Clackamas Print ntertainment Wednesday, Jan. 31, 2007 5 Jazz Jams ready to groove tla Dickerson Ju Clackamas Print Jazz musicians, young and old, invited to attend the Monday- it, weekly jam session, held in Leroy Anderson Room in the ineyer Center. As well as the regular special sts. Clackamas faculty will be earing. Music instructors Tom ieling, Clay Giberson, Charlie »gett and Eli Reisman will be ying bass, piano, drums and gui- tespectively. The invitation to come jam is n to everyone. It is expected that fasional musicians, as well as dents and community members, (attend the sessions to play and he purpose of the jams is to nr great musicians, such as ts Davis and Charlie Parker, e joining together musicians from the Portland-metro area. Clackamas student and bassist Zach Sears hopes that the jams will be a good learning experience for younger musicians. “The best way to get good is to play with good musicians,” said Sears. Jazz Ensemble Director Wakeling wrote a grant, which was later approved, to have these jam sessions. According to a recent press release, this may be the begin­ ning of a new era for the music and arts scene in Oregon City. There is no entry fee to play. The first jam session is Jan. 29, and the sessions, which commence at 7 p.m., will run until 10 p.m. Recordings of the individual ses­ sions will be available for pur­ chase. For more information, e-mail Wakeling at wakelingt@clackamas. edu, or contact the music depart­ ment at 503-657-6958, ext. 2434. AU photos by Juno Dean Clackamas Print FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: Music Instructors Clay Giberson, Charles Doggett and Tom Wakeling jammed out Monday night at the Jazz Jams in the Neimeyer Center. The Jazz Jams are open to the public every Monday night from 7 p.m. until 10 p.m. and are free of charge. gs insulting and could be done by a first-year art student in only a handful of hours with Photoshop. The comic chronicles the adventures of the Freedom Phalanx, an uninspired and clichéd super group full of Justice League and Avengers wannabes who, in lieu of char­ acter depth, have unconvinc­ ing angst issues. What’s worse is that the by David Stark characters are written incon­ sistently from one arc to the next. And I’m not talking In a world where anyone about little issues like person­ can be a hero, no one seems to ality quirks; I’m referencing be able to write. major characters having total Top Cow’s City of Heroes 180-degree shifts in attitude. comic, based off the popular Other comics have had the Massively Multi-player Online same problems while find­ Role-playing Game, exempli­ ing their rhythm and style. fies everything that is wrong However, the complete lack with the comic book industry. of continuity between arcs The first three issues makes trying to follow the were written by Mark Waid story almost impossible. In (Kingdom Come, Superman: fact, there is almost no sense Birthright) and were done of time in the comic. It is so with his usual skill. The story bad that one need not read the wasn’t fantastic, but it was arcs in order. The saddest thing of all ’ good enough to be entertain­ ing. The following issues is that City of Heroes could were atrocious, filled with have been a really great comic. poor writing and an utter lack Compare the current run with of understanding about what the 12 issues done by Blue had come before. The fourth King’s, which concentrated on issue through the sixth came, small characters and their per- off as nothing more ’tharffiB' sonal conflicts, encouraging pathetic attempt at giving the the reader to care about what Statesman, City of Heroes’ happened to the heroes. Superman rip-off, some depth. With a comic based off of The horrendous writ­ an MMORPG, there are just so ing sunk to truly monumen­ many possibilities. For exam­ tal depths in issue 16 where, ple, the company could have while our protagonists were a contest and the winner get recovering a piece of stolen to have their character star in technology, the most power­ an issue. ful of them, the Statesman, So sadly, City of Heroes decided to go off and kidnap fails to tap into even the small­ his nemesis’ granddaughter. est amount of its massive The art is simplistic, and potential. the pencils, while clear, are Top Cow’s run so far on reminders of work best left in City of Heroes gamers a gen­ the early 80s. The colors are erous 1 out of 5. VISUAL LITERATURE M - Th: 7 a.m. to 7:30 p.m ffò^Fridays: 7 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. . Éilil g| Check out our Chef’s Special Penne Pasta and Meat Marinara Nachos Taco Salads Quesadillas We ]?roud lv m. - 10:30 a.m. open 10:30 a.m. - 2:30p.m. ★ Subject to change during the week