Monday, November 30, 2009

Caburlesque Kittens


Tantalizing…Titillating…Talented! The Caburlesque Kittens have been mesmerizing audiences with their live and interactive cabaret dance show in venues all over San Diego County since June of 2008. Filled with sex appeal, talent, drive and class, these ladies are the real deal! Their show is loaded with retro sex appeal. It’s pure entertainment for the ladies and a good old-fashioned teasing for the men. By combining classic Cabaret with elements of Burlesque, these sexy kittens please and impress every crowd…every show! A Caburlesque Kittens show is very wink-and-nod, and there tends to be a humorous and theatrical flair to the routines. You won’t see them in g-strings and nipple tassels…but you won’t miss them either. Their beautiful costumes…often based in classy lingerie…are sexy. Their intricately choreographed and skillfully executed dance moves…are sexy. The amazing array of talent on display…dancing, comedy and amazing singing…is very sexy. Their unique take on all of the above…is very classy. Spend an evening with these eight sexy, classy, talented ladies and you’ll never forget it! Past performances include: NTC Promenade, Liberty Station The House of Blues Ruby Room Winston's Beauty Bar Cajon Classic Cruise Women's Expo, Orange County Garfield Theater at JCC La Jolla Mother Goose Parade Ocean Beach Christmas Parade The Kensington Club Brick By Brick Portugalia And many more... Upcoming Shows: Get Schooled with The Caburlesque Kittens at Brick By Brick September 12th! 8:30doors 9:00pm show Tickets are $10 pre-sale and $15 at the door For booking, please contact Director Chrissy Burns (aka Ophelia Kitty) at 619-818-5704 | StarshineEvents@cox.net The Caburlesque Kittens "Classic Cabaret meets Burlesque. Now THAT's sexy!"


Friday, November 27, 2009

Roundabout Tribute to the band Yes


Here is your chance to see the Tribute band Roundabout that is the nations premiere tribute to The original band Yes are an English progressive rock band formed in London in 1968 and generally regarded as one of the archetypal bands of the genre. Despite a great many lineup changes, occasional splits within the group and the ever-changing trends in popular music, the band has continued on for over forty years and still retains a large following.[1]
The band's music blends symphonic and other 'classical' structures with their own brand of rock music, which is marked by sharp dynamic contrasts, extended song lengths, abstract lyrics, and a general showcasing of instrumental prowess. Although the band's sole consistent member has been bass player Chris Squire (noted for his highly melodic and discursive playing as well as his early use of electronic effects), Yes is also generally noted for the distinctive high-register vocals of lead singer Jon Anderson and the eclectic musical stylings of a succession of guitarists (Peter Banks, Steve Howe, Trevor Rabin, Billy Sherwood), keyboard players (Tony Kaye, Rick Wakeman, Patrick Moraz, Geoff Downes, Igor Khoroshev) and drummers (Bill Bruford and Alan White). Several band members became celebrated musicians and/or bandleaders in their own right, and a 1980 lineup of the band was briefly fronted by future production star Trevor Horn.
Long-term band members Squire, Howe and White have most recently been touring (on the In The Present Tour of late 2008 and early 2009) with a Yes lineup featuring vocalist Benoît David and keyboardist Oliver Wakeman. So don't miss you chance to see Roundabout November 28th 8pm Ramona Mainstage to get you tickets .


Thursday, November 26, 2009

Runhoney Rocks


Maria Naccari-Beahan Runhoney is a San Diego based alternative/rock band. Lead vocals/guitar- Sarah Harmel, Drums- Emily O'Bannon, Bass guitar-Maria Naccari-Beahan. sarah and emily became friends first, then sarah soon found out emily could play the f*ck out of the drums..... and its been on ever since... THE HUNT FOR THE PERFECT BASS PLAYER THEN BEGAN. AFTER SUFFERING THROUGH SOME UNSAVORY BASSISTS, THE GIRLS BEGAN TO BECOME CONCERNED THAT THEY WOULD NEVER FIND THAT PERFECT ADDITION TO THEIR SOUND. ENTER MARIA. USING HER SUPERPOWERS, SHE INSTINCTUALLY KNEW THAT THE GIRLS WERE IN TROUBLE. SHE TRACKED THEM DOWN AND SAVED THEM FROM CERTAIN DOOM. FORMERLY A NUN, THIS BASS KILLAH WAS THE ANSWER TO THEIR PRAYERS. WITHIN ONE MONTH OF PLAYING TOGETHER, THESE THREE (NOW OFFICIALLY RUNHONEY) RECORDED THEIR EP AND BEGAN TOURING THE SOUTHWEST GAINING MOMENTUM AND BUILDING THEIR FAN BASE. AFTER ABOUT A YEAR AND A HALF OF PLAYING TOGETHER AT BIGGER AND BETTER VENUES, AND TIGHTENING THEIR SOUND, THE GIRLS STARTED TO FEEL LIKE SOMETHING (OR SOMEONE) WAS MISSING. WANTING TO ADD ANOTHER GUITAR PLAYER, THEY WERE UNSURE AOBUT *AGAIN* FINDING THE PERFECT PERSON TO COMPLETE THEIR SOUND. ENTER MEGAN JANE.... MEGAN (THE SHAPE-SHIFTER) FIRST APPEARED TO THEM AS A PHENOMENAL DRUMMER, PLAYING SHOWS WITH THE TOP NOTCH TALENT IN SAN DIEGO AND LA. LITTLE DID THEY KNOW THIS RED HEADED, CURLY HAIRED CHAMELEON WAS ALSO A CRAZY-ROCKIN'-TASTY GUITARIST! SARAH, EMILY AND MARIA ASKED MEGAN TO PLAY ON THEIR TRACKS IN THE STUDIO AND THEN ASKED HER TO PLAY WITH THEM ON STAGE AT SEVERAL SHOWS. THEY WERE HOOKED! THAT'S WHEN IT BECAME CLEAR... RUNHONEY WAS COMPLETE. NOW, RUNHONEY IS UNSTOPPABLE WITH POWERFUL VOCALS, ADDICTIVE SONG WRITING AND A SICK ASS RHYTHM SECTION. RUNHONEY IS CURRENTLY IN THE STUDIO WITH PRODUCER, ALICIA CHAMPION, FINISHING THEIR 1ST FULL LENGTH CD. AFTER THE COMPLETION OF THEIR CD, RUNHONEY WILL CONTINUE TOURING THE WEST COAST WITH NATIONAL DATES TO FOLLOW.

"WHAT ROCK BAND DELIVERS LOOKS? ...TALENT? ...AND BRAINS? I SAY: RUNHONEY!! THIS BAND HAS THE POTENTIAL, THE FOCUS AND THE DRIVE TO DO MANY SPECIAL THINGS! IF YOU TRULY LISTEN, YOU'LL SEE EXACTLY WHAT I MEAN. DO NOT TAKE THIS BAND FOR GRANTED.............. THEY'RE FAR MORE THAN WHAT YOU'RE EXPECTING!"
Dave Wilson - Producer/Host of "The Dirty Dave Show" -KCLA FM

"I HAVEN'T SEEN A [@?$%&] BAND LIKE THIS IN 16 YEARS."
 Al Bowman - Producer/Founder of the Los Angeles Music Awards

The Hotel Cafe Los Angeles

Los Angeles has birthed and bred a wide variety of music scenes, but they tend to burn bright and fade quickly. To name just two examples, the leopard-print glitz of '80s hair metal (in which a good riff was only slightly more important than a good dye job) and the reckless energy of the city's early new wave seemed designed from the start to live fast, die young, and leave good-looking back catalogs.
The local singer-songwriter tradition, however, has endured despite the passing of years and turning of trends. We've hosted acoustic soul-barers from Neil Young to Pete Yorn, and, when the genre was enjoying its heyday in the late 1960s and '70s, artists such as Joni Mitchell, Linda Ronstadt, and Crosby, Stills and Nash spread the Laurel Canyon love worldwide. "There was a moment here in the '70s where you couldn't be a singer-songwriter without having a major label ready to sign you," says local musician Gary Jules, who has been playing in L.A. for years. "It was an amazing time."
Such a time just may be coming around again, thanks in part to Jules himself, with a little help from the owners of the Hotel Café, a small Hollywood coffeehouse turned singer-songwriter haven. It's too soon to peg this intimate space – located in the heart of the Cahuenga strip between Hollywood Boulevard and Selma Avenue – as the next Troubadour or Whisky a Go-Go. But the club's name comes up a lot these days, usually attached to enthusiastic raves about such gifted songsmiths as Jules. Further bolstering the buzz, the Café has been attracting quality acts from out of town. Indeed, over the last two years, the small venue has hosted a steady stream of established and upcoming artists, and this loosely organized family of musicians has come to call the Café home.
"It's happened slowly," says Hotel Café co-owner Marco Shafer of the scene's build-up. "We didn't try to force it, so hopefully it will stay around that much longer."
"I like everything about the Hotel Café," says Trevor Lissauer, who currently has a monthly residency there. "I like how it looks, kind of like an old jazz club, and I like the fact that people actually come to listen. It's like a theater that way; the focus is on who's up on the stage."
In this way, the Hotel Café recalls Largo, the Fairfax Avenue nightclub that for several years has been one of the city's more notable venues for singer-songwriter performances. Like Largo, the Café also offers silence, shelter, and sanctity to acoustic artists ill-suited for noisy rock clubs. Yet Largo is decidedly upscale, with a larger room, a full bar, and an extensive dinner menu, while the Hotel Cafe remains true to its cozy coffeehouse roots. Although the club was recently granted a liquor license and now sells cold beer, caffeine remains the drug of choice. In general, the feel is low-key and comfortable, with a young, casual crowd of not only music fans but musicians as well.
"The whole idea was to have a place that would run itself, which we're laughing at [now]," says Shafer, who bought the space nearly three years ago with friend and business partner Maximillian Mamikunian. The pair hoped to create a comfortable late-night hangout. "We didn't have any intention of becoming a venue," Shafer adds. "We did some jazz stuff, but it was very sporadic."
Still, Mamikunian recalls, "Everything was trucking along and doing fine." Indeed, the Café was enjoying a brisk business, serving a regular clientele of insomniacs and caffeine addicts, when the events of September 11, ¯ 2001, threw off its momentum. "It destroyed us," Mamikunian says. "Everyone went back to their old haunts, to where they were more comfortable. We were dead in the water, and that's when, literally, Gary came riding by."
At the time, Jules had just completed school, a new album, and a successful residency at Largo. "I was looking for a place to play and do another residency," he says. "I had a lot of friends who were top-quality players. I felt like we just had to find the right place and make it happen." When he rode by the Café and saw the piano through the window, he says, "I came in and kept bugging them to let me play."
The result was a Tuesday-night residency, with Jules's band playing alongside acts such as moody roots band Minibar and the Jukebox Junkies. Eventually, the singer-songwriter began booking the club as well, and the response to his lineups was overwhelming. Shafer and Mamikunian had unwittingly provided the perfect atmosphere for the kind of music Jules and his friends were making – a quiet, intimate spot where people came to meet and drink, but mostly to listen.
"When I first walked in," recalls Ethan Gold, a singer-songwriter and co-founder of a songwriters collective known as the Expatriates, "I felt like I had found the Holy Grail of acoustic-music venues."
Almost all the musicians who have played the Hotel Café seem to concur with Gold's assessment. In a remarkably short amount of time, the place has become not only a successful live venue but also a kind of all-purpose clubhouse for this burgeoning community of L.A. songwriters.
"Most of the people who come here know each other," says Shafer, "because most of the people who play here, hang out here, too."
The Café gave these artists a chance to manufacture community, Jules notes. "L.A., especially Hollywood, is such a transient area," he says. "You need to create a space where it's like, ‘Hey, this is your place,' where people feel like they belong. The musicians who play here support one another. Instead of competition, you get encouragement, which is what you need to really build a scene."
Jim Bianco is another local musician who both performs at and patronizes the Café. "Go there on any given night," he says, "and there's really good music playing, Marco and Max are working, and half the crowd is musicians. I think everyone who plays there really enjoys coming to hear the other musicians, to see what everyone else is up to, what they're working on. There's definitely a community there, which isn't exactly something L.A. is known for. If you play there, you know you're in good company."
This good company includes not only Angelenos, but visiting singer-songwriters from around the country. The club receives 15 to 20 demos a week from as far away as Canada, Michigan, and New York. "And that's with a post on our Web site saying we can't take any demos right now!" says Mamikunian with a laugh.
"It's overwhelming," notes Shafer, who now books the club. "Right now we already have about 100 artists who are regulars, who do really well." Among these are quite a few established artists, including such up-and-coming musicians as Pete Yorn and Patrick Park.
"It's just a really good feeling in there," says Park. "For singer-songwriters, having to play at rock clubs is kind of a crapshoot, but the Hotel Café provides the kind of space you want."
What really sets the Hotel Café apart, Biano says, "is that it's owned by real music-loving people. And that's an understatement – these guys dig music more than musicians do. That's why it's got such a great reputation."
It's a reputation that only gets better with time, but Mamikunian isn't bragging. "We are what we are," he says. "We don't try to be anything. We just let the space do its own thing."
As Jules points out, "All a club is, is a room with music in it. The magical part is defined by the people that come there – by the things that happen there – and all the magic stuff that gets left behind. That's what people will talk about years later, and that's what makes a place really endure."
Plus the Tour http://www.thehotelcafetour.com

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Prohibition Live's in the Gaslamp San Diego

Prohibition is a new, hidden gem from the owner of Nicky Rottens and Sloppy Joey's. That will give you a hint as to where it is in the Gaslamp Quarter--but it won't help when they ask you for the password to gain access.
Prohibition brings a Roaring '20s-era speakeasy to San Diego, with live jazz performances by local musicians, and great cocktail specials. It's my ultimate spot for getting out of the crowded, sweaty, noisy clubs full of drunk guys smacking a girl's rear end to the beat of the music.
Recently, Prohibition has locked down access, to keep the shorts-and-flip-flop crowd out. I've had them close the door behind me and not let tailgaters in at all.

I want it intimate, sophisticated-yet-friendly, with live music that can be enjoyed, reasonably-priced and refreshing cocktails (they seem to rotate their menu every month or so) and light crowds. Every time I've been, that's what I get.
FYI: Prohibition is open Thursday-Saturday, from 9 p.m.-2 a.m. The password changes daily. Folks can visit their Web site (ProhibitionSD.com)

Kenny Eng

Kenny will always be the first to admit that he spends too much time in his own head. It may sound harmless enough, but a few listens to his music will quickly reveal how conflicted his head is and how fascinating a place it must be.

In 2007, Kenny took a serious leap of faith and moved to from his hometown of Alameda, CA in the San Francisco Bay Area to San Diego, CA. Without any prospects or connections, Kenny was left to establish himself based on his abilities as a musician and songwriter. And he has done just that. His soothing voice coupled with his already formidable (and constantly improving) guitar playing and intelligent songwriting have won the respect of audiences, critics and other musicians throughout the West Coast.


In June 2008, Kenny released his debut EP "Self Centered" which he considers to be an sarcastic ode to himself. Unfortunately, you will not find any songs about false bravado, delusions of grandeur or love songs on the album. Much like his head, the album is filled with songs that espouse his internal conflict framed as life experiences. It's this kind of introspection that drives his songwriting but sometimes, as those close to him would say, he just needs to "get out of his head".


According to Kenny, the biggest challenge is reconciling his ideals with his dreams. He'll say it's about balance and honesty. On one hand, he knows that he has something special to offer and wants to share his unique talents with everyone he can. On the other hand, he remains humble and respectful to the fact that not everyone will enjoy or even understand his music and that success with these constantly conflicting ideas may or may not be possible. But "success" has never motivated his music. In fact, Kenny would tell you that he'd rather have little to no success as long as his music stayed honest to himself.

If nothing else, Kenny wants you to think about his music critically. And if you feel like supporting art, he hopes that you'll support his.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

DJ Ana Sia Music



Ana Sia’s love of electronic music combined with an innate understanding of the value of dance to the human soul collectively fuse to create unforgettable sets of experience, whether she is slamming spots in her hometown of San Francisco or taking her turn in the forests of music festivals around the country.
Ana’s energetic delivery of brain-fazing beats has earned the Princess Slay-ah an important spot in pioneering the West Coast future sound movement. She will take you on a musical expedition into the deepest reaches of your brain, as she masterfully blends a wide spectrum of rhythms with a beautiful fluidity and a delicate sensibility, giving the dance floor a delightful ride that ends at the corner of bliss and oblivion.
Uniting the best elements of dirty dubstep, grimy glitch, and her personalized blend of “global slut psy-hop,” Ana Sia’s sets confirm crunk status of all who dare enter into her seamless world of sound.


Sunday, November 1, 2009

Wendy Darling


Wendy Darling is a young San Francisco-based indie outfit fronted by female vocalist and occasional mutli-instrumentalist, Cori Rush, a raw, stunning, 6’ tall talent with pipes to back up the look. Rush’s unique vocal stylings have been compared to the likes of Karen O, Kim Deal, Natalie Merchant, and Jenny Lewis just to name a few.
Formed in San Diego, this energetic band was originally visualized as an acoustic singer-songwriter duo of Rush and Nate Heller (guitar, vocals). They had an instant musical chemistry, and as they developed their sound, they realized the music deserved fuller arrangements. Cue high school buddies Jon Freeman (bass, synth) and Hector Verdugo (drums, piano), who’ve added playful melodies and that soulful indie sound.
Though 2008 was the break out year for Wendy Darling, playing to packed venues throughout California, inking a record deal with Surfrock International in Japan, and reaching the top 50 on the international charts after the release of its debut album, “Half-Told Bedtime Stories…”, they have been invited to play numerous summer festivals this year such as Rothbury, Wanderlust and the upcoming Monolith Festival at Red Rocks.
Wendy Darling has continued to fine-tune its style, incorporating more complex instrumentation (including banjo, glockenspiel, samplers, and accordion), but have focused on keeping Rush’s sultry, honey-dripped vocals the essence of the band. The resulting live shows are a blend of indie rock and folk, with touches of electronica and vintage psychedelic that delivers an exclusive style with catchy hooks. There is sincerity, innocence, and just the right amount of zest in the music that comes out of Wendy Darling. The band loves to share its music, and after listening to a track or two, you’ll most assuredly want to do the same.