The Maybe Happening to hold CD release party The Portland-based duo use poetry, guitars and violins to flesh out their sound By Ryan Nyburg Senior Pulse Reporter Nathan Langston and Jonathan An dersen, tire Portland duo that compris es The Maybe I Iappening, have been playing together for a long time. "We started off playing video games," Langston said. "Now we play in a band." The two have been close since Langston was 2 and Andersen was 3, and they eventually decided to form a band. But this is not to say they were completely alike. "I was classically trained," Langston said. "I was playing Bach, Rachmani noff, etc. Jon, on the other hand, took a few lessons, but mosdy was playing the Pixies and Nirvana." Combining their disparate musical influences, along with Langston's inter est in poetry, The Maybe I Iappening do not resemble many other bands. Mixing spoken word poetry with Andersen's distorted guitar and Langston's violin, the band creates a sound that Andersen describes as "Mozart meets Metallica." "Many of our songs are like classical compositions," Andersen said. "Some of them are just standard verse/cho ms/verse, but many of them are classi cal in the way they move through many different areas." With a new self-titled album, the band is ready to expand beyond the few Eugene and Portland clubs where they have been able to score gigs. Filling out their sound on the album with trum pets, drums and cellos, they recorded many songs that Langston and Ander sen had been playing for a while, as well as a few new tunes. In regards to the songwriting, the band uses a simple and collaborative process. "One of us will come up with a riff or an idea and we'll play around with it until we come up with something," said Andersen. The newly recorded work might mean the band could find a larger au dience. That audience will be able to watch the band Saturday night at Foolscap Books, where the Happening will be having their CD release party. But publicity isn't all the band has in mind for the event. "It's going to be a multimedia event," Foolscap owner Marietta Bonaventure said. "There will be oth er bands from Portland, like Broken Prophylaxis and the Binary Dolls. There will be local poets, including Jerry Wagner and Doug Jerome, some interactive art and maybe film." The show is the latest in a series of "experiment shows" that Langston has put on at the bookstore. "The idea is to get in as many forms of expression as possible," Langston said. "We try to get everything that we can involved in it. We're even getting a stand-up comic." Langston has a long history with Foolscap. While an English major at the University last year, he won the Foolscap-hosted Eugene Poetry Slam and was a member of the Eugene Slam team. But after graduating, Langston decided to move to Portland. "I think I did all I could do in Eu gene," Langston said. "Anyway, my girlfriend lives here." After their new album is released to the public, the Happening aren't exactly Courtesy Portland's The Maybe Happening will hold a CD release party at Foolscap Books on Saturday. sure what their next move will be. "Sound wise, I think we might be come more extreme in the way of dy namics, switching from really soft to re ally loud," Andersen said. "Beyond that 1 really don't know where we'll go." For the moment, the band is simply looking forward to the upcoming show. "It's going to be great," Langston said. "This party is going to be of comic book proportions." Foolscap Books is located at 780 Blair Blvd. The Maybe Happening CD release party begins at 9 p.m., with tickets avail able for $5 at the door. The Happening's new CD will be on sale for $8. Contact the senior pulse reporter at ryannyburg@dailyemerald.com. Band uses odd noises to create beauty The Austin, Texas-based band Explosions in the Sky has a stunningly unique, if slightly pretentious, sound By Helen Schumacher Pulse Columnist I hate the sounds of modem living. Our ears are coastantly subjected to the buzz of technology — computers, re frigerators, heaters, fans, cars, leaf blow ers and lawn mowers — that is devel oped to make our lives easier. And I suppose they do, but at a cost. Silence is rare, if not non-existent, in a city. Explosions in the Sky, an Austin, Texas, quartet, provides a remedy for this 21st-century drone. Their latest album, "The Earth Is Not a Cold not the decaying sphere of metal and concrete that comes across in the sound of machinery. The album begins with the song "First Breath After Coma." And that's what it sounds like, an aural awaken ing after years of listening to buzzing motors. Explosions In the Sky trans form the noise of daily life into music. REVIEW Dead Place," is an affirma tion that the Earth is, in fact, Instead of a leaking faucet, listeners get a steady, dripping guitar note and a bass drum heartbeat. Layer upon layer of instrumentation— guitar, bass, per cussion— is added, building texture and creating tension. In other songs, such as "The Only Moment We Were Alone" and "Six Days at the Bottom of the Ocean," the parts accumulate, becoming more frantic, and then fade, only to return in frill force, like a hurricane ripping out street lights and creating waves that erode away the soil. Finally, all traces of civilization collapse into the sea. The musicians in the band are able to capture the dynamics of the natural world and transform it into thick and dreamy post-rock like that of bands Mogwai, Godspeed You Black Emperor! or The Dirty Three. With its sweeping, grandiose songs, Explosions in the Sky belong to a pretentious genre of music, but not without reason. It takes patience and endurance from the musician to sus tain the energy and emotion for so long. "The Earth Is Not a Cold Dead Place" is only five songs long, but spans just longer than 45 minutes. Just like the name, Explosions in the Sky is both apocalyptic and stunning. Contact the Pulse columnist at helenschumacher@dailyemerald.com. TRIUMPH continued from page 11 environment," before all merge into a call and response finale that answers "Needs a little pooping" to lyrics such as "Every actor who tries to sing," and "Shitty movies made from crap TV." Most of the band from O'Brien's TV show provides the music. Obviously, this album will rub up against the edge of some listen er's comfort zones. Laughter often requires a suspension of judgment. Just how much suspension will de termine how much enjoyment laughter is elicited from a given person. Contact the Pulse editor at aaronshakra@dailyemerald.com. The Oregon Humanities Center presents a symposium on February 29-March 1,2004 KEYNOTE SPEAKERS Susan Niditch Amherst College War in the Hebrew Bible: fWbftvOvoK) uusrary, any Considerations CMMMIAPV 90 rCaffWItH * 465# Mahmoud Ayoub Temple University v Jihad and Fighting: Peace and War in the Qur’an MARCH 1 Both lectures will be held at 8 p.m. in Room 182, Lillis Hall. These events are free and open to the public, and are cosponsored by tire College of Arts and Sciences. For more information, or for disability accommodations, please caB (541) 346*3934. EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity. O UNIVERSITY OF OREGON ■vmvlHflli Communitu Center (or the Performing Arts 8th & Lincoln ■ Friday • Portland Showcase: The Motive, Life at These Speeds, lotmyXand the Groadies, Pseudosix Rock $3 advance for UO students with ID %i, door; $6 advance for general public, $8 door 8:oo pm ■ Saturday ■ Deethoof The Papercuts Indie Rock $8 advamce, $io door, 8:oo pm ■Sunday ■ Hie FCCToim Saqe Francis Sloe Beats Grand Buffet, Mac Lethal, The Gimme Fund, Macromatics Hip-Hop Si2 advance, $15 door, 8:00 pm ■ Monday • The Locust Hie PtotTo Blow Up the Eiffel Tower, YOB, Ned Metal $8 advance, $10 door, 8:00 pm ■ Wednesday ■ The Suicide Girts Burtesque Tour with Bloom Dance Performance $8 advance, $10 door, 8:00 pm All Ages Welcome 6X7-2746 Student Groups Advertise in the Oregon Daily Emerald. Call 346-3712 to speak with a sales rep. We have great University rates. BRIEF continued from page 10 Human Services from the University. "I thought about going into social * work, but the position with Student Life has allowed me to focus on my music and stay in Eugene," Maken na said. Makenna took piano lessons for sev eral years. 'The minute I started (lessons) I fell in love with it," she said. "I knew it was apart of me." Inspired by the likes of Judy Garland and Joni Mitchell as a youth, Maken na's own sound has a self-described New Age feel with songs focusing on transformation and finding oneself. Makenna played at the old Eu gene City Bistro and local coffee houses, but she didn't release her first album until May. With the help of Barbara Higbie, a singer and songwriter who has worked on more than 40 albums, Makenna got started on her first release. "Barbara Higbie is such an inspira tion for me," Makenna said. "Since May she's been such a great supporter of my music." With Higbie's help, Makenna also produced a six-song blues and jazz al bum that was released in October, and she said she hopes to release another al bum later this year. — Beau Eastes GOT A STORY IDEA? kv'*,G4 § 2841 Willamette * 484-1727