New Student Edition 2006 - The Michigan Daily - 9D Music Continued from Page 1D Heaven." Deciphering the lyrics is only half the fun. 3. Radiohead - OK Computer Post-apocalyptic rock with heart? You've heard people talk about them, calling Radiohead the best band of our generation, yet you haven't listened to a single track? Start with this, their most accessible and critically raptured album. Hell, if that's too much, just watch one of their trippy music videos on the Internet. Find some way to get Radiohead into your ears. You won't regret or forget it.,, 4. M.I.A. -Arular Last year this concentrated, elegantly precise doss of dancehall/revolution thwacked hor( -s of despondent college kids into reconciilng the dance floor and their political science classes on South Asia. Want to not look like a completely ignorant, culturally stunted bore? Give in to the fire of Arular. 5. Nick Drake - Five Leaves Left Every boy with a guitar: Put down your tool and worship. Drake, the wistful English folk bard, and his debut album are lucid five-minute daydreams into nature, love and subtly nuanced inves- tigations of his own soul. As indispens- able and heartbreaking as any of Keats's "Odes" and worlds more youth- ful (see the quiet drug nod in the title). Listen and real- ize your diary entries are shallow, dissonant and trite. That alone is grounds for rec- ommendation. move onto another influential New York band with deep-rooted problems and drug addictions. Loaded lays the founda- tion for modern indie-rock bands includ- ing The Strokes, and includes songs such as "Cool It Down" and "Sweet Jane" that cement its place as one of the best and most important albums in all of rock. 7.OutKast - Southernplayalisticadil- lacmuzik Why the weirdest little gem of South- ern rap? Because before "Gangsta Gril- lz" mixtapes were running the streets and before Lil' Wayne found surrealism, OutKastwas the progenitor of everything sacred, foul, beautiful and profane in the rap world of the Dirty Dirty. College is about confronting what you once thought was weird ... and eventually loving it. Even if you never master Hindi, you can certainly get OutKast's debut. 8. James Brown - Live at the Apollo Mr. Dynamite at his finest. Aside from being one of the most sampled American artists in history, Brown is also the greatest live soul act: He's hun- gry, sad, uproarious and, well, soulful. "Try Me" is the instant torch classic, but the hurried medleys of Brown's classic dance jams might be the closest thing to napalm energy on wax. To understand why people go to live shows in college, buy this album. 9. Interpol - Turn on The Bright Lights The grandchild of British post-punk, Interpol's "Turn on the Bright Lights" ushered in a revived era of simple, tight hooks and brooding imagery. Intro- ducing a highly stylized look and Paul Banks's distinctive drone, and you've got the perfect introduction for aspiring hip- sters into the world of indie rock. 10. Ghostly International - Tangent 2002:Disco Nouveau Pt.2 Whether or not you've ever listened to electronic music before (note: Euro-trash on the radio doesn't count), you're bound to love, and recognize, a number of tracks off of Ann Arbor-based Ghostly Interna- tional's Tangent Disco. The compilation introduced a new generation of artists from Detroit, techno's birthplace, and it ultimately helped Ghostly win Rolling Stone's hottest new label award. - Evan McGarvey and Punit Mattoo Courtesy of Britishinvasion.ca "Thank God this isn't my mug shet." FILMS Continued from Page 1D 3. "City of God" Probably the most wrench- ing film featured here, "City of God" will earn you a cer- tain level of prestige simply because it's filmed in another language, but you get the real cred if you can make it through the gang-initiation scene with- out flinching (we didn't). It's long. It's beautiful. It's tragic. It's the rise of the next great international filmmaker (Fer- nando Meirelles). You have no more time to waste. 4. "Fight Club" In the category of "you probably should have seen this already," "Fight Club" none- theless deserves a shout out if you're among the miscreants who haven't. David Fincher's graphic and funny film fea- turing a gifted actor and a matinee idol taking it to the streets is among the most often quoted (what's the first rule of fight club again?) and widely seen films among a generation thirsty for a movie mantra of chaos and non-conformity. 5. "Donnie Darko" Witness the bizarre church of "Donnie Darko." The Sept.- 11 era tale of a boy, a plane crash and his giant bunny touts a violent puppy dog of a hot young star (Jake Gyllen- haal) and a quasi-intellectual plot that doesn't make sense no matter how much weed you smoke beforehand. But people still love to talk about it, and it's always a treat to see which movies your classmates immortalize. Whatever your opinion of its off-the-wall ram- blings, this is the preordained poster movie of your genera- tion. 6. "Pulp Fiction" No film has ever been made quite the same since Quentin Tarantino's blood-and-guts storybook won top honors at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival. The pop-culture manifesto and unchallenged alpha and omega Uma Thurman in "Pulp": sexiest cokehead ever (sorry Kate Moss). of all things postmodern film- making is the single most influential American movie since its release, and it's a lot of fun, too. 7. "Chinatown" Forget it, Jake. Roman Polanski's seminal 1974 crime thriller is more than a cinemat- ic classic - it's a college kid's must see. Why? Because of the way its style and structure has influenced all subsequent film- making, because of the sleek cool of Jack Nicholson in his prime and the icy elegance of a young Faye Dunaway and, most importantly, because by the time you turn 18, you'll be 'expected to have an apprecia- tion of fine film that runs a little deeper than "The Matrix." 8. "Lost in Translation" Bill Murray may have sto- len the pre-release buzz for this lyrical film, but once the limelight faded, the real star shone even brighter. Scarlett Johansson is lingering - she's haunting and unflinchingly vulnerable, intangible but ach- ingly real. Your aunt may have called it slow, but you know better. Displacement and angst are what college is all about, and if you can't appreciate a contemplative Johansson, you might want to just give up and hang that Carmen Electra poster. 9. "Boondock Saints" Yeah, we haven't seen it either. We hear it's the new thing. 10. "Dr. Strangelove" Alternatively titled "or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb," Stan- ley Kubrick's 1964 classic is a searing indictment of Cold War politics that is at once brutal and hilarious. The University is full of liberals, and liber- als love criticizing the current administration. It's relevant. Get it? It's also fine filmmak- ing and fairly requisite viewing if you want to appreciate the myriad allusions to this great film found in every avenue of pop culture today. -Amanda Andrade and Jeffrey Bloomer BOOKS Continued from Page ID Bible as an essential germ of Western thought, well, you're doing yourself a profound aca- demic disservice. Also, the book features the sweetest character off all time: God. 4. "Ariel" - Sylvia Plath An experienced English major might argue this book is responsible for the whole of bad English 223 poetry. Maybe. But what Sylvia Plath does here is expose the internal workings of the modern American woman and all the expectations, conflicts and inner darkness that went unmentioned in centuries of poems. The essential tome of contemporary American verse, "Ariel" still shocks decades after its publication. 5. "The Sound and the Fury" - William Faulkner This book is notoriously difficult to get through, with syntax muddled almost beyond belief and adjectives layered upon nouns like extra frosting on a cake. But the rewards lie in the untangling: Faulkner's prose is rich, faceted, profoundly moving in its complexity and utter sadness. Its scope is unrelenting and the depths it plumbs in its attempt to puzzle out the meaning of human relationships will break your heart. 6. "To the Lighthouse" - Virginia Woolf A quietly moving portrait of a family slowly destroyed by the tragic events of an ordinary life, Virginia Woolf's study in time and its effects will drop you down and raise you up with its waves of stirring stream-of- conscious, a phrase that every aspiring col- lege student ought to know. If nothing else, this book will change the way you look at your family. And if you read it at the right time, it'll change your life. 7. "The Bluest Eye" - Toni Morrison Morrison is the most prolific, emotion- ally sundering novelist of our nation's past 100 years. "The Bluest Eye" is an autopsy of the life of society's designated "other." A young black girl dreams of being white, blue-eyed and accepted. The scalding trag- edies that unfold mark every character and piece of the novel, and, more importantly, the reader. 8. "Hamlet" - Shakespeare Two words: Oedipal complex. Plus ghosts, murder, intrigue and indecision, all wrapped up in the terribly beautiful language of Shake- speare's finest. This play is psychology, politi- cal science and English all wrapped up in some of the best drama in the Western world. Besides, if you can spit off Hamlet's mono- logue randomly, the chicks will dig you. 9."Uncle Tom's Cabin" - Harriet Beech- er Stowe Famously known as the book that started the Civil War, "Uncle Tom's Cabin" isn't read nearly as much as it should be. At its least incendiary, the book is a sharply emo- tional glimpse into the world of slavery before it became the center of a movement and the focus for innumerable tomes of liter- ature. More than that, it's a soft, almost lov- ing portrait of the life of a family controlled and dominated by an unjust social structure. Who knew that this little book could help spark America's bloodiest war? You will once you read it. 10. "Early Poems" - Robert Frost The rock of ages of American poetic identity and aesthetic, Frost, also the most fundamentally misread poet in our culture, shows all his gifts for resilient, easy diction and frighteningly real-nature scenes in this inexpensive collection of his first three books. "The Wood-Pile" and "Road Not Taken" are the undisputed classics, but his longer lyrics and narrative style inspire. - Evan Mcgarvey and Bernie Nguyen The Cradle Will Rock by Marc Blitzstein Art is never dangerous - unless it tells the truth. A piece of theatrical history Duderstadt Video Studio * Oct. 5 - 15, 2006 Dept. of Theatre & Drama The Pajama Game by Richard Adler, Jerry Ross & George Abbott The current smash hit of Broadway - love and labor clash in a pajama factory. Mendelssohn Theatre * Oct. 12 - 15, 2006 Dept. of Musical Theatre Musical Theatre II To be announced A full scale production of a new musical. Duderstadt Video Studio Nov. 9 - 12, 2006 Dept. of Musical Theatre Cosi fan tutte by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Long before "Temptation Island, "men tested their lovers'fidelity at their own peril' Sung in Italian with English translations. Mendelssohn Theatre * Nov. 16 - 19, 2006 Opera Theatre You Can't Take it With You by George Kaufman & Moss Hart Only family could inspire such a madcap comedy!/By American theatre's cherished icons Kaufman & Hart. Power Center * Dec. 7 - 10, 2006 Dept. of Theatre & Drama The 2006-0? - School of Music, Theatre &Dance season promises superb entertailmlent! Student tickets are only $9 with ID - 45% off the regular price! Get yours now at the League Ticket Office in the Michigan League.. Rituals & Reveries Choreography by Martha Graham, guest Leyya Tawil, and faculty An evening of modern dance featuring the seminal work of dance pioneer Martha Graham. Power Center Feb. 1 - 4, 2007 - University Dance Company She Stoops to Conquer by Oliver Goldsmith Blind dates and practical jokes lead to laughter in this tale of mistaken identity. Mendelssohn Theatre - Feb. 15 - 18, 2007 Dept. of Theatre & Drama The Bartered Bride By Bedrich Smetana A comic folk-opera full of spontaneous charm. Sung in Czech with projected English translations. Power Center * Mar. 15 - 18, 2007 Opera Theatre The Who's Tommy by Pete Townsend and Des McAnuf An entertainment juggernaut of sights, sounds and dance - the quintessential rock musical. Power Center Apr. 12 - 15, 2007 Dept. of Musical Theatre