Posted on:
Jun 20th, 2011 By:
Anya99
Monday June 20
Swing to Joe Gransden, trumpet player extraordinaire, and his 16-piece orchestra during Big Band Night at Cafe 290 on the first and third Monday of every month. From 3 PM on, savor tropical sounds and libations, as well as a Polynesian dinner during Mai Tai Monday at Smith’s Olde Bar. Kingsized and Tongo Hiti lead singer Big Mike Geier is Monday night’s celebrity bartender at Sister Louisa’s Church of the Living Room and Ping Pong Parlor. Northside Tavern hosts its weekly Blues Jam.
Tuesday June 21
Grab your horn and head to Twain’s in Decatur for a Joe Gransden jazz jam session starting at 9 PM. Fedora Blues is at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack. Notorious DJ Romeo Cologne spins the best ‘70s funk and disco at 10 High in Virginia-Highland. Catch Tuesday Retro in the Metro nights at Midtown’s Deadwood Saloon, featuring live video mixes of ’80s, ’90s, and 2Ks hits.
Wednesday June 22
It’s an all-star night of jazz and swing at the Star Bar with Nat King Coal Miners, a dynamic new jazz trio made up of three seasoned musicians, February ATLRetro Kool Kat Spike Fullerton (Ghost Riders Car Club) on guitar, Matt Wauchope (Blair Crimmins & the Hookers) on piano and blues man Dave Roth (Burnt Bacon). Read more about them in a sneak preview with Spike Fullerton posting soon.
Chris Isaak may not have that perfect pompadour anymore but you can see him still shaking up alt-rock with that modern Sinatra vibe tonight at in the Classic Chastain series. Get ready to rumba, cha-cha and jitterbug at the weekly Swing Night at Graveyard Tavern. The Hollidays bring a little soul to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack and Danny “Mudcat” Dudeckblues it down at Northside Tavern respectively. Dance to ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s hits during Retro in the Metro Wednesdays presented by Godiva Vodka, at Pub 71 in Brookhaven.
Thursday June 23
Expect “shimmies, shakes, glitter, glamour and, of course, tassels” as the burlesque beauties of Minette Magnifique take to the stage tonight in a new show titled Prohibition Exhibition *Making the Illicit Explict* at The Warren City Club. Read the ATLRetro Kool Kat profile of Shellie Schmals, aka Baroness VONSchmalhausen here.
In Conversations with Contemporary Artists: Radcliffe Bailey, the world-renowned artist discusses his work with diverse media in the new exhibition MEMORY AS MEDICINE, which opens Sun. June 26 and runs through Sept. 11 at High Museum of Art. Take a tour with the provocative artist in this week’s Kool Kat here.But you won’t find anything more effective than Buy Klonopin Online at all. Tickets to the talk at the Woodruff Arts Center’s Rich Auditorium are free but limited to two per person, and advance reservations are recommended at (404) 733-5000.

Tongo Hiti
Classic horror (James Whale’s 1931 FRANKENSTEIN featuring Boris Karloff vs Hitchcock’s 1963 THE BIRDS) is the theme for viewer’s choice night at Piedmont Park‘s Screen on the Green. Listen to Tongo Hiti’s luxurious live lounge sounds, as well as some trippy takes on iconic pop songs, just about every Thursday night at Trader Vic’s. Alt-country act McNary plays Kathmandu Kitchen & Grill (formerly Pho Truc) in Clarkston. All shows are no cover charge, no smoking and all ages. Party ‘70s style with DJ Romeo Cologne at Aurum Lounge. Breeze Kingsand Chickenshack bring on the blues respectively at Northside Tavern and Fat Matt’s Rib Shack.



Bluegrass Thursday at Red Light Cafe features Curtis Jones & Friends.
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Category: This Week in ATLRetro | Tags: 10 High, Amy Pike, Atlanta History Center, Aurum Lounge, Baroness VonSchmalhausen, Barrow Boys, bathrooms, Big Mike Geier, Blair Crimmins, bluegrass, Bonaventure Quartet, Boris Karloff, Breeze Kings, Bubbapalooza, burlesque, Cadillac Jones, Cafe 290, Chris Isaak, Classic Chastain, Clermont Lounge, Curtis Jones.AM Gold, Dave Roth, Deadwood Saloon, Dinosaur Jr, Fatt Matt's Rib Shack, Fernbank, Frankenstein, Ghost Riders Car Club, Gone with the Wind, Graveyard Tavern, High Museum of Art, Hitchcock, Hollidays, Joe Gransden, Kathmandu Kitchen and Grill, Mai Tai Monday, Margaret Mitchell, Martinis & Imax, Matt Waucope, McNary, Minette Magnifique, moda, Mudcat, Nat King Coal Miners.Spike Fullerton, Northside Tavern, Piedmont Park, Plaza Theatre, Professor Morte, Prohibition Exhibition, Pub 71, Radcliffe Bailey, Red Light Cafe, Retro in the Metro, Robot Monster, romeo cologne, Screen on the Green, Shane Morton, Shellie Schmals, Silver Scream Spookshow, Sister Louisa's Church of the Living Room, Slaughter camp, Smith's Olde Bar, Star Bar, Steve Miller Band, The Birds, The Earl, Tongo Hiti, Trader Vic's, Twain's, Variety Playhouse, Warren City Club, WaterDream
Posted on:
Jun 17th, 2011 By:
Anya99
Friday, June 17

Libby Whittemore
It’s an all-around jazzy evening at three Atlanta theaters, attractions and museums. Beloved Atlanta chanteuse Libby Whittemore returns to Actor’s Express for the second show in a four-day run (June 16-19) of LISA & LIBBY’S SUMMER CAMP, joining singer Lisa Paige and musical director/accompanist Robert Strickland for a summer-themed new installment to the Libby’s at the Express series. The show combines standards, Broadway tunes, and more, and in the second act, the 31st Ladyof Country Music Connie Sue Day. Shows start at 7:30 PM. Vocalist Marsha DuPree sings sweet, soulful cabaret and musical revue favorites at Callanwolde Jazz on the Lawn. Or head to the halls of the High Museum of Art for a night of art and Friday Jazz with Kevin Bales. Joe Gransden brings his big band style of jazz to Jazz Journeys at Georgia Aquarium. If swingin’ blues is more your mood tonight, Jump’n Jukes are at Fat Matt’s Rib Shack. Or catch an IMAX movie and merengue the night away during Salsa Night with Salsambo Dance Studio at Fernbank Museum of Natural History’s Martinis and IMAX.
Saturday June 18
What could be more retro than the first annual Rockabilly Luau at the Masquerade Music Park from noon to 8 PM, featuring a mix of rockabilly, psychobilly, surf and psycho-surf music by Hot Rod Walt and the Psycho DeVilles, Daikaiju, The Pelvis Breastlies, The Mystery Men?, The Rebel Surfers,The Go Devils, The Atomic Rockets and C.N.I. COW. More performers include Blast-off Burlesque, Davina and the Harlots, The Spinderellas and authentic Polynesian dancers and fire dancers. The total tiki day also promises Hawaiian BBQ and beer, a pre-1968 car show, Hawaiian pin-up girl and swimsuit contest, live tiki carving, lei greeters, a worst Hawaiian shirt contest, vendors and classic tropical drinks. All ticket sales support two local animal rescues. Catch ATLRetro‘s sneak preview with founders and this week’s Kool Kats Chris Mattox and Jessica Vega here and an exclusive interview with The Rebel Surfers here.
Papa Said Knock You Out and that’s exactly what Atlanta Rollergirls plan to do today in their monthly double-header at the Yaraab Shrine Center. First bout between the Sake Tuyas and Toxic Shocks is sold out, we hear, but tickets were still available at press time for the second match at 7:30 PM between Atlanta Rumble B‘s and visiting team Fort Myers Derby Girls. Then take the Highway to Hellbilly as world-famous mountain Dancing Outlaw Jesco White and country singer-songwriter Roger Alan Wade burn up Atlanta at 529 Club in East Atlanta. DJ Romeo Cologne transforms the sensationally seedy Clermont Lounge into a ’70s disco/funk inferno. And of course, ’80s metalheads/rockers will want to head to Lakewood Amphitheatre for Heart and Def Leppard.
Sunday June 19
Blake Rainey & His Demons headlines blues “dunch” between 1 and 4 PM at The Earl. Hall & Oates play Chastain Park Amphitheatre.
Closing this weekend

Ray Harryhausen's interpretation of the Cyclops in THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD (1958)
Sun. June 19 is the last day to see the original images which inspired Ray Harryhausen‘s amazing stop-motion cyclops, centaurs and other mythological beasts in the special exhibition, MONSTERS, DEMONS AND WINGED BEASTS: COMPOSITE CREATURES IN THE ANCIENT WORLD at the Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University through June 19. The exhibition of monstrous art, drawn from the museum’s permanent collections, shows how the ancient Greeks were inspired by other Middle Eastern cultures in developing a vast repertoire of richly imagined creatures.

Kandace Christian as Margaret Mitchell. Photo courtesy of Melita Easters.
Find out about the headstrong, irrepressible early years and the human side of MRS. JOHN MARSH..THE WORLD KNEW HER AS MARGARET MITCHELL at the Ansley Park Playhouse. The well-reviewed hit one-woman show by Melita Easters and starring Kandace Christian has gotten some great reviews and even includes a rare perspective on her year at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts – the only time she ever left the Southeast. Friday and Saturday at 8 PM and Sunday at 2 PM.
Ongoing
MODERN BY DESIGN, the High‘s newest special exhibition opening on Sat. June 4, celebrates three key moments in modern design and also the Museum of Modern Art, New York‘s (MOMA) collection history. The works on loan from MOMA cover “Machine Art” (1934), “Good Design” (1950-55) and “Italy: The New Domestic Landscape” (1972), with the latter addressing modernism in the context of 1960s and ’70s counterculture.
The ever irreverent Dad’s Garage Theatre takes a stab at the ’80s horror genre of camp slasher films in SLAUGHTER CAMP about a homicidal maniac terrorizing a theatre camp. June 2-25 on the main stage.
Get a rare chance to view original manuscript pages from the last four chapters of ATLANTA’S BOOK: THE LOST GONE WITH THE WIND MANUSCRIPTat the Atlanta History Center. The new exhibit, which opens today and runs through Sept. 5, is part of a series of activities celebrating the 75th anniversary of the publication of the international bestseller and also includes foreign and first edition copies, the desk Margaret Mitchell used while writing it and select images.
Tune back in on Monday for This Week in Retro Atlanta. If you know of a cool vintage-inspired happening, send suggestions to ATLRetro@gmail.com.
Category: Weekend Update | Tags: 529 Club, Actor's Express, Ansley Park Playhouse, Atlanta History Center, Atlanta Rollergirls, atlanta rumble b's, Atomic Rockets, Blake Rainey & His Demons, Blast-Off Burlesque, burlesque, c.n, Callanwolde, Carlos Museum, Chastain Park Amphitheatre, Chris Mattox, Clermont Lounge, Dad's Garage, Daikaiju, Davina and the Harlots, Def Leppard, Emory University, Fatt Matt's Rib Shack, Fernbank, fort myers derby girls, Georgia Aquarium, Go Devils, Gone with the Wind, Hall & Oates, Hawaii, Heart, High Museum of Art, hula, hula hoop, jazz, Jesco White, Jessica Vega, Joe Gransden, Jump'n Jukes, Kevin Bales, Lakewood Amphitheatre, Libby Whittemore, Libby's at the Express, Lisa Paige, Margaret Mitchell, Marsha DuPree, Martinis & Imax, Masquerade, Melita Easters, Modern by Design, modern design, MOMA, monsters, Mystery Men, Northside Tavern, Pelvis Breastlies, pin-up, Psycho Devilles, psychobilly, Ray Harryhausen, Rebel Surfers, rockabilly, Roger Alan Wade, roller derby, romeo cologne, Sake Tuyas, salsa, salsambo, Slaughter camp, Smith College, Spinderellas, surf music, The Earl, tiki, Toxic Shocks, tropical cocktails, Yaarab Shrine Center
Posted on:
Jun 16th, 2011 By:
Anya99
This Saturday’s Rockabilly Luau (noon-8 PM at The Masquerade Music Park) promises an island paradise of musical entertainment from Atlanta bands such as Hot Rod Walt and the Psycho DeVilles, The Atomic Rockets, Pelvis Breastlies, The Mystery Men? and C.N. i. Cow to eclectic regional acts such as Alabama’s Japanese-monster-inspired band Daikaiju and Asheville’s The Go Devils. One band you may know a little less about because they’re new and from Nashville is The Rebel Surfers. But ATLRetro is guessing if you don’t, your ignorance won’t last very long. Like this week’s Kool Kats, Luau founders Chris Mattox and Jessica Vega, guitarist Pete Jamestone and Manda Lou are a dynamic duo of seasoned musicians who mean to cause some mighty fine trouble in the Retro music scene.

The Rebel Surfers Peter Jameson, Manda Lou and new drummer Vera Herten.
Both aren’t Music City natives but they were raised in music. Pete hails from Motor City, where he was a producer, writer and guitarist for such seminal rock and punk acts as Nikki And The Corvettes (Bomp Records), The Motor City Rockers ( The Romantics’ original incarnation), The Original House Of Blues Allstars (Boston) and Nick Kane (The Mavericks), as well as sessions with Rockin’ Ronnie Weiser and Ray Campi (Rollin’ Rock Records), Susan Tedeschi, Annie Rains, Ronnie Earl and Was (Not Was). Manda Lou (sax, bass guitar and lead vocals) comes from the Big Apple and led her own rockabilly band in Nashville which has included Johnny G. d’Artenay and Harry Fontana. Manda Lou also toured Europe with the American Music Abroad Empire Tour and played sax with Pete in Nashville’s Soul Reputations.

Maybe it’s that diverse background that makes them so ready to rebel against the idea of riding the wave of any particular rock genre. Don’t call them simply surf or rockabilly or psychobilly or surfabilly or any label. Or better call them all of that all of once and quite a bit more (see Pete’s thoughts on being boxed below). They’re also more than a little excited about the Rockabilly Luau. ATLRetro decided to sit down with Pete and get a sneak preview of what tiki-philes can expect when the Rebel Surfers come to town.
How did a Journey Man Detroit Guitarist and a New York Rockabilly Sax Kitten end up in Nashville?
Well I was on my way to LA and Nashville got in the way, and it just made sense to stay. Manda Lou moved here from upstate NY to play music. Eventually we crossed paths, followed the Muse, and it all took shape

The Rebel Surfers play The Mercy Lounge in Nashville.
You’ve worked as a producer, writer and guitarist for a lot of big names in Detroit. Is there a different flavor to the music scene in Nashville and what do you like about it?
Detroit is down and dirty where you play every note as if your life depended on it because it does and it has always been that way. Nashville is full of great musicians of all kinds. The unique and like minds seem to organically find each other and make something cool! I’m so lucky to be from the Motor City. It defines everything I do
What’s the origin story behind the Rebel Surfers?
The Rebel Surfers evolved from a recording project into a live act over the last year or so, The name just made more sense than some of the bad ones people come up with!
Your Facebook page describes your sound as “Rock and Roll, Surf, Rockabilly, Spy, Blues, Garage, Instro, Spaghetti, Hot Rod, Exotic, Fuzz, Tropical, Instrumental”? That’s like all my favorite Retro rock music styles meshed together into one happy sound, but is it challenging when you try to describe your sound?
Well, it’s pretty easy to wear our influences on our sleeves, We just love all the “kool” music and culture so much it’s impossible to limit ourselves. So we just go with it. People have to put things in boxes. You just can’t worry about it. You just have to do your thing. Happy Sound. I like that!
I just had the pleasure of interviewing Dick Dale last week for ATLRetro (read it here). How much of an influence is he on your music, and have you had a chance to catch him on his current tour?
Interviewing him must have been something. No, our hearts are sad as we will not get the pleasure of seeing Mister Dick Dale on this tour. Being a card-carrying Fender Man, The Stratocaster, Fender Reverb, Amps—all of it, he truly invented a timeless art form with the tools Leo gave him. His influence is beyond measure, as a performer, musician and human being. In fact, Manda Lou wants to marry him!
Any special plans for the Rockabilly Luau?
We now have our new permanent drummer Vera Herten. We did our first big show with her last week with Los Straitjackets, and we are just reborn as a stripped-down, lean machine. She was the true missing link we have been searching for. We have to pull out all the stops at the Rockabilly Luau as we will be following opener Daikaiju who will just destroy the place. Atlanta, here we come. We can’t wait!
Are you and/or Manda tiki collectors, and if yes, what do you love about vintage Hawaiiana?
We are mostly collectors of musical instruments and vintage clothes, but everything inspires us. Right now we are all living in Tiki World!
When I visit Nashville and want to hear great music like yours, where should I go?
There is some amazing rockabilly on Sundays down on Lower Broad at Robert’s Western World with The Chris Casello Trio. Layla’s, The Basement, The FooBar Too and The Mercy Lounge are my favorites!
What do you and Manda like to do when you’re not performing?
We are always working on something. Right now it’s putting the finishing touches on our first full proper all-original studio album. It should be out around the end of August just before we go on our East Coast tour, You can preview much of it on Reverb Nation and Facebook, as well as see our videos. Our “Live Bootleg” Limited Edition CD will be available at the Luau. Thanks!
Category: Features | Tags: Annie Rains, Bomp Records, Chris Casello Trio, Chris Mattox, Daikaiju, Detroit, Dick Dale, fender, FooBar Too, Herry Fontana, House of Blues, Jessica Vega, Johnny G. d'Artenay, Layla's, Los Straitjackets, Manda Lou, Masquerade, Mavericks, Mercy Lounge, Motor City Rockers, Nashville, Nick Kane, Nikki and the Corvettes, Pete Jamestone, psychobilly, Ray Campi, Rebel Surfers, Reverb Nation, Robert's Western World, rockabilly, Rockabilly Luau, Rockin' Ronnie Weiser, Rollin' Rock Records, Romantics, Ronnie Earl, sax, Soul Reputations, surf music, surfabilly, Susan Tedeschi, The Basement, tiki, Vera Herten, Was(Not Was)
Posted on:
Jun 15th, 2011 By:
Anya99
If you, like ATLRetro, are depressed you missed the 10th anniversary Hukilau in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., last weekend, a little tiki treasure is coming here to lift your spirits. Say aloha to the Rockabilly Luau, this Saturday June 18 at the Masquerade Music Park, an all-afternoon (noon to 8 PM) celebration of two of the main fuels of the Retro revival—‘50s/’60s inspired music (rockabilly, psychobilly, surf, lounge) and the Hawaiiana subculture of cocktails, tiki art, hula and a nostalgic longing for island paradise that had its heyday from the 1920s-60s.
For a first-time event, the band line-up is a stellar round-up of some of Atlanta and the Southeast’s top Retro-inspired talent including Hot Rod Walt and the Psycho Devilles, Daikaiju (Huntsville, AL), The Mystery Men?, The Go Devils (Asheville, NC), Rebel Surfers (Nashville, TN), C.N.i. COW, Atomic Rockets and the lovely Pelvis Breastlies, as well as Nashville’s hula-hooping Spinderellas and burlesque troupes Blast-Off Burlesque, Dames Aflame and Davina and the Harlots. Hosts are Tyler Atomic (Atomic
Rockets, “Built for Speed“ on WRAS 88.5 FM) and lovely nationally acclaimed Retro pin-up model Ashley Croft. But Rockabilly Luau is more than just another all-day concert, true to the luau spirit, attendees will be greeted with leis, feast on island food (including the prerequisite kalua pig), sip tropical cocktails, watch live tiki carving, have a chance to purchase tiki memorabilia, and be treated to performances by authentic Polynesian dancers and fire dancers. A variety of contests (see below), body-painting and a pre-1968 car show top off the festivities which will benefit two local animal rescue charities, Friends to the Forlorn Pitbull Rescue and Shelter Angels Pitbull Rescue.
The creators of the Rockabilly Luau are Chris Mattox, who works for Frazier Harley-Davidson, and Jessica Vega, a Polynesian college student and manager of a clothing boutique. ATLRetro recently caught up with Chris for a preview.
How did each of you come to love rockabilly and tiki/Polynesian culture respectively, and what about each appeals to you personally?

Jessica Vega makes a blue friend on a Mai Tai Monday at Smith's Olde Bar.
I grew up on rockabilly and surf music. One of my fondest childhood memories was my dad taking me to see Dick Dale at the Variety Playhouse. A love for Polynesian culture was inevitable. Jess is Polynesian, and for her, an appreciation of her culture came first. She grew into the music and tiki culture as an offshoot of that.
How did you come up with the idea for the Rockabilly Luau?
Jessica, who’s Polynesian, mentioned that while there are all kind of Polynesian events in California and Florida, there aren’t [m]any here. I thought that was a real shame given the number of great surf bands and “tiki-philes” there are in the south. We decided to put together the Luau and give any proceeds to Shelter Angels Pitbull Rescue and Friends to the Forlorn Pitbull Rescue.
How is Rockabilly Luau different from other music festivals?

Blast-Off Burlesque
The Luau is different in a number of ways. First, we made a concerted effort to include people who were working to keep Polynesian culture alive. Second, as the Website states, this is a hangover you can feel good about; 100% of the ticket price goes directly to the charities.
You’ve got an amazing entertainment line-up from bands to burlesque. When you started approaching folks, did you feel there was a real hunger for an event like this?
Yes! People kept saying, “I’ve been waiting for somebody to do this!” It was really encouraging—not to mention, the whole shebang is for charity.
Can you tell me a little about the bands. What style does each play?
From the top, Hot Rod Walt and The Psycho Devilles are a psychobilly band, Daikaiju is a Japanese-inspired surf band, The Mystery Men? are a surfabilly band, The Go Devils are a psychobilly/surf/swing band, The Rebel Surfers are a rockabilly/surf/blues band, C.N.i. Cow is a rockabilly/surf/punk/metal band, The Atomic Rockets are a rockabilly band, and The Pelvis Breastlies are an all-female Elvis Tribute band.
Will you be serving mai tais and other exotic cocktails?
We will be serving exotic cocktails—Mai Tais, etc. They just won’t be served in coconuts. We have to save SOMETHING for next year. However, umbrellas are included.
What kinds of Hawaiian foods will be on the menu?
Hawaiian BBQ, veggie fried rice, smoothies, fruit lemonade, kalua pork…I’m making myself hungry.
I understand there will be contests, too. Can you give a little taste about what’s planned in that regard?
We have a hula hoop contest, a Hawaiian pin-up swimsuit contest and an ugliest Hawaiian shirt contest. You can’t say we don’t have a sense of humor.
Is the show all ages? What is the charge for parking?
The car show is all ages, and the parking is free of charge.
How did you pick the charities for this event? Do you have a special love for pitbulls?
We already knew both charities through our work at Ink for Paws, Inc. [a nonprofit organization founded by Mattox and Vega]. We knew they were both one-person charities and sorely underfunded. As for pit bulls, I own one and I think they get a bad rap. Both of these charities are trying to reshape hearts and minds about pitbulls.

Jax P. Snugglebear.
Can you tell us a little about your pit bull? What’s his name and what’s he like?
My pit bull looks like your typical, post-apocalyptic, vicious junkyard dog. His name is Jax P. Snugglebear. He’s the biggest lapdog you’ve ever seen. He’s about as dangerous as a fluffy pillow. Unless you’re a squirrel. Then he’s like Chuck Norris’ mean older brother.
Do you hope to make this a regular, perhaps annual event?
Most definitely. The response we got was overwhelming. The Rockabilly Luau will definitely be an annual event.
Tickets are $15 in advance or $20 at the door and can be purchased here.
Category: Kool Kat of the Week | Tags: Ashley Croft, Atomic Rockets, Blast-Off Burlesque, C.N.i. COW, car show, Chris Mattox, Davina and the Harlots, Dick Dale, Elvis tribute band, Friends to the Forlorn Pitbull Rescue, Go Devils, Harley-Davidson, Hawaiian shirt, Hawaiiana, hot rods, Hukilau, hula, hula hoop, Jessica Vega, kalua pig, Mai Tais, Masquerade, Mystery Men, Pelvis Breastlies, pitbulls, Polynesia, Psycho Devilles, psychobilly, rockabilly, Rockabilly Luau, Shelter Angels Pitbull Rescue, Spinderellas, surf music, tiki, tropical cocktails, Tyler Atomic, Variety Playhouse
Posted on:
Jun 13th, 2011 By:
Anya99
Monday June 13
From 3 PM on, savor tropical sounds and libations, as well as a Polynesian dinner during Mai Tai Monday at Smith’s Olde Bar. Kingsized and Tongo Hiti lead singer Big Mike Geier is Monday night’s celebrity bartender at Sister Louisa’s Church of the Living Room and Ping Pong Parlor. Northside Tavern hosts its weekly Blues Jam.
Tuesday June 14
Watch Dennis Hopper battle crazed redneck cannibals as Splatter Cinema presents THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2 at the Plaza Theatre tonight at 9:30 PM. Read Geoff Slade‘s bloody review here. Hear UK ’70s
hard rock band Uriah Heap at Variety Playhouse. Attend the Atlanta launch of THE SWEETEST THING, a novel about two remarkable women during the Great Depression, by award-winning writer Elizabeth Musser, author of The Swan House, at the Atlanta History Center. Grab your horn and head to Twain’s in Decatur for a Joe Gransden jazz jam session starting at 9 PM. Notorious DJ Romeo Cologne spins the best ‘70s funk and disco at 10 High in Virginia-Highland. Catch Tuesday Retro in the Metro nights at Midtown’s Deadwood Saloon, featuring live video mixes of ’80s, ’90s, and 2Ks hits.
Wednesday June 15
It’s only halfway through the work week, but Syrens of the South Productions are ready to make it go a little faster with Hump Day Honeys, a weeknight burlesque show at The Shelter featuring both local favorites, such as Katherine Lashe and Kittie Katrina, as well as hot out-of-town guests such as Burlesque Nouveau from Greensboro, NC. Shows start promptly at 10 PM, end at midnight, and include a raffle to benefit the Southern Fried Burlesque Fest. Get ready to rumba, cha-cha and jitterbug at the weekly Swing Night at Graveyard Tavern. The Hollidays bring a little soul to Fat Matt’s Rib Shack and Danny “Mudcat” Dudeck blues it down at Northside Tavern respectively. Dance to ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s hits during Retro in the Metro Wednesdays presented by Godiva Vodka, at Pub 71 in Brookhaven.
Thursday June 16

Slim Chance & the Convicts
Slim, Dangerous Dan and Tony Drummer reunite for the first time in five years and replay their very first set from June 4, 1986 to celebrate The 25th Anniversary of Slim Chance & the Convicts at Kathmandu Kitchen & Grill (formerly Pho Truc) in Clarkston. Opening for the Redneck Underground icons is Spooky Partridge. No cover charge, no smoking and all ages!
Beloved Atlanta chanteuse Libby Whittemore returns to Actor’s Express for a four-day run (June 16-19) of LISA & LIBBY’S SUMMER CAMP, joining singer Lisa Paige and musical director/accompanist Robert Strickland for a summer-themed new installment to the Libby’s at the Express series. The show combines standards, Broadway tunes, and more, and in the second act, the 31st Lady
of Country Music Connie Sue Day. Shows start at 7:30 PM. Relive the pangs and pleasures of ’80s high school romance via John Hughes’ 1984 hit SIXTEEN CANDLES at Piedmont Park‘s Screen on the Green. Listen to Tongo Hiti’s luxurious live lounge sounds, as well as some trippy takes on iconic pop songs, just about every Thursday night at Trader Vic’s. Party ‘70s style with DJ Romeo Cologne at Aurum Lounge. Breeze Kings and Chickenshack bring on the blues respectively at Northside Tavern and Fat Matt’s Rib Shack.



Bluegrass Thursday at Red Light Cafe features He Sang She Sang and Hopfrog.

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Category: This Week in ATLRetro | Tags: 10 High, 529 Club, Actor's Express, Atlanta History Center, Atomic Rockets, Aurum Lounge, Big Mike Geier, Blake Rainey & His Demons, Blast-Off Burlesque, bluegrass thursday, Breeze Kings, burlesque, Burlesque Nouveau, Callanwolde, Carlos Museum, Chastain Park Amphitheatre, Chickenshack, Chris Mattox, Clermont Lounge, CNI Cows, Dad's Garage, Daikaiju, Davina and the Harlots, Deadwood Saloon, Def Leppard, dunch, Elizabeth Musser, Fat Matt's Rib Shack, Fernbank, Geoff Slade. Uriah Heap, Georgia Aquarium, Go Devils, Gone with the Wind, Graveyard Tavern, Hall & Oates, Hawaii, He Sang She Sang, Heart, High Museum of Art, Highway to Hellbilly, Hollidays, Hopfrog, hula hoop, jazz, Jesco White, Jessica Vega, Joe Gransden, Jump'n Jukes, Katherine Lashe, Kathmandu Kitchen and Grill, Kevin Bales, Kittie Katrina, Lakewood Amphitheatre, Libby Whittemore, Libby's at the Express, Lisa Paige, luau, Mai Tai Monday, Margaret Mitchell, Margaret Mitchell House, Marsha DuPree, Martinis & Imax, Masquerade, Modern by Design, modern design, MOMA, monsters, Mudcat, Mystery Men, Northside Tavern, Pelvis Breastlies, Plaza Theatre, Polynesian, Psycho Devilles, Pub 71, Ray Harryhausen, Rebel Surfers, Red Light Cafe, Redneck Underground, Retro in the Metro, Robert Strickland, rockabilly, Rockabilly Luau, Roger Alan Wade, romeo cologne, salsa, salsambo, Screen on the Green, Sister Louisa's Church of the Living Room, Sixteen Candles, Slaughter camp, Slim Chance and the Convicts, Smith's Olde Bar, Spinderellas, Splatter Cinema, Spooky Partridge, Swan House, swing dancing, Syrens of the South, Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2, The Earl, The Shelter, tiki, Tongo Hiti, Trader Vic's, Twain's, Variety Playhouse
Posted on:
Jun 13th, 2011 By:
Anya99
By Geoff Slade
Contributing Blogger
Splatter Cinema Presents THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2 (1986); Dir: Tobe Hooper; Starring: Dennis Hopper, Caroline Williams, Jim Siedow, Bill Moseley, Bill Johnson; Special Makeup Effects: Tom Savini; Tues. June 14; 9:30 PM; Plaza Theatre; Trailer here.
The original THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE was a groundbreaking achievement of mood and drawn-out tension, the third one was mostly crap, and the reboots are soulless in the way horror movies tend to be in this post-HOSTEL era. But THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2 is funnier, grosser, weirder and better than most people remember.
Dennis Hopper plays a former Texas Ranger named Lefty who’s been tracking the “chainsaw killers” who attacked his brother’s kids some years before. They killed his nephew (Franklin, the whiny guy in the wheelchair) and completely effed-up his niece (Sally, the one that got away) in the original film. He enlists a radio DJ named Stretch in the hunt which climaxes (of course) in the killers’ lair.
This time around, the tone is lighter. The film seems to halfheartedly satirize the genre (as well as the 1980s), and there is plenty of humor in the script. We learn, for example, the cannibalistic clan’s surname is “Sawyer” (seriously!). Also, Leatherface, the most famous, if not the most charismatic member of the family falls in love and creams his Dickies while giving credence to a “chainsaw as phallus” reading of the series. It’s not a comedy per-se, or even a “black-comedy,” but the heavy-handed gloom of the original is missing.
There is still plenty of squirm-inducing weirdness and tons of gore (way more than the original) thanks to special effects maestro Tom Savini. In fact, a scene featuring a face-peeling, a peeled-face-wearing and some forced dancing is as grotesque as anything released by a major movie studio in the mid-’8os. Rest assured, with Hopper and the rest of the cast, the chainsaws aren’t the only thing chewing up scenery. Jim Siedow (as “Cook”) and Bill Moseley (as “Chop-Top”), in particular, bring their characters to life with over-the-top gusto. And the two guys in the Mercedes are so obnoxiously annoying
that their (Spoiler!) gruesome demise early on will likely bring on a round of high-fives.
THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2 is best enjoyed on a big screen and the perfect movie for Splatter Cinema.
Category: Retro Review | Tags: Bill Moseley, cult movies, Dennis Hopper, horror, monsters, Plaza Theatre, Splatter Cinema, Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2, Tobe Hooper, Tom Savini
Posted on:
Jun 10th, 2011 By:
Anya99
The Earl, Friday June 11, 8:30 PM; with Laramie Dean opening; nonsmoking.

Photo courtesy of Dick Dale.
Dick Dale insists he’s not a master of any trade, but fans of the undisputed King of the Surf Guitar would disagree. After all, who else pioneered the Fender Stratocaster guitar and rocked the strings so hard that he blew up a battalion of amps before Leo Fender developed one that could withstand Dick Dale? The man, after all, has a career spanning more than five decades. At age 74, he hasn’t tuned down the noise and even a recent bout of cancer and extreme high blood sugar episodes from diabetes haven’t slowed down his touring. In fact, you get the impression that touring and playing is what keeps him alive in a way that most people would envy.
Dick’s current tour is a special treat, in that he’s hitting smaller clubs like The Earl in a 17-city circuit. Former-roadie-turned-protégé Laramie Dean (Agent Orange) is the one to thank for suggesting the idea, as well as Dick’s wanting to support his son Jimmy Dale, who plays with Dean and is blossoming into one hell of a drummer himself. I had a list of 10 or so questions prepared, but as soon as I dialed up Dick, relaxing in his hotel room before his Austin gig on Tuesday night, it was clear he had a few things on his chest that he wanted to talk about. So I just rode the wave he offered, enjoying surfing through Dale’s passion for supporting Jimmy, recent highlights from the road, his health challenges, the pleasures of clean living (he’s never drank alcohol nor taken drugs, and he quit smoking and red meat years ago) and his lifelong love affair with country music. I’ve edited the conversation down a little bit only for space and repetition and divided his comments by subject, but what follows is mostly unexpurgated, authentic Dick.
On how martial arts gave him his philosophy of life – the joy of living in the moment
To set a foundation for this conversation, I’ve been doing martial arts all my life, and I’ve been all over the world with different masters. I’ve been with the monks with their way of thinking, and that’s the way I can put up with the cancer and all the crap that’s happened with me and being on stage without taking drugs. I once asked my master, “why I can’t I be the best of something and just be unbeatable?” He said, “yes, you can, but you have to give up everything in your life. You must eat and sleep and breathe it.” So he said, “let me ask you something, “would you rather be a master of one or you would rather be a jack of all trades, master of none?” He said, “if you are master of one, you’d be awfully dull at a gathering, wouldn’t you?” It’d be like Einstein. He wouldn’t be able to talk to somebody who’s a contractor or flies an airplane or is shooting bows and arrows or surfing huge waves and surfing little waves. So I chose to learn about as many things as I could—everything from raising canaries to welding to building houses to whatever. I’d have libraries ceiling to floor on all these things, and I’d then ask people who are very successful and be humble in asking.
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Category: Features | Tags: Agent Orange, Big Band, Buddhism, Catalina Casino Ballroom, Catalina Island, country music, Dick Dale, Ernest Stubbs, Esperanza, Fender Stratocaster, Gene Autry, Gene Krupa, Glen Campbell, Glenn Miller, guitars, Hank Williams Sr., Harry James, Hawaii, hillbilly music, Jett Williams, Jimmy Dale, Joe Maphis, Johnny Cash, Laramie Dean, Larry Collins, Latin music, Lefty Frizzell, Leo Fender, Lorrie Collins, martial arts, MIM, Musicians Hall of Fame, Pat Boone, Rendezvous Ballroom, Stan Kenton, surf guitar, surf music, surfing, swing dancing, T Texas Tiny, Target, Tex Ritter, The Earl, Town Hall Party
Posted on:
Jun 10th, 2011 By:
Anya99
Friday, May June 10
It’ll be a tidal wave of terrific when surf guitar king Dick Dale plays with protegee Laramie Dean, at The Earl. Read ATLRetro’s exclusive interview here. Col. Bruce Hampton & the Quark Alliance rock Shorty’s in Tucker. Breeze Kings bring the blues to Northside Tavern.
This Friday night is a marvelous movie night. Get a last chance to see the Coen Brothers‘ remake of John Wayne classic TRUE GRITon the biggest screen in Atlanta at the Fox Theatre as the Coca-Cola Film Festivalcontinues. Not sure if one can call the over-the-top action flick HOBO WITH A SHOTGUN with Rutgar Hauer a classic, but you can also see it in an awesome art deco venue, the Plaza Theatre. Or watch Cineprov! make good fun of quintessential ’80s time travel flick BACK TO THE FUTURE at Relapse Comedy Theatre and even get some pic taken with a real Deloran. Or catch an IMAX movie and get down to the soft melodic rock of HERO at Fernbank Museum of Natural History’s Martinis and IMAX.
Saturday June 11
Shop for Retro-inspired crafts from a variety of vendors during the Indie Craft Experience from 11 AM to 6 PM at Ambient Plus Studio in the West End. It’s a another big movie day as the Plaza Theatre presents Clint Eastwood in A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS at 3 PM and
7:30 PM, kicking off a screening of all three of the Sergio Leone MAN WITH NO NAME trilogy of Westerns through the summer. Read Philip Nutman’s Review/Preview here. Also, theCoca-Cola Film Festival continues at the Fox Theatrewith animated family film RANGO at 2 PM and Gregory Peck classic TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD at 7:30 PM. Remember to arrive early for the Mighty Mo’ organ singalong and cartoon.
Dave Alvin & The Guilty Ones and Nashville wrestling-mask-wearing surf rockers Los Straitjackets shake up The Earl. Relive both rad and gnarly danceable ’80s
hits with Denim Arcade at @tmosphere in Loganville, featuring Becky Cormier Finch of Three Quarter Ale. Read ATLRetro’s Kool Kat of the Week interview with Becky and get a preview of the show here. DJ Romeo Cologne transforms the sensationally seedy Clermont Lounge into a ’70s disco/funk inferno.
Sunday June 12
Rick Dang headlines blues “dunch” between 1 and 4 PM at The Earl. Celebrate GONE WITH THE WIND – 75 Years Later with Scarlett O’Hara or Rhett Butler cocktails and Southern-themed hors d’oeuvres at the Historic Oakland Cemetery Bell Tower and meet John Wiley, Jr., coauthor of MARGARET MITCHELL’S GONE WITH THE WIND, A BESTSELLER’S ODYSSEY FROM ATLANTA TO HOLLYWOOD, from 5 to 7 PM. Admission is $20 and reservations are required by Fri. June 10.
Ongoing
MODERN BY DESIGN, the High‘s newest special exhibition opening on Sat. June 4, celebrates three key moments in modern design and also the Museum of Modern Art, New York‘s (MOMA) collection history. The works on loan from MODA cover “Machine Art” (1934), “Good Design” (1950-55) and “Italy: The New Domestic Landscape” (1972), with the latter addressing modernism in the context of 1960s and ’70s counterculture.
The ever irreverent Dad’s Garage Theatre takes a stab at the ’80s horror genre of camp slasher films in SLAUGHTER CAMP about a homicidal maniac terrorizing a theatre camp. June 2-25 on the main stage.
See the original images which inspired Ray Harryhausen‘s amazing stop-motion cyclops, centaurs and other mythological beasts in the special exhibition, MONSTERS, DEMONS AND WINGED BEASTS: COMPOSITE CREATURES IN THE ANCIENT WORLDat the Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University through June 19. The exhibition of monstrous art, drawn from the museum’s permanent collections, shows how the ancient Greeks were inspired by other Middle Eastern cultures in developing a vast repertoire of richly imagined creatures.
Get a rare chance to view original manuscript pages from the last four chapters of ATLANTA’S BOOK: THE LOST GONE WITH THE WIND
MANUSCRIPT at the Atlanta History Center. The new exhibit, which opens today and runs through Sept. 5, is part of a series of activities celebrating the 75th anniversary of the publication of the international bestseller and also includes foreign and first edition copies, the desk Margaret Mitchell used while writing it and select images.
Tune back in on Monday for This Week in Retro Atlanta. If you know of a cool vintage happening next week, send suggestions to ATLRetro@gmail.com.
Category: Weekend Update | TAGS: None
Posted on:
Jun 9th, 2011 By:
Anya99
By Philip Nutman,
Contributing Blogger
A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS (1964); Presented by AM 1690; Dir: Sergio Leone; Starring Clint Eastwood, Gian Maria Volonte, Marianne Koch; Sat. June 11; 3 PM and 7:30 PM; Plaza Theatre. Trailer here.
Clint Eastwood shoots up Atlanta’s Plaza Theatre over the summer, screening Sergio Leone’s “Man with No Name” trilogy over the next two months. In 1964, the Western, as global audiences knew it as essayed by actors such as Audie Murphy and John “The Duke”” Wayne, changed forever due to the rebellious vision of a 34-year-old Italian writer/director, Sergio Leone. An unabashed, blatant “adaptation” of Japanese master Akira Kurosawa’s classic “chambara” (samurai film), YOJIMBO, Leone took American TV’s favorite laconic ranch hand sidekick, Rowdy Yeats from the show RAWHIDE, an actor named Clint Eastwood, and cast him as the amoral, mysterious gunslinger cinema audiences around the world would come to embrace as “the Man With No Name.” The film, A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS, was so successful, it spawned two sequels: FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE and the stunning epic, THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY.
Bullets and blood flew—Sergio never shied away from the sadistic nature of his vile characters—and A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS launched the “spaghetti western” and shot the spurs off the classic Hollywood visions of directors John Ford and Howard Hawks. Forget Monument Valley and Ford’s THE SEARCHERS (1956); farewell to Hawks’ RED RIVER (1948); goodbye Stevens’ SHANE (1953), or even Sam Peckinpah’s pre-THE WILD BUNCH (1969) old school saddle flicks like RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY (1962). Once Leone pulled the trigger, the cinematic genre which America created started to mutate as the bullet hit the bone. A once vibrant but now stagnant genre was forced to either evolve or die.
Nihilism. Blood. Sweat. More blood, more sweat. Ford and Hawks and their fellow saddle riders had created a paradigm of moral certitude in which good was GOOD and evil was EVIL, a landscape of moral regeneration whereby a Man With A Good Heart and a Moral Cause could save the day via a chivalrous, judicious use of a six shooter at high noon and win the arms of a Good Woman. Well, Leone shot the horse they rode into town on.
You’ve likely seen it on TV; maybe you’ve rented the DVD, and you think you know A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS. But unless you see Leone’s widescreen vision in a movie theater, you ain’t seen dirt, cowhand.
FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE screens Sat. July 9, 3 PM and 7:30 PM.
THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY screens August 13, 3 PM, 7:30 PM.
Category: Retro Review | Tags: Akira Kurosawa, Audie Murphy, chambara, Clint Eastwood, Fistful of Dollars, For A Few Dollars More, Howard Hawks, John Ford, John Wayne, Man With No Name, Philip Nutman, Plaza Theatre, Rawhide, Red River, Ride the High Country, samurai movies, Sergio Leone, Shane, The Good the Bad and the Ugly, The Searchers, The Wild Bunch, Western movies, Westerns, Yojimbo
Posted on:
Jun 8th, 2011 By:
Anya99

Photo credit: Jayne Cormier.
Today many people make fun of music in the Eighties when pop stars sported ultra-teased mullets, super-wide shoulderpads, leg warmers and cut sweatshirts. Coming after the hard edge of punk, the sugary exuberance of Top of the Pops UK bands today seems quaint and something we sometimes like to forget we actually thought was rebellious at the time. Yet it’s easy to forget that for a lot of the ‘80s, only handful of Brit hits makers made the US Top 40, like Flock of Haircuts—excuse me Seagulls—, The Police, Human League, Soft Cell and Tears for Fears before John Hughes movies made at least one song by Simple Minds and a de-angrified Psychedelic Furs temporarily cool.
On the other hand, our charts were loaded with big-haired hard rock and metal bands from Van Halen to Bon Jovi, Cinderella to Motley Crue. Michael Jackson was the King of Pop. Billy Ocean crooned “Caribbean Queen,” Rick James undulated to “Super Freak,” Huey Lewis claimed the “Heart of Rock n Roll, Prince spawned an fleet of protégées, and Madonna seemed to spawn an entire genre to herself.
While many cover bands play ‘80s music, Atlanta’s Denim Arcade tries to capture both the decade’s sense of fun and unique sound using similar equipment from guitars to keyboards—the signature instrument of synth pop. Made up of seasoned musicians out to have some fun, Denim Arcade includes Wade Finch (lead and rhythm guitar) and John Christopher (bass), who first played together in the alternative band Noise Dot Com; Andy Womack, who has drummed in a wide variety of bands for more than 20 years including Atlanta-based Renaissance Festival phenomenon, The Lost Boys; and lead vocalist Becky Cormier Finch, best known for Three Quarter Ale, a fast-growing popular Celtic rock band that was a finalist recently on the GEORGIA LOTTERY’S ALL-ACCESS MUSIC SEARCH show.
ATLRetro caught up with Becky to find out why these talented musicians decided to go back to the Eighties, what to expect at their next show this Saturday starting at 10 PM at @tmosphere, and what’s up next for Three Quarter Ale.
I understand Denim Arcade actually grew out of another ‘80s cover band called Great Scott. How did the band get started and get its name?
Both bands got started because of friends with a shared love of ‘80s music and a love of performing. “Great Scott,” of course, is Doc Brown’s signature phrase in BACK TO THE FUTURE. We had a line-up change, and decided that with a female lead singer, “Great Scott” didn’t really fit. No one in the band is named Scott, anyway! I believe a group of friends was at Manuel’s Tavern, having a conversation about quintessential ‘80s things, and my friend Bettina just blurted out “Denim Arcade” and it stuck!
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Category: Kool Kat of the Week | Tags: '80s, '80s music, @tmosphere, Adam Ant, AnachroCon, Andy Womack, Asia, Back to the Future, Becky Cormier Finch, big hair, Bon Jovi, Celtic rock, duran duran, Eighties, Flock of Seagulls, Georgia Lottery's All-Access Music Search, Georgia Renaissance Festival, Great Scott, hair bands, hair metal, hard rock, heavy metal, Human League, John Christopher, John Hughes, Katrina and the Waves, Lost Boys, Madonna, Manuel's Tavern, Michael Jackson, Noise Dot Com, Prince, Psychedelic Furs, Simple Minds, Soft Cell, Tears for Fears, The Police, Three Quarter Ale, Top of the Pops, Van Halen, Wade Finch