The University of Calgary Gauntlet®
  2005-03-03
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Director Departs
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The face of Alberta in 200 years
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Lewis still missing
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T-Birds soar while Dinos stuck in water

Entertainment
Music Interview: No need to Crtl+Alt+Delete
Theatre Profile: Beware of Blast
Movie Review: The end of the Ramones' century
Music Interview: Saving classical music with a sax
Music Interview: The travelling Ghost of Modern Man
Music Interview: Keeping your mind in the Guttermouth
Music Interview: Neo-funk has a new name: Sekoya
Music Interview: Great White still striving for greatness
Theatre Review: Vagina togetherness
Spun: Mos Def
Spun: Tetrix
Spun: Sleeper Set Sail
Spun: Ghosts of Modern Man

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NUTV Does Documentaries



  Spun: Mos Def


Spun



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The New Danger (Click for larger image.) The New Danger

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ENTERTAINMENTSpun: Hollerado
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ENTERTAINMENTSpun: Four Tet

Nowadays, too many people know how to just loop a catchy sample. Let's face it, in these times the bar has been raised. But enter the worthy Mos Def--half of Blackstar, part-time movie star and a brilliant musician .

His second solo The New Danger is like the splattered paint of Pollock--complexly organic and steeped in darkness. Flirting with a multitude of styles, Mos Def creates something part-hard rock, part-Marvin Gaye and even a dabble of ambient music.

Melancholy, his raps and vocals carry a bitter sweet and sometimes angry sentiments. "Sunshine", for example, begins with a spy movie beat, while soft string music cuts the song in the middle and heavy metal music, complete with shouts and screams, finishes off the track. Mos Def understands the power of minimalism, hence a few trip-hop tracks like "The Panties."

Even more impressive is "The Beggar", a soulful, emotional track comparable to a Nina Simone classic. Through his efforts, Mos Def has outshone Black Thought, Talib Kweli, K-os, Andre 3000 and Common.

Mos Def introduces his band Black Jack Johnson (not to be confused with Ben Harper's friend Jack Johnson) in this new album. Live drum beats, jam sessions and power chords are showcased throughout like black dots on a sheet of paper and the connecting lines include everything from flute sounds to jazzy productions, falsetto singing to hard-core raps about the ghetto. Yet in all this, Mos Def remains very true to himself.

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