Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Thanksgiving Eve is Pink Pompeii

Pink Pompeii is headlining the Drunken Unicorn on Wednesday, November 26th, 2010 - Thanksgiving Eve.



Pink Pompeii was a song about spilling pink paint on ants.
That song was written by cellist/vocalist Nan Kemberling when she was in the acoustic duo “Da Dum” with guitarist/vocalist Rob Gal.

During the time that Pink Pompeii was a song, Rob Gal was also in the band, “The Holland Dutch,” with guitarist/vocalist Courtney King and Nan went on an orchestral tour in China. When Nan came back, she and Rob wanted to change Da Dum from an acoustic duo to an electronic dance rock trio, as is often the case in similar situations. They asked Courtney to join them in this endeavor and she consented. It was at that time the three decided to multi-purpose the name Pink Pompeii to include their new ensemble as well the established song title.

Nan’s songwriting has not been limited to the song Pink Pompeii, in fact she is a prolific songwriter. Courtney never lets the fact that she didn’t write Pink Pompeii slow her down for even a moment. She too incessantly puts the pen to paper and between her and Ms. Kemberling, the music spews like hot lava from the very mouth of Mount Vesuvius.

Mr. Gal’s role in all this is that of instrumentalist and co-arranger. After all, he has been a producer, engineer and musician for decades.

Above all, each Pink Pompeiilian is a born entertainer determined to “bring it” to the people at every chance. The band is well groomed in every sense of the word and proud of it!

Pink Pompeii on Sonicbids

La Chansons are performing second.



La Chansons is the Atlanta husband and wife, dance pop duo, Greg and Carson Keller. Greg and Carson both grew up in Marietta, Georgia, but did not know each other until they were in college. They then found out that their musical tastes had taken similar paths over the years. Greg grew up on Smashing Pumpkins, Nine Inch Nails and Nirvana while Carson was listening to Nirvana, Hole, and Bikini Kill. Their tastes turned more electronic in their later teen years, as Greg got into Paul Oakenfold and Carson discovered Le Tigre. From then on they each fell in love with dance music in all it's forms, but their teenage musical tastes still seep into their songs and continue to influence them. La Chansons was created in 2004 when Greg had just graduated from UGA, and his Athens punk band had just split up. Carson was an art student in Atlanta with a life-long fantasy of being in a band. Greg wanted to start a new music project and noticed Carson's artistic talent. In the beginning, La Chansons was comprised of Greg's songs and Carson's accompanying low-fi music videos. As their relationship grew, La Chansons became more of an equal collaboration. Now Greg writes and plays the music, and Carson writes the lyrics and sings. In their relationship they are able to pass ideas back and forth freely, and in doing so they make each other's music and art better. They took their name from an old French children's book found at Carson's parents' house. While their sound has progressed since their inception in 2004, their name, "chansons", meaning songs, still applies. Their focus has always been on writing songs that are catchy, well-crafted, and from the heart. As for the "La" in La Chansons, they still don't know if it's correct or not, but they don't really care. They like how it sounds, and it reminds them of singing. La la la la la!

La Chansons on Facebook

Apollo Gold is the opener.



Apollo.Gold is a young artist who defines pop music with catchy, yet meaningful songs that will have a long lasting effect in the music industry. His inspiration for music comes from life experiences as he wishes to inspire others to live by art and with the power of their soul.

Apollo Gold on Facebook

$5, 21+
Doors @ 9 pm

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Wowser Bowser EP release show on Saturday, November 20th, 2010!

Wowser Bowser are having an EP release show at the Drunken Unicorn on Saturday, November 20th, 2010.



"'To the Pleasant Life!" intones Pettis, sounding like Bowser if he was actually Charles Foster Kane, and Mario was this plumber that reminded him of the solitary despondency of wealth. But then Mario becomes a charity project, invited to "kick it" and get on a train like it was before sunrise on a bucket list. Juxtaposed with the mdma bubbles they're embedded in it comes off like a spirit guide on the world of tomorrow ride at epcot, layering gurgling synths on top of what sounds like a keytar if it were actually a guitar shaped like a korg. Just don't call him twee, he might cry a tear in the shape of a K." -Discount Coupon

Wowser Bowser on Myspace

This Piano Plays Itself are the third performer for the evening.



"A friend of mine from Georgia, Davy over at Ohm Park, sent a local Atlanta band my way that he thoroughly enjoys. It's always a treat receiving a new and unheard of album from a trusted confidant, much preferred over the hit and (often times) miss approach some you crazy publicists utilize. The band is called This Piano Plays Itself and have made a name for themselves around Atlanta with their stellar live performances, something definitely believable considering their big sound.

The Georgian quintet have a guitar-driven shoegaze sound that reminds me of Explosions In The Sky or Slint, with billowing sounds and more layers than Trident's latest marketing gimmick. I'm not sure if you've got a set of superb speakers or rock out your tunes on ear buds, but "Who We Were" jams out like something epic on a stellar set of headphones. Hopefully I'll get a chance to experience This Piano Plays Itself in person soon." - I Guess I'm Floating Blog

This Piano Plays Itself on Facebook

Co Co Ri Co are the second band of the evening.



cocorico, cew cew ree cew, cah cah ri cah, co co sleepo, coco puffo, key key n re sow, co co cola, ji ji boo boo, milky stew, milky milky bunches, golden gooey brews, sticky riffkins, rocky mountains, grizzle grass, tiny swimmers, blue tubes, foam rooms, cozy tombz, s's, waffle spouses, floody, bumpkin, bright headside, water bedside, space bar, jambient: this is it (this is jambient), old man looking up, never (not) knowing, squeeze pop, splash, mrkrs, invisible wings, dip, blues core, sleepy splash, mis take is land ..

Co Co Ri Co on Myspace

Sunspots are the opener.



Sunspots was a bedroom project but it is now a band. Sunspots is fueled by euphoric angst and a general desire to unfold into the outside world through carrying on at excessively loud volumes.

Sunspots on Myspace

$5 in adv, $7 DOS, 18+
Doors @ 9 pm

Friday, November 5, 2010

Hank & Cupcakes play on Friday, November 19th

Hank & Cupcakes are headlining the Drunken Unicorn on Friday, November 19th, 2010



"You wouldn’t call Hank’s style “minimalistic”: the man can deliver at once melodic riffs and low frequency lines, mastering left hand dexterity, right hand picking authority, and huge array of filters, flangers and followers to make one of the freshest signature sounds I've heard in the bass world"
The Deli Magazine - 7.20.10, NYC

Funky fresh sound
Hank & Cupcakes heat up Williamsburg with new EP and sizzling live shows
On stage, at least, Cupcakes can’t help but stand out, with her explosive, commanding voice and overt sexuality (despite her cutesy nickname, this is a woman who penned the track “Pleasure Town,” a funk-disco enthused “Love Shack”). When they play Brooklyn Bowl this month, Hank & Cupcakes look to “rock the stage really hard and hopefully burn the place down,” said Cupcakes. Don’t be surprised if they do.."
The New York Post - 6.15.10

"Cupcakes is an empowering woman. Much like Madonna in that she’s not afraid of her sexuality, dislike the Britney Spears alikes in that she has some integrity and sophistication and can actually write lyrics, and like Patti Smith in that she is often quite primitive and not afraid of expression. She’s a rockstar, capable of moving crowds....Hank is perhaps the best bassist I’ve ever seen..He is both lead and rhythm, playing purely with the four strings of his bass and a few pedals. Other bass players around the city are neither jealous nor loving, they are simply in awe..."
Knocks From The Underground - 6.9.10 NYC

Hank & Cupcakes on Facebook

Kenan Bell is the third performer.



You can think of Kenan Bell’s arrival as a shining star in the constellation of hip-hop as one of the slowest-developing coming-out parties ever.

Bell grew up in the lily-white Los Angeles suburbs challenging stereotypes. He’d look askance at anybody who assumed because he was black and tall he played basketball. He’d smile knowingly at anybody who expected him to be more gangsta than skater. He’d fidget nervously, self-conscious about his high-pitched voice, when anybody presumed he should be a rapper.

“I never wanted to be that guy, the one who plays to everybody’s expectations,” Bell says. “But I have started to realize who I am, that I have a deep love for hip-hop as an art form, that I need to do this.”

“Picture a bookworm with a ghetto blaster,” he raps in his song “Sounds Awesome” — and if you can imagine that in a 6-foot-5, sunglasses-sporting, argyle socks-favoring package, you have one snapshot of who Kenan Antony Bell is.

Now the 26-year-old, who has spent the past four years teaching spelling, vocabulary and handwriting to fourth- through sixth-graders, is ready to drop his own words on a hungry legion of hip-hop purists.

Bell’s debut album “Until the Future” is hip-hop for people who know their Basquiat as well as their basketball, who are as liable to quote Langston Hughes as MC Hammer, who can party as hard to a soundtrack of Kool Moe Dee as the Offspring.

His songs — biting yet playful, bumpin’ yet tuneful — were birthed in the journals he started keeping as a child. “I kept a diary, but I would write the entries in rhymes,” Bell says. “Every once in a while, I’d tell my friends, ‘Let me audition this for you guys,’ but I was too shy to perform. I always felt like kind of an ugly duckling in the vocal department — I’d get clowned for my voice.

“I was even shy being the ‘K’ in the Thanksgiving play in elementary school.”

Not that you’d know it now.

Boyhood pals Jason Burkhart, now the rapper’s unhinged hype man, and Jon Siebels, the former Eve 6 guitarist, kept after Bell to step to the front, and their rock-oriented production was too catchy to resist. After a long day of teaching, it wasn’t uncommon for Bell to walk to his car and find a CD of backing tracks waiting for him.

The music sprang from the friends’ wide-ranging common interests — Bell has a deep, abiding love for old-school hip-hop but is just as likely to name-check Miles Davis, Charles Mingus, Jimi Hendrix, Parliament, Michael McDonald, Sade and the Cocteau Twins as he is Arrested Development.

Recorded over parts of 2008 and ’09, “Until the Future” manages to be smart, sassy and sensitive, a rump-shaking liturgy from somebody who can wrap his brain around the existentialists but who might lose his heart to the girl at the next table.

From his first live show in January, 2008, Bell proved he can party hearty as well as smartly. Besides Burkhart and Siebels, his live band has boasted such ace players as Josh Klinghoffer, Eric Gardner, Matt Reagan, Nicholas Johns, Joey Rossiter, Kevin Harp and Seth Johnson.

Emerging from the Los Angeles indie scene — Bell did a residency at the respected Silver Lake club Spaceland — the band has opened for such varied artists as De La Soul (on its 20th anniversary tour), Jane’s Addiction, Dizzee Rascal, Kool Keith, Illinois and the Heavy.

Bell’s exuberant live performances belie his bookish past, but he’s not trying to prove anything, except his commitment to a new era of hip-hop.

“I never think, ‘If the haters could see me now …’” he says. ‘That’s not what motivates me. It’s the kids coming up who I feel deserve something better than the rap that’s out there right now. It’s the same passion I have for the kids I’ve been teaching — passion for the future and the future of this music.”

His song “Like This,” appeared on the video game NBA 2K10, was released as an iTunes single in November. And the single “Good Day,” unveiled in mid-December, boasts the B-side “T.G.I.F.,” featuring a collaboration with West Coast pioneer Aceyalone.

“Until the Future” will be released on March 30, 2010 (the birthday of Bell’s mother Charisse) on Siebels’ new label, Sonata Cantata Records.

Kenan Bell website

Biker Daughter is the second performer.



"Looking for the 'girl next door'?...you've found the wrong place, this girl happens to live two houses down from pure American Badass. Listening to "Nothing To Say", the first track of the EP and thinking "Peaches?" — right, this EP doesn't fall too far from that tree. The same hard electro intensity will put Biker Daughter at the top of anyones weekend party anthem list, male or female, you'll feel like the sexiest fucker in the bar. Kenan Bell makes an appearance on "Setback", showcasing BD's flow, reminiscent of Scream Club - holding her own against Bell's unique delivery. So I've made it to "Whole Wide World"...and by this point I’m impressed by what the 5-track EP has achieved in mixing old influence with new ideas...what else will Ellei J have to 'Say'."
— David Varela, Oh Snaps!

Biker Daughter website

Costume Party are opening the show.



Costume Party is a new local electro / pop / dance act featuring Evan Andree

Costume Party on Myspace

$6 in adv, $8 DOS, 18+
Doors @ 9 pm

Advance tickets available @ Ticket Alternative, Criminal Records,
Decatur CD, Fantasyland Records and the following CD Warehouse locations: Buford, Duluth, Kennesaw, Lawrenceville and Roswell.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

MC Chris live at the Drunken Unicorn on Wednesday, November 17th

MC Chris will be performing at the Drunken Unicorn on Wednesday, November 17th, 2010



This is nerdcore

"Rappers in Middle Earth costumes, rhyming about Star Wars, getting into beefs with Wired magazine ... Welcome to the nerdy face of hip-hop, says Marcus O'Dair

In a few weeks' time in Florida, there will be an entire festival dedicated to one musical sub-genre, a sub-genre that was regarded as a joke when it first came to attention at the start of this decade. Now, maybe, the joke is on those who laughed at nerdcore. Where conventional hip-hop celebrates wealth and sex and drugs, nerdcore eschews gangsta themes for "geeksta" interests - its MCs rap about Star Wars, about World of Warcraft and about computer coding. If that's what you want from a festival, then get along to - you guessed it - Nerdapalooza. Or just hope that the talk of a Nerdapalooza UK proves to be more than idle speculation.

The festival isn't the only sign that nerdcore is in rude health, eight years after its birth. Scene stalwart MC Chris has recorded with the acclaimed rapper Talib Kweli and has reached the hip-hop Top 10 on iTunes. Nerdcore MCs have been played on MTV. The main nerdcore internet forum, Rhyme Torrents, is thriving. And, most tellingly, this spring saw two documentaries about nerdcore screened at US film festivals.

Nerdcore Rising focuses on MC Frontalot and his first full US tour in 2006, as he attempts to turn a hobby into a career. It sounds like a pipe dream for a bespectacled man in suit and tie, whose sole concession to stagewear is a headtorch. But when I meet him at the film's premiere at the SXSW film festival in Austin, Texas, he assures me that the move has been successful - his income has doubled annually since he made the leap. In Nerdcore for Life, an overview of the movement, the similarly square MC Chris recounts a similar tale: "My name is MC Chris and I'm a full-time rapper, crazy as it sounds. That's what I do for a living." Dan Lamoureux, the film's director, says that although these two and MC Lars are the only artists able to ones able to turn a career from nerdcore, "I think a few artists are on the verge of taking the plunge and try and make a living off their music."

"This really is the dawning of nerdcore," agrees Jason Christie, featured in Nerdcore for Life under his stage name High-C. As founder of Rhyme Torrents, he has probably played as big a role as anyone in the growth of the scene. "It is spreading far and wide, internationally: my server stats show regular visits from just about any country you can care to name. And when people do discover nerdcore, they now enter into a vibrant scene with many diverse artists - a far cry from a scant two years ago, when the only nerdcore artists anyone knew of were on Wikipedia, and numbered eight in total."

Obviously, that doesn't mean there were only eight people rapping on nerdy themes. Jazzy Jeff was doing just that a full two decades ago, and the lineage runs through MC Paul Barman, Del Tha Funkee Homosapien, various Madlib and Kool Keith projects and even Lupe Fiasco. Yet these aren't nerdcore artists, not least because they never claimed to be; nerdcore, Frontalot tells me, is strictly an "opt-in identity".

Nerdcore began with Frontalot's 2000 tune, Nerdcore Hip Hop. Subsequent milestones for Frontalot - at least according to Nerdcore for Life - include performances at the Penny Arcade Expo video game convention in Seattle and the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. That news of these performances spread over the blogosphere points to one of nerdcore's key strengths: the internet, now fundamental to the dissemination of all music, is presumably embraced more warmly by nerds than by anyone else on the planet. This, after all, is a scene whose biggest bad boy is a convicted hacker and self-proclaimed "digital gangster" named YT Cracker.

Technology doesn't just help in spreading the nerdcore gospel. It also makes the creation of the music itself cheaper and more accessible than ever before. Perhaps most importantly, it allows artists without record labels, and operating within what is still a highly underground scene, to tap into an international audience. As MC Frontalot says, he might only have one fan in every town but when you add all those together, "you create a very shallow but incredibly wide-reaching fanbase.

"It means it's hard to look at the sort of deal that's traditionally been offered by a record company and see it as a good idea. A record company sells a CD for $16.75, and the whole band gets $1.20 out of that, but my margin is completely the reverse. I spend $1.20 producing the physical CD, I sell it for $14 and pocket all the rest. I've sold less than 10,000 copies of either my albums, but they've been paying my rent for the last two years." As we are told on Nerdcore Rising, "without the internet, there would be no MC Frontalot".

Negin Farsad, director of Nerdcore Rising, certainly endorses that theory. "Nerdcore seems a natural and cultural embodiment of the entire tech revolution that's created a sea change in the way that we live," she insists. "Frontalot has grabbed hold of the zeitgeist and recognises that hip-hop and technology aren't going anywhere - they will emerge and converge in the form of nerdcore, whether we like it or not."

In Nerdcore for Life, MC Chris makes a similar point, noting that mainstream hip-hop is getting geekier, to the point where even Jay-Z records now contain references to comic books and superheroes. High-C takes the argument even further: "The whole definition of a nerd is expanding. Everybody in the US uses computers, a great many of them play video games, and comic books are really coming back for adults. So there's a little bit of nerd in us all."

Nerdcore has no shortage of critics, though. For some, it's just too jokey. Others suggest that nerdcore, as a largely white and often humorous take on a predominantly black genre, carries racist undertones.

Dan Lamoureux, whose Nerdcore For Life depicts black and Asian as well as white nerdcore artists, responds thus: "I spent more than two years studying nerdcore, and never once did I encounter anyone that I thought was trying to insult or disparage people of another race. The genre is not a parody. A lot of the music is very witty, but the primary goal isn't to make people laugh. I think that the confusion comes from the antiquated and prejudiced assumption that hip-hop is 'black' music and shouldn't be attempted by people of other races. The whole point of hip-hop is that it's supposed to be the voice of the people. It's evolved into a truly global art form, and the music is so ubiquitous that it's even permeated into geek culture."

Indeed, if a key tenet of hip-hop is "keeping it real", then a fantasy obsessive is being less true to the genre by pretending to have more bullet scars than 50 Cent than he is by rapping about Lord of the Rings. Though admittedly, Lords of the Rhymes, who in Nerdcore for Life do exactly that while dressed in Middle Earth costumes, remain on the wrong side of the crucial distinction made in the same film by MC Lars: between being "fun" but still being taken seriously, and being "funny", and hence perceived as a joke.

The simple truth is that, as with many genres, nerdcore has both wheat and chaff, and with time, the lesser acts will fall by the wayside. What's remarkable is that the scene's strongest artists do now have a chance of forging a sustained career - at least as long as there are fans as ardently loyal as the girl in Nerdcore Rising who travels for 19 hours to see Frontalot perform. Yet the same strength of passion can also manifest itself negatively: Nerdcore for Life gives a glimpse of nerd in-fighting so ferocious it makes the beef between Death Row and Bad Boy look like a schoolyard scrap. Similarly, both Dan Lamoureux and Wired magazine have found themselves the subject of "diss tracks" for their coverage of the scene, MC Router's verbal assault on Wired featuring the charming line: "What the hell's going on with this shitty magazine? You want this motherfucking knife in your fucking spleen?" Just like "real" hip-hop then.

Where to hear nerdcore

Sadly, neither of the nerdcore movies has a UK release scheduled. But you can still catch up with the main players. MC Chris has three albums available, including this year's mc chris is dead. You can buy all three from his website, mcchris.com. If you are feeling cautious, you can hear seven songs at myspace.com/mcchris. MC Frontalot has two albums, and you can buy his most recent effort, Secrets from the Future from frontalot.com. Or you could just download the 53 tracks available for free on the site. YT Cracker - "the undisputed king of nerdcore" - has a vast digital archive available at ytcracker.com. For further information, rhymetorrents.com rightly proclaims itself "your source for nerdcore" and has links to blogs, podcasts, artists' sites and downloadable music." - Marcus O'Dair / The Guardian, Friday 30 May 2008

MC Chris website

MC Frontalot is the second performer.



I am a famous internet rapper, except that I am not very famous. It is possible that I get more google results than your mom. Unless your mom is genuinely famous. In which case I am humbled. By your mom

MC Frontalot on Facebook

Schäffer The Darklord is the opener.



Schaffer the Darklord (or STD) is a New York City-based rapper and comedian with subversive material best-suited for brainy and/or decadent audiences. With manic energy, verbose vocabulary and cartoonishly commanding stage presence, STD skewers such topics as religious zombies, sci-fi sex fantasies, grammar snobbery and obsessive cat-enthusiasts. Imagine a Frankenstein-esque monster assembled from equal parts Bill Hicks, Eminem, Prince, Ozzy Osbourne and Darth Vader, stitched together inside the shell of a maniacal heavy metal ex-patriot.

Schäffer The Darklord on Facebook

$12 in adv, $14 DOS, 18+
Doors @ 9 pm

Advance tickets available @ Ticket Alternative, Criminal Records,
Decatur CD, Fantasyland Records and the following CD Warehouse locations: Buford, Duluth, Kennesaw, Lawrenceville and Roswell.