9 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, September 16, 2010 - 38 I * Th Mihign Daly mihigadaiyco Thrsda, Spteber 6, 010- 3 The dos and don'ts of decorating your dorm Guitarist Benjamin Curtis loves touring, harmonizing, chilling ... and twins! The Seven Bells to There are two things I will keep with me forever upon my graduation from the University of Michigan, along with my degree in one hand and a pile of debt in another. ' One of them is my M-Planner, and the other is my poster col- lection.4 When I JENNIFER was younger, XU I could never understand how obsessed my parents would get with remodeling their per- fectly fine kitchen or redecorating their garden with even more use- less masses of brick and mulch. But standing in my one-bedroom apartment with the smelly sink and the window that only opens a crack, I feel so much homeowner's pride I could burst. Above the couch, there's my "America's Next Top Model" shrine and some weird pages I ripped from Nylon that say "The revolution will be televised." On top of the couch, a miniature Charlie Brown-esque evergreen tree that my roommate bought from Meijer last Christmas. And then there are the pictures of Woody Allen scattered around every corner; the posters of "Trainspotting," "Lolita," "Away We Go," "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" and "Gosford Park" framing my bed; the photo- graph of a tight-shirted Michael Vartan winking cheekily at my roommate and me whenever we go to brush our teeth. And thoughI am not usually one to dispense advice, I believe that, in the spirit of the nation, we should encourage the public to partake in a little Martha Stewart. And so, some not-very-helpful tips on apartment/dorm decorating: Themes are always good - The theme of my apartment is "I do not like white walls soI am just going to cover every inch of it with pictures that I like," but you can adopt any theme of your own. If you l can pri Bay anc loud ex come i bake a1 tantali: tables t And th Be i like the but if y clawing ate it. T tion of photos. stuff I ally of' to CVS of them cents, a printso Be c room is for ally trouble F br Picass on you: even b poster: a good but wh Blockp favorit and pri your ci All it rE pair of Post I firstn my roo in orde conscic purcha for stic turesi killing weeks at all ti to dinn days ot the fire ike "Transformers," you (this happens at least once a day, nt out pictures of Michael no lie) and the high-frequency d then create impossibly vibrations of the alarm managed plosions whenever people to knock down three of my poster- n. If you like food, you can puttied posters nearby. Once lot of cookies and set your again, poster putty sucks. zing treats out on your Ugly lamps are OK - When o double as room decor. buying lamps, it's better to value en invite me over. function over style. Right now nventive - I know that's I'm staring at this beautiful five- most generic advice ever, color floor lamp held up with ou have any out-there idea a shaky metal stick andI am g away at your brain, liber- deathly afraid it's going to fall on ?he most ingenious inven- my head. If you're going to invest my short life is my CVS in at least one ugly piece of crap, . I save random pictures of please make it your lamp. Plus, like on the internet (usu- you can cover its hideousness Woody Allen), and then go by doubling it as a coat hanger, to buy 4x6 glossy prints and believe me, in your 8.5x8.5 a. Each print costs like six postage-stamp dorm room, you'll cnd they often give free want anything that will keep you away anyway. from falling face-forward on top heap - Because your of your clothes as you waddle s only a temporary haven your way across the bedroom your academic and social floor. s, don't buy original Indulge on lasting items - I bought this $100 shaggy blue chair from Dry Ice a million years back on a total whim. Years ?oster putty later, people started sitting in it )ke my heart. so much that it started smelling k a little funny. All in all, a good and honorable investment. Other things I have: a paper lantern o paintings and frame them from some Chinese store in New r walls. Actually, don't York, a photo mobile hanger from uy frames. The student Middle Earth and a canvas pic- sale at the Union is always ture of three feathers from Urban resource for cool prints, Outfitters. y not be even cheaper? The point is, no matter what osters.com blows up your the method, be decorative, and be e images from the internet self-expressive when you're doing ints them into a PDF file for it. At the risk of sounding too anti- utting and taping pleasure. hipster, I think that it's healthy to eally takes is a printer and a get attached to the new posses- scissors. sions that we have once in a while. ter putty sucks - When After all, we're students, and we moved into my apartment, don't own many things in our immate and I decided that, lives other than the clothes on our r to be all environmentally backs and the computers you're ous or whatever, we would reading this column on. Follow ise some blue poster putty my advice, and sooner or later king up our 203,948 pic- you'll be known in your hall as nstead of resorting to tree- "that crazy person that is always rolls of tape. Cue to two standing on chairs taping things." of catching fallen posters It's a good feeling. toll at the Bli Chill homespun act to spread the good vibes in A2 tonight By SHARON JACOBS Assistant Arts Editor It's a little surprising that the three members of NYC-based School of Seven Bells have embraced live audiences. The SeVen Bells band's intimate, . homemade style Toght at suggests a shyer 9 pli. .i group, but the The Blind Pig band is sure to $12 greet its crowd at the Blind Pig tonight with enthusi- asm. "When we made (our) first record ... we knew we were going to play live, but we didn't realize that ! we were going to love it as much as we do," guitarist Benjamin Cur- tis said in an interview with the Daily. After completing Alpinisms, its worldly and otherworldly 2008 debut, School of Seven Bells took off for a year of touring. * "It was amazing," Curtis said, "connect(ing) with people and just discovering this really intense energy. We weren't really aware of the power there." It was while on tour in Europe that Curtis and identical twin bandmates Claudia and Alejan- dra Deheza were inspired to start writing their second album, Dis- connect from Desire. More emo- tional than its predecessor, Desire retains the band's wispy, ethereal sound. "All these ideas started coming to me really quickly," explained Curtis, who handles the band's dreamy and sparse music while the Dehezas write and harmonize the lyrics. "I'm deaf and I blast my head- phones," he continued. "Ally and Claudia started writing, just from the headphone bleed." Before Desire was completed, the band had already found its title in a mystical deck of cards - Brian Eno and Peter Schmidt's "Oblique Strategies." "They made it as a tool for art- ists ... to help you out of a cre- ative problem," he said. Alejandra Deheza drew a card that read "dis- connect from desire," a message Curtis said resonated with the band. "We knew we were going to write a record that was sort of a lot more personal and original." While School of Seven Bells certainly concocts its own origi- nal blend of delicate melodies and slowly shifting accompaniments, it's often boxed in with a shoegaze label and treated with a string of My Bloody Valentine and Coc- teau Twins references. Curtis is resigned to the shoegaze tag but still finds it limiting in some ways. "I think everyone has a little shelf that they need to put things in, and I'm fine with that," he said. "What's unfortunate about it is, it seems like more often than not, labels scare people away from nd Pg music than steer people toward it. "There's a lot more subtleties to the genre terms than most people think about." Veterans of music biz label- ing and terminology, Curtis and the Deheza twins met while their former bands (Secret Machines and On!Air!Library!, respectively) were both supporting Interpol. Curtis soon left his old band to focus on School of Seven Bells. "There's a certain delicacy to our music that doesn't really exist in the Secret Machines," Curtis said, "there's just a bigger dynam- ic. And I kind of like to explore that a little bit more." But one thing that Secret Machines does have in common with School of Seven Bells is fam- ily ties: In the former band, Curtis played alongside his brother Bran- don Curtis; in the latter, he shares the stage with two sisters. "They have a particular way of talking to each other that I don't think anyone else can really understand, kind of like a lan- guage, like a tone," Curtis said. "It's hard to read, but it's cool." And Curtis remains unfazed by the duo's closeness. "If there's anything I feel left out of, I'm probably glad that I feel left out of it," he said. "Family dynamic's pretty intense." Maybe it's that intense family aspect that gives School of Seven Bells shows that special intensity - based more on crisp harmonies and communicative lyrics than a big sound - that will be on dis- play tonight. imes of the day, from 2 a.m. sertime. In one of the best f my life, I accidentally set e alarm off while cooking Xu's next theme is now-I-like- white-walls-must-burn-all-posters. To join in, e-mail jennifxu@umich.edu. CAREERS AT THF NATIONAL SFC RITY AGENCY Get to know NSA. University of Michigan SWE/TBP Career Fair Tuesday, September 28 10 m. -4pm. Pierpont Commons, Duderstadt Please bring a resume and unofficial transcript You already know that intelligence is vital to national security. But here's something you may not know. The National Security Agency (NSA) is the only agency charged with generating intelligence from foreign signals and protecting U.S. systems from prying eyes. Make a critical difference with what you know at NSA. KNOWING Meet and Talk with Recruiters to Discover Excellent Career Opportunities in These Fields: Computer/Electrical Engineering Computer Science Information Assurance Mathematics Foreign Language Intelligence Analysis Cryptanalysis Signals Analysis Business Management Finance & Accounting Paid Internships, Scholarships, and Co-op Plus other opportunities WHERE INTELLIGENCE GOES TO WORK* PLEASE JOIN DAILY ARTS WE WROTE THIS HAIKU FOR YOU IT WAS QUITE DIFFI- www.NSA.gov/Careers APPLY TODAY WATCH THE VIDEO '',I Get the free App for your camera phone at gettag.mobi and then launch the App and aimit at this tag. E A V FOLLOW US ON Find us on Facebook Search: NSACareers E-mail join.arts@umich.edu for information on applying. U.S. citizenship is required. NSA is an Equal Opportunity Employer. All applicants for employmentsare considered without regard torace, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status, disability, sexual orientation, orstatus as a parent.