Friday, April 29, 2016

Frenchy gets Back in the Saddle again


The names “Bob Wills” and “Gene Autry” inspire smiles and swing dancing. In Atlanta that tradition is carried forward by Back in the Saddle, a conglomerate of local musicians whose fascination with Western swing and cowboy music has entertained Atlanta audiences — in various manifestations — for about 20 years.…

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Thursday, April 28, 2016

The 2016 Atlanta Mess-Around at a glance


Here's a rundown of this weekend's Atlanta Mess-Around festivities, including critics picks and links to each acts' music.

Weekend passes are available for $50 (+ fees) until 2 p.m. on Fri., April 29.

Friday matinee at 529 ($10, doors at 3 p.m.)
Death Stuff:  4 p.m.
OMNI: 4:45 p.m.
DINOS Boys: 5:30 p.m.
Wreckless Eric 6:20 p.m.
Eric Goulden, aka Wreckless Eric, is one of the last Stiffs standing.…

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Chelsea Shag brings forth 'Colours'


Chelsea Shag has remained fairly low key this year, playing a few select shows and releasing one live video for "Us Kids," while steadily working to finish her new record, Colours, out this Fri. April 29.…

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Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Atlanta Music Project Named a National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award Finalist

ATLANTA MUSIC PROJECT NAMED A NATIONAL ARTS AND HUMANITIES YOUTH PROGRAM (NAHYP) AWARD FINALIST

Atlanta Music Project One of 50 Youth Program Finalists Selected By President Barack Obama’s Committee On The Arts And The Humanities

 

ATLANTA – President Barack Obama’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities selected the Atlanta Music Project (AMP) as one of 50 extraordinary youth programs across the country. Of the 50 selected programs, ten will be chosen to receive a National Arts and Humanities Youth Program (NAHYP) Award. The NAHYP Award is granted to organizations that offer enriching arts and humanities learning opportunities to young people. Finalists were selected among 301 nominations from 41 states and the District of Columbia.

“The Atlanta Music Project is honored to be recognized as an NAHYP Award Finalist,” said Dantes Rameau, Co-founder and Executive Director of AMP. “Over our six years of working with Atlanta’s underserved youth, we have seen firsthand the positive effects that music has on a child’s development and received an overwhelming amount of support from the Atlanta community. This award is a testament to the positive impact we are making and we are grateful to be counted among the nation’s top programs that are making an exceptional difference for youth.”

NAHYP Award winners are chosen by a national jury composed of arts and humanities field experts and will be announced in June.  Winners receive a one-time grant of $10,000 and an invitation to attend a White House awards ceremony hosted by First Lady Michelle Obama.  

About the Atlanta Music Project

Founded in 2010, the Atlanta Music Project provides intensive, tuition-free music education for underserved youth right in their neighborhood. Now in its sixth year of programming and serving 200 students at four sites, AMP provides all its students with an instrument, a teaching artist, classes and numerous public performance opportunities.

AMP does not hold entrance auditions – the only requirement is a commitment to attending all classes. AMP’s programs include: the AMP Orchestra; AMPlify, the choral program of the Atlanta Music Project; the AMP Academy, which provides advanced musical training to AMP’s most talented and dedicated students; and the AMP Summer Series, a music festival and school.

AMP’s young artists have performed at Atlanta’s most prestigious venues, including the Woodruff Arts Center, Spivey Hall, and the Rialto Center for the Arts. In 2015 Clayton State University established the Atlanta Music Project Endowed Scholarships, providing scholarship funds for AMP students choosing to attend Clayton State as music majors and music minors. In the next two years, AMP will expand to serve more than 300 students at multiple sites. For more information visit http://ift.tt/1y14GV7.

# # #

Atlanta Music Project Contact:
Lindsay Aleshire, 706.202.6132, lindsay@atlantamusicproject.org

AMP Orchestra Spring Concert

AMP Orchestra Spring Concert



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OBN IIIs headline the Mess-Around kick-off Party

OBN IIIs from Austin, TX, have cranked out garage-punk rippers for years now, but with the group's latest record, 2015's Worth A Lot Of Money, they've amped up the rock 'n' roll, which, no doubt, makes for a good time live. On Thurs., April 28, OBN IIIs mark their third Atlanta Mess-Around appearance.…

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The A List: New music from Keith Williams and Lyonnais, Mylanta Nightmares Fest announced, and more music news


The new Lyonnais album, Anatomy of An Image, is now out via Geographic North. Stream the whole thing via Spotify.…

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Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Cities Aviv brings the vanguard of young Memphis hip-hop and electronic music to Murmur


Memphis-based rapper and producer Gavin Mays, better known to most as Cities Aviv, makes his way to Broad Street this Fri., April 29, for a show at Murmur. Press play on "Survival Fit," the closing number from 2015's Your Discretion Is Trust for a sample his production style.…

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B.o.B dives off the edge with 'E.A.R.T.H.' mixtape


Atlanta's favorite conspiracy theorist rapper is back with new music. B.o.B dropped his new, mixtape E.A.R.T.H., on Earth Day (April 22).…

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Eddie Flowers on the Gizmos' fanzine roots


The term proto-punk conjures up images of teens raised in 1970s suburbia, relocating to the nearest major city to form a band with like-minded misfits. Eddie Flowers' story deviates from that script.…

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All the Residents’ men

Shadowland brings the Residents Randy, Chuck, and Bob trilogy to a close. The Rule of Three is a Pagan/Wiccan belief that the energy someone releases into the world — positive or negative — returns threefold. It's similar to karma, and the subtle differences are best left to the eye of the beholder.…

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Atlanta Mess-Around turns 8

Atlanta’s garage punk festival sticks to its roots. Call it a garage rock festival, a Southeastern punk family reunion, or a binge-drinking holiday. One thing is certain: The Mess-Around is an Atlanta music institution.…

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Monday, April 25, 2016

How a Summer Music Festival Changed My Life Pt. 1

I attended my first summer music festival the summer after my 12th grade of high school. I was fortunate to have maestro Jean-Marie Zeitouni as a conductor in high school. To improve my playing, he encouraged me to attend the Orford Arts Center,  about a four-hour drive from hometown, deep in the mountains of Quebec. Besides the Suzuki piano camps my parents forced me to attend during my elementary school years (parents stayed with students = not as fun), I hadn’t been to a summer music camp in years. I hadn’t even heard of the Orford Arts Center. But I loved playing bassoon and I wanted to improve, so I sent in the requested audition cassette tape (remember those?). A few months later I heard back. I had been accepted, with a scholarship! I was set to spend two weeks studying bassoon with a gentleman named Stephane Levesque. Being the clueless, young whippersnapper I was, I had never heard of him.

Stephane Levesque and I, many years after our first meeting at Orford.

Stephane Levesque and I, many years after our first meeting at Orford.

At Orford I had a one-hour lesson with Mr. Levesque everyday for two weeks. I would quickly find out who he was: Principal Bassoon of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra. For those who don’t know, students usually get one private lesson with a teacher once per week, leaving the student six days to prepare for the next lesson. At Orford I had one day to prepare each lesson. In two weeks I made the same amount of progress I would have made in about three months of regular lessons. Scales, studies, solos, orchestral excerpts, whatever Mr. Levesque assigned, I was to play it for him the next day, in front of the other bassoonists. No pressure. But I did it, and I was stunned at my rate of improvement. I was even able to perform a solo piece at one of the student recitals.

The Orford Arts Center has perfected the art of the summer music festival. Up in the mountains, there wasn’t much else to do besides eat, sleep, hike and do music. Accommodations and food were provided for all so everyone could be focused on making music. Besides meeting talented young musicians from all over the world – as focused and determined to improve their craft as I was – I got to be around some of the best musicians in the world AND watch them perform concerts. For the classical music geeks, these are just some of the musicians we students were rubbing shoulders with: late cellist Janos Starker (cello God, basically), hornist James Sommerville (Principal, Boston Symphony), and clarinetist Karl Leister (former Principal of the Berlin Philharmonic) and my teacher Stephane Levesque.

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This t-shirt is still sold on McGill’s campus.

I couldn’t believe my luck. I’d practice all day, then at night, I’d get to watch these guys perform, the same musicians who were playing on the my dad’s CDs back home! And if you stuck around late enough (I did), you might catch these great artists eating a late night meal at the campus pub and they’d give you a few words of wisdom. Quite simply, it was an amazing experience. With everything – the environment, the students, the teachers, the concerts – geared towards the pursuit of musical excellence, you couldn’t help but be inspired. For me, this place was magic. I was hooked.

Lucky for me, Mr. Levesque thought I was talented enough to play bassoon at the college level. It just so happened that just a few months before Orford, I had been sitting in my guidance counsellor’s office flipping through a glossy-covered booklet about the McGill University School of Music. It had fancy pictures of the student ensembles performing around the world and the music faculty, several of whom were from the Montreal Symphony Orchestra. Being that my hometown of Ottawa was just two hours away from Montreal, I had always admired McGill University.  It’s almost always ranked as the number one or two university in Canada. I was pleasantly surprised that and in addition to being a seller academic school, they had one of best music schools in Canada.

 

Me, a happy McGill music student.

Well, at the end of my time at Orford, Mr. Levesque asked if I had thought about studying music in university. I said “yes, actually, I’m really interested in going to McGill University.” He said, “Well I’m on the faculty at McGill and I think you’d be a good fit.” And just like that, my pathway to college became a little more clear.

I went back for grade 13 (in Ontario at that time there were five years of high school), and practiced my butt off for college auditions. All I could think about was getting into McGill to study the bassoon. Fortunately my hard work paid off and I was accepted at McGill.

 

While a summer music festival played a huge part in my development as a musician, I couldn’t have attended if I hadn’t received a scholarship. Ditto McGill University. And ditto pretty much every other school and festival I attended. I am very, very, very, very, very grateful to my teachers who always advocated for me in obtaining scholarships for these endeavors. My two weeks at the Orford Arts Center, a summer music festival, literally changed my life.

Today, as co-founder and executive director of the Atlanta Music Project, I’m excited to have the opportunity to paid it forward. This summer the AMP Summer Series will bring the summer music festival experience right to the neighborhoods AMP serves for 100 talented middle and high school students. And to make sure all students can attend, we’re providing 100 full-tuition scholarships. You can support the AMP Summer Series by making a donation to our launch campaign, here.

Who knows, your support might just change a life. Someone’s support for me certainly changed mine.

 



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The Real Kids' John Felice talks Modern Lovers and his band's debut album


Boston rock 'n’ rollers the Real Kids’ saccharine-drenched 1977 debut helped pave the way for American power pop and new wave. The band also aided punk’s efforts to revive three minute pop songs, an honorable mission that’s left a mark on pretty much every band that has ever graced the Atlanta Mess-Around stage.…

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The A List: New music from Snowbride, PURSES, Futo, and more music news


Snowbride
has released a new track, "Lengths of the Interior," from Small Town Synthetics (date TBA). Listen to it via SoundCloud.…

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Friday, April 22, 2016

The A List: New music from Keithcharles Spacebar and holders, Atlanta Magazine remembers Prince, and more music news


Watch the video for Keithcharles Spacebar's latest single "Chillin Killin" at Immersive Atlanta. "Chillin KIllin" appears on Chillin...Killin (Awful), which you can stream via SoundCloud.

Listen to "Full Moon," the latest single from hip-hop collective [A]RT via SoundCloud.

ICYMI, Kennesaw garage-emo trio Holders have a new single, "Tough."…

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The Masarie Gang celebrates releasing 'The Mountains Are My Home'


Atlanta’s tightly knit acoustic/jam band scene always has lots of cross-pollination going on. Sharing the stage can enhance the sound, and encourages creativity, so on their debut release, The Mountains Are My Home, the Masarie Gang calls in a few favors from talented friends.…

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Thursday, April 21, 2016

Prince's Last Concert: Live at the Fox Theatre 4/14/16 [Full Audio]

The morning after Prince's last live concert — performed before two sold-out audiences at Atlanta's Fox Theatre on April 14 — he posted a Tweet as simple as it was profound: 
"I am #transformed," it read.…

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RIP Prince


Sad news is spreading across the Internet: Prince has died at the age of 57. The revolutionary, soul, pop, and R&B icon born Prince Rogers Nelson is reported to have been found dead in his Paisley Park estate in Chanhassen, Minnesota.…

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Floral Prints guide to Atlanta: 10 places to go when touring the city


Touring as a band can be a surreal experience. You might see the best a city has to offer, from food to art to people, or you might get lost amid a hundred miles of mega gas stations and box store sprawl.…

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Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Press Release: AMP Announces Launch of Inaugural Summer Music Festival and School

 

AMP-Summer-Series

ATLANTA MUSIC PROJECT ANNOUNCES LAUNCH OF INAUGURAL SUMMER MUSIC FESTIVAL AND SCHOOL

Program To Offer Free Summer Music Instruction and Concerts
In Atlanta’s Underserved Neighborhoods 

ATLANTA, GA. – April 19, 2016 – The Atlanta Music Project, a nonprofit providing intensive, tuition-free music education to students in underserved neighborhoods of Atlanta, announced the launch of a new program, the Atlanta Music Project Summer Series, a music festival and school. The inaugural AMP Summer Series will take place from June 6, 2016 to June 23, 2016 at two inner-city Atlanta sites and provide intensive choral and orchestral music instruction for 100 experienced middle and high school students.

AMP created the Summer Series as a way to continue providing high quality music instruction to its students, all within the context of a festival of live music performances by world-class musicians. As well as serving current AMP students, the AMP Summer Series will accept applications from experienced middle and high school musicians who wish to be a part of the program. Community-based, tuition-free, conservatory-level music instruction is an uncommon prospect for most of Atlanta’s inner-city youth. AMP is uniquely positioned to offer this rare opportunity in Atlanta’s underserved neighborhoods.

“For budding young musicians, a summer music camp experience is paramount to their personal and artistic development, and we are thrilled to bring this experience to the neighborhoods we serve,” said Dantes Rameau, AMP’s Executive Director and bassoon teaching artist. “We are thankful for MailChimp’s financial support in helping us make the inaugural AMP Summer Series a reality. It will be that special summer experience that creates lifelong memories for all involved.”  

The foundation of the AMP Summer Series will consist of three weeks of intensive musical instruction for students to include group lessons, music theory, composition, masterclasses and participation in an orchestra or choir. In addition to the music education components, the AMP Summer Series will feature free evening concerts and recitals by the AMP Teaching Artists and special guest artists, which will all be open to the public. The AMP Summer Series will culminate with final concerts by the AMP Summer Series Festival Orchestra on Wednesday, June 22 at 7 p.m. and the AMPlify Summer Series Festival Choir on Thursday, June 23 at 7 p.m.

“The AMP Summer Series is an ambitious project that will bring live music performances and music education to Atlanta’s neighborhoods that will benefit most,” said Lain Shakespeare, MailChimp’s Corporate Citizenship Manager. “MailChimp is proud to stand behind AMP’s bold vision of social change through the pursuit of artistic excellence.”

To complete the funding for this new program, AMP has launched a fundraising campaign through IndieGoGo. To support the campaign, visit: ampsummerseries.org. For AMP Summer Series program information and online application, visit: http://ift.tt/1rmZAGc

About the Atlanta Music Project

Founded in 2010, the Atlanta Music Project provides intensive, tuition-free music education for underserved youth right in their neighborhood. Now in its sixth year of programming and serving 200 students at four sites, AMP provides all its students with an instrument, a teaching artist, classes and numerous public performance opportunities. AMP does not hold entrance auditions – the only requirement is a commitment to attending all classes. AMP’s programs include: the AMP Orchestra; AMPlify, the choral program of the Atlanta Music Project; the AMP Academy, which provides advanced musical training to AMP’s most talented and dedicated students; and the AMP Summer Series, a music festival and school. AMP’s young artists have performed at Atlanta’s most prestigious venues, including the Woodruff Arts Center, Spivey Hall, and the Rialto Center for the Arts. In 2015 Clayton State University established the Atlanta Music Project Endowed Scholarships, providing scholarship funds for AMP students choosing to attend Clayton State as music majors and music minors. In the next two years, AMP will expand to serve more than 300 students at multiple sites. For more information visit http://ift.tt/1y14GV7.

###

Media Contact:

Lindsay Aleshire, Atlanta Music Project

706.202.6132, lindsay@atlantamusicproject.org



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Help Launch the Inaugural AMP Summer Series!

The Atlanta Music Project Needs YOUR Help to Launch the AMP Summer Series! Watch the video below and give today!

You were there when we made AMP a reality six years ago. You were with us when we started AMPlify, the choral program of AMP, three years ago. Now, join us as we launch a bold new endeavor: the Atlanta Music Project Summer Series, a summer festival and school. We want YOU to be part of this exciting new phase in AMP’s history.  Help make this summer an unforgettable one for 100 talented students. Thank you for your continued support of our mission to create social change through music. 

Make the AMP Summer Series a reality by donating to our launch campaign today! To support the campaign, visit: ampsummerseries.org

The inaugural AMP Summer Series will take place from June 6, 2016 to June 23, 2016 at two inner-city Atlanta sites and provide intensive choral and orchestral music instruction for 100 experienced middle and high school students. The foundation of the AMP Summer Series will consist of three weeks of intensive musical instruction for students to include group lessons, music theory, composition, masterclasses and participation in an orchestra or choir. In addition to the music education components, the AMP Summer Series will feature free evening concerts and recitals by the AMP Teaching Artists and special guest artists. The AMP Summer Series will culminate with final concerts by the AMP Summer Series Festival Orchestra on Wednesday, June 22 at 7 p.m. and the AMPlify Summer Series Festival Choir on Thursday, June 23 at 7 p.m.

AMP-Summer-Series

 



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The A List: New music from ACNE Electric Nature Flower and more


Bryan Scherer of Nurse and Cheap Art has formed a new band called ACNE. The band's demo of deathrock-infused hardcore is streaming on YouTube.

The newest release from ambient drone artist the Electric Nature, Dark Sun Set Circle, is out now via Illuminated Paths.

Surf rockers Hex Girlfriend (feat.…

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Gunpowder Gray rekindles a bygone era with 'Straight to Hell'


<a href="http://ift.tt/1STPHFL">Straight to Hell by Gunpowder Gray</a>
Two years have passed since blues-rock and classic metal outfit Gunpowder Gray’s self-titled debut arrived via Atlanta metal stronghold Boris Records.…

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Two AMP Academy Musicians Awarded Allen Edmonds Scholarship

The Atlanta Music Project and Allen Edmonds have partnered to offer a scholarship program that reflects the values of both organizations. Both organizations agree that it is important for young musicians to sound their best and look their best for performances. Founded upon this shared belief, the Allen Edmonds Scholarship provides two eligible AMP Academy students with a complimentary pair of performance shoes. The scholarship is open only to teens enrolled in the AMP Academy. Winners were chosen based on the merit of a submitted essay.

This year’s Allen Edmonds Scholarship winners are tenth grade violinist Cierra Butler and ninth grade cellist Danielle Liburd. The scholarship recipients were treated to a red carpet reception on April 11 at the Allen Edmonds store in the Buckhead neighborhood of Atlanta, GA, while they chose their brand new performance shoes.

Allen Edmonds 2

Tenth grader Cierra tries on a pair of performance shoes at the Allen Edmonds store in Buckhead.

 

Ninth grader Danielle (second from left) poses with AMP Conductor & Artistic Manager of Orchestras Christopher Thibdeau (left) and Allen Edmonds staff at the Allen Edmonds store in Buckhead.

Ninth grader Danielle (second from left) poses with AMP Conductor & Artistic Manager of Orchestras Christopher Thibdeau (far left) and Allen Edmonds staff at the Allen Edmonds store in Buckhead.

 

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About Allen Edmonds

 

Allen Edmonds began handcrafting Made in U.S.A. shoes in 1922 on the shores of Lake Michigan in Wisconsin. Today they continue this manufacturing tradition and offer the finest men’s dress and casual shoes available featuring classic American styling and fine craftsmanship. AE’s product is complemented by Master Fitters who have earned their title by fitting over 3,000 customers (and counting), making them experts when it comes to finding a pair of Allen Edmonds that will feel like they were tailored especially for your feet.

Allen Edmonds prides itself on using superior leathers such as calf skin and cordovan. These materials are combined with cork footbeds to create unmatched comfort. AE’s shoes remain in the last for at least 24 hours to ensure that they hold their shape for a lifetime. Allen Edmonds style is about more than just fashion and materials. It is about conveying a classic look while retaining versatility and durability.

You’ll be in good company with leaders all over the world who wear AE shoes during the most important moments of their esteemed careers.



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