Sunday, January 31, 2010

what's it all about?



kick-flip-finger-style





it's all in the fingers...

follow the leader



d-boy builds and soon sells the goods...

Saturday, January 30, 2010

dance dance dance




but i never knew how to... properly that is...




The pogo is a dance where the dancers jump up and down, while remaining in the same location; the dance takes its name from its resemblance to the use of a pogo stick, especially in a common version of the dance, where an individual keeps their torso stiff, their arms rigid, and their legs close together.

While similar to the religious dances of the Pentecostal faith and various African tribes, pogo dancing is perhaps most associated with punk rock, as both performers and audience members at punk rock performances often pogo; a pogo mob is a group of pogo dancers at a punk concert (see also punk dance). It is a precursor to the "mosh pit".




FOR THE RECORD... EARLY ENGLISH PUNK WAS NEVER ABOUT violence RATHER A VOICE FOR THE DOWN TRODDEN YOUTH BRIGADE... SURPRISE IT TOOK THE USA AND LITTLE TOWN CALLED LA TO TIP THE SCALE AND BECOME THE NEW BREEDING FOR SPOILED BRAT VIOLENT WANNABE'S (germs excluded)... SKIN & OI AREN'T PUNK...


oh btw i think im in this vid during the palladium shots... hey i used to be spoiled too. oi

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKoozg5nS-k

Friday, January 29, 2010

freeman chronicles - chapter one







freeman

rust never sleeps

trail head


salt dog
heavies

single fin blue

after the races















january 2010

Thursday, January 28, 2010

memories from the starship enterprise...


a long long long time ago i stowed away on the starship enterprise. i jumped a petty officer. i then donning his cool little outfit began to study the ships people. the vessels timeless on-goings.

several days later i jumped ship and free fell back to earth.

in conclusion to my my little adventure i realized that i should be happy, my troubles are no big deal. hell i could still be hanging with the tribbles.

those cute little troubled monsters.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

truth be told


elmer rules...


























Elmer Nelson Bischoff (July 9, 1916 – March 2, 1991) was a visual artist in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Monday, January 25, 2010

who's eating who?



Mark Strand

Eating Poetry
Mark Strand

I

Eating Poetry

Ink runs from the corners of my mouth.
There is no happiness like mine.
I have been eating poetry.

The librarian does not believe what she sees.
Her eyes are sad
and she walks with her hands in her dress.

The poems are gone.
The light is dim.
The dogs are on the basement stairs and coming up.

Their eyeballs roll,
their blond legs burn like brush.
The poor librarian begins to stamp her feet and weep.

She does not understand.
When I get on my knees and lick her hand,
she screams.

I am a new man,
I snarl at her and bark,
I romp with joy in the bookish dark.

Mark Strand was born on Canada's Prince Edward Island on April 11, 1934. He received a B.A. degree from Antioch College in Ohio in 1957 and attended Yale University, where he was awarded the Cook prize and the Bergin prize. After receiving his B.F.A. degree in 1959, Strand spent a year studying at the University of Florence on a Fulbright fellowship. In 1962 he received his M.A. degree from the University of Iowa.

He is the author of numerous collections of poetry, including Man and Camel(Knopf, 2006); Blizzard of One (1998), which won the Pulitzer Prize;Dark Harbor (1993); The Continuous Life (1990); Selected Poems(1980); The Story of Our Lives (1973); and Reasons for Moving (1968).

He has also published two books of prose, several volumes of translation (of works by Rafael Alberti and Carlos Drummond de Andrade, among others), several monographs on contemporary artists, and three books for children. He has edited a number of volumes, including 100 Great Poems of the Twentieth Century (W. W. Norton, 2005), The Golden Ecco Anthology (1994), The Best American Poetry 1991, and Another Republic: 17 European and South American Writers(with Charles Simic, 1976).

His honors include the Bollingen Prize, three grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, a National Institute of Arts and Letters Award, the 1974 Edgar Allen Poe Prize from The Academy of American Poets, and a Rockefeller Foundation award, as well as fellowships from The Academy of American Poets, the MacArthur Foundation, the Ingram Merrill Foundation.

He has served as Poet Laureate of the United States and is a former Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets. He currently teaches English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University in New York.



Paul Strand



b. 1890 New York City, d. 1976 Orgival, France
photographer
American

Paul Strand began photographing in New York in the 1910s. During the early 1920s he received recognition for both his painting and his photography. He visited New Mexico in 1926 and, beginning in 1930, returned for three consecutive summers, making portraits of artist friends and acquaintances. It was there, amidst a community of visual artists and writers, that Strand began to develop his belief in the humanistic value of portraiture.


Strand subsequently traveled to Mexico, where he photographed the landscape, architecture, folk art, and people and in 1934 produced a film about fishermen for the Mexican government. Thirteen years earlier he had collaborated with Charles Sheeler on a film, Manhatta, a study of the urban high-rise environment. Having returned to New York late in 1934, Strand devoted his energies to theater and filmmaking cooperatives.

In 1943 Strand resumed his still photography, focusing on the people and surroundings of New England. In the early 1950s he moved to Europe, spending six weeks in the northern Italian agrarian community of Luzzara and later traveling to the Outer Hebrides, islands off the northwest coast of Scotland. He traveled and photographed in North and West Africa in the 1960s.


profoundly apologetic


for no
post
of
day / night

yester-year-day


i was on a job

battling
some
heavy duty
dragons...

still bleeding...
still breathing...

still in love...

Saturday, January 23, 2010

thinking in terms of pictures





















art by: d - " BALDY " - boy


i love my six followers... u make it all worth while.

Friday, January 22, 2010

truly


unbelievable |ˌənbəˈlēvəbəl|adjectivenot able to be believed; unlikely to be true : unbelievable or not, it happened.so great or extreme as to be difficult to believe; extraordinary : youraudacity is unbelievable.DERIVATIVESunbelievability |-ˌlēvəˈbilətē| |ˈənbəˈlivəˈbɪlədi| |-ˈbɪlɪti|noununbelievably |-ˈlēvəblē| |ˈənbəˈlivəbli| adverb : [as submodifier] he worked unbelievably long hours.


http://www.sfmoma.org/

art by elmer July 9, 1916 – March 2, 1991

Thursday, January 21, 2010

tired in and out of montreal


cool kids unite... lets get together... sleep and dream.


check this shit



sorry i don't know who took that insane photo but who ever you are - i love you...

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

ooooh la-la as in la art show








i am going to get really inspired and im ready. im really, really ready... i can hear my brushes crying. it's gonna be work time boys.

la art show coming your way...

Monday, January 18, 2010

Sunday, January 17, 2010

through the venetian plate glass

i've been
sitting

inside

this place
for so long

i watch people
pass by

one time
this old woman
noticed

me


sitting
there alone
drinking
writing

pretending

how
did she know?

i blushed

then it came
to me

yes
it was her
eyes

yes
her eyes


her eyes
had given
her away




words & photo by t bird balderas

Saturday, January 16, 2010

brothers and sisters



collings + red
stripes =

understanding

Friday, January 15, 2010

so


im thinking

hey - that's
a great idea...

Thursday, January 14, 2010

spaceland - echo - plex - while my guitar gently weeps...

here's is a sampling of what your going to be doing - real soon


From: Spaceland Blast

Date: January 14, 2010 7:36:40 PM PST

To: tbalderas@verizon.net

Subject: James Lavelle, Bowerbirds, The Strange Boys, Daedelus, Scott H Biram, Nomo & More!

Reply-To: blast@spaceland.tv



TICKETS ON SALE SATURDAY


CLICK TO BUY TICKETS CLICK TO BUY TICKETS


IDAHO FALLS
Thu. Jan. 21
@ Spaceland


Record Release Show


“Featuring a line-up that includes former side-men for Black Eyed Peas, Mojave 3, Hope Sandoval, Cake and the Brian Jonestown Massacre, The Idaho Falls seamlessly mix the sound of California country pop with psychedelia and spaced out noise.” - The Los Angeles Times


“8 out of 10 stars. God, I love this record in so many ways. That a band have managed to independently release an album that's so beautiful to look at and hold is a feat in itself... It's an album that screams out to be listened to, and fortunately, this time around at least, you really can judge the book by its cover.” - Americana U.K.


“4 out of 5 stars. Setting a standard for today's country-fied indie bands.” - All Music Guide

LISTEN


with


RED CORTEZ

The music of Red Cortez is a puree of punk, bosa nova, blues, soul and rock 'n' roll. They bounce between frantic, hurried rock songs to gorgeous blues melodies with unparalleled expertise.



OLD CALIFORNIO

Unlike many revivalists, Old Californio also seem to understand that jamming was a fundamental component of the sound and whilst they don't quite provide a psychedelic maelstrom, there are tantalising hints on songs such as 'Warmth of the Sun' or 'Lazy Old San Gabriels'.


TICKETS AT DOOR

JEMINA PEARL
Fri. Jan. 25
@ Echo


Echo & Club Underground present


In Pearl's world, there's black and white-- and maybe some red. Things that suck get what they deserve, whether they're asshole fans, jerky boyfriends, or simply the notion of growing up. She's an old-school punk in that there's little pretense; she thrashes about onstage because she wants to and not because she thinks it looks cool. According to her Ecstatic Peace label head (and Break It Up guest guitarist/vocalist) Thurston Moore, she's not "out to impress anybody; she [is] just kicking total ass." He should know. As far as ass-kicking goes, there's plenty of it here. Nearly every song is marked with a rough-edged riff from another era, whether it be surf, garage, or girl group. And Pearl's guttural wail is intact. But there are no straight-up, minute-long goofs, and instead of raging on about pitch-perfect nonsense and suburban malaise, Pearl often turns inward. The self-reflection can be reassuring, as on the fizzy, Dave Sitek-assisted Gemini ode "Ecstatic Appeal", or deeply troubling, as on the laborious downer "Retrograde", where voices in the back of Pearl's mind tell her to "go on, cut a little bit deeper, see how far we can go."

Pitchfork

LISTEN



PURCHASE TICKETS

REVEREND
PEYTON'S BIG
DAMN BAND

Wed. Jan. 27
@ Echo


Echo & Grand Ole Echo present


Well, they're not that big, but they make a damn big sound: featuring the burly, bearded Reverend Peyton on steel resonator guitar and guttural vocal bark – a sort of backwoods Brian Blessed – with his wife Breezy on washboard and his kid brother Jayme on drums, the band bring to their retro-fabricated rootsy Americana an utterly gripping compulsion. Peyton employs a dervish blend of thrashed chords, bustling fingerpicking and slashing slide interjections, but it's the post-modern manner of his material that really sets them apart. Alongside food-themed cuts such as "Mama's Fried Potatoes" and testaments to the rambling life like "Worn Out Shoe", are songs which apply antique, vintage treatments to starkly modern concerns, corporate greed "Wal-Mart Killed The Country Store" to the health-insurance anxiety of "Can't Pay The Bill". Even that time-honoured blues staple, the fishing song, gets a dystopian makeover in "The Creeks Are All Bad", with Peyton advising anglers to throw back their catch "'cause there's PCBs in the catfish, and mercury in the bass". But there's room for a glint of humour too, as in the trailer-park scenario sketched in "Your Cousin's On Cops".

The Independent

LISTEN WATCH


with


THE DONKEYS

There's a little Dylan lurking in these bones, there's some old country and there's some sick melodies that can actually punctuate.


PURCHASE TICKETS



FRUIT BATS
Thu. Jan. 28
@ Echoplex




Fruit Bats were greeted by a very house when they hit the stage. They opened with a song from 2005's Spelled in Bones, “Canyon Girl”, and then played a few newer songs, but not before bandleader Eric Johnson asked for permission first, saying “We'll play some old shit, I promise” and joking that they would “play all four albums in a row, plus a mystery album of your choosing.” After a solid set of newer songs (some of which they also performed during KEXP's Bay Area broadcast), they pulled out a few revamped classics, such as “Seaweed” (with added harmonica) and “The Little Acorn.” They followed up with a few more new songs that were equally impressive. Behind Eric Johnson's distinctive voice, a change in style was prevalent in the new music. Although he never gives up the band's signature pop and twang elements, the songs were a bit more sprawling and mined a similar vein of classic rock as Grand Archives and before that Neil Young. Fruit Bats finished with a couple of classics, including “The Rainbow Sign” and “When U Love Somebody.” It was a great show, and we're looking forward to the next time Fruit Bats hit town... and to the new album we hope to see later this year!

KEXP

LISTEN WATCH


with


CITAY

Citay's source is the sweet California folk/pop/rock sound of the 70's, and with an excess of fashion-heavy, irony laden bands around these days, it's nice to hear something earnest.



EXTRA CLASSIC


DJ TURQUOISE WISDOM


PURCHASE TICKETS

FISHTANK
ENSEMBLE

Thu. Jan. 28
@ Spaceland






The LA Weekly calls them “cross pollinated gypsy music.... one of the most thrilling young acts on the planet.” Formed in 2005 and playing everywhere from the hippest LA clubs to festivals, cultural centers, museums, parades, and even on the street, the band includes two explosive violins, the world's best slap bass player, musical saw, flamenco and gypsy jazz guitar, trombone, opera, jazz and gypsy vocals, accordion and one little banjolele. Tackling everything from French hot jazz to wild Serbian and Transylvanian gypsy anthems, Flamenco, and oddball originals, the band is a not to be missed event for world music lovers...and everyone will love this intoxicating mix of music!

LISTEN


with


DIEGO'S UMBRELLA

Diego's Umbrella has prided itself on melting together a mish-mash of world influences into a surprisingly modern sound. The band's instrumentation includes a fiddle and accordion and at times their product is that of a wandering Eastern-European band of minstrels who were abducted by flamenco masters


TICKETS AT DOOR


OUT 4 BLOOD
Fri. Jan. 29
@ Echoplex


Rum & Humble, Echo & KCRW present

A night featuring artists from the TRUE BLOOD soundtrack


The Grammy-nominated ‘True Blood' soundtrack comes alive in a night of music from HBO's acclaimed series at the Echoplex on January 29. Reflecting the present-day Southern Gothic atmosphere portrayed onscreen, the soundtrack's haunting song selections lean toward a large helping of roots-oriented, swamp-flooded, Louisiana-influenced sounds; performed by contemporary and classic practitioners of the genre. Gary Calamar, music supervisor for ‘True Blood,' says “I am thrilled that we are able to pull together some of the amazing artists who are on the ‘True Blood' soundtrack for this very special show. And.... we are trying to secure some surprise guests as well. It's going to be badass !” Out 4 Blood is made possible in part with generous support from Louisiana Entertainment and proudly recognizes Louisiana's Year of the Song, celebrating the historic contribution of the state's songs and songwriters.



with


JOHN DOE


CC ADCOCK


JACE EVERETT


and more!


PURCHASE TICKETS

BOWERBIRDS
Sat. Jan. 30
@ Echo




On Bowerbirds' 2007 debut, Hymns For A Dark Horse, the coupled-up North Carolina duo spun folksy tunes and gypsy rags about the wonders of nature, which made sense—the record was made with singer Phil Moore and accordionist Beth Tacular living in an Airstream trailer in the woods, building themselves a cabin between band practices. Just as fittingly, Bowerbirds' sophomore LP, Upper Air, is a more intimate affair that finds the pair well nestled in a spare-but-sound set of songs. Bowerbirds benefit from a more-is-less dynamic musically, as well. Moore and Tacular break out organ, piano, autoharp, violin, and upright bass, among other instruments (not to mention a killer boy-girl harmony), but all in a successful effort to arrive at a simpler, more measured sound epitomized by the soulful jangler “Northern Lights” and the delicate surge of “Teeth.” Upper Air is a comely album through and through, and certainly one of this year's high-water marks for the acoustically inclined.

The Onion AV Club

LISTEN WATCH


with


JULIE DOIRON

After the brief “The Life of Dreams”, in which Doiron's voice and guitar are abetted only by a soundtrack of field recorded bird songs, the album launches into the Squire-penned “Spill Yer Lungs”, whose plugged-in power chords lurch uncannily like Black Sabbath.


PURCHASE TICKETS

NOMO
Wed. Feb. 3
@ Spaceland


Club NME


On last year's Ghost Rock, NOMO established their own brand of future funk, built on hypnotic grooves comprised of drums and a huge collection of electrified, homemade likembes and scrap metal. The horn section, once the thundering heart of the band, took on a different role, settling into spaced-out dialogue with the rhythms-- leader Elliot Bergman's more conversational horn charts recalled Charles Mingus and Sun Ra in their perfectly pitched balance between structure and disorder. Invisible Cities serves as something of a breath-catching moment for a band that's taken a giant leap on each of its albums, bringing some of the thunder back while further elaborating on the progress made on Ghost Rock. Invisible Cities is the exact record NOMO needed to make at the point in their evolution. It consolidates all their gains and nicely sums up their output to this point, and as much as you can point to influences and basic kinship with other artists, the music NOMO are now making is very much their own thing. NOMO's facility with both rhythm and tunefulness also makes it easy to follow them as they head down their own path. If you've come this far with the group, Invisible Cities won't disappoint, and it's also a pretty great place to start.

LA Record

LISTEN WATCH


with


ORGONE

Orgone recalls acts like Fela Kuti, Trouble Funk, and War, but with a heavy dose of disco, as on Killion's "Dialed Up," where the deep groove and diva vocals are so authentic, they could be samples.


PURCHASE TICKETS

DAEDELUS
Fri. Feb. 5
@ Echoplex


Alfred "Daedelus" Darlington is a proponent of Edwardian dandyism for the Internet age, and his electronic whimsy has been influenced equally by Coldcut's chopped-up beats and Bernard Herrmann's orchestral Vertigo. But on Love to Make Music To, the L.A. producer unveils a nocturnal soundtrack toughened up by booty bass ("My Beau"), hardcore techno (the astringent "Hrs:Mins: Secs"), and coked-out club rap (the slurry "Touchtone" with Paperboy and Sa-Ra's Taz). Daedelus' furious stylistic shifts are engrossing (if challenging), and when he closes the album with the glowing predawn ballad "You're the One," it sounds like hard-won catharsis.

Spin.com

LISTEN WATCH


with


NOSAJ THING

Nosaj Thing is now, without a doubt, among L.A.'s finest musical modulators. His electronic soundscapes and wild beat tectonics play like vignettes that affect the listener's mind as deeply as he hits their soul.



JOGGER

Jogger is prepping their first full length This Great Pressure for Daedelus' new Magical Properties imprint and if “In America” is any indication, it'll be a harmonious, genre-busting, ADHD-exacerbant* full of bleeps and strum.


PURCHASE TICKETS

SCOTT H BIRAM
Sat. Feb. 6
@ Spaceland


Amped sounds of a mad trucker crab broke open Scott H. Biram's Bloodshot Records' sophomore sticker, Graveyard Shift (see "Texas Platters," July 21, 2006), but the bruised heart of "Lost Case of Being Found" and "Santa Fe" uncovered disarming vulnerability. Something's Wrong/Lost Forever, platter six for the local one-man wrecker, opens on the institutional dementia of "Hospital Escape," which sets up the Fat Possum transistor blues of "Time Flies" ("when you're going down slow"). Yet it's the organ-lacquered strum of "Sinkin' Down" that records Biram's secret specialty: down-on-your-luck rubberneck-ability. "Still Drunk, Still Crazy, Still Blue," organ-coated as well, constitutes authentic outlaw melancholy from George Jones to Merle Haggard. "Draggin' Down the Line" leaves a trail equally obvious, and electric-hewn solo "Wildside" could dominate the quartet. Biram's lonesome soul approaches the authenticity of the Black Keys/Dan Auerbach, not forgetting harp carburetors ("Ain't It a Shame"), foot-stomps ("Hard Time"), or field-holler closer "Go Down Ol' Hannah." Graveyard Shift brought annunciation; Something's Wrong/Lost Forever responds with coalescence.

Austin Chronicle

LISTEN WATCH


with


THE DIRT DAUBERS

Colonel JD Wilkes (of Th Legendary Shack*Shakers), along with his wife Jessica and long-time friend 'Slow' Layne Hendrickson, make up the hillbilly / hokum trio The Dirt Daubers. Hailing from western Kentucky, these three caterwaulin hooologans sing loud and proud an eclectic mix of Appalachian, ragtime, and hot jazz standards and original music.


PURCHASE TICKETS

JAMES LAVELLE
Sat. Feb. 13
@ Echoplex


Its been a long five years since UNKLEs James Lavelle released his second mix album for GU from Romania. It followed his series debut from Barcelona, which was hailed at the time as one of the finest and most timeless albums to come out of Global Underground in years. James of course has been busy touring the world with his band UNKLE and releasing artist albums to critical acclaim while continuing to tour the world as an international DJ. His new mix album, in our opinion, is his best mix album to date! Bangkok was the chosen city, selected for its vibrant nightlife and multi-cultural party scene. The album is due for release 27th July 2009. On Bangkok, James has put together an electronic sonic soundscape that is his most eclectic yet, it features exclusive tracks and remixes from UNKLE themselves plus the likes of Radiohead, Radio Slave, Carl Craig, James Holden, Doves, Layo & Bushwacka, X-Press2, Innervisions (Henrik Schwarz / Ame / Dixon Feat Derrick Carter), School of Seven Bells, Nathan Fake, Evil Nine, Mystery Jets, Fergie and Animal Collective plus many more.

NME

LISTEN WATCH



PURCHASE TICKETS

THE STRANGE BOYS
Fri. Feb. 26
@ Echo


With an expanded line-up featuring Seth Densham and Jenna Thornhill of Mika Miko and Darker My Love's Tim Presley, Texas's Strange Boys look to ever so slightly build upon the roots-garage template they've constructed over the course of several singles and an excellent debut full-length on In the Red. The Boys have an uncanny ability to internalize a host of increasingly ancient (the ‘60s will turn fifty this year mind you) pop and rock sub-sub-genres and make them sound utterly vibrant in the messed up times of now. And based on the title track/first single, the new auxiliary members seem to have picked up the band's groove quite handily.

Prefix

LISTEN WATCH


with


CHAIN AND THE GANG

On Down with Liberty..., Svenonius and his (mysterious) gang churn out yet more groovy, bare-bones funk over which Svenonius waxes crypto-political and meta-textual.



NEVEREVER


PURCHASE TICKETS

Echo Myspace AtTheEcho.com Spaceland Myspace ClubSpaceland.com

SPACELAND IS LOOKING FOR INTERNS!

We are looking for web savvy marketing interns for the Spring semester. Applicants must have a passion for music, basic computer skills, attention to detail, experience with social networking sites, knowledge of the local music scene and venues, and be able to commit to at least 2 days a week in the office. Knowledge of photoshop, html, or prior booking experience is definitely a plus. Internship is for college credit only.


Please send cover letter, resume, and your 5 favorite bands to blast@spaceland.tv

UPCOMING SHOWS


EVERY MONDAY IN JANUARY @ SPACELAND - YEAR LONG DISASTER RESIDENCY
EVERY MONDAY IN JANUARY @ ECHO - THE FRENCH SEMESTER
EVERY TUESDAY IN JANUARY @ ECHO - OLIN AND THE MOON
1/16 @ Echo - AA Bondy / Nik Freitas / Willy Mason (early show)
1/16 @ Spaceland - Hockey / Asa Ransom / Eastern Conference Champions
1/16 @ Echo - Funky Sole with Special guest J.Rocc
1/17 @ Spaceland - Hell Ya! presents Adam Franklin and The Bolts of Melody / Rabbits / The Arms
1/17 @ EchoPart Time Punks with Yummy Fur / Neverever
1/18 @ Spaceland - Year Long Diasater / Imaad Wasif / Gasoline Angels / The Kris Special
1/18 @ Echo - The French Semester / Moving Picture Show / Light FM / Downtown/Union
1/19 @ Spaceland - Hotrats / Lemon Sun
1/19 @ Echo - Olin and The Moon / Dusty Rhodes & The River Band
1/20 @ Spaceland - Club NME with Har Mar Superstar / Neon Trees / Little Red Radio
1/20 @ Echo - The Ettes / The Blood Arm / Heavy Young Heathens
1/21 @ Echo - Music Go Music / Wounded Lion
1/21 @ Echoplex - Down & Derby Roller Disco
1/22 @ Spaceland - Movits / The Blasting Company
1/24 @ Spaceland - The Minor Canon / Rademacher / Andrew Lynch / Quiet Americans
1/26 @ Spaceland - Summer Darling / By Sunlight / Vanaprasta / Shiloe
1/28 @ Echo - The Parson Red Heads / The Chapin Sisters / Social Studies / All Spots to Black
1/29 @ Spaceland - Spaceland & ArjanWrites.com present Superfraiche featuring V V Brown / Reni Lane / Love Grenades / Scott Simons
1/30 @ Spaceland - Nico Stai / Voxhaul Broadcast / Yikes! A Lion / Fences
2/11 @ Echo - Grand Ole Echo presents Justin Townes Earle / Joe Pug

RECENTLY ANNOUNCED

Mondays in February @ Spaceland - PRINCETON
2/2, 2/9 & 2/16 @ Spaceland – MIA DOI TODD
2/4, 2/11 & 2/18 @ Spaceland – IMAAD WASIF
2/4 @ Echo - THELONIOUS MONSTER / DOGWEED / HORSE THIEVES / XANDER SCHLOSS
2/5 @ Echo - Club Underground with EBONY BONES
2/16 @ Echoplex - Mardis Gras party with OLLIN
3/4 @ Echoplex - LESLIE & THE LYS
3/18 @ Echo - XIU XIU / TUNE YARDS / NOVELLER

WIN TICKETS!


FRUIT BATS @ Echoplex Jan 28 (18+)
NOMO @ Spaceland Feb 3 (21+)

Be one of the first to respond to blast@spaceland.tv and get hooked up with a pair of tickets to the show of your choice (you must pick one from the two listed above).

In the subject of your email response please put the band name of the show you want to attend. Be sure to include your full name in the email.





Forward email


This email was sent to tbalderas@verizon.net by blast@spaceland.tv.

Update Profile/Email Address | Instant removal with SafeUnsubscribe™ | Privacy Policy.

Email Marketing by


Spaceland Productions | 2658 Griffith Park Blvd. | #391 | Los Angeles | CA | 90039