US – Sunday, March 21
The week's releases
Metro staff reviews the latest CDs, DVDs and books for your reading pleasure.
 
SXSW ’10: Get your dance on, great songs optional
The trends that emerged from the SXSW Music Conference in Austin last week are still bubbling to the top as I make sense of the hundreds of songs that filled the city for four days, but one thing I definitely noticed is that popular music may soon have a lot more emphasis on flexibility.
 
Metro’s spring ’10 guide to television
Check us out all this month for our picks for the best series premieres, season returns and must-see episodes.
 
Just when it couldn’t get worse for Bullock, here come the neo-Nazis
Sure, it’s Monday, but it could be worse — you could be Jesse James. On Saturday, James went back to work at West Coast Choppers, days after allegations surfaced that he cheated on his wife, Sandra Bullock, with a tattoo model. Us Weekly notes he was wearing a wedding ring.
 
Taking on a blockbuster
If the name Stieg Larsson isn’t familiar, the cover of his globally best-selling book may provide instant recognition, considering the novel is reaching Harry Potter-level ubiquity. The film adaptation follows suit, blowing box office records all over Europe for its roundly praised, faithful rendition of the story of two detectives (of sorts) who uncover family scandals in search of a woman who has been missing for 40 years. We sat down with director Niels Arden Oplev to chat about his version of the tale.
 
Published 21:47, May the 15th, 2008
 
When prose attacks: Verbobala  When prose attacks: Verbobala  
 

Poetry in motion, literally

Verbobala creates a political spectacle in verse and multimedia performance art

INTERVIEW. Expect a collision of genres when video installation and performance art group Verbobala lands in Boston this weekend. The concept of borders, between art forms and countries,  is well known to the bilingual performance artists based in both Cuernavaca, Mexico and Tucson, Arizona. Their work is a mash-up remix of poetry, music and video. Metro spoke with poet Logan Phillips.

Do you consider your focus to be poetry? Performance art? Music? Video?

I think our focus is creating spectacle, using all of the above.  We mix bilingual poetry and video projections to create experimental performances which frequently focus on identity and borders.

When you say “borders,” do you mean both literally and metaphorically, or artistically in your work?

This is a good question. Artistic genres are like international borders ... To some extent they’ve always existed and always will exist, as they serve very specific interests. We like to play with the tension held in those lines, but we don’t let them limit us. It’s too easy to see borders or genres as literal things, as laws of nature.

How important a role does the political aspect of building fences around our country play in your art?
I don’t think that people in the U.S. have really thought this through, this message that is being sent to the rest of the world by constructing a metal wall. The damage to the country’s reputation on the international scene is pretty huge ... it makes one wonder how long the U.S. can call itself “home of the free,” while we have the largest per capita prison population of any industrialized nation, a metal wall on our borders, etc.  ...  The U.S. has entered into a dangerous period of cultural isolation, and this is something that can be seen in nearly all modern art projects, not just our own. We’re not keeping the world out by constructing a wall around our country. We’re keeping ourselves locked in.

Do contemporary audiences need something more to capture their attention to enhance listening to poetry? 

Poetry doesn’t need anything to enhance it, and people are much more receptive to it than they think they will be. Our brains are hard-wired to listen to a good story told convincingly. The oral tradition is as old as we are. But I do see where you’re going with the question. Sometimes we think of it like a band: there are people who go to solo guitar, or poetry, performances, but more people come out when it’s an entire band playing.

Verbobala
Saturday, 11:55 p.m.
The Coolidge Corner Theatre
290 Harvard St., Brookline
MBTA: Green B Line to Harvard Street
$10, 617-734-2501
www.coolidge.org
 

 
 
Share
 
MMMpod
The March MMMpod features conversation and music from Surfer Blood and The Allman Brothers Band (There's a double-bill you're not too likely to see. However, Gregg Allman does mention Hannah Montana!). We also speak with Vampire Weekend and the Dropkick Murphys.
 
 
 
Metro Life Panel