Friday, January 30, 2008 A look at the world of music, from the obscure to the obscene, 30H!3 stage Heavy beats, catchy rhythms, vocals that complement the rap/pop genre, and lyrics that will make you get your grind on is what 30H!3 is all about. Two guys rapping, talking about sex, women, drinking, partying, everything a college stu dent wants and needs to listen to at any party. The band consists of two friends: Sean Matthew Foreman and Nathaniel Warren Seth Motte. Coming out of Boulder, Colorado, which has the area code 303, the inspiration for the band name. They met in a physics class at the University of Colorado, and, inspired by the underground hip-hop scene, came together to produce CONTRIBUTED PHOTO 30H!3 is a new face on the pop/nq scene thou consists of two college freinds who met at the University of Colomdo. They ai signed with Photo Finish Records. the music we know and love today. Their first album was self-titled and self-released in 2007. The band then signed to Photo Finish records, a branch of Atlantic Records. Their second album dropped in 2008, titled Want. 30H!3 has opened for Jessica Simpson. played on Tje Vans Warped Tour 2007 and 2008, played in Banboozle Left and the Pemberton Festival in British Columbia. Upcoming in the future of 30H!3 is a year of touring. They are supporting Katy Perry on a European tour in February, headlining the Alternative Press Tour, and making an appearance on Warped Tour this summer. A few of their songs have been used on episodes of The Hills as well. What sets 30H!3 apart from most other electronica/rap bands is their in-your-face cockiness and blatant use of sex appeal. Almost all of their songs have some sort of sexual innuendo in between heavy bass and rhythms. For any fan of punk or pop-punk music, the vocals of 30H!3 is what attracts listeners to them. They rap, but their voices ooze with a somewhat hardcore background. They remind me of today's Beastie Boys, modified for todays dance clubs. The lyrics are hard and well delivered, with intermittent poppy elements, showing their electronica side. The lyrics are so catchy that after a few listens, you'll find yourself dropping rhymes along with the guys. "Push it baby, push it baby, out of control, I got my gun cocked tight and Fm ready to blow." From the song "Starstrukk" this lyric outlines the bands love of riding the border between dance club music and all-out sex music. While none of their lyrics will make you sit down and ponder your life or blow you away, they will almost always make you get up and move or even laugh. Whether they're singing about one night stands (see "I'm Not Your Boyfriend Baby") or rolling up to clubs with women, 30H!3 delivers a fast-paced rap performance. Any fan of rap, hip-hop, or pop-punk music will dig 30H!3. They give a refresh ing break from all the mainstream, overplayed dance music that today has been reduced dawn to a single phrase that is repeated over and over to a constant beat. Their songs don't blend together, they get you up off your feet and put you in a dancing, happy mood. Most of their lyrics deal with what college kids have in mind anyways: partying and having fun. even if you stand —John Quincy Adams ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT _~ ~,~ y; J the new and the old takes center on the pop scene By Nicolas Kniseley contributing writer ntks(X)64psu.edu alone. Comic book films take world one cinema at By Evan Koser contributing writer emksllo(opsu.cdu When it comes to an artistic perspec tive in feature films. Hollywood's blockbusters typically lack in such a department. The idea of an artistic direc tion in a film is all but overlooked in the Hollywood sector, leaving it up to the independent film industry to fill the void. Venues like the Sundance Film Festival and, closer to home, the Erie Horror Fest provide the only available outlets for directors and producers who feel the need to express that artistic direction in a full-length, feature film. In the Academy Awards, as of now, five blockbusters are up for nomination for "Best Art Direction." This includes The Dark Knight, Changeling, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Duchess, and Revolutionary Road. Breaking this and past nominations down, this will be the first time since the movie Batman (which won the award in 1989) that a comic-book movie adap tation has received a nomination. Aside from these two, most award-winners have been musicals, book-to-film adap tations, or historical films. In 1972, the winner was CabaTt; Schinder's List in 1993, Titanic in 1997, Chicago in 2002, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King in 2003, and last year's winner was Sweeny Tocki. As it stands, Hollywood's typical box-office hits don't ever make the list ing of nominees. While this may seem unfortunate, it actually opens the door to many opportunities for independent film-makers. For instance, the movie many know and love, Saw, was released at the Sundance Film Festival in early 2004. After becoming a critical success there, it saw international release later that year in October. This pattern is not new to Sundance and is usually always the case with most successful - fitrns. This year festival will sliO‘'Vcas . e a full length feature film by Derrick Comedy. For those of you familiar, they got their start on You Tube. They, too, have hit it big and are now looking forward to con tending for a nation-wick theatre release of their movie, Mvstery Tem. While it may seem like there exists hope in the film industry for artistic direction, most films in the Sundance Film Festival go unnoticed by main stream attention. What truly matters to them is what Hollywood provides for them. And as of late, Hollywood seems to have an ever-growing comic-book movie adaptation market. In light of this, the comic-book tycoon, Marvel, even started their own production com pany, quickly buying the rights to as many of—if not all of—their own char acters that they could. Their own pro- This week in art history By Mike Wehrer copy editer mrwso94(wpsu.edu Jan. 29, 1983 - "Down Under" by Men At Work hit #1 on UK pop chart. The group is an Australian rock band with reggae influences. They won a Grammy in 1983 for "Best New Artist." Its members included Colin Hay, Ron Strykert, Jerry Speiser, Greg Ham, and John Rees. jections show they they'll have a fea ture-film release every year for the next five years. Comparable to this is the market for DC comic-book adaptations, especially after the success of The Ark Knight. Also waltzing through this new door of opportunity are movies filmed as if they were still comic-books. With the advent of Sin City and its critical acclaim by movie-goers came other films like 300 and The Spirit, both of which incorporated a specific filming technique to better capture the "feel" of the respective comic-book. With Sin City and The Spirit, both films gathered recognition for utilizing a unique color ing process, which renders most of the film in black and white but retained or added coloring for select objects. The movie 300 was filmed mostly with a super-imposition chroma key technique, to help replicate the imagery of the orig inal comic book. 1::=1 , 4 Watchmen film to debut on Itihorh 6th, 2009 Jan• 30, 1998 - Howard Stern Radio Show premieres in Indianapolis IN on WNAP 93.1 FM. The shock jock moved to Sirius Satellite radio on January 9, 2006, where he currently broadcasts on channels 100 and 101 in an uncensored format. He has also writ ten Private Parts, which he later made into a movie. The Behrend Beacon I 5 over the a time Following the success of these films is the upcoming Watchmen. Seemingly, the film will retain its orig inal color, but will be shot also using chroma key technique, helping to stay as true to the graphic novel as possible. To help the director and writers alike, actu al frames of the comic-book were used for the film's storyboard. Watchmen will be coming to theatres this March. With the doors open to more and more comic-book films and with the graphic novel, Watchmen, being critically acclaimed in Time's 2005 "100 best English-language novels from 1923 to present," it seems the door to artistic direction for any type of movie is up for grabs. Assuming The Dark Knight takes home the award movie-goers could start to see an influx of more comic book oriented artistic films in the near future. Feb. 1, 1974 Good Times pre mieres on CBS TV. This American sit com was a spin-off from the show Mau&', which was itself a spin-off of All in the Family. It starred Esther Rolle and John Amos and centered on their lives in a housing project in Chicago. Feb. 2, 1993 - Frito Lay pays court ordered $2,500,000 to Tom Waits for using his song. The company had ini tially asked Waits to use his music in an ad in 1988, and Waits had refused. Frito Lay then hired an impersonator to sing a song similar to Waits' "Step Right Up," off the album Step Right Up. Feb. 4, 1977 - Fleetwood Mac's "Rumours" released. The band formed in 1967 in London with Peter Green, Mick Fleetwood, Jeremy Spencer, and Bob Brunning. (Brunning was soon replaced with John McVie) The band had the most success during the late 1960 s and from 1975-87. Feb. 5, 1973 - Comic strip "Hagar The Horrible" debuted This syndicated comic strip was originally written by Dik Browne. Since Dik's death, his son Chris Browne has taken over the strip. The strip is a caricature of Viking life. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO