May 26. 2010 'ri'*' Portiani* (Obsvrorr Page II IMIIIAISMIM Bold Attitudeand Mind Set Acclaimed singer gets you dancing (AP) - If you're going to a Janelle Monae performance, be prepared to get up and dance. Even if the music doesn't move you — and it most likely will — her agents will plot to get you on your feet. At a recent concert to preview her first full-length album, the criti­ c a l,y a c c la im e d "T he ArchAndroid," her backup dancers literally pulled people out o f their seats, while other members o f the Monae nation ordered people to move. "You don't come to a Janelle Monae show to sit!" one woman barked. The experience is almost like par­ ticipating in a spiritual conversion, and in some ways, that's what Monae is hoping to achieve with her music — a revolution o f the mind, one frenetic beat at a time. "Sometimes you have to show how to dance to a song — like, they don't know until they see an ex­ ample," the 24-year-old singer- songwriter explains during a recent interview. She adds: "1 want them to allow the music to transform them as much as it's transformed m e ... (the music) deals with self-realization, and I think ifthey listen to it from the beginning Jazz Night at Clark College Janelle Monae gets people dancing with her James Brown- funk to Prince-like rock. to the end, they will have an emotion picture experience for the mind and that's very transformative in itself." Monae hopes to have the same impact on her followers that Lauryn Hill had on her. Back then, when Monae was growing up in Kansas City, Kan., Hill's Grammy-winning "The Miseducation o f Lauryn Hill" was one o f the albums that expanded her musical horizons. "You just got a sense that $he knew as an artist that she was a leader, and she led me to a place that no other artist had been able to do, female artist," she says. "She was an inspiration for me because she showed me that I didn't have to take the same safe, sexy route. I could bring all o f me with me, when I'm performing. I could be all o f me on my album." "The ArchAndroid" seems to contain all o f Monae's artistic self. It's a melange o f musical styles, from James Brown-funk to Prince-like rock to a tune that could blend in with 1960s folk-pop. Monae's artistry draws from a large well. Her inspirations include Fritz Lang's futuristic "Metropolis" (she named her debut EP after the film) and Walt Disney; her uniform is usually that o f a tuxedo, complete with button-down shirt and tie; and her signature pompadour hairstyle (she calls it the "Monae"). Her creative muse is a female android who finds out she is the chosen one and is trying to figure out how to handle her newfound mission. And Monae describes her own talents as superpowers. "My goal is to really help pre­ serve art and focus on ideas that are life-changing that will stay around for years and years, that will help the next generation that comes after me," she declares. It's a bold attitude, but that mindset is what helped Monae dur­ ing her years toiling underground before she started to chip at the mainstream. The Clark College Music Depart­ ing the Vocal Jazz Ensemble, under ment wil 1 be presenting its 4th annual the direction o f Janet Reiter, and the Clark Jazz Night, showcasing both of Jazz Ensemble, under the direction o f the Vancouver campus's acclaimed Rich Inouye. student jazz ensembles. Admission is free and open to the The concert in Gaiser Hall on Fri­ public and donations to the Clark day, June 4, at 7:30 p.m. will feature Music Department will be graciously both big band and vocal jazz featur- accepted at the door. F a - A u .. •- ' '- d - X ■C*- ’ 1 • v T - C J Ruh Laytoa-ifcTroaWemakers - CSA - M ezel P 1 Seven Reasons 7 * Transcendental Brass Band FEATURING Solar-powered stage I Green and Organic Beer garde« Food a«d Beverage ee Admission •fcBM'refc'Mf OX A OFF THE GRID J J d . . f ECOPALOOZA ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS CONCERT A lte rn a tiv e E nergy S ource w ith Z e ro E le c tric ity From The City Visit eco nw. oro for more detads ‘ a*"*'* Spr/tty A m a d Au/tdr-a/gcr Friday, June 11 7-9 p.m. - Contact: Lionel Clegg at 5 03 -9 1 6 -6 2 8 2 3920 N. Kerby Ave. Children (under 12) $5 Adults $ 10 Dixion ’s Rib Pit between 19th & 20th on Alberta Street 503-753-0868 .Adz t, , --- d JL I H o u rs 12 p.m . to 10 p.m . T ueday thru S aturday S unday after 3 p.m . 'Ä5- Congratulations! D in n e rs $ 9 .5 0 S a n d w ic h e s $ 8 .5 0 Cheryl L. Johnson Georgia State University Graduate from Mom & Dad, Family & Friends Wishing you much success. A nd Soul Food us o n ce y o u 11 c o m e back again The sounds of the powerful African drums rumble in the distance. A chant is called back and forth between the children. Drums and voices become a river o f sound and the room is transformed into an African village. Drum­ mers and dancers come into view. They begin Kukatonon ( “We Are One ”). Kukatonon is prou d to be supported by: Regional Arts & Culture Council, Self Enhancement, Inc, The Black United Fund o f Oregon, T he H erb ert A. T em p leto n F o u n d a tio n , Papa M u rp h y 's International, and The Matthew S. Essieh & Family Foundation.