This Week in Retro Atlanta, October 15-21, 2012

Posted on: Oct 17th, 2012 By:

Rod Hamdallah

By Zohra Yaqub
Contributing Writer

Monday, Oct. 15

Ramp up your Monday night at 529 Bar in East Atlanta Village!  Reverend Andy Presents: A night of blues, swamp music, and Americana featuring Kool Kat Rod Hamdallah, Lone Wolf OMB and Whiskey Belt.  Monday night is Big Band Night at CAFE 290! Come join Joe Gransden and his Smokin’ 16 piece Big Band at 8 p.m. for a swingin’ evening of jazz. You’ll hear arrangements from the songbooks of Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Count Basie, Ray Charles, Wes Funderburk and others along with Gransden’s originals. Northside Tavern hosts its weekly Blues Jam featuring Lola Gulley. Head over to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a hearty serving of BBQ and Dry White Toast.

Bernadette Seacrest

Tuesday, Oct. 16

Head up to Eddie’s Attic to hear the sweet vocals of recent Kool Kat Bernadette Seacrest & her Kris Dales with special guest, Alex MaryolFilm Love presents: 2 films by Robert Drew at the Plaza Theater.  Starting at 7:30 p.m., the first documentary, PRIMARY (1960), takes a close look at John F. Kennedy’s campaign for presidency during the first week in April 1960. The second, THE CHILDREN WERE WATCHING (1961), examines school desegregation in New Orleans.  Recent Kool Kat Calu Cordeira mixes tiki libations at Mai Tai Tahitian Tuesday starting at 9 p.m. at the Dark Horse Tavern. Grab your horn and head over to Twain’s in Decatur for a Joe Gransden jazz jam session starting at 9 p.m. J.T. Speed rocks the blues at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack or you can blues it down with Nathan Nelson & Entertainment Crackers at Northside Tavern.

Ruby Velle and the Soulphonics

Wednesday, Oct. 17

Check out very Kool Kat Ruby Velle at Smith’s Olde Bar at 8 p.m. for some Georgia Soul. Grab some Shovels and Rope at The Earl at 8:30 p.m. This South Carolina-based duo gives raucous performances throughout the country and will be stomping through Atlanta this Wednesday.  Get ready to rumba, cha-cha and jitterbug at the weekly Swing Night at Graveyard TavernThe Hollidays make it a soulful night at Fat Matt’s Rib ShackDanny “Mudcat” Dudeck blues it down at Northside Tavern.

Thursday Oct. 18

Call him what you will, but come to Variety Playhouse and engage in some “provocative chit-chat” with hardcore punk provocateur Henry Rollins at 8 p.m. Just in time for Halloween, don’t dress too nice because blood is sure to flow as GWAR promotes their latest album BLOODY PIT OF HORROR in Heaven at Masquerade.  Also performing are DevilDriver, Cancer Bats and Legacy of Disorder. Drive over to Twains at 9:30 p.m. to watch the soul and rock-driven funk machine that is Abby Wren and What It Is.  No one has to feel lonely when you decide to rock out at The Loft with Grammy-winning musicians, Los Lonely Boys. It’s a dance off! Come down to Hand in Hand for the famous Midnight 80s and 90s dance contest. Eat, drink and play a classic game with an adult spin every Thursday night as Mon Cherie presents Mad Lib-Ations, Atlanta’s newest Retro weekly pastime, starting at 7 p.m. at the Corner Tavern in Little 5 Points. The fun-filled night includes games and prizes from some of the city’s most fun Retro retailers, Psychobilly Freakout and punk faves spun by The Right Reverend Andy and a raffle. Relax with a tropical cocktail at vintage tiki bar Trader Vic’s where Tongo Hiti plays Retro-Polynesian luxurious live lounge sounds, as well as trippy takes on iconic pop songs, every Thursday night. The Breeze Kings and Chickenshack bring on the blues respectively at Northside Tavern and Fat Matt’s Rib Shack Danny Barnes plays Bluegrass Thursday at Red Light Cafe starting at 9 p.m., but come early and bring your own instruments for a locals jam at 7 p.m. Mike Z Trio honkytonks it up at Big Tex.

Lon Chaney as Phantom of the Opera (1925).

Friday, Oct. 19

Get your scare on this Halloween and join the cast of DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA and their ghastly fiends as they throw their second annual Spookhuis ($7 for entrance, $5 if you come in costume).  Get in the Halloween spirit as Plaza Theatre‘s Universal Monster Month continues with silent classic THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (1925), starring the Man of 1000 Faces, Lon Chaney, playing all weekend. Tav Falco & the Unapproachable Panther Burns are performing at Star Bar with The Delusionaires at 9 p.m. Get groovy to a group led by former Grateful Dead drummer, Mickey Hart Band, at Variety Playhouse. Flock to Terminal West at King Plow to watch iconic Goth band Swans take flight again at 9 p.m.  From the Athens bluegrass scene, Packway Handle Bar will be joined by High Strung String Band at Smith’s Olde Bar at 8 p.m.  Or head over to Northside Tavern if you are looking for a night of blues with Stoney Brooks.  Get down and country with Micky & The Motorcars and Old Southern Moonshine Revival at Peachtree Tavern at 9 p.m.  Spice it up with some Latin flare under the dinosaurs with Salsambo Dance Studio at Fernbank Museum of Natural History Martinis & IMAX.

Saturday, Oct. 20

‘Tis the season to be scary! March down to Little 5 Points and indulge your inner monster at the 12th annual L5P Halloween Parade and Festival featuring street performers, artist’s market, and two music stages. Scheduled bands include Ghost Bikini; Gun Party; Death of Kings; Walk From the Gallows; The Casket Creatures; Randy Michaels and the Sharp Dressed Lads; Volume IV; The Evils; Sex BBQ; Wasted Potential; Wet Rainbow; Til Someone Loses An Eye; Andrew and the Dispyramids; The Wayward Family BandJeremy Ray and more. Concerts start at noon, parade starts at 4 p.m.  Charlie Mars will be promoting his fifth album, LIKE A BIRD, LIKE A PLANE, at Smiths Olde Bar at 8 p.m.  Scat on down to Big Tex Cantina in downtown Decatur at 7 p.m. to check out the Tommy Dean Trio as they play favorites from The Rat Pack, classic soul, and great American songbook standards.  Make it a date night at The Buckhead Theater by supporting iconic Atlanta-based new wave band, The ProducersOpening acts include another Atlanta favorite, Angie Aparo, Gareth Asher & The Earthlings, and Deb Bowman. It’s Pandemonium!  Dance it out at the Glam and Glitter Rawk Dance Party at The Shelter. The Athens music scene comes to The Earl this weekend with Holly Golightly and the Brokeoffs and Kool Kat Jeffrey Butzer.  Head over to the Tabernacle at 7 p.m. to see Rufus Wainwright, Ingrid Michaelson; and Lucy Wainwright Roche or moonwalk your way over to Variety Playhouse to see Yacht Rock Revue perform THRILLER and PURPLE RAIN in their entirety!! Catch a rare screening of the prison noir feature BRUTE FORCE (1947), directed by Jules Dassin and starring Burt Lancaster, part of the ongoing Saturday MOMA AMERICAN INDIES series at the High Museum of Art.    Northside Tavern, Atlanta’s home to the blues, and the Wayback Band at Shorty’s Pizza in Tucker.  And as usual, DJ Romeo Cologne transforms the sensationally seedy Clermont Lounge into a ’70s disco/funk inferno late into the wee hours of the night.

Alejandro Escovedo

Sunday, Oct. 21

Find out what country-punk sounds like when you head over to Variety Playhouse to watch Alejandro Escovedo & The Sensitive Boys at 8 p.m. Rock duo based out of Austin, The Ghost Wolves, will be opening. Big Tex Cantina  is trying to make every Sunday a bluegrass Sunday. Come out and support the cause with Whoa NellyFat Back Deluxe rock the blues at Fat Matt’s, and Uncle Sugar blues it down at Northside Tavern. Faithless Town plays dunch at 1 p.m. at The Earl.

Ongoing

Every night is The Night of the Living Dead at the Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse, now in its own third season and expanded to include two different walking attractions, Curse of the Undead and ZWar and a zombie shoot at Safety Wolf, the paintball combat complex offMoreland Avenue, just south of I-285.  The Apocalypse happens every Thursday-Sunday all month.

Netherworld, Atlanta’s favorite haunted house for the past 15 years, is open every night from October 5-November 3.  Ticket prices range from $22 per person for the main haunt, Banshee, to $50 for a speed pass to see both haunts, Banshee and The Hive, and cut to the front of both lines.

Visit the High Museum of Art to see the Fast Forward: Modern Moments exhibit featuring artistic development from the past 100 years, 1913-2013. Artists includeHenri Matisse, Salvador Dalí, Georgia O’Keeffe and Jeff Koons. Closes January 10, 2013

Take retro to another level at the Genghis Khan special exhibition at Fernbank Museum of National History.  Closes January 21, 2013.

If you know of a cool happening coming up soon, send suggestions to ATLRetro@gmail.com.

 

Category: This Week in ATLRetro | TAGS: None

Kool Kat of the Week/Retro Review: Sex, Blood and Rock n Roll: Jesus Christ Superstar meets Grand Guignol in Not-To-Be-Missed Dracula The Rock Opera

Posted on: Oct 12th, 2012 By:

Dracula and his wives in DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA at 7 Stages; L-R: Jessika Cutts, Rob Thompson, Naomi Lavender, Madeline Brumby.

In this Week’s Kool Kat, we break the rules and give it to more than one person – those crazy kids in the Little Five Points Rock Star Orchestra.  Don’t miss DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA before it closes this Sunday, October 14 at 7 Stages. 

DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA melds JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR with Grand Guignol in a production that not only rocks hard and delivers a horrific, non-twinkly Nosferatu, but also is surprisingly true to Bram Stoker‘s original novel. Not to be missed, this DRACULA brings the rock opera genre into the 21st century with the energy, musical, acting and staging quality of an off-Broadway find. Seeing it is like discovering HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY ITCH in 1998 or THE ROCKY HORROR SHOW in a tiny upstairs theater in London in 1973. But hey, wait a second, this is Atlanta’s 7 Stages Theatre, not New York, not London, not even LA or Chicago. And it’s not Rob Zombie, but Rob Thompson. How the HELL did that happen?

The short answer is years of hard work by the Little Five Points Rock Star Orchestra, a motley crew of badass tattoo-covered Atlanta musicians, stage professionals and grassroots performance artists whom you haven’t heard of most likely unless you live here. If you don’t live in Atlanta, you probably won’t believe this gang of music misfits, most with ultra-light theater experience, has produced a libretto, lyrics, acting and staging that set DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA tooth and claw above community theater.Maybe you’ll be more convinced when I point out that they did have the benefit of Del Hamilton, a seasoned internationally acclaimed director, to guide them. DRACULA will be the last of 80 shows which he has directed before he steps down as artistic director of 7 Stages, building with Faye Allen, a reputation for this company as one of Atlanta’s most edgy. It’s a testament to Hamilton’s vision that he was willing to take on a venture in the pop culture/horror arena as his swan song (though he will continue to stay active in 7 Stages). Clearly Hamilton drove the cast and production crew to their highest potential, ably assisted by longtime Atlanta actor Justin Wellborn, who returned from Los Angeles to work on DRACULA.

Harker (Chris Love) receives a dire warning from a gypsy woman (Naomi Lavender).

In JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR, the son of God is reborn as a rock star, and so likewise is the iconic vampire dark lord of fiction as Rob Thompson emerges on stage, dressed as Vlad the Impaler with a long dark mane, a Gothic red velvet vest so pointy it looks like it could cut you, and tight black leather pants. At first he is bending his fingers and arching his back, creating a shadow image creepily reminiscent of Max Schreck in the iconic silent NOSFERATU (1922). But soon recharged by the promise of a new feeding ground in England, he is re-uniformed in a blood-red cape, red and black boot chaps and a sword. With his petulance, cockiness and powerful voice, Jim Morrison meets Ozzy as Thompson emotes on the power of blood to a heavy beat right out of Black Sabbath.  This Count is no romantic sparkly vampire, but a black metal superstar of evil whose immortality is dependent on the death of humanity.

When ATLRetro reviewed the first act, then titled HAUS VON DRACUL, during a trial run last year, we called that review “Dracula Superstar but Love is the Answer.” That tagline still holds true in that DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA is unique among Dracula dramatizations for having a strong/non-wimpy rendition of Jonathan Harker in the transcendent voice and passionate mannerisms of African-American actor/musician Chris Love. With a lion’s mane of long black hair, Love is already a daring visual choice for a role too often played close-cropped and straight-laced. Now Thompson has caught up with Love, but Love, as Harker, continues to embody the everyman (us by proxy) as he arrives on stages and declares in a moving opening solo that “a good man is a true man”  and later a stranger in a strange land, “all alone away from Mina.” Bram Stoker’s novel is written in the epistolary form with characters expressing their ebbing terror through diary entries and letters, and this rock opera masterfully embraces that format, often taking lines directly from the book and making the audience a confidante. In Love’s hands, Harker’s predicament gets progressively lonelier, reminds us that the vampire is evil and not to be embraced, progressively raising the stakes and easing the first act towards a sense of doom with no hope and escape.

Van Helsing (Jeff Langston, center) and Lucy's three suitors, Quincey (Shane Morton), Seward (Chaz Pofahl) and Arthur (Jed Drummond) make a "vein" attempt to save Lucy's (Jessika Cutts) life with blood transfusions.

Beyond Dracula’s tight leather pants, the “sex” side of rock n roll comes center stage early in Harker’s seduction by Dracula’s three wives, played to a perfect sirenic pitch by Muleskinner MacQueen Trio chanteuse Naomi Lavender (who also plays a gypsy woman and Mina), Madeline Brumby (known in the neo-exploitation movie world for her breakout role in also-Atlanta-produced DEAR GOD! NO!) and Jessika Cutts (who also plays Lucy). Their breasts show through white diaphanous robes, a clear homage to the sexy female vampires of Universal, Hammer and the lesbian vampire B-movie genre, and this production ups their otherworldly quality by adding exotic Eastern European headpieces and dance moves reminiscent of a Kali ritual. The actresses achieve a chemistry in their ethereal voices and interplay that only heightens the erotic tension and also their profound loneliness, trapped in the castle with the Count.

The first act showcases how to effectively use minimalist sets, lighting and an ensemble cast. No coach is needed with just Harker sitting vulnerably on steps while a mad driver thrashes a long whip, a small herd of humans outfitted in haphazard fur pelts furiously keeping pace to a metal beat. Less is more is also well-executed in the similarly soundtracked (the beat always gets heavy when Dracula is at his most bloodthirsty) ship scene conveying the hopelessness of the captain (Rick Atkinson) trying in vain (vein?) to keep his ship afloat in a stormy sea while the Count devours his crew in one of the play’s bloodiest scenes (watch out, front row!).

Van Helsing (Jeff Langston), Vampire Slayer!

DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA has to introduce a lot of new characters rapidly in the second act, and this task is mostly achieved well, including characters who appear in the book but often excluded from screen and stage. In a poppy update of Cole Porter’s “Tom, Dick and Harry” from KISS ME KATE, Lucy (Jessika Cutts) enthusiastically emotes to her best friend Mina (Naomi Lavendar) about her three suitors, earnest, bowler-hat-wearing Arthur (musician Jed Drummond in his stage debut); Dr. Seward (Charlotte, NC-based actor Chaz Pofahl), who runs the asylum (how romantic!); and Quincey, an American cowboy played with appropriate “home-on-the-range” swagger and just the right nod of humor by Atlanta horror Renaissance man-about-town Shane Morton (Professor Morte of the Silver Scream Spookshow, DEAR GOD! NO!, Gargantua, etc.) against type – in other words, more country than rock (Note: because of Shane also being the mastermind of the Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse, Arnie Lowder is now playing this role Thurs-Sat for the last few weeks of the run).

We already have a sense of Mina from Harker’s songs about her. Like in so many Dracula dramatizations, she could be just a romantic foil and vampire victim but fortunately Lavender’s unique voice – Kate Bush meets Janis Joplin, with a twist of Jane Wiedlin?! – and sheer dynamic energy forestall that possibility, ultimately ensuring she will be an equal to the otherwise male vampire-hunting team. Renfield’s crazed obsessiveness with Dracula is portrayed with a manic frenzy and an appropriately metalhead of frizzy curly hair in a breakout performance by Rick Atkinson, who has been with the L5P Rockstar Orchestra since its first production of JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR in the mid 2000s.

Meanwhile, Dracula in London is more of an omnipresent villain, now re-energized by a city full of fresh blood into full throttle rock star and re-attired in a black leather jacket (think actual suit jacket – Steve Tyler, not Sid Vicious). Fortunately Thompson and company recognize that he needs a similarly rocked-out foil not a dawdling elderly professor. Not your mama’s Van Helsing, this vampire hunter in purple is Doctor Strange meets Freddie Mercury. Jeff Langston, of hard-rocking Atlanta-based bands Ledfoot Messiah and AM Gold,  is just the hard-edged leader to unite Lucy’s triad of suitors to try and save first her life (no, they don’t succeed despite a steampunky transfusion gizmo) and then Mina’s as the Count makes them his inevitable victims. Ultimately, the intrepid group must travel all the way back to Transylvania to finish the battle, and as for the end, if you’ve read the book, well, you know it. And if you haven’t, you may well be surprised.

Rob Thompson as Count Dracula/Vlad the Impaler.

Ultimately that DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA is bound and determined to be tightly faithful to Stoker’s novel is both its strength and an occasional weakness, however, because occasionally that fealty causes some dramatic challenges. For example, after act one, it seems impossible when Mina receives a letter from Jonathan Harker that he has somehow escaped Castle Dracula. (Maybe a side performance showing Harker escape in pantomime might clarify?). Another scene that felt like it needed a little more work was a city scene in which Harker spies the Count for the first time in London stalking female victims. But these really are only small complaints in what overall is a fantastic production. Let’s hope for an encore soon and more runs well beyond Atlanta.

All photos courtesy of 7 Stages and DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA and used with permission.

 

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Days and Nights of the Dead: Zombies Walk and Stage an Apocalypse This Halloween Season in Atlanta

Posted on: Oct 8th, 2012 By:

Don't mess with Eddie Ray and these tough, battle-scarred babes of the Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse.

The rest of the nation thinks Atlanta is the zombie capital of America because THE WALKING DEAD is filmed here. But the undead walked here long before Hollywood arrived and the best local zombie activities are completely conceived by homegrown brains.

First off, mark your calendar and break out your creepiest make-up for not one, but two Zombie Walks. Organized by Luke Godfrey, one of the sick brains behind Splatter Cinema, Zombie Walk Atlanta 2012 is this Sunday Oct. 14. This seventh annual event is the city’s largest and starts at Wonderroot at 3 p.m., but show up much earlier if you need help with your make-up. After you’ve walked with the dead, head over to Luke’s other bloody creation, Chambers of Horrors. For more about Luke and the city’s most extreme adults-only horror attraction, read last year’s ATLRetro interview with Luke here.

The dead don’t just have their day inside the Perimeter. The 2012 Marietta Zombie Walk  is Saturday October 27 from 5 to 7 p.m. during the Carnival of Doom festival. Register and buy a T-shirt here.

Finally, every night is The Night of the Living Dead at the Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse, now in its own third season and expanded to include two different walking attractions, Curse of the Undead and ZWar and a zombie shoot at Safety Wolf, the paintball combat complex off Moreland Avenue, just south of I-285 (open Thurs.-Sun. nights throughout October and on Oct. 31). Set in and around a two-story abandoned motel, this more-than-100,000-square-foot attraction was nightmared up by the maniacal minds of local horror Renaissance man/make-up artist Shane Morton (Silver Scream SpookshowGargantua, Dear God! No!, Dracula The Rock Opera, etc.) and Jonny Rej (Plaza Theatre). Much more than your traditional walk-through haunt with jump-out monsters, AZA delivers a total immersion “experience,” in which attendees interact along the way with a variety of colorful characters living and undead. It’s sometimes hard to know who to trust but if someone says “run,” let’s just say you can be sure zombies are around, and if you don’t, you may get bitten and infected yourself or worse – eaten for your brains!

In “Curse of the Undead,” the origins of the zombie apocalypse are cultists reanimating the dead with arcane incantations. If you’re an EVIL DEAD fan, this one’s for you which makes the most of the addition of four acres of woods and even includes a zombie-killing hero named Bruce! My group was fortunate to have the protection of a police officer, played by talented local blogger filmmaker Eddie Ray (SATANIC PANIC: BAND OUT OF HELL) who did a great job of making us aware of a certain missing person problem and even imbued a little Southern-fried humor. FYI, we also encountered a few other familiar faces from the Silver Scream Spookshow and the Atlanta music scene.

Classic horror fans also will enjoy nods to Lovecraft (apropos since The Necronomicon raises THE EVIL DEAD) and the whole subgenre of B-movies featuring robed Satanists from THE DEVIL RIDES OUT (1968) to RACE WITH THE DEVIL (1975). Wear comfortable shoes (open-toes are no-nos) and watch where you step in the woods to not trip on tree roots. The journey is well worth a travel, but after all the build-up, my group’s one disappointment was that we expected one more final big scare that we didn’t get. AZA is constantly evolving and tends to improve with every week, so perhaps that may change.

“ZWar” picks up where the last two AZAs left off with the sinister Center for Disease Development (CDD), now developing a high-tech mega-weaponized zombie. Last year introduced an ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK-like scenario with a seedy encampment of humans as potentially dangerous as the undead. ZWar begins outside in the back parking lot with a similar brutal gang of people who use zombies for sport and a redneck overlord demanding our group steal drugs from the CDD for them. Once indoors, zombies menace, a brawny commando protects us with a machine gun and there’s the prerequisite mad scientist, but things really heat up when the scientist’s nervous victim takes the lead to find a way out. Without giving away any spoilers, the actor in that role did a fantastic job of upping the tension (does he really know where the exit is?). Will you make it out without encountering the CDD’s Necro-Tech warriors? Let’s just say, there’s no climax disappointment here.

Tickets to the Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse are $20 for each attraction, $30 for both ZWar and Curse, $30 for the zombie shoot or $55 for everything! Located just south of I-285, off Moreland Road; directions here.

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This Week in Retro Atlanta, October 8-14, 2012

Posted on: Oct 8th, 2012 By:

By Zohra Yaqub
Contributing Writer

Calu Cordeira

Monday, Oct. 8

Northside Tavern hosts its weekly Blues Jam featuring blues and southern soul singer, Lola Gulley. Head over to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a hearty serving of BBQ and Dry White Toast.

Tuesday, Oct. 9

Want to hear a harrowing and inspiring story of survival?   Come to FoxTale Book Shoppe for A RARE TITANIC FAMILY book signing at 6 p.m.  Recent Kool Kat Calu Cordeira mixes tiki libations at Mai Tai Tahitian Tuesday starting at 9 p.m. at the Dark Horse Tavern. Grab your horn and head over to Twain’s in Decatur for a Joe Gransden jazz jam session starting at 9 p.m. J.T. Speed rocks the blues at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack or you can blues it down with Nathan Nelson & Entertainment Crackers at Northside Tavern.

Ruby Velle

Wednesday, Oct. 10

Check out “MR. SATURDAY NIGHT” himself, Julian Velard, at Smith’s Olde Bar at 8 p.m.  for some classic piano pop.  Also performing is Kool Kat Ruby Velle & The Soulphonics.  Get ready to rumba, cha-cha and jitterbug at the weekly Swing Night at Graveyard TavernThe Hollidays make it a soulful night at Fat Matt’s Rib ShackDanny “Mudcat” Dudeck blues it down at Northside Tavern. Dance to ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s hits during Retro in the Metro Wednesdays at Pub 71 in Brookhaven.

 

Thursday Oct. 11

Dance on over to Star Bar in Atlanta’s favorite little retro community, Little 5 Points, and enjoy a night of “Super Rock” with 1970s iconic garage/new wave rock band The Fleshtones.  Also playing will be Kool Kat Joshual Longino of Andrew and the Disapyramids, The Myopic I, Ghost Bikini, Absolutely Not, and Fringe Factory. Treat your ears to the artist Ella Fitzgerald once referred to as “the best young singer in America,” Janis Ian.  Ian will be taking the stage at Eddie’s Attic at 8 p.m.  Strip down the stress of the work week with the rockabilly and honkytonk music of the Ghost Riders Car Club featuring guitarist and Kool Kat Spike Fullerton at Clermont Lounge.  The show starts at 9 p.m.  Hooo weee!!  Git on down to Twains to enjoy some good ole countrified punk-rock and bluegrass with Grim Rooster at 9:30 p.m.  Class up your Thursday night at the museum with some honkytonk covers of Grand Ole Opry classics with Whiskey Belt at the Fernbank Museum of Natural History.  It’s a dance off!  Come down to Hand in Hand for the famous Midnight 80s and 90s dance contest.  Eat, drink and play a classic game with an adult spin every Thursday night as Mon Cherie presents Mad Lib-Ations, Atlanta’s newest Retro weekly pastime, starting at 7 p.m. at the Corner Tavern in Little 5 Points. The fun-filled night includes games and prizes from some of the city’s most fun Retro retailers, Psychobilly Freakout and punk faves spun by The Right Reverend Andy and a raffle. Relax with a tropical cocktail at vintage tiki bar Trader Vic’s where Tongo Hiti plays Retro-Polynesian luxurious live lounge sounds, as well as trippy takes on iconic pop songs, every Thursday night. The Breeze Kings and Chickenshack bring on the blues respectively at Northside Tavern and Fat Matt’s Rib ShackCulliton, Dean & Bass play Bluegrass Thursday at Red Light Cafe starting at 9 p.m., but come early and bring your own instruments for a locals jam at 7 p.m. Mike Z Trio honkytonks it up at Big Tex.

Friday, Oct. 12

Luche Libre masks + high energy rock = One awesome night at The Earl with Los Straitjackets.  They will be joined with Kool Kat Caroline & The Ramblers at 9 p.m.    Scat on down to Big Tex Cantina in downtown Decatur at 7 p.m. to check out the Tommy Dean Trio at as they play favorites from The Rat Pack, classic soul, and great American songbook standards.  Head over to Northside Tavern at 10 p.m.  if you are looking for a night of blues with John McKnight and Little G Weevil.  Whether you have been a vampire for four or 400 years, join the children of Nosferatu, Dracula and Lestat at Ritual’s 4th Annual Vampire’s Ball at The Shelter; make sure to dress the part to get the full, dark and delicious experience.  Get in the Halloween spirit as Plaza Theatre‘s Universal Monster Month continues with THE INVISIBLE MAN (1933)  directed by James Whale (FRANKENSTEIN, BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN) and starring Claude Raines, playing all weekend.  Longing for some Memphis soul or New Orleans funk?  Join The Mar-tans under the dinosaurs at Fernbank Museum of Natural History Martinis & IMAX to get your groove back.

Saturday, Oct. 13

Come watch the dancing vixens of Atlanta burlesque at MINETTE MAGNIFIQUE presents “TRICKS, TREATS + TASSELS: A Burlesque Halloween, featuring Kool Kats Vyolet Venom, Shellie Schmals and Kellyn Willey.  Shows start at 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. at Jerry Farber’s Side DoorStephen King fans can enjoy a night at the Plaza Theater watching Splatter Cinema presents MAXIMUM OVERDRIVE (1986). Andy Warhol intended for KITCHEN to be the vehicle that would propel Edie Sedgwick into stardom; however, she had difficulty memorizing her lines, and much of her performance is improvised. See it during the Culture Shock party at the High Museum of Art which ties in with the recently opened Fast Forward: Modern Moments 1913-2013 special exhibition.

The Whiskey Gentry.

Take part in Candler Park’s annual Fall Festival this weekend.  The bands take the stage at noon and the lineup includes Rick Derringer who played guitar for Steely Dan, Alice Cooper and even “Weird Al” Yankovic, among many others, and Derek St. Holmes, guitarist for Ted Nugent.  Also featured at the festival will be the 70s light rock stylings of  Yacht Rock Revue, “Pogues go old time Nashville” country rock of The Whiskey Gentry, The Sundogs, Moontower, Kevin Lewis and My Homework Ate My DogKool Kat Ruby Velle is keeping herself busy this week and playing at Eddie’s Attic with Madeline and Rudy Currence.  Check out Larry Griffith Band at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack and Australian Pink Floyd is playing the Fox Theatre.  Got Festival Fever?  We have a cure for that – The 15th Annual Oakhurst Arts and Music Festival features the Oakhurst Community Music Collective, In The Wheelhouse, Sehwe Village Percussion, The BooHoo Ramblers and The Swamp Funk Quartet.  Go see a music icon who performed with Motown legends, Ike Stubblefield, at Northside Tavern, Atlanta’s home to the blues, and the Wayback Band at Shorty’s Pizza in Tucker.  And as usual, DJ Romeo Cologne transforms the sensationally seedy Clermont Lounge into a ’70s disco/funk inferno late into the wee hours of the night.

Bernadette Seacrest

Sunday, Oct. 14

Dig and claw your way out of the grave and join fellow undead in Zombie Walk Atlanta 2012 The walk begins at 3 p.m. at WonderrootCome in your own makeup, but if you have been dead for a little too long and are struggling with today’s zombie fashion craze and makeup tricks, you can show up as early as noon and have the zombie staff help you. Candler Park’s annual Fall Festival rages on with performances by legendary blues chanteuse Francine Reed, the crazy Seed & Feed Marching Abominables, Back Yard Birds, Kool Kat Bernadette Seacrest, Lexi Street, Sunmoon Pie, Five O’Clock Shadows, Off McLendon and Village Fate Society.  Fat Back Deluxe rock the blues at Fat Matt’s, and Uncle Sugar blues it down at Northside Tavern.  Todd Prusin plays dunch at 1 p.m. at The Earl.

 

Last Chance/Don’t Miss – Closing This Week!!!

DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA merges JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR with Grand Guignol in a production that rocks hard but is surprisingly true to Bram Stoker‘s original novel. Not to be missed, this DRACULA has the energy, musical, acting and staging quality of an off-Broadway find but yet is completely homegrown, conceived by Rob Thompson (Dracula) of the Little Five Points Rock Star Orchestra and directed by Del Hamilton and Justin Welborn. Its cast and creative team also include Naomi Lavender (Mina), Chris Love (Jonathan Harker), Jeff Langston of AM Gold (Van Helsing) and Shane Morton of the Silver Scream Spookshow (Quincey). Watch for a full Retro Review soon. Through Oct. 14.

If you know of a cool happening coming up soon, send suggestions to ATLRetro@gmail.com.

Category: This Week in ATLRetro | TAGS: None

The Little Death: Absinthe Makes a Truly Scrumptious Recipe at The Day of the Cupcake

Posted on: Oct 4th, 2012 By:

Our top pick for Saturday Oct. 6 is a truly scrumptious tribute to one of our favorite Retro treats. Willy Wonka would appreciate the World of Pure Imagination that is the Sugar Dolls‘ annual Day of the Cupcake celebration. The confectionary-inspired festivities begin at Sacred Heart Tattoo ( Little Five Points location) from noon to 7 p.m. with $50 cupcake tattoos, sugar skull decorating & contest, free cupcakes, games and live performances. Then at 7 p.m., the fun moves to  The Five Spot where a $15 cover ($10 with cupcake tattoo) gets you $5 Lucid Absinthefree masks for early arrivals and music by bands Christ, LordToy Devils and Till Someone Loses an Eye featuring Aileen Loy, as well as special guests The Thimblerig CircusThe Chameleon QueenClay Crockerof Prentice Suspensions and aerial performances by: Lori VanVoorhis, Mara Chanin, Aileen Loy and Alexis Gorsuch. And of course, the Cupcake Eating Contest will be back as well! There’s also an art auction, and eccentric garb is encouraged but not required! The entire day and evening supports Aid Atlanta. Still don’t get what it’s all about. Read more about The Sugar Dolls and last year’s Day of the Cupcake here.

In the mood to eat cupcakes and drink absinthe, now?!  To get in the holiday spirit ahead of time, here’s a special adult cupcake recipe from The Sugar Dolls to tantalize your tastebuds…

The Sugar Dolls

“The Little Death”

Cupcake recipe with “Lucid Absinthe’ “

Cake Ingredients

  • 2 cups sugar
  • 1-3/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 3/4 cup Cocoa or  DARK Cocoa ( depending on how much of a bite you want)
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1/2 cup vegetable oil
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1 cup boiling water

Heat oven to 350°F
Put liners into your cupcakes pan. Stir together sugar, flour, cocoa, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Add eggs, milk, oil and vanilla; beat on medium speed of electric mixer 2 minutes. Stir in boiling water (batter will be thin) You may want to use a piping bag to put your batter into you liners, fill liners half way.
Bake 30 to 35 minutes
Cool completely
Lucid Ganche

  • 12 ounces chocolate, chopped into small pieces
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • optional 1/4 cup Lucid Absinthe’

Place chocolate pieces in a large bowl. Heat heavy cream on medium high until it comes to a boil then slowly add your chocolate while maintaining a stir once melted take off heat and add in your absinthe, let cool.  While that cools you will need to hollow out the center of your cupcakes, then slowly pour the ganache into the center of each cake.
Now to frost!
Lucid Mocha Frosting

  • 1 cup unsalted butter, softened
  • 3 1/2 cups confectioners sugar
  • 1/2 cup cocoa powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon table salt
  • 1 teaspoons vanilla extract or 1/2 teaspoon almond extract
  • 2 tablespoons milk or heavy cream
  • 2 tablespoons dark fresh brewed coffee
  • 1/4 cup Lucid Absinthe’

Cream butter for a few minutes in a mixer, Sift  confectioners sugar  and cocoa into the mixing bowl once incorporated add remaining  ingredients.  If your frosting needs a more stiff consistency, add a little more sugar. If your frosting needs to be thinned out, add additional Absinthe if your feeling frisky  or dark coffee if you need more bite and kick. Either way Whip the mess out of that frosting give it the good beating you want it to give you.  Frost cupcakes.  If you would like a garnish for your cupcakes, make another batch of ganche and once cool, drizzle it a top your tasty treats with a chocolate covered espresso bean or two.

 

 

 

Category: Features, Wednesday Happy Hour & Supper Club | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Kool Kat of the Week: An Egg-centric Life: Meet Jennifer Ellis and Her Grant Park Backyard Chickens on the Fifth Annual Urban Coop Tour

Posted on: Oct 3rd, 2012 By:

Jennifer Ellis and Thelma, a Barred Plymouth Rock hen.

What’s more Retro than backyard chickens? Explore this fast-growing trend in the fifth annual Urban Coop Tour, which offers a sneak peek into 13 intown gardens built around poultry. Having tasted eggs hatched by home-raised hens, ATLRetro wondered how hard it is to start a coop, so we decided to make Jennifer Ellis, whose Grant Park coop is on this year’s tour, Kool Kat of the Week. The Retro chops of the 30-year-old single woman are further enhanced by being the owner of a 1920s bungalow/fixer-upper. Despite a time-consuming day job in health care marketing/consulting, she’s found the time to build a micro-farm in her backyard, which also includes an organic vegetable garden, and according to Jennifer, it’s helped, not hurt her social life!

How did you decide to get into backyard chicken-raising? I understand that your father raised chickens, too?

I’d say my father is a retired-hippie. He’s a huge gardener, former professional landscape designer, artist, outdoorsman and hunter; he loves all things nature and advocates the preservation of our natural resources. I’m fortunate that the green thumb is strong from each of my parents, but veggie gardening is more prevalent from my father. I grew up with veggie gardens, and gardening is just a way of life in western North Carolina where I relocated at 10 years old. People there are utilizing their land and farming to reduce food expenses. In high school I worked in a local greenhouse owned by a local man that helped further “hone” my gardening skills in terms of propagating, dividing, pruning, pest/disease treatment, etc .

Ellis's urban coop.

I have always found it very satisfying to have garden-raised dinners, salads, breakfasts from the gardens when I returned home as an adult – but before I owned my home. Dad would send me out to the garden to pick veggies for the evening’s salad when I was home. Even after 40-plus years, my dad still seems proud and excited to do that for his family. He now sells his surplus at local markets and farm-to-table restaurants. Dad’s secret to a lush, bountiful organic garden is due to two things: coffee grounds saved for him by the local coffee house and his chicken poop. After years of pent-up gardening energy from living in condos or apartments across the city, I needed to get my hands in my own dirt. A healthy garden starts with the soil, so chickens came first. I worked on enriching my soil as the chickens grew from day-old chicks to laying hens.

I found that you can get paralysis by analysis if you try to over-plan your coop. I found a barn builder on Craigslist that specializes in coops – I was able to pick my roof color and then painted the coop to match my house. I wanted the coop to look like a permanent, intentional structure in the yard. I’ve made adjustments – moved the nest box, added a run, etc – as needed.

Let’s talk chicken-shopping. You have eight – a silver laced Wyandotte, two buff orpingtons, two Easter eggers, a white silkie, a black frizzle, and a Plymouth Rock. How did you pick them, find them and do the different types have different personalities like dog and cat breeds?

I wanted a diverse and interesting group of hens, but the priority was egg production. I added the two bantams – the frizzle and silkie – because they were just so cute. Unfortunately, they’re also on the very bottom of the food chain and a local possum found my silkie especially sweet. My Plymouth Rock is my favorite – gorgeous, sassy but tame, and great eggs! I bought from MyPetChicken.com as they came highly recommended as a reliable and responsible breeder. All my chicks arrived happy and healthy. They certainly all have different personalities. My redheads or buffs are quite bossy.

How do the chickens interact with your organic garden? Do you grow your own feed, have to be careful to fence them so they can’t get into certain vegetables?

Ha! Very carefully. They sheared-off my spring garden multiple times. I grew all my spring veggies from heirloom seeds, and they whacked them all back. Once they learned to jump into my cedar beds, it was all over from there. They seemed to pull “chicken Houdinis” by escaping their coop every time I turned around. Once the garden grew large, I was able to let them free range again, but when veggies are small, they are kept to their run.

My neighbors two doors down used to have an urban coop, and my collie would just stare through double fences and bark at them transfixed by their movement. I understand your dog gets along great with the chickens. How did you manage that?

Six months, lots of patience and one lost chicken. When the chicks arrived, my Weimaraner – bred for bird hunting, ha! – Neims would stare though the wire top of the stock tank and literally drip drool on the chicks. I was hoping the excitement would wear down, but it didn’t. I moved them out to the coop at six or eight weeks and had to keep Neims in the house if they free-ranged. Over time, I would bring him out with me for a few minutes, but keep him restrained. I found that if I didn’t fuss over the chickens, he started to care less. I tried to teach him they were mine, not his – he likes fetching and catching balls in the air. I read that in training dogs, it’s normal to lose one or two in the process. Neims caught one little bantam pullet in his mouth when she made an erratic movement and that was a crossroad for him. He got in big trouble. Once he accepted he could eat or play with them, he wanted to then “mount” them. He gave up on mating with the chickens quickly. Today the hens [are] annoyed by him.

Eggs and vegetables from Jennifer Ellis's organic garden.

Is it expensive to run an urban coop?

I wouldn’t say expensive, but I think you have to find more value in the process or hobby than saving money, because it’s probably cheaper to buy from a grocer. My little farm is my hobby, my therapy, companionship, entertainment, my food and health. I’d love to have dwarf goats and rabbits, but I’m limited by land and the additional expense.

Do you have to get chicken-sitters when you travel?

Free eggs make for easy-to-find sitters! If I’m not gone for more than thre days, I’m able to put out enough feed and water for them. The most time-consuming stage is raising the chicks, as they need to be checked at least once a day.

How much time does it take to run a micro farm? Do you still have time for a social life?

Not much time at all. The chickens are so easy. I check on them every day or two, but they’re simple. My garden has a drip-line irrigation system [www.mrdrip.com] that I designed and installed by myself, which is set on a timer. It’s fair to say I could spend as much as or as little time as I like in the yard, but it takes planning and preparation.

Depending on the time of the year – spring and early fall – my garden IS part of my social life. I enjoy entertaining people in my backyard. The “girls” receive visitors from all over – my friends have their favorites. And I have friends that like to help in the yard from time to time. I couldn’t have gotten my garden and coop up and running without the help of friends.
Our cooperation been favorable so far and we can recommend both the provider and the https://phenterminehealth.com drug (only if prescribed by your attending doctor).

What has been the most surprisingly fun or funniest thing about running an urban coop?

In the spring, when I’m in the garden tilling or planting, I have a couple of girls that sit and wait for me to uncover bugs. I don’t even have to pick them up. If I turn over a grub, they dart in to grab it and return to their post. Smart girls! They’re very entertaining and have a lot of personality.

The Urban Coop Tour is sponsored by The Wylde Center and Georgia Organics. Advance tickets are $15 (online only) for Wylde Center members and $20 for non-members. Children 12 and under are free. Day of Tour tickets are $25 for adults and available at The Wylde Center.

All photographs are courtesy of Jennifer Ellis.

Category: Kool Kat of the Week | Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

This Week in Retro Atlanta, Oct. 1-7, 2012

Posted on: Oct 3rd, 2012 By:

Monday, Oct. 1

Cinefest at GSU starts a week run of the Arnold Schwarzenegger sci-fi/action/ horror classic PREDATOR (1987)Northside Tavern hosts its weekly Blues Jam featuring Lola Gulley. Head over to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack for a hearty serving of BBQ and Dry White Toast.

Tuesday, Oct. 2

Dinosaur Jr brings back grunge at Variety Playhouse. Recent Kool Kat Calu Cordeira mixes tiki libations at Mai Tai Tahitian Tuesday starting at 9 p.m. at the Dark Horse Tavern tonight. Grab your horn and head to Twain’s in Decatur for a Joe Gransden jazz jam session starting at 9 p.m. J.T. Speed rock the blues at Fat Matt’s Rib ShackNathan Nelson & Entertainment Crackers blues it down at Northside TavernDance the night away at Tues. Retro in the Metro nights at Midtown’s Deadwood Saloon featuring video mixes of ’80s, ’90s and 2Ks hits.

Wednesday, Oct. 3

We can’t promise a Once in A Lifttime performance, but it’s still mighty cool to see David Byrne live. This time he’s with St. Vincent at Cobb Energy Centre. The Mystery Men? surf down to the Star Bar with Moon Base, Hope to Death and Hello Cobra. Hoop Essence, featuring Kool Kat Rebecca DeShon, starts a Hula Hooping for Everyone class at 6-7 p.m. at CORE Dance Studios. Get ready to rumba, cha-cha and jitterbug at the weekly Swing Night at Graveyard Tavern. The Hollidays make it a soulful night at Fat Matt’s Rib ShackDanny “Mudcat” Dudeck blues it down at Northside Tavern. Dance to ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s hits during Retro in the Metro Wednesdays at Pub 71 in Brookhaven.

Thursday Oct. 4

Atlanta Burlesque & Cabaret Club holds its monthly meeting at Elliott Street PubPlaza Theatre screens 1987 fairy tale satire cult classic THE PRINCESS BRIDEFilmmaker David Markey (1991: THE YEAR PUNK BROKE) goes hardcore, mixing in-depth interviews, rare live footage and historical perspective in CIRCLE JERKS: MY LIFE AS A JERK (2012) the story of one of the most influential bands in the American underground, at Cinefest at GSUEat, drink and play a classic game with an adult spin every Thursday night as Mon Cherie presents Mad Lib-Ations, Atlanta’s newest Retro weekly pastime, starting at 7 p.m. at the Corner Tavern in Little 5 Points. The fun-filled night includes games and prizes from some of the city’s most fun Retro retailers, Psychobilly Freakout and punk faves spun by The Right Reverend Andy and a raffle. Relax with a tropical cocktail at vintage tiki bar Trader Vic’s where Tongo Hiti play Retro-Polynesian luxurious live lounge sounds, as well as trippy takes on iconic pop songs, every Thursday night. The Breeze Kings and Chickenshack bring on the blues respectively at Northside Tavern and Fat Matt’s Rib Shack. Culliton, Dean & Bass play Bluegrass Tuesday at Red Light Cafe. Mike Z Trio honkytonks it up at Big Tex.

Friday, Oct. 5

Get in the Halloween spirit as Plaza Theatre‘s Universal Monster Month kicks off with the Boris Karloff classic THE MUMMY(1932), playing all weekend. Meanwhile over at Cinefest, in DRILLER KILLER (1979), an artist slowly goes insane and takes to the streets of New York after dark to randomly kill derelicts with a power drill.The Lizardmen pay respect to The Who, The Pinups cover David Bowie’s PINUP and Cherry Bomb are all Joan Jett all the time at Star BarAbbey Road Live! brings back The Beatles at Terminal West at King PlowSwamp Funk Quartet bring on the blues, down and dirty at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack. on the big screen at GSU’s Cinefest at 9 p.m.The PlazaLOLA blues it down at Northside Tavern. Frank Barham plays Big Tex. The Bonaventure Quartet throw a Swing Dance Night under the dinosaurs at Fernbank Museum of Natural History Martinis & IMAX.

Saturday, Oct. 6

Our top pick for Saturday is a truly scrumptious tribute to one of our favorite Retro treats. Willy Wonka would appreciate the World of Pure Imagination that is the Sugar Dolls‘ annual Day of the Cupcake celebration. The confectionary-inspired festivities begin at Sacred Heart Tattoo ( Little Five Points location) from noon to 7 p.m. with $50 cupcake tattoos, sugar skull decorating & contest, free cupcakes, games and live performances. Then at 7 p.m., the fun moves to  The Five Spot where a $15 cover ($10 with cupcake tattoo) gets you $5 Lucid absinthe, free masks for early arrivals and music by bands Christ, LordToy Devils and Till Someone Loses an Eye featuring Aileen Loy, as well as special guests The Thimblerig Circus, The Chameleon QueenClay Crocker of Prentice Suspensions and aerial performances by: lori Vanvoorhis, Mara Chanin, Aileen Loy and Alexis Gorsuch. And of course, the Cupcake Eating Contest will be back as well! There’s also an art auction, and eccentric garb is encouraged but not required! The entire day and evening supports Aid Atlanta.

Of course, every Saturday night in Atlanta has too many choices. Dress in your best wicked 1850’s funeral attire, you thieves, gamblers, and loose women, and walk in a Jazz Funeral for Snake Nation, a rowdy red light district that was cruelly and deliberately burned down. Today that district is Castleberry Hill. Come early to build a saloon lantern in free workshops for a 40 Saloon Salute! Meet at 217 Walker Street at 7:30 p.m. and step off at 8 p.m. Also on Saturday, Journey will help you not stop believin’ at Lakewood Amphitheatre. The Matron of the Atlanta Burlesque and Cabaret Society Talloolah Love teaches the Burlesque in the Bedroom workshop to channel the art of the peel, the roots of burlesque and how to challenge society’s cookie cutter norms of beauty and art at Liberator Factory Store. Or go Really Retro and show off your steampunk at the Artifice Club meeting at Cypress Street Pint and Plate. Veteran Atlanta singer/songwriter Michelle Malone plays Eddie’s Attic with Deja Vu. Tommy Dean Trio plays Big Tex. Jason Patros Trio is at Fat Matt’s.  Matt Wauchope & The Martans rock Northside TavernAnd as usual, DJ Romeo Cologne transforms the sensationally seedy Clermont Lounge into a ’70s disco/funk inferno late into the wee hours.

Sunday, Oct. 7

Historic Oakland Cemetery hosts its annual Sunday in the Park celebration from noon to 6 p.m. with free tours, open mausoleums, live entertainment, food, vendors and a Victorian costume contest. The Brit gals with the biggest hair,  Bananarama, are really singin’ something at Hard Rock Cafe in support of Pinktober breast cancer research fundraising. Pat Metheny Unity Band jazzes up Variety PlayhouseFat Back Deluxe rock the blues at Fat Matt’s, and Uncle Sugar blues it down at Northside Tavern.  Os Ossos brings a Brazilian jazz sound to dunch at 1 p.m. at The Earl.

Ongoing

DRACULA THE ROCK OPERA merges JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR with Grand Guignol in a production that rocks hard but is surprisingly true to Bram Stoker‘s original novel. Not to be missed, this DRACULA has the energy, musical, acting and staging quality of an off-Broadway find but yet is completely homegrown, conceived by Rob Thompson (Dracula) of the Little Five Points Rock Star Orchestra and directed by Del Hamilton and Justin Welborn. Its cast and creative team also include Naomi Lavender (Mina), Chris Love (Jonathan Harker), Jeff Langston of AM Gold (Van Helsing) and Shane Morton of the Silver Scream Spookshow (Quincey). Watch for a full Retro Review soon. Through Oct. 14.

If you know of a cool happening coming up soon, send suggestions to ATLRetro@gmail.com.

Category: This Week in ATLRetro | TAGS: None

This Weekend in Retro Atlanta, Sept. 28-30, 2012

Posted on: Sep 28th, 2012 By:

AM Gold. Photo credit: David Batterman.

I always believe in being straight-up so I want to take a quick moment out before getting o a pretty amazing Retro Weekend in Atlanta to apologize that over the past few months ATLRetro hasn’t been your dependable one stop for all the Retro activities you want to know about in Atlanta. Our calendar writer had to move on at the same time I embarked on a big time-consuming life change. Every week I thought I could catch up, but then something else side-winded me, so some weeks went by without This Week. ATLRetro has been fortunate enough to have some great contributing writers, such as Torchy Taboo, James Kelly and Jennifer Belgard, to tide us over on the features and reviews side, and now things are beginning to calm down just as the Hallows season hits Atlanta with a vengeance. I’d love to expand the coverage to cocktails, restaurants, how-to mid-century design tips and vintage vacations. To do that, though, ATLRetro needs a few more good writers and in particular a calendar writer/editor. The latter position is a great opportunity for a journalism intern or a writer wishing looking for more experience, more bylines and some real fun! So drop a line to me, Anya99, at atlretro@gmail.com if you or someone else you know wants to join the ATLRetro team! And now back to This Weekend In Retro Atlanta!

Friday, Sept. 28

Featuring some of Atlanta’s hardest rocking musicians, AM Gold celebrates the release of its first CD at the Star Bar tonight. Find out why it’s our top pick of the evening in our exclusive interview with Kool Kat of the Week Joel Burkhart here.

We know Atlanta is Horror Town USA, even if the rest of the nation doesn’t – and it has nothing to do with THE WALKING DEAD. Before you head to the Star Bar, catch the opening of two of the city’s best homegrown haunted attractions, Netherworld and The Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse. Look for scary sneak previews here soon.

The Plaza finishes off its September Kubrick Festival with a three-day run of the crazed Cold War cult classic DR. STRANGELOVE, OR HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB (1964) starring Peter Sellers and George C. Scott.

Legendary ’80s/90s Atlanta band Insane Jane reunites for one show only for a benefit for Sylvia Cross at The Earl.  Cross was a huge supporter of Atlanta music and art through Sylvia’s Atomic Cafe in the ’90s to The Sycamore Place Gallery in the 2000s. Your cover will help with medical bills she incurred due to hip-replacement surgery without the benefit of health insurance.

Peter Sellers in DR STRANGELOVE.

This weekend more than 10,000 Japanese anime fans will descend on Cobb Galleria Centre and the Renaissance Atlanta Waverly Hotel next door for Anime Weekend Atlanta (AWA). The four-day pop culture convention kicks off tonight and runs through Sunday afternoon. To find out why it’s Retro from kaiju eiga to a jazz bebop lounge in last year’s Kool Kat interview with Jason Merrill here.

Spanky & the Love Handles bring on the blues at Fat Matt’s. Cadillac Jones, The Mar-Tans and Nick & The Grooves rock The Five SpotFrankie’s Blues Mission plays the blues at Johnny MacCracken’sDanny “Mudcat” Dudeck blues it down at Northside TavernTerry Flynn Band plays Big Tex. Join jazz vocalist Rai Ragland and her trio for an exciting evening of swing, blues, Latin, ballads and more under the dinosaurs at Fernbank Museum of Natural History Martinis & IMAX.

Saturday, Sept. 29

Listen to great bands ALL DAY at Little Five Fest, an all-day music and street festival at multiple venues. In between the live music, consider taking a break to see the Atlanta stage experience of the year, DRACULA: THE ROCK OPERA, at 7 Stages in a special 2 p.m. show (First 75 with a festival pass get in free and watch for an in-depth Retro Review soon!) and stick around Java Lords for screenings of  swell Retro flicks like WAYNE”S WORLD, PEE WEE’S BIG ADVENTURE and GHOST BUSTERS.

Over at The PlazaBlast-Off Burlesque enter the FORBIDDEN ZONE tonight for the latest in their Taboo La-La series. It’s much more than a rare chance to see a 30th anniversary presentation of the 1982 Richard Elfman cult classic, starring Susan Tyrrell and Herve Villechaize, on the big-screen.  A zany and sexy preshow featuring special guests Chico! and Rev. Uncle Laffo, a costume contest, concubine humper contest, prizes from Libertine, complimentary cocktails and DJ Westwood-a-Go-Go! Remember, it’s only a movie that will have you living in the Sixth Dimension!

Anime Weekend Atlanta (AWA) continues. Soul Rebels Brass Band are at Smith’s Olde BarTommy Dean Trio plays Big Tex. The Jumpin’ Jukes shake up Fat Matt’s.  Danny “Mudcat” Dudeck blues it down again at Northside TavernAnd as usual, DJ Romeo Cologne transforms the sensationally seedy Clermont Lounge into a ’70s disco/funk inferno late into the wee hours.

Sunday, Sept. 30

Snake Legs rock the blues at Fat Matt’s, and Uncle Sugar blues it down at Northside TavernInterstate plays dunch at 1 p.m. at The EarlAnime Weekend Atlanta (AWA) concludes and it’s your last chance to see DR. STRANGELOVE, OR HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND LOVE THE BOMB (1964) at a 3 p.m. matinee at The Plaza Theatre.

If you know of a cool happening coming up soon, send suggestions to ATLRetro@gmail.com.

Category: This Week in ATLRetro | TAGS: None

Kool Kat of the Week: Joel Burkhart Plans on Doing Something With It; AM Gold Throws a CD Release Party at the Star Bar

Posted on: Sep 27th, 2012 By:

AM Gold at Oakland Cemetary. Photo credit: David Batterman.

By Torchy Taboo
Contributing Writer

My radio was my best friend from grade school all through college. I knew every word to every song and spent my teen years trying to stretch my tiny hands across the frets to eke out “Smoke on the Water” like the rest of my artsy friends. An Atlanta band has emerged called AM Gold that speaks to the growed-up heart looking for that “me and my radio” feeling. They will celebrate the release of their first CD, PLANNING ON DOING SOMETHING WITH IT, this Friday September 28 at the Star Bar with Higher Choir and My Rebel Episode.  A dream-team of an outfit, they’re fronted by this week’s Kool Kat guitarist Joel Burkhart, who was good enough to give ATLRetro the back-story on growing up in the glory days of AM radio, his past bands and Star Bar shenanigans.

Torchy/ATLRetro: Tell me about AM Gold.

Joel Burkhart: AM Gold started as a dream. Several nights in a row I had this dream of a band playing on the top of a hill. There was sunlight behind them so all I could see were the long shadows of the band cascading down the hill. The golden rays of the sun eclipsing any details other then the shadows of the people playing. The sound was a chorus of voices, not heavenly like a choir but more earthly and gritty. I heard them singing these lines:

“These are the songs we like to sing
Makes us forget most everything
This is the way that I want to feel
Soft as love and strong as steel.”

After the third or fourth night of this dream, I picked up the guitar and wrote that song. Then I started putting together the band. I knew it would possibly be the last band I ever put together so it had to be amazing. It had to have great players but this time it also had to have great singers. This was going to be all about the words and the melodies. If I wanted them to shine I had to get the right people to be in the chorus.

I have played with Jim [Stacy], Eric [Young] and Jeff [Langston] for years and knew what they were capable of. Jim Stacy has been a lead singer/frontman for many years with Greasepaint, LaBrea Stompers and Little Women and sings with me in The Downers. He was first on the list, but I asked him last because I didn’t think he’d want to be in another band with me. Jeff plays with me in Bully but has also fronted his own bands (Ledfoot Messiah, Ritual, Flathead Fuel) for years. He is quite possibly the best male vocalist in Atlanta that no one knows about. Eric has been my drummer through Mulberry Street, Bully, The Downer Brothers and now AM Gold. Along the way he started singing back-ups and is one of the best singing drummers around. He also makes playing drums look as easy as breathing. Musically I have never played with a better drummer. I have a hard time imagining my songs with anyone else playing drums on them.

When it came time to complete the rhythm section, there has always been a combination that I wanted to hear together. I had Eric and now I was lucky enough to get Blake [Parris] to say yes also. Blake is this town’s hidden treasure. Someday someone who can pay him properly for his services is going to come and take him on the road and we won’t ever see him again. Blake is an amazing bass player and singer – probably one of the best -but he can play almost anything: electric guitar, acoustic guitar, lead, rhythm, banjo, lap steel, pedal steel, keys… I really bet that you could give him a trombone, and in 15 minutes he would have a proper part written for a song. There is nothing that I can play or sing that won’t be made significantly better with Blake. He could just sit onstage with anyone and make then sound better. Seriously.

The final piece to the puzzel was a keyboard player. The only person that even crossed my mind was Jett [Bryant]. While he is not one given to the art of practice, he is one of the best damn singers in the game of rock and roll. He knocked’em dead in the Rock City Dropouts and kills it every night with Bigfoot. With AM Gold, he is pitch perfect and brings the pretty. I am sure that this is the most professional band I have ever played with. Practices and rehearsals are exciting and fun. We always have fun playing shows and hell, on top of all of that, we like each other. We all genuinely like being in the same room and shooting the shit. When the 6 of us are playing and singing together it is magic. There is no other word for it.

Joel, where are you from? Did you grow up listening to AM radio?

Joel: I am originally from Detroit. Lived there until the age of 5. Lived in farm country – Tecumseh,MI – for a few years before moving to Brighton, Michigan. I spent the 1980s as a mall rat in the suburbs. I moved to Atlanta when I turned 19 [in 1989].

Totally grew up listening to AM radio early on in Detroit – WJBK, WXYZ and CKLW. Later listened to commercial FM Radio – WRIF, WLLZ – and the college stations from University of Michigan and Eastern Michigan University.

Joel Burkhart. Photo Credit: John McNicholas.

Do you write much aside from lyrics and when did you first start writing songs?

You know, I used to write all the time. I have notebooks and notebooks of stuff. Poems, short stories, essays, laundry lists – actual and metaphysical – good, bad, everything,  As I have gotten older, I write less but the quality seems to be higher. I think that comes with being married and having kids, but also realizing who I am and what I want to say. When I do put pen to paper these days, there is probably a song there.

I started writing songs pretty late, I think. I was in my mid-teens when I first learned enough chords to have two different parts to a song. Unfortunately the first one sounds a lot like “Under The Milky Way Tonight” by The Church and the second one sounds a lot like “Boys Don’t Cry” by The Cure. It really wasn’t until a few years ago that I started to think I was writing my own songs that sounded like me. I think that’s part of the process: writing and writing and writing until you find your own voice.

Who were your earliest musical influences that stuck with you?

I think like most kids you listen to what is around you at the time, and my earliest influences were from my relatives. Whether it was my cousins listening to Elvis, Chicago, Kiss or Steve Miller; my grandfather listening to hits from the ’40s and ’50s; my grandmother playing WWII ballads on her Wurlitzer; or my uncle’s Rare Earth, Kansas and Yes records, it all influenced me. Some of the best memories I have are driving around singing “Afternoon Delight” [Starland Vocal Band] or “What’s Going On” [Marvin Gaye] along with my mother. Detroit radio was some of the best in the country in the ’70s, and my mother, in particular, was pretty influential in my early years. She loved music and loved singing; whether it was rock, soul or country, she listened to it all. Our record collection had Neil Diamond, Neil Sedaka, Paul Williams, Barbra Streisand and the Bee Gees. Another big record that stuck with me was Tom T. Hall record SONGS OF FOX HOLLOW – For Children of All Ages. My grandmother gave that to me. I wore that thing out.

Who’d you listen to that makes you ask, “What was I thinking?  and how’d you ‘take their sad song ‘n make it betta’? Even the questionable influences of childhood can positively shape budding creativity, right?

When I was a young child, we had one of those small Imperial portable record players and I would go from room to room when my parents had parties putting on my “show.” I would carry my record player, my yardstick – which doubled as microphone and guitar – and my favorite record, Helen Reddy’s “I Am Woman” b\w “Delta Dawn.” I would sing through side one, take my break and then sing through side two. Man, I could rock that shit.

While there was some questionable hair metal that I listened to in the ’80s – TnT, Krokus, Helix anyone? – I can’t really disavow it in good conscience. They are all colors in my crayon box so to speak. Some people are great at painting with one color; I’m not. All of the music that I have listened to tends to find its place in the songs that I write for my different bands.

Before the Star Bar sound booth days, what was your worst day job, and did I hear the residue of that angst in your band Bully?

I did death scene clean up for almost two years. It was miserable work, didn’t pay very well, boss was a dick. That was very influential in the Bully songwriting process. “Quitter,” “Spit,” “I Don’t Feel Well,” “2nd Drawer Down.” All from that period of time. I’d come home pissed off and beat, fire up the bong, hit the Jaeger and let it all out. Thankfully my work life is less stressful now, but I think that was what life is supposed to be like in your 20s, living hard and carefree.

What was it like working sound at the Star Bar? Favor us with a story of your days in the booth.

So much to tell – Jim Stacy and I once spent 30 minutes trying to get a G string on Hasil Adkins’ guitar while a nearly sold-out house waited impatiently. He had a box of old guitar strings he carried with him, every one of them old and rusty. Just looking at the box gave me tetanus. For some reason, none of them were the right one.

Once we had a kid who was trying to promote some shows – this particular one with Har Mar Superstar – have a breakdown on stage. He started calling out the booker of the club, the owners, the bartenders and finally me. He told the room filled with people I had stolen his guitar and amplifier – which I believe he had left in a friend’s car or sold for meth – and that he wasn’t a “fat, jaded motherfucker” like me. I, for sure, took the brunt of it, I guess because he was on stage staring right at me. I think most everyone thought I was going to kill his mic (or him), but I just let him keep going until he tuckered himself out. He ended up going to a mental hospital a week or so later. Pretty weird.

But I also had some great, amazing memories there. The Ex-Husbands blowing everyone away with an out of left field, dead-on cover of “War Pigs” [Black Sabbath], followed by “Beating around the Bush” by AC\DC.

I remember that!

Alejandro Escovedo bringing over 200 people to complete silence with the breathtaking-ness of his songs; The Drive-By Truckers playing an Atlantis Music Conference and just weeping over the song “Heathens,” knowing things would never be the same for them after that night. That stage is magic.

AM Gold. Photo credit: David Batterman.

As I was on the road last year, I heard a lot of BS about how listening to Johnny Cash was a hipster trait and therefore passe. What would you say to that labeling?

One of the bonuses of being older is that I don’t know if it’s hipster or not. I’ve been listening [to Cash] since the ’70s when I was a kid and never stopped. I don’t plan on stopping anytime soon.

With The Downer Bros, you and Jim Stacy pay homage to some of Johnny Cash’s most, for the lack of a better word,  “fierce” recordings. You recently rattled the walls at the 12th Annual Cash Bash at the Star Bar [Sept. 22]. How’d the idea for the Downer Bros come about?

Like most of our great ideas, it started off with drinking. During the rockabilly\country revival in the 1990s, there were a lot of bands that would throw in a Johnny Cash or George Jones [song] and do it in whatever style they played. There was no one really doing the slower, lost love, murder ballad stuff, and definitely no one doing it stripped down and acoustic. Jim and I loved that kind of stuff. So when we were waiting for bands to show up or when the night was over, we would play songs, just me and him. Acoustic guitar, harmonica and our two voices, harmonizing and trading songs. It was magic. The name came from trying to describe the music to our good friend Andy McDaniel. He asked what kind of music we were doing and we said “country music, but you know, the ‘downer’ stuff.” It stuck.

I’ve been paying attention and coming to see your bands for a bit now. Do I detect a progression of a happier and more fulfilled man through your musical timeline, having made so many people weep openly, inviting us to be healed and happy – or am I waxing fanciful?

I think there is a definite evolution. Mulberry Street was me getting my feet wet playing and performing but quickly became a little darker then I thought it would become. With Bully, I totally embraced that darkness and anger. When you are more or less penniless, living from day to day, broken-hearted and feeling alone, it is hard to find the light. The Downer Brothers are similar to Bully in that there is some frustration and  loneliness, but instead of being loud and in your face and angry, it was quiet and more thought-out and reserved.

AM Gold it is next logical extension of the realization that there is goodness all around you. Goodness in the things you do, the places you go and the people you meet. The trick, I think, is being open to it, being willing to let it chase away the darkness that has comforted you for so long. Don’t get me wrong, there is still a meanness out there, thriving and consuming, but you have the choice. You can live in fear with the darkness or live in the happiness of the light. Mostly now I choose the light. Some days it is really hard work to find it, but I think it is worth the struggle.

As a performer, what show stands out in your memory?

Probably one of the highlights for me personally was playing in Greasepaint and opening for Tenacious D. It was a sold-out crowd at The Tabernacle here in Atlanta. For AM Gold, it has to be playing The Dogwood Festival earlier this year. A few thousand people on a beautiful day in Piedmont Park. Nobody knew who we were or our songs, but they seemed to really appreciated them and we had a great response.

Honestly though every show is great in its own way. Any time I get to get on stage with my friends and we get to play our original songs, the ones we have practiced a hundred times, the ones we put our time and effort into writing and arranging and performing. That’s a good day.

Worst gig ever has to be the Chili Cook-Off at Stone Mountain last year.  It was the first time in over 20 years I set foot on stage for the sole purpose of making money by playing covers. While we had fun playing our Steve Miller Greatest Hits set at the Star Bar a couple months earlier, when it came to doing those songs again, there was no love for them. While I admire people that can get on stage and play three or four sets of somebody else’s material and are able to support a family doing it, I am not cut from that same cloth. I suppose that’s why I am not able to support a family doing that.

I’ve been the annoying fan begging for CDs forever. What was the AM Gold studio experience, was it documented on film and when will PLANNING ON DOING SOMETHING WITH IT be available? Joshin’, but seriously does being recorded affect your perspective? And by the way, thanks and eager to hear both the Bully and AM Gold disks!

The recording process was really fantastic. We recorded with a great guy named Jimmy Ether at his studio called Headphone Treats. For this recording we were all in the same room, playing together. We set up in the morning, recorded seven songs, and were pretty much done that night. We came back a couple times and overdubbed a few guitar parts, percussion and some vocals, but for the most part, what you hear is what we did that first day. It is a really great way to record. All of the recordings I have ever done previously were all with the drummer in his own room and the guitar amps in their own rooms and the rest of the band usually in the control room listening back through small, tiny speakers. It has always been frustrating for me. I like being able to feel the kick drum and bass, feeling the air move in the room with the music, the rise and fall of the conversation we are all having with one another through our instruments. There is no replacing it.

As for the Bully stuff, we’ve got over 40 songs that had very limited – me handing a homemade CDR to someone – release. I’m hoping to change that later this year. I think we are going to put out three EPs, each having five to seven studio cuts and two to three live recordings. I’m not really sure. We also started re-recording some Bully stuff a couple of years ago that has yet to see the light of day. When your bass player is in one of the biggest metal bands in the world, it gets hard to get everyone together in the same room and on the same page, but hopefully while Troy [Sanders] is home for a little bit between records, we can get some Bully time out of him.

What aspirations does the band muse about for the foreseeable future? Just sheerly hypothetically speaking, what’s next for you creatively?

The thing about us being in our 40s and doing this is that we don’t have the free time and lack of obligations that being 20 something has. Jett [Bryant, keyboards] has Bigfoot and a budding movie career [he was the star of DEAR GOD! NO! and is going to be in the follow up], Blake [Parrish, bass] and Eric [Young, percussion] are both in several bands and are in high demand as players, Jeff [Langston, guitars] has Ledfoot Messiah (they are doing the Kiss Kruise later this year) and he is in DRACULA: THE ROCK OPERA (ED note: Watch out for a Retro Review soon) at 7 Stages and Jim [Stacy, harmonica] has the Starlight Six Drive-In and Palookaville to run, as well as a successful TV show and the possibility of a opening a restaurant fairly soon.

And me, I’m not getting any younger. The thought of getting in a van and blowing with the wind down the road trying to find my rock and roll fortunes has long passed me by. The music I write and play isn’t fashionable. I have no hipster cred; my waist size has expanded. I’m not much to look at;  my head is shaped funny. At the end of the day I’m a 43-year-old IT nerd scraping by at a job I don’t care about, working for people who don’t care about me so I can earn money which is spent before I get it so I can keep a roof over my family’s heads and food and clothes in and on our bodies. I have a beautiful wife and family and a life like most people: spectacularly wonderful and exceedingly average. It just depends on what day of the week and how close we are to the next paycheck. Sometimes we have a little more than others, sometimes a little less. In my mind I’m doing all of this for them, hoping for the big pay-off someday. Rational Joel knows that is probably never going to happen.

But still, I have this need to make this music. I tell these stories and dream these dreams. That’s all good music really is. Stories and dreams. I’m going to keep writing and playing every chance I get for whoever will listen. When I have new stories, I write new songs. When I have new dreams, I write new songs.

It’s what I do, I don’t plan on stopping anytime soon.

Look for me up front and center.

AM Gold. Photo credit: David Batterman.

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Kool Kat of the Week: Bernadette Seacrest: From Ballet Dancer to Punk Rock Girl to Torch Song Provocateur

Posted on: Sep 19th, 2012 By:

By Torchy Taboo
Contributing Writer

In an ocean of great musical talent in Atlanta, we’ve discovered a shiny pearl perched on a high rock on the shore. ATLRetro’s Torchy Taboo had the opportunity to chat with singer Bernadette Seacrest and was immediately enchanted by her humble nature and artistic approach to giving performances. Bernadette plays the last Tuesday of every month with a revolving list of local favorites accompanying her at various intimate settings. On September 25, you can catch her at Sister Louisa’s CHURCH of the Living Room & Ping Pong Emporium; the show is upstairs from 8 to 10 p.m. and there’s never a cover. Bernadette opts to play small venues where she feels she is sharing the evening with the audience, the bartenders and wait-staff, everyone in the room. This intimate approach is informed, she explained to me by the deep creative  fulfillment she gets from performing, one that began as she was growing up fully immersed in the world of ballet.
Torchy Taboo: You are originally from Cali; North or South and is that where your performance background began?
Bernadette Seacrest: Yes, I grew up part of the time in California. My mom and dad split up when I was four. My dad stayed in NYC and my mom moved back to San Francisco but went back and forth between San Francisco and Venice Beach. My sister and I figured it out and all-in-all we spent the majority of our youth in Venice. Because we moved around so much I ended up attending ballet schools at the San Francisco Ballet, the Los Angeles Ballet and the American Ballet Theater in NYC.
Bernadette, as with all true ballerinas, grew up obsessed with the dance. It influenced every part of her growing psyche and was all she knew or wanted. Then all that suddenly ended. She suffered a tragic injury in ballet rehearsal which ended a promising dance career after which she ended up in NYC. How did you cope with that abrupt change and loss?
I dropped out of high school when I was injured; had a bit of a break-down when I couldn’t dance, was living in a foster home at 15,  and went to beauty school when I turned 16 (LA and Kansas City). Then I moved to NYC on my own in ’82 [at] 17 years old and lived in the East Village.
Is that where and when you developed your unique individual style? Did the punk undercurrent of the time in NYC give your angst a place to make itself useful?
I worked for a punk rock designer and started dabbling in fashion, and I also did a bunch of stylist work and modeling and junk – all with the crazy underground punk rock fetish peoples. No formal education in the fashion. I ended up moving to LA and creating a clothing line for a company called NANA. I took a few classes in fashion at Santa Monica Community College, but mostly I just figured shit out on my own. The women who influenced me back then, designers that I sold in the store I worked at [Enz’s – still in existence], were Vivienne Westwood, Dianne Brill and the like. Betsey Johnson had her little store just around the corner from one of the stores I managed. These ladies were kind of self-taught, too. It was the “punk rock” way, you know – if you wanted to play music, you played music, you picked up an instrument or whatever. I did have friends in school, but most of the folks I hung out with were doers.
How long have you been singing? And what was your first show?
I’ve been singing for just over 10 years. My first show was with Pat Bova in Albuquerque, NM. I was a wreck! I had had really bad stage fright all my life  – I was also a mess when performing with the ballet or doing any runway modeling. So I hated my first show! But I had always wanted to sing and I made a little promise to myself that I would perform five times, and if at the end of the fifth show I still felt the same way, I would stop. I would stop knowing I had given it my best. Luckily I was completely addicted by maybe the third or fourth show!
How much influence and input do you have in the writing of your songs? You describe them as “heavy”; does the phrase “Torchy'” (hahaha) also apply?
Torchy is most definitely a good description. I feel very fortunate to have found writers that I resonate with; it’s a real gift. They have all been my bandmates and have come to know me well. I am a feeling-based person more than anything. My guys bring me songs, I listen and see how I feel. It’s very simple. I don’t come at them with ideas- I allow them space to do their thing, the same way they allow me space to interpret their material the way I feel it. It’s a beautiful thing.
Your performance style is so personal. How does singing male-written lyrics affect that, if at all?
Actually, I had kind of a major epiphany this year regarding the song-writing. I have struggled with major insecurity about the fact I don’t write my own material, for as long as I’ve been singing. Really down on myself about it, not feeling confident about myself as an “artist” feeling like the cliche – “fraud.”  But this year I met with Pat Bova while I was visiting New Mexico and it hit me like a tidal wave. I’ll try and articulate it, but I am not sure I have the words to convey the depth of what it felt like to realize that my gift is to interpret his brilliant, and to me profound, material. It is equally as important for me to sing his songs as it would be my own. His songs need a voice. They need to reach people, they’re important. I feel they are important. They have such deep meaning for me. He knows me so well, knows my struggles and heartache, etc. He has been struggling the last several years, not performing himself as much, life kind of hitting him hard in some ways, and as I sat there with him, listening to him sing these songs he wrote I was filled with this feeling of “Oh my god! I HAVE to sing his songs, people need to hear this!” A wave of emotion came over me with an understanding like I’d never had before.
Bernadette explained to me the relief of finally finding that same complete fulfillment on stage that she’s experienced in the ballet. The list of accompanist is impressive, including local favorites RL Martin on guitar, Kris Dale on bass and Marlon Patton on drums. One week she found herself in a last-minute need of a drummer and as luck would have it, Kingsized‘s own king of the pipes, Big Mike Geier himself took a seat at the skins. Now that IS a creative approach.
All photographs are courtesy of Bernadette Seacrest.

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