Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

San Diego Symphony's 2015 Summer Pops Concerts

18 JUNE 2015
 
 
 


Of all the events calling your name during San Diego Comic-Con, one of the most beautiful will be the San Diego Symphony's 2015 Summer Pops Concerts. A multimedia fusion of music, film and digital imagery, the concerts offer several nerd-themed performances behind the convention center, next to the water at dusk. You won't hear the word "relaxing" in association with Comic-Con too often but this is one opportunity where you can kick back with a glass of wine or some popcorn and just absorb an enthralling experience. 
 


Thursday, 9 July - 8:00 pm


 
 
 

Pokémon: Symphonic Evolutions will take you on "a powerful musical retrospective through the popular video game franchise's most memorable melodies." You'll hear the orchestra bring the music to life while giant screens will show visuals from classic and recent games, including Pokémon Red, Blue, Yellow, Gold, Silver, Crystal, Emerald, Ruby, Sapphire, Diamond, Pearl, Platinum, Black, White, X and Y.

  
Saturday, 11 July - 8:00 pm 


 



Watch Captain Kirk (Chris Pine) and the Enterprise crew face off against super-genius and terrorist Khan (Benedict Cumberbatch) while the orchestra plays the film score live.

 
Saturday, 11 July - 6:00 pm 
 


 
Anyone buys a ticket for Star Trek Into Darkness can also buy a ticket for a meet and greet with one of today's most popular and prolific composers, Michael Giacchino. You know his work from the Star Trek films, Pixar movies like Up and The Incredibles, as well as Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, and shows like Lost, Fringe and Alias. Be aware that you need to buy a ticket for the movie as well if you'd like to attend the meet and greet.

All Comic-Con Weekend Concerts are located at Embarcadero Marina Park South, behind the San Diego Convention Center. $1 of each ticket goes to supporting arts education programs.


If you're looking for more of a peaceful evening event instead of a wild bacchanalia, put this at the top of your list. With the shows at 8 pm, you can get dinner first or go out after, or get a good night's sleep. Either way, San Diego Symphony's 2015 Summer Pops Concerts are one of the best Comic-Con events you'll find - so don't wait much longer before getting your tickets.


 

 

Party at SDCC with brand new music festival BAMF

17 JUNE 2015





You know how sometimes you get really sick of being indoors at Comic-Con? Those moments when you've been in one crowded hall, room and aisle too many? Sometimes you just want to get outside (in a non-Hall-H-line kind of way) and celebrate summer - and this year you can do so at a brand new 3-day party: The Bad Ass Music Festival.

Described as "where geek meets music on the streets of downtown San Diego," BAMF will be at Ruocco Park on 10-12 July. And by geek, they're including steampunk, Harry Potter, cosplay, comics, nerd rock and more. They will have:

  • Music from The Doubleclicks, Paul & Storm, Kirby Krackle and more
  • DJ dance parties
  • Comedians
  • Podcasts
  • Panels
  • Quidditch matches
  • Food trucks
  • A collection of local brews
  • A bounce house
  • Various vendor booths
  • A cosplay contest
  • Interactive steampunk performance by League of Steam
  • A dozen other things I don't have room to list

Ticket prices vary; if you have an SDCC badge, you can get in for 15; you can also bump up to 30 if you want to include a BAMF t-shirt. Non-badge-holders, you can get in for 50 and it rises from there. Remember, this is for a 3-day festival so those prices are pretty reasonable whether you have a badge or not.

This is a great opportunity to eat and drink and listen to music out in the sun or under the stars; a festival where you can actually move around and burn off some energy instead of sitting in one chair for hours. It's also a good way to actually meet your fellow attendees and future nerd friends, something that isn't always easy at the comedy shows, screenings and performances that abound at SDCC.

You can find out more about the lineup here. I know a lot of you are still hedging your bets on events, waiting to see what else gets announced (like, oh, say, Nerd HQ panels) - but given that you can fit this festival into whatever free time you have, it sounds like a pretty safe bet that BAMF is worth attending.
 


Interview with MC Frontalot

30 JULY 2014




If you were at the Merrow last Friday night, you got to see MC Frontalot give an amazing show. If you didn't get to see it, you missed out - but you can find out what he's doing right now. His sixth album, Question Bedtime, will be released by Level Up on 26 August, with guests that include Open Mike Eagle, Kid Koala, Paul F Tompkins, Kyle Kinane, mc chris and others. And yes, that is the artwork of legendary comic book artist Bill Sienkiewicz on the album cover above.

I caught up with him at Comic-Con to talk about his new album and dissect the essential nerdiness at the core of the #1 Nerdcore rapper in the world.


So you're the progenitor of Nerdcore. How did that get started?

The original idea was that it's difficult to present yourself as a rapper unless you're cool. Pop stars in general are usually pretty cool but rappers are especially cool. So I was sitting there rapping into my computer and it occurred to me that if I inverted the whole notion of how cool I was supposed to be, that it would make it acceptable that I was recording these things into my computer. I was doing it for years as a hobby before it turned into a career. In the beginning I didn't have to put myself out there much - I could use my nerd skills to do it without being a rapper in real life. I could make MP3s and had control of a web server and I could put up an image gallery on the frontalot.com page. It was all real rappers with their faces blurred out, pretending it was me.

The whole thing was supposed to be this sleight of hand – that's why I'm MC Frontalot. It's impossible to pin me down. But then other people started calling what they were doing nerdcore and the press started taking an interest and the press doesn’t like you to be an anonymous person online. They want to know how old you are and where you went to high school and what you look like. So I had to abandon all the anonymity. But I eventually made my peace with it and once I got the band together around 2004, I started doing it live enough that I was no longer embarrassed to get on stage.

Then the whole thing seemed great. The fan base built up over the years and it's been a full-time gig since 2006.

So what breed of nerd are you?

I started life as a big reader - fantasy and sci-fi when I was little but I became more visual as I got older and got deep into comic books. Then video games got very fancy and honestly those absorb more of my attention than literature does these days.

In addition to being a musician and rapper, do you practice other art forms?

I’ve always been a cartoonist but I’m not terribly good at it. I post web comics for my fans and this weekend I'm a guest at the Dumbrella booth.

Who are some of your favorite comic creators?

Chris Ware, Daniel Clowes, Julie Doucet, Hernandez Brothers, others.

Tell us about your new album.

It's all fairytale songs. I got a cover out of Bill Sienkiewicz which I'm extremely excited about - he's one of my favorite illustrators of all time. 

It's sort of a children's record and it sort of isn't. Like it's maybe slightly too scary and definitely way too complex for little kids. I don't know that there's an upper limit on being interested in it unless you felt for some reason you're too old to be interested in fairy tales.

Nerds aren't like that.

Yeah, nerds aren't like that.

It's weird  - it occupies this strange space between entertainment that is kid-appropriate but not kid-targeted. I was talking about this with my keyboardist; he said "yeah, it's for alternative tweens - it's 'altweenative.'" And I was like, "Wow, that is the shittiest word I've heard all night. I'm going to tell that word to the press and blame it on you." So it's altweenative and that's his fault, my keyboardist G Minor 7.


Awesome word. How is your new album different from your previous Nerdcore hiphop work?

This album is the first one that's a complete departure. The first five albums have songs on all kinds of topics like getting old or having trouble going to sleep. They always have stuff on my weird little core obsessions – there's a song about text adventures and a song about data encryption, a song about cryptozoology - stuff that's easy to identify as Nerdcore. And there's been five albums that have been very easy to identify as Nerdcore. This one, I don't know if it will be. There's nothing about computers or technology and the songs aren't set in the present day - they're all set to these really old stories.

But they're sort of magical and definitely very imaginative and I hope my audience will dig it. The seed of it is me at 11 years old in middle school in the library going through these old fairy tale compilations and bugging the librarian about missing volumes. I tried to make a record about my obsession. Maybe it is a Nerdcore record. And maybe it is a children's record - there's no cussing on it.
I don’t really have a handle on what the record is but I’m excited that I did something entirely different.

<Editorial note: I've heard the album and it is magnificent.>

How do you feel about your fans defining your work? For instance, when they see something in your work that you didn't intend?

Well, authorial intent only gets you so far. Every piece of art only truly exists in the mental landscape of whomever is consuming it. That's always their prerogative to decide what it means. But when they say "MC Frontalot definitely meant this" - we could have a debate but I'm going to have the most authority. It doesn't bug me, though. I like it when people find stuff I didn't intend that they think fits really well with the stuff I did intend.

I have a song called Origins of Species from the second record about my unhappiness with Intelligent Design becoming popular. The song is in the voice of this reverend, Reverend Frontaloud who's telling everyone how we're going to defeat the secularists. Someone stuck it on YouTube and half the commenters didn't understand the satire - they thought I was tearing down atheism and the other half said "You guys are idiots! MC Frontalot hates religion!"

And neither of those are true. I was trying to create a critique of Intelligent Design with some sympathy for people where I feel their brains have been infected by these ideas and it's not really their fault - your belief structure gets built when you're little. And you lean on other people and your culture to tell you what's right and wrong. I don't begrudge people who like to live that way. But I am mad at people who invent fraudulent ideas like creationism equals science. They're doing a disservice to people of faith. So that's one example of people thinking I intended something I didn't.


What's your favorite thing about Comic-Con?
Leaving.

Just kidding. My favorite thing about Comic-Con is getting to see some of my buddies and all the other creator folks who have to come here for work. In the evening I get to run around and sometimes I get invited to fancy nerd parties and I can fanboy out on whoever. I also meet people like fantastic illustrators – I’m always shopping for my next album cover.
 
Question Bedtime releases 26 August. 

Tour dates:
US: 19 August-20 Sept
UK: 24 September– Late October
Australia: Late October - Early November