UpCoMiNg ShOwS

Wed 25

Apache Cafe - *Al Smith's Midtown Atlanta Jam Session* - Doors @ 8:00pm, Show @ 10:00pm, $6 Admission, 18+ - Atlanta

the Drunken Unicorn - Customers, Biters (formerly Poison Arrows), Ralph - $5 for 21+, $7 for < 21 - 18+ Atlanta 9pm

Thu 26

Happy Thanksgiving!

Fri 27

Cartelthe Masquerade - Cartel, The Summer Set, and This Providence - Heaven - $16.50 adv - Atlanta 7pm

the Masquerade - Evol Intent and guests - Hell - $13 adv - Atlanta 9pm

Highland Ballroom - Living Rooms, Nomen Novum, Roman Photos DJ Set - Atlanta 9pm

the 5 Spot - Delta Moon and Joe McGuinness - $10 - Little 5 Points 8pm

The Earl - Today the Moon, Tomorrow the Sun, Abby Go Go, Carnivores - Atlanta 8pm

the Drunken Unicorn - *The Moon And Pluto Presents* : Gift Horse, Before The Solstice, The K-Macks - $5 for 21+, $7 for < 21 - 18+ Atlanta 9pm

Within Devestation

Swayze's - Black Friday Metal Fest - Within Devestation, Amecca, This Could Spell Disaster, Behold the Gates, A Path Less Traveled, Ash Tree Lane - Marietta 6pm

529 - REACTIONARY RECORDS FEST (Day 1): Barreracudas, Predator, Balkans, El Fossil, Shining Path, Carnivores - Atlanta 8pm - 2 Day pass for $15; $8 Day Pass

Sat 28

the 5 Spot - Coy Bowles and Friends - Little 5 Points

the Drunken Unicorn - Music Hates You, Gollum, Burden Of Vision - $6 - 21+ Atlanta 9pm

Lenny's - *BoStylz Ent. presents Crown of Horns Metalfest* : Alternator, Carosis, Solar, Psalm of the Fallen - $7adv, $9door - Atlanta 9pm

the Variety Playhouse - Shawn Mullins - $20 adv, $22.50 doors - Little 5 Points 8:30pm

Andrews Upstairs - Ben Deignan - Atlanta 8pm

Smith's Olde Bar - The Last Waltz Ensemble, Charlie Starr, The Dirty Dozen Horns Section - Atlanta 8pm

Smith's Olde Bar - Night Driving in Small Towns, Jeremiah Ezell, Kyle Hurd - Atlanta 8pm - DJ Sky in the main bar

Swayze's - Avicena, Yo Soybean - Marietta 8pm

529 - REACTIONARY RECORDS FEST (Day 2): GG King, Grinder Nova, Baby Dinosaurs vs. Extinction, John Barrett's Bass, Drum of Death, Coffin Bound, Humms, Cars Can Be Blue, It's Elephants, Vegan Coke - Atlanta 8pm - 2 Day pass for $15; $8 Day Pass

Sun 29

Smith's Olde Bar - Benefit for David Hulsey - The Shanghai Gesture, Mojo Filter, The Biggie Rats, Geisha Hit Squad, The Shards - Atlanta 8pm

Mon 30

Apache Cafe - *Art Mondays* featuring Josh Hunter - $5 - Atlanta 7 pm

the 5 Spot - Joe McGuinness - FREE - Little 5 Points 9pm

Lenny's - *KIRKWOOD BALLERS CLUB* - Free to play, to play fill out this form  - http://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?key=pBgq-zv5PW52NWQJGE9SgUA

Eddie's Attic - Atlanta's Premier Open Mic Night - click here for info on playing...

Smith's Olde Bar - Amarye, Deep Cut, Freddie Way - Atlanta 8pm

529 - Vipers And Adders, Campaign - Free Show - Atlanta 8pm

 

 

Click here for a complete list of upcoming shows...

 

 

 

 

Search the site...

SUBSCRIBE to our BLOGS & REVIEWS here...

News & New Tunes

 

Henry County's new venue, the Armory, is set to open Friday, November 27th. The Armory is located in Carriage Gate Shopping Center at the corner of McDonough Parkway and Jonesboro Road.  The address is 1128 McDonough Pl, McDonough, GA  30253. They are looking for sofas, folding tables, chairs and artwork!! Any help or donations are appreciated. Stay tuned to their site for upcoming concerts and details.

 

Jesse Nobody's new EP, "Sex, Love, Hate, Friendship", recorded with Joe Queer of the Queers is done, be on the lookout for that release soon!

 

Check out the Abominable Snow Jam December 7th at Tasty World in Athens featuring awesome bands Ocean is Theory and Come What May. $5 over 21, $7 under 21, doors at 9 pm.

Stickfigure is proud to announce that La Chansons are now on Stickfigure Recordings. Their sophmore release will be available on January 26th, 2010!

If you haven't heard of or been by Beatlab, check them out on Ponce next to the Publix. From their site,

'Beatlab is Atlanta's premier DJ & Producer lifestyle boutique. Owned and operated by an experienced and knowledgeable staff that specializes in the growing needs of today´s music industry.' 

So please go out and support a local store, get involved and meet some of the awesome people who work there, and hopefully you'll be pleasantly surprised by what you find. Check out their website at http://www.beatlabusa.com.

 

from the selmanaires on myspaceLocal Indie stars The Selmanaires and Atlas Sound are preparing to head out on full U.S. Tour starting October 15th at the Earl (with U.K. band Broadcast).

 

Attractive Eighties Women released their second album on August 29th. You can buy the album here. You can download some songs for free.

 

Electro Indie Superstars Today the Moon, Tomorrow the Sun will be in the studio this month in-between a month and a half long U.S. tour.

Quantcast

 

 Attila

 has been working on a new album and are hitting the road for a major U.S/Canadian tour starting Sept 17th. They'll be in Loganville and Columbus, Ga Oct 4th and 5th.

  Quantcast

The Bone Church are preparing to release a multitude of new songs in the coming weeks. Take a listen on their myspace page and show some support.

 

Collective Efforts have a new album titled Freezing World due out this fall.

 

 

 

 

50:50 Shot

 

the Nice Guise

Hip-hop outfit The Nice Guise debut album, 'Catalyst and Ty-vicious are The Nice Guise' is available at Criminal Records, The Bench, Beatlab, and Decatur CD. Also listen for them on WRAS Album 88.

 

Thy Mighty Contract

has their debut album out now.

 

CanCan

is still working on their new full length titled Monsters & Healers.

Promise December

Soil to Sky

has a new album coming soon.

 

 

Check out the Local in Marietta - now booking shows.

 

 

Mike Morgan of the North Trolls

 

Your Advertisement here...SUPPORT LOCAL MUSIC
Send us your questions, comments & concerns...
This form does not yet contain any fields.
    ...and here...

    Buy add space and directly support the local music scene. Send inqiries to beatlanta@gmail.com. SUPPORT LOCAL MUSIC.

     WELCOME TO BEATLANTA.com

    WE ARE STILL A WORK IN PROGRESS...BUT CHECK OUT THE STORIES WE DO HAVE...AND CHECK BACK OFTEN AS WE ROLL OUT MORE SECTIONS AND SERVICES.

    ------------------------SUPPORT LOCAL MUSIC----------------------

    Hold your mouse over the player to scroll through a selection of our latest videos. Click our channel name to see more than 200 live videos. Please subscribe... 

     

     

     

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

     Don't forget to read our blogs and utilize our posts section...and please, post your comments and thoughts to our blogs and posts.

                   

    Please donate and help us improve the site and put money in the hands of bands. All funds will be used to improve the site and and then be put back into the music community through various events and services we will offer. Help us grow and we will help the Atlanta music community in exceptional ways. Thanks everyone for your support. 


    Band website builder
    Quantcast

    Quantcast

    ------------------------SUPPORT LOCAL MUSIC----------------------

     

    Tuesday
    24Nov2009

    The Peppermint Confederacy - Interview, Album review and more...


    I found The Peppermint Confederacy while doing research for our bands section. I had never heard of the five piece from Woodstock, GA so I had no idea what I was going into. The album was free and immediately available so I decided not to listen to them through their myspace player; that way I was clueless to their sound when I sat down with the album. The album was instantly perplexing and hard to classify so I took it on for a few weeks, listening to it everyday, searching for new clues and answers. What I found was was an awe-inspiring experience that took me deep into the mind and somewhat fantasy like world of The Peppermint Confederacy and lead vocalist Josh Miller.

    In the Rain of Daylight is a wondrous entity from start to finish. The Peppermint Confederacy provide substance and introspect mixing folk and alt-country that provide the listener with a sense of being lost, but with the feeling that your on the way to a magnificent new beginning. It was an adventure to listen to with the fusion of an array of instruments and meditative, somewhat psychedelic effects, mostly with a folky acoustic foundation. Everything from Acoustic Guitar to Harmonica, Piano and Maracas come together to create a soft and sobering sound that hits with passion and insight.  

    What I enjoyed most about In the Rain of Daylight was its completeness. The music made is intelligent and well thought out with intention and purpose. It seems to have a goal and that goal is moving you towards thoughtful contemplation. Each song leads into the next with grace and smoothness that is not easily found or repeated, seeming to bridge the move from one device to the next; making it possible to experience the last song and the current one simultaneously, and with cause. The album is a journey with an emotional and subtle intensity. The lyrics stand alone as an impressive example of the art of language and arrangement. They are poetic and philosophical at their worst moments. Mix in some elegant and imaginative rumination on top of amazing and beautiful music, and you have Josh Miller and The Peppermint Confederacy's fantastically dreamy phenomenon, In the Rain of Daylight.

    The interview below is amazing. All due to the answers and what you find by listening to the members and music of The Peppermint Confederacy. My first impression of the sound was a little off, but thats simply due to its uniqueness and originality...so I challenge the new listener to take the album on for many rounds, and I'm positive you'll be impressed.  The lyrics can be found free at the band's myspace page. You can also download the entire album from there. READ the interview below. LISTEN to and go see The Peppermint Confederacy.

     

    The Interview...

    1. I really like "Fire on the Moonlight." Can you tell me a little bit about that song? I also really like

     The guitar part of fire on the moonlight was written by Chris with the help of whiskey, and the lyrics/vocal melody were written by myself under the influence of lots of cough gels.  I wanna use my voice to inspire people and change the world and I want others to use their voice and do the same be it a singing voice, speaking voice, shouting voice, or something like a paintbrush or keyboard.  There's a lot of selfishness and greed that makes life hell for a lot of people, but I want to inspire such a fierce optimism in spite of the darker elements of humanity that it rises up in people like the sun.  Perhaps I'm bipolar, but I really want to write from a perspective that is both sorrowful and hopeful, with the ultimate intent of inspiring others.


    2. I was going to ask if one person writes most of the music or if its a more collaborative thing, but reading that you were a solo act, it kind of answered that. However, in the newly acquired lineup, are you looking to move into a more collaborative role? If so, are you worried or anxious at all about where that may take your sound? Or are you motivated by the change? Has the move from a solo act to a full lineup gone smoothly for you and the band?  I only ask because the sound seems so direct and with intent. Each song is reminiscent of the last but each creates an individual experience; much like you might find in a solo artist. I'm just curious of the new dynamic of the band.

      We take turns coming up with the foundational element which is usually an acoustic guitar but might involve anything in the future. Typically if one of the guys has written the basic riff or whatever I have to work with them on structure as I add lyrics and make sure we have distinct transitions from verses and choruses and what not. When I write the song on guitar the guys just jam over and over until their parts sound precise. Things start off as jams and get played until the jams have evolved into parts.  Since the five piece became official we haven't done a lot of collaborative writing and we're trying to get into a habit of getting together for writing. I want our new material to be well planned out and tastefully executed so that when we practice enough everything sounds really tight, atmospheric, and dynamic. I think the best way to do that will be having all of us together working through each part, but who knows? We might just keep doing it this way if that doesn't work out. Neither the bassist or I know any theory whatsoever so it's hard to communicate.

    3. Were the array of instruments part of your solo act as well or did they come with the new musicians (cello, harmonica, Piano, effects)?

    I've always collaborated with talented musicians in my recordings. The first two Peppermint Confederacy albums were done in Jacksonville, Florida with a jazz/funk drummer/bassist named Johnny Rumbach. Geoff Knorr,  who played cello on In the Rain of Daylight, also played on my last album, "Glorybaby" (closest to a real solo project sound), but for the most part Chris and Greg have added all of the really interesting sounds to the mix. My music just doesn't sound nearly as interesting or full without them.

    4. I am a lover of poetry and lyrics myself; your lyrics are quite profound at times, very poetic, philosophical; they are amazing in that they could stand on their own as great poetry. Do you write the lyrics before the music? After? Or maybe a mix? Tell me a little bit about your writing process?

    I have to hear the song to really write good lyrics. I do write poems as well, but I used to try and play music to poems I'd written and it just never sounded precise enough. I like having the music because I can be inspired to write lyrics that really fit with the melody and capture the mood of the music.  Sometimes the sound of a song reminds me of the ocean so I write about the ocean and mix metaphors and perspective in where I can. With Chris and Greg's songs I like to have them sit there and play me the riff over and over or record it on the computer. I sing gibberish to get the melody and meter down and just write the lyrics into that sort of mold the music has created.

    5. The lyrics are intensely introspective...What motivates your lyric writing? 

    Most consistently for me It's my relationship with nature/God/the universe/whatever. I'm sort of a Transcendentalist and I get a lot out of looking around and finding beauty and inspiration simply in nature, but I tend to keep my own perspective and emotions involved because it's those elements that make them what they really are to me. A tree in and of itself is poetically not that significant, but what that tree makes me feel or think and how I relate to it is full of meaning if I can just look deep enough to figure it out and make the right connections. I can use external elements to explain internal struggles because those elements are all colored and brought to life by my perspective which is quite an introverted one. Being an introvert and a weirdo and a poor person have lead to some pretty desolate times in my life and I'm always sort of struggling with that, so when I look around and see a blade of grass I think of how much blades of grass must love the sunlight just like I loved a girl named Rae who was far away and I knew I'd probably never reach, hence the song Rae about a blade of grass in love with the sun.

    6. What do you use to add the effects in the ablum? Particularly, the spacey sound in "Thirst" that carries you through to the end of the song?


    There was talking and hanging out played backwards, a tom muffled with a cloth and hit over and over then maximized, a bunch of random guitar work with pedals being tweaked and played with.


    7. What do you hope people take away from "In the Rain of Daylight"?

    Rest and encouragement. I want people to be able to close their eyes and escape when they're listening all alone. Music keeps me going and has kept me somewhat sane/alive/and well and I'd like to return the favor to some other quiet obscure introvert out there; someone who relates to the sadness of the melody and who can identify or be brought to identify with the Joy hidden in the lyrics... like gold hidden deep in the ground.


    8. Any closing thoughts or something you would like to pass on to fans of the album? 

    Think for yourselves, hold on to your dreams, act like individuals, hang in there, and come see us play live sometime because we want to hang out with you and share a crazy, beautiful, spiritual experience with you involving music.  

    9) One last question....What is in the name "The Peppermint Confederacy"?  How did that come about? 

    The name came from a guy my mom dated when she was younger. He was in a cover band called The Peppermint Confederacy and they broke up while my mom was still dating the guy. She always talked about how cool that band name was when she found out I was into music and trying to start bands all the time. I was kind of into Tooth and Nail punk stuff at the time and wasn't really interested in calling my band that. The first song I played under this moniker was written in 2004 for my mom and it was played at her memorial service. I've kept The Peppermint Confederacy around ever since.


    Thirst

    The Peppermint Confederacy | MySpace Music Videos

     


    Blindlight - Live @ The Drunken Unicorn August 12th, 2009

    The Peppermint Confederacy | MySpace Music Videos

     

    See more videos from The Peppermint Confederacy here.

     

    Monday
    23Nov2009

    Damon Moon and the Whispering Drifters at the Drunken Unicorn...

     

    Chris from beatlanta recently caught Damon Moon and the Whispering Drifters  at the Drunken Unicorn on October 24. Here are a couple videos from the show and some album art and promotional items. This is some really great music...

     

    Meridian Road CD DigiPakBurlap EP

     

    Damon Moon and the Whispering Drifters is comprised of : Damon Moon - Vox/Acoustic/Electric, Jacob Smith - Lapsteel , Jake Suarez - Electric Guitar, Penny Croft - Vox/Keys, Charlie Bennett - Percussion/Noise. They have played Atlanta venues such as The Earl, Star Bar, Drunken Unicorn, 529 and various house shows..

     

      

     

    Beatlanta: Tell us about your history.

    Damon: I originally started this whole thing as a nights and weekends kinda recording project with a good friend of mine...  I had just quit another band I was in, and I felt the need to keep active musically, just recording little ideas, even if they didn't go anywhere.  But eventually, that idea turned into an album, and the album turned into a live band, and the live band turned into full US tours, which always seem to turn into bumper stickers and truck stops.

     

    Beatlanta: How do you feel about headlining in Atlanta?

    Damon: That's a weird feeling.  I normally don't think about the order of bands very much, even when I go see someone I'm a huge fan of.  The order bands play in always just seem to make sense most of the time I suppose.  I didn't think our first headlining show would be any different really, but leading up to the show, it was a little nerve wrecking.  It made me feel like a kid again, which I think is totally healthy.  It totally changes the way you use your drink tickets.  Haha.  It was a good time though, and I feel like this is a sign that we're doing some of the right things for a band our size.  Hopefully these shows keep comin' our way, and the crowd keep growing.

     

    Beatlanta: Can you give us some of your influences?

    Damon:  I'm influenced by all sorts of things...  Musically, I'm not really sure who I'm influenced most by... There's plenty of old country that's close to the top of that list, Townes, Hank, Waylon, and Willie for sure.  As far as more modern artists, atleast what I've been listening to lately, Chelsea Wolfe from Sacramento, Bruce Peninsula, Jana Hunter, and J. Tillman are all amazing.

     

    Beatlanta: Who are some other local Atlanta bands that you like?

    Damon: Ocha la Rocha- I used to be in this band a few years ago.  I split to do my thing, and things have worked out great for both bands I'd say.  They're all great guys.  It all kinda came full circle recently when both of us got booked to play the Art Outside Festival near Austin, TX recently.  Great times. When I was in Ocha, I went with them to Austin to do SXSW.  It was pretty cool to be back in TX hangin' out with those guys, talkin' about days gone by over cold Lonestar!

    Ponderosa - Some of my favorite dudes in the city, straight up!  So many great memories with JT Hall and Kris Sampson, back in the Nickel and Dime days.  Great dudes, great band.
    Magic Apron - I don't know too much about this band, but I've seen them a few times around town, and I loved them every time.  Check them out!  Beautiful songwriting.
    Jeffery Butzer - I've never met Jeffery, but we know one another.  His music is amazing, reminds me of what SHOULD be in Wes Anderson's films.  That's the vibe I get at least.  Great tunes.

     

     

     

    Saturday
    21Nov2009

    FREE Show tonight: The Bone Church, O.C.O. and Dreaming of Highfive...

     

     

    Wednesday
    18Nov2009

    $5 show this Friday...Electronic and IDM music at its best...

    Some of Atlanta's finest electro, IDM artists will be playing...

     

     

    REKLEIN

    Reklein is an Atlanta experimental, electronic IDM duo that have a really unique sound. I have not seen them live myself but I can imagine the experience could be an amazing accomplice to a night of mind altering deeds, if you know what I mean. I recently reviewed their latest album Piedmont...

     

    (review from beatlanta's review section)

    Piedmont is a unique and transforming album that provoked something inside of me. The song titled Intro immediately pierces you with a sense of eeriness that is deep and profound and the second song titled Cambric really continues that sense and sets the mood for a good experience. The sounds being mixed are a little dark and give you a dense feeling when you first hear them. Their the type of songs that could make the score to an awesome suspenseful moment in life, or the overtones to an epic moment in a Michael Mann movie. Especially Cassidy, a song that carries you along a non-wavering path of lightness and sense of purpose. It reminded me very much of some scores that were done by Moby for various things. Those of us familiar with his works for movies and things know that sense I am referring too. That sense that makes you feel like life is deeper than the day to day drudge (see the score, by Moby, to the movie Heat at the end when Al Pacino has to shoot Robert DeNiro). That sense that music is meaningful and guides us through that drudge. Reklein did that for me. I don't listen to IDM music as much these days as I have in the past but Reklein awakened an interest to seek out some more information into the local computer electronic scene. Reklein say they are a band that was formed to fuse two different styles of music and I can definitely see that in the eclectic mix of sounds that they produce. Piedmont intertwines very dense, industrial undercurrents glazed over with a more space rock theme. Sometimes the industrial part can get in the way of the sounds harmonizing but it is very short lived making the majority of Piedmont a really cool album that can be a great companion in seeking out some expansion of mind. I recommend the songs Cassidy, Sinke and Robb for the spacier sound that I prefer, and the songs Harland and Michnofor a little more industrial sound. All of them are equally wonderous though. Reklein also melds some more bubbly and perkier sounds as well. See the beginning of Larson and the song Cartwright. Larson does manage to take it back to the epic, score worthy material toward the middle of the song, making it one that is pretty encompassing of what Reklein is all about...bringing together two styles to make beautiful and thoughtful music. 

    Stream and Download the entire ablum Piedmont for free here.

    Reklein at NoPhest

     

    Here is an interview with Reklein:

    When did Reklein form? How do you know each other? Tell me a little about Reklein and your goals as a band?

    Reklein formed in 2007. Andrew and Hans went to middle and high school together and have been best friends for over 15 years. Reklein was formed to blend 2 very different musical styles. Reklein is about creating quality electronic music that is more song oriented.


    Who plays what instruments?

    Hans and Andrew both play and create all musical elements of the songs. We use keyboards and synths and mainly every type of VST known to man.

    What are the names of any current albums or any due out? Who produced them?

    Piedmont - 4.11.2009 rerelease 9.12.2009
    Produced by Andrew Velker and Hans Grubb

       
    What other local bands would you recommend to your fans and fans of local area music?

    There are many. A few are: The Fabric, Indigovox, Sensitive Chaos, The Secret Life and Citizen Green.


    How do you find the Atlanta IDM scene? Has it been kind to Reklein? Are there any towns in particular that have been kind to your band and what you're trying to do, more so than Atlanta....where is the IDM scene most appealing to you guys if outside of Atlanta?

    The electronic scene is small but tight knit in Atlanta. All the artists are very supportive of each other and great to work and play with.

    Tell us a little about how you feel about Reklein and its design, its perception and philosophy. Are there any major influences that influence your sound or made you want to start your band?

    We are heavily influenced by 90 electronic music of all kinds. FSOL, Orbital, Information Society, Nine Inch Nails just to name a few. Andrew and Hans love electronic music but wanted to make it more organic and personal. To take something synthetic and make it as real and organic as possible.

    Tell us a little about your favorite Reklein song? What should fans of your music know about it?

    All of our music is made to be listened and shared. Because we want everyone to have and enjoy our music, we release all of for free. It is licensed under Creative Commons to let everyone know that our music is created to be shared.

    Whats your favorite venue to play in Atlanta? How do you guys advertise your shows?

    We love Kavarna. We use a lot of social networking. Twitter, Facebook, Myspace and traditional means of flyers and word of mouth.

    What does Reklein listen to? Are there any "group" influences that allowed ya'll to really connect as a band and make such awesome music?

    We listen to a lot of different music. To name some, Nine Inch Nails, Wisp, Cake, Blackalicious, The Cure, Ohgr, Outkast, and many others.

    How do you feel about the future of the music industry?

    If the music industry continues in its current form it is doomed. It needs to be opened up, and more adopting of all the great new ways to promote, distribute, and consume music through the internet.

    How do you feel about file sharing? Do you feel that it's detrimental to the industry or do you find it a good thing - to help more people hear more music?

    Yes, we believe in file sharing and see it as a great and easy way for people to share their favorite music. It makes for a great word of mouth network and helps us to get more listens.

    Any Closing Comments?

    Reklein music is for everyone. Listen. Share. Repeat.


    Reklein on MySpAcE

     

     

    More videos by Reklein...

     

    R_Garcia:

    "R. Garcia began making loud noise with a Japanese drum-set, a pair of boom-boxes and a flamenco guitar. Through this ramshackle conglomeration of stuff, he accidentally discovered multi-track recording. The result of his experiments would lead him to record an acoustic punk album before he could even fully tune his instruments.

    As a teenager, Garcia’s vision quickly grew beyond the immediate desires for beer, pot, and girls. He founded 9D recordings, a cassette-tape label that was more responsible for audio terrorism than anything else. 9D would later evolve into the critically acclaimed Nophi Recordings — a small boutique label that would grow to share in the fathering of the modern American electronic music movement.

    Constantly writing, recording, releasing, and touring along the way, Garcia shows little sign of an easing stride. He currently performs with his band, The Nerd Parade, as a solo musician, periodic contributor to The Future Funk Collective, and a slew of other artistically-themed projects.

    His recent return to the left-field of electronic music has afforded him a newly found dedication to the craft, where he has found comfort as both teacher and student in the ways of computer music." - Polyvibe Records

     


    Click here to download 5 of his albums completely FREE.

     

    Threv:

    I've lived on the beach, a farm, suburbs, and the city.

    2004 Georgia Tech graduate.
    Computer Engineer. Synth designer.

    Sonic Alchemist.

    I make electronic music.

    2006 Atlanta Laptop Battle Champion
    2007/2008 Atlanta Laptop Battle Host
    www.atlantabattles.com

    DJ of WREK 91.1 FM "The Mobius" 5 years running.
    http://themobius.livejournal.com

    Co-Chair, Nophi Recordings
    www.nophi.net

    Member of The Secret Life
    myspace: www.myspace.com/atlsecretlife
    liner notes: www.threv.net
    blog: bassduck.blogspot.com




    Member of Harmaline
    myspace: www.myspace.com/harmaline
    website: harmaline.offnominal.com
    blog: harmaline.offnominal.com/blog
    labor day jams (featuring ryan dempsey, john jacobus, jeremy dickens, and omar torres): harmaline.offnominal.com/laborday

    DJ Tractorpull (performed at the masquerade's 2005/2006 new years bash and countless house parties)

    Throw events for Random Rabbit, Larvae, The Future Funk Collective, Hart Deer, The Secret Life, Harmaline, and several Nophest (www.nophest.com) bi-yearly 3-day festivals of merriment and music.

    Passionately addicted to music, excitement, and love.

    Click here to hear stream his music.

     

    Tay0:

    tay0 is a name I've used some variant of since 1986 as a conduit for my bedroom studio experiments while I played "real" music in a number of bands. I've done a few remix projects, some production for other artists, and some TV / film work. Most recently I've been collaborating with drummer Mitchell Sosebee and steelmaster Stacey Cargal under the name Ultralap, and playing live and recording with Atlanta singer-songwriters Lindsay Rakers and Blair Lott.

    Click here to stream music by Tay0

    PLEASE COME OUT AND SUPPORT THESE AMAZING BANDS. If its not your thing then come out and experience something different. SUPPORT LOCAL MUSIC.

    Sunday
    08Nov2009

    Kingnaldo, Rova Zetella and Merkava live at the Masquerade...

     

     

    Beatlanta - All three bands hail from the ATL. The show was last Wednesday at the Masquerade. While I had heard of every band on the lineup I had never seen any of them live nor heard any of their music, save a few samples of Rova Zetella and some of Kingaldo singing in Spanish. I am happy to report back that the show was amazing. If you weren't there, you missed a night of talented musicians laying it down like they do best.

    Merkava took the stage first. Merkava is a unique band in that they blend a variety of musical styles. They have a heavy sound but mix in some tropical and jazz themes from time to time. I also noticed that they had two drum sets on stage and at times would switch off playing the second set between a few different members. They also had some bongos they worked in every so often and would also switch vocalists. I like this because it screams talent and cooperation; showing that one member isn't afraid to give the spotlight or share his instrumental attributes with another musician. Its a sign that a band works together well and has greater potential to last.

     

     

    Merkava

    Merkava is Joey Jackson - Bass, Korg; Ben Jones - Drums, Synth; Matt Pethel - Guitar, Drums; Sam Jones - Guitar, Organ, Drums. This was my first time seeing them live and they impressed me enough to want more. Their broad and comprehensive sound is awesome and I think would be attractive to folks who enjoy an experimental, more spacey sound. I look forward to seeing Merkava again and I'm sure we'll have plenty of chances to do so. Here is a video from the show...

     

     

     

     

     

     

    More pictures of Merkava on beatlanta...

    See more videos of Merkava at beatlanta's youtube channel. Merkava on MySpacE

     ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    KINGNALDO

    Kingnaldo was cool. I had no idea what to expect going into the show. We had been promoting the show for a couple weeks and the only songs I listened to of his were sang in spanish. Not that that's bad or takes away from the music, it just gave me a different experience of what to expect. I was enthused to to find that not only was the music good but he gave a great stage performance as well. Kingnaldo is just straight up good rock music. It has elements of many different styles of music that blend together to create a loud, in your face, pure ROCK sound. Kingnaldo himself I can tell is a soulful being. His music speaks of rebellion and non-conformity, as punk as punk gets but keeping that aspect from dominating his style; that is to say that the music is not what you would label 'punk,' but the attitude is there. He has jazzy electronic guitar breakdowns; he uses a loud speaker to highlight his vocals in a couple different songs and he stops to thank his band and also gives the name of each song and sometimes what it is about before he starts. You can tell he is humble and very passionate about the music he puts out and the stage performance he gives. He would at times drop to his knees, guitar around his neck swinging out behind him, shrieking into the loud speaker tales and expressions of love and non-compliance.

     

    Kingnaldo's music is appealing to a broad base of fans as he includes darker motifs that would appeal to more new wave or heavy progressive types while at the same time intertwining jazz guitar and chaotic heavy metal riffs; all while the bass grooves and the drums beat rapid and dense. Add the rioting and revolutionary attitude and you have a meld of jazz infused rock and soul, pleasing to the ear and fun for the whole.

     

    See more pics of Kingnaldo on beatlanta here.

    See more videos of Kingaldo at beatlanta's youtube channel.

    Kingnaldo on MysPaCe

    ...and don't forget to catch a Kingnaldo Hot Topic Performance...

     

     ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

     

    Rova Zetella

    It was my first time seeing the band and I was blown away. For me, they definitely were the highlight of the show. They showed passion for their music and the band itself was powerful on stage, rocking out to every song, never looking bored. I walked away knowing that Rova Zetella were serious and adrenalized; that they would be moving forward more quickly than some other bands. I'm not sure of their status to date; I know they are not signed but I don't see that lasting too much longer.

     

     

    Boom!  Rova Zetella is Rob Hardie (Vocals/Keyboard); Jordan McGhin (Guitar); Matt Riggs (Bass); Ben Zahn (Synth); Raleigh Chesney (Guitar/Cello); Jacob Deel (Drums).

    What stood out most to me, besides that most of the band was barefoot, was the passion shown by Rob Hardie. Not only does he have the perfect voice for what Rova Zetella creates, but he performed with a zeal that comes naturally to talented lead singers. Although energized, Hardie managed to foster a melancholy radiance that felt extremely fitting for the atmosphere and mood that comes complete with Rova Zetella. Rob Hardie is also an amazing keyboardist. His addition to the music cannot be downplayed and he roams the keyboard with a quickness and accuracy that I have not seen too often. All in all, each member of Rova Zetella brought technique and powerful ability to each and every song. Their stage performance was magnificent and their songs remarkable. There was not a time that Jordan McGhin or Matt Riggs were not completely rocking out on stage. There wasn't a moment that Jacob Deel or Ben Zahn looked unfulfilled or lost in the tedium of repetition.

    Rova Zetella's creative use of keyboards, synth, numerous guitars and heavy drums is not to be missed. Their sound was vigorous and smart, sincere and demanding. The vocals are amazing and the lyrics meaningful. The animation and brilliance Rova Zetella brings to the stage is both striking and inviting and will not go unnoticed long.

    I am more than eager to see and hear more of Rova Zetella. They are now added most happily to my list of favorite local acts. I can't wait for their album to drop in early 2010 and I will be reviewing it here on beatlanta.com. I hope you can catch them soon and look forward to the album as much we are here and to what is sure to be a most positive review here on beatlanta.com.

     

    See more videos at beatlanta's youtube channel.

    See more pics of Rova Zetella on beatlanta here.

    Rova Zetella on mYSpaCE -  They have shows coming up so go see if you can make it.

     

    SUPPORT THESE AMAZING BANDS AND SUPPORT THE LOCAL MUSIC COMMUNITY.