Thursday, April 7, 2011

Performer Magazine show review of Today The Moon, Tomorrow The Sun from

Hey everyone,

Here is a review from the April 2011 Performer Magazine for the Today The Moon, Tomorrow The Sun, Cusses and Baby Baby show that occurred on Saturday, February 12th, 2011 at the Drunken Unicorn.



At 9:00 p.m. on Saturday, February 12th, a very slow trickle of music fans filtered into The Drunken Unicorn. Three bands were slated to play, but the crowd hadn’t arrived. With a lineup like Today the Moon, Tomorrow the Sun, The Cusses and Baby Baby, you would think people would be banging down the doors, right? But the night looked ominous. A worried merch girl made noises about the bad traffic, the million other things going on, all the romantic pre-Valentine’s Day crap all over town, how maybe this wouldn’t be the best night for a show. Oh, was she wrong…

Baby Baby started the night off with a rebel yell of “JORTS!!!” Four men got on stage, all decked out in cut-off jean shorts and little else, proclaiming, “Fuck winter! We’re dressed like it’s summer! Whatcha gonna do?!” Then they lit into a set of pure party rock. With grinding guitars, thumping bass, pounding drums and jokes about race, the suburbs and summer clothes, Baby Baby pumped the crowd into a frenzy that wouldn’t end till after Today the Moon, Tomorrow the Sun left the stage. The answer to their (potentially) rhetorical question, of course, was, “We’re gonna dance!”

The Cusses got on stage, sounding like Death From Above 1979 with a gorgeous female leader vibrating down the middle of the stage - think David Byrne with a mean left hook. In the aftermath, one member of the audience said in an awed voice, “Did anyone else feel like she was about to jump off the stage and punch you in the face? Because I kinda did… and, well, that was kinda hot.”

Finally, Today the Moon, Tomorrow the Sun took the stage. TTMTTS gave life to all that is collaboration, rock and dance. They thanked their forerunners. They thanked their openers. They thanked their audience. They thanked each other. The crowd begged, pleaded and demanded, “ONE MORE SONG!” Sure, this happens at nearly every show in every city where kids want more party, but somehow it never gets old. After just enough pause and with just the perfect, “Aw shucks, you really like us?” grins on their faces, TTMTTS came back out and rocked the house down one more time.

- Amelia Shackelford

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Street Violence is having a CD release show here on Wednesday, April 20th

Street Violence are hosting a CD release show here at the Drunken Unicorn on Wednesday, April 20th, 2011.



Local Atlanta garage rockers Street Violence are celebrating the release of a new ep on a cd.



Street Violence on Facebook

Red Sea are performing second.



"Red Sea has released a 4-track EP called Weird Problem yesterday, which very well may be one of the best records to come out of the Atlanta area all year. Aesthetically, the closest reference point is probably Women, but Red Sea‘s brand of psychedelic guitar-driven indie carves out its own unique niche." - Ohm Park



Red Sea on Facebook

Society Of Ghosts are the opener.



Not much is known about Georgia's Society Of Ghosts. Rumor has it that they feature members of Wowser Bowser.

$5, 18+
Doors @ 9 pm
The first 75 people through the door receive a FREE COPY of the Street Violence CD.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Oh No Oh My is performing here on Tuesday, April 19th

Oh No Oh My is performing at the Drunken Unicorn on Tuesday, April 19th, 2011



Oh No Oh My is a four piece indie-rock band based out of Austin, Texas. Members include Daniel Hoxmeier, Joel Calvin, Greg Barkley and Tim Regan; all of whom are multi-instrumentalists.

An active band since 2005, they have toured nationally and internationally alongside acts like Mew, Gnarls Barkley, The Flaming Lips, Au Revoir Simone, and The Deadly Syndrome.

Praised for their upbeat sound and versatile instrumentation, this group is quickly gaining recognition as a very talented and promising indie-rock outfit.



Oh No Oh My on Facebook

Night Driving In Small Towns are performing second.



Night Driving in Small Towns are land dwellers. Having moved from small south Georgia towns to the city of Atlanta in 2008, the band has seen its share of topography. So has their music. Having navigated the spaces between artsy folk pop and brazen indie rock, their sound is sometimes gutsy, sometimes reserved, but always premeditated.

The group’s musical content originates from the songwriting duo of Andrea Rogers and Colby Wright. The two have written together for almost a decade, getting their craft down to a weird science in the process. Wright provides a lush musical backdrop for Rogers’s intimate lyrics, an amalgamation that has been described as a “potent cocktail” of sound (Michael Shaunessy, Flagpole). This intoxicating vibe led to Night Driving’s inclusion in a 2008 list of the “Top 25 Bands on Myspace” as determined by Rolling Stone, as well as their subsequent inclusion on the roster of Atlanta’s Lower 40 Records.

The band’s debut album on the Lower 40 label was released April 20, 2010. Night Driving in Small Towns are currently playing regionally in support of the record.



Night Driving In Small Towns website

Trench Party is the opening act.



"There's, of course, a consequential warm, humming, lo-fi quality to these songs, but it's not really what makes Kitchen a middling effort. The songs dabble in this really straightforward singer-songwriter territory, and while it's not directly derivative of any influences, there's nothing that really stand out about them. Cook just rolls through these tracks with a lower register and daunting languidness.

It's just these linear narratives that don't really go anywhere. It's okay to forgo verse/chorus structure, but these are just paragraph blocks delivered forgettably." -PunkNews (reviewing "Kitchen")

"Trench Party is the solo project of Jake Cook. When he sent me a link this EP a little over a month ago, it was his most current release. He’s so prolific, though, that this is no longer the case – he’s got a new one called Hack out now. Take a look at all the guy’s releases – he’s a machine.

Trench Party (at least on record, anyway) is lo-fi singer-songwriter stuff, mostly built around just voice and guitar. Cook sings it all earnestly, even when he’s being kind of a smartass. It has the effect of making him sound like something of a DIY basement Jonathan Richman, which is a pretty good thing to sound like." -Little Advances (reviewing "Kitchen")



Trench Party on Facebook

$5 in adv, $7 DOS, 21+
Doors @ 8 pm, first act performing at 8:30 pm

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

Monday, April 4, 2011

Getting “OFF!” with Keith Morris - An interview with Keith Morris

Hey everyone,

here is an interview that was conducted with Keith Morris of OFF! after their performance at the Drunken Unicorn on Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011.

Thanks to Eric Brown of The Mercer Cluster for this interview.



Even at 55, frontman Keith Morris is a legend in the punk rock scene. At 25, he and guitarist Greg Ginn founded Black Flag, possibly the most important American punk band after The Ramones. He later went on to work with Circle Jerks, whose 1981 debut Group Sex rocked the hardcore punk scene.

Last year, he returned to the scene with the veritable supergroup OFF!. Their first album, a collection of early vinyl releases entitled The First Four EPs is an attack on the senses in every possible way. That’s a compliment, I swear. But the man is a force of nature. Onstage he goes wild, despite being older than my father and wrestling with diabetes. He gives history lessons in between songs. It’s captivating, really.

Last week, my good friend and photographer Jonathan Popham accompanied me to Atlanta venue The Drunken Unicorn, where OFF! absolutely slayed, and afterwards we had the opportunity to talk with Morris about the new record, touring and bands he’s currently digging. Read on.

Keith Morris: So where are you guys from?

Eric Brown: We’re from Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. It’s about an hour away.

KM: Oh, that’s not bad. Pop in a few CDs and you’re there.

Jonathan Popham: Well, probably a few more if they’re punk CDs.

KM: Yeah, but that’s not all there is to listen to. Just because you’re going to see that type of band doesn’t mean you have to listen to that type of music. Personally, I don’t listen to too much of that music.

JP: What do you listen to?

KM: We’ll, we’re in Georgia. What’s one of the biggest bands to come out of Georgia?

EB: The Allman Brothers. From Macon.

KM:That’s right. There’s also another great band from Athens: R.E.M. I listen to both of those bands a lot. There’s the Marshall Tucker Band too, but I don’t listen to too much of them.

EB: So how has the tour been going so far?

KM: Well, this is actually the first date of the proper tour [with supporting act Trash Talk]. We played six shows at South by Southwest in Austin, Texas, and it was pretty much bumper to bumper. It was a clusterf**k. And plus, we’re driving a van that’s also pulling a trailer. If you’re driving just a van with your equipment in the back, you can maneuver around quite easily and find places to park, but in Austin during SXSW, if you’re in a van with a trailer it’s like you’re in the ninth inning and you’ve been missing fast balls all night.

EB: One big thing I wanted to talk about was that you started your career with Black Flag in the late ’70s, when it was harder to get recording time, harder to promote your band. But now it’s easier to record and get your music out there anywhere online, legally or not.

KM: Everybody wants it for free. So how can we earn a living if this is the line of work we choose to do? If we’re that stupid, why do we do this? When we first started, if you were playing a show, you’d get on the phone and call ten of your friends, tell them about it and hope that each of them would tell ten of their friends too. You hoped it would spread out that way, but it didn’t always work that way. I remember there were certain nights… I remember a Clash concert at the Santa Monica Civic. As soon as The Clash stopped performing, we raced out to the parking lot and put flyers on all of the car windows. There were 4000 people in the building, and we were passing out flyers to people as they came out. And that’s how we had to do it. You know, our form of advertising was going out with the wheat past and spending three hours at four in the morning plastering sides of buildings, power boxes and telephone poles.

I remember one night, another one of my compadres in crime, he and I were flyering on Sunset Boulevard and we were stapling to palm trees. And each time we would put up a flyer, this guy in a pickup truck would come around and tear them down. We looked back and we though that the guy probably had a gun, and even if we tried, it’d be like fighting a guy who had been smoking angel dust, so why bother?

EB: Yeah, and now you can just post things right online to advertise. How has that affected what you do and the punk scene in general?

KM: Well, recently we were part of a campaign to just turn your Internet off. Turn it off, and go out and do something. Go to a record store rather than listen to it on your computer. The beauty of a record store is that you might go in and they’ll be playing something very interesting that you haven’t heard before, and you might want to find out more about that. You might want to buy it. Maybe the guy behind the counter will play something that you’ve never heard before and you’ll be like, “Wow, this is great! Who is this?”

At this point, the show’s promoter drops in, and we all discuss that night’s concert and a bunch of bands. I’ll spare you, but we ultimately ended up here:

KM: You know, we were offered a couple of dates on a Dinosaur Jr. tour. That’s the kind of thing we want to do, because I’m 55 years old, and after 30 years I’ve already played a lot of places like this. In all my years, I’ve only played in headlining bands. We do a 30-minute set, and that’s much more an opening band thing. Of course, not that opening bands get offered too much money… But we’ve been asked to play with Dinosaur Jr., Queens of the Stone Age. The Red Hot Chili Peppers are thinking about asking us. And we’re gonna play with them all, and the punk rock kids will f**king hate us, but I’m 55 years old. I’m gonna have some fun, and I’m gonna see my friends and I’m gonna listen to some decent music. It’s not gonna be the punk rock marathon every night. It’s boring. It’s like watching a kid finger paint. You have red and green and purple and yellow and blue, but you just end up with brown.

JP: In that sense, how do you think the scene has progressed since the ’70s?

KM: Well, it’s certainly been commercialized. It’s certainly more accessible because of the Internet. But we didn’t have any of that. We had to go out there and get our asses kicked and have bricks thrown at us by drunk bikers. You know, I’ve had my nose broken two nights in a row, and I’ve been kicked in the jaw and threatened with knives. It’s like, that’s living life. I can honestly say I’ve lived a f**cking great adventure.

Sunday, April 3, 2011