, cockily professed to an eager crowd Tuesday night at The Sphere.Whibley's profane and narcissistic sense of humor was for the most part well received by the large crowd of punk-rock enthusiasts, aged 6 to 60.The "Go Chuck Yourself Tour," which kicked off with Tuesday night's show, also features Unwritten Law and Hawthorne Heights and is every bit the tribute to adolescent vulgarity that the name suggests.Sum 41 played an exciting and well-rounded set, including most of the better songs from all three of their full-length albums.The band was situated in front of a huge black tapestry, decorated with a skull and their band name.


NEWS

Catchy 'Elevator' music

"Elevator," the third album created by Canadian dance-rock quartet Hot Hot Heat, continues to put a happy face on teenage angst.The recent success of bands like Franz Ferdinand, The Killers, and Temper Temper has brought popular music's obsession with 80s culture to a boiling point.


The Spectrum
NEWS

Catchy 'Elevator' music

"Elevator," the third album created by Canadian dance-rock quartet Hot Hot Heat, continues to put a happy face on teenage angst.The recent success of bands like Franz Ferdinand, The Killers, and Temper Temper has brought popular music's obsession with 80s culture to a boiling point.


The Spectrum
NEWS

Cookin' up a cure

A throbbing headache, excruciating bodily pain, a relentless feeling of self-deprecating guilt: for anyone who has suffered these, or any of the crippling symptoms of the hangover, there is finally a beacon of hope and it lies, shockingly, within a book."The Wrath of Grapes," Patrick Meanor's literary attempt to cure this all-too-common collegiate malady, is subtitled: "A Complete Hangover Cookbook and Guide to the Art of Creative Suffering." It's just that - an amalgam of cures for what he calls "the 'physical' and 'metaphysical' hangover."Meanor, an English professor at SUNY-Oswego, hasn't drunk in 27 years, but he possesses a wealth of knowledge on the hangover and its potential cures."The Wrath of Grapes," obviously a spoof on the Steinbeck novel, combines countless literary allusions to the hangover, with Meanor's philosophical musings and scientifically based physical cures.


NEWS

Getting rich again

With a title like "The Massacre" on his sophomore Shady/Aftermath effort, no one can rightfully accuse 50 Cent of lack of ambition.Sadly, three years after the Queens native's debut album, "Get Rich or Die Trying," 50 can be accused of spending too much of his time marketing mineral water and videogames and not enough focusing on what got him rich in the first place: writing rhymes."The Massacre" is a solid record, both lyrically and in terms of production and will doubtlessly be appreciated by many, though others will be irked that "The Massacre" is a watered-down facsimile of "Get Rich." "The Massacre" sticks to the traditional rap equation, a few ultra-violent, gun-toting anthems, a few about seducing women, some about partying and a couple more about gun toting.


The Spectrum
NEWS

Not always oiled first: a Squeaky Wheel fights back

A deranged, Marxist lunch-lady, Japanese Legos and stock footage from "Family Feud" were among the diverse artistic tools used at Squeaky Wheel's open screening, "Chance and Misfortune" Wednesday night.Squeaky Wheel, a nonprofit media arts center located on Elmwood Avenue, like many local artistic establishments, has lost funding due to the severe budget cuts recently passed by Erie County legislators."Chance and Misfortune" was Squeaky Wheel's valiant effort to give Buffalo video, musical and performance artists an open forum to discuss the budget cut's effect on the local art scene.The event kicked off with Tammy McGovern's brief video montage of chance-related television footage, intermixed with shots of downtown Buffalo.


NEWS

Here's to six more years

As the floor in Broadway Joe's became more and more packed with eager fans on Friday night for the sixth anniversary celebration of Baby Steps hip-hop, the general energy level continuously skyrocketed.The Queen City's underground hip-hop scene is one of its many thriving artistic cultures, unfortunately widely overlooked by UB students.


NEWS

Angular rock inside the 'circle'

It is uncommon for contemporary music to be considered "high art." Most popular musicians are constrained to the boundaries of thought provided by their respective genre.Two bands, Circle Takes the Square and Fear Before the March of Flames, performing at The Buffalo Icon on Saturday night, aim to change that.Both Circle Takes the Square and Fear Before the March of Flames deliver a brand of cutting-edge hardcore every bit as artful as it is gut-wrenchingly brutal.Circle Takes the Square is a thrash act formed in Savannah, Georgia.


The Spectrum
NEWS

More than a couch potato

As the fourth week of classes winds down for students at the UB, moments of pure and uninterrupted laughter are beginning to seem, for many, few and far between.Luckily for anyone suffering such woes, relief in the form of comic genius Steven Wright comes to the Center For the Arts at 7 p.m.


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