RADIO NEVER
They might us -- shorten frequencies shows -around for keep listening. say it on fucking
RADIO WILL NEVER DIE
might try to kill shorten our frequencies or cancel our -- but we’ll be for as long as you listening. We can’t on air, but we love you guys.
Rock on,
where's the by RORY
In recent Internet Land events, Pitchfork posted a semi-controversial interview with everyone’s favorite Icelandic artist Bjork in light of her new record Vulnicura. The article sparked an important discussion on popular social media platforms about female musicians, their place in the music industry and the constant adversities they face.
From facing constant doubt to being deprived credit of their own work, it doesn’t take a musical
the credit? RORY
genius to realize that misogyny is real in the music industry. The prominent and absurd attitude towards women in music is pretty toxic; it diminishes artist integrity, perpetuates a system of entitlement for male musicians and potentially discourages young girls from pursuing musical careers.
After reading several posts in reply to the article (and being angered by some), I reached out to Lindsey Sprague of the Greensboro band Daddy Issues to see how these problems affect our own local scene. Sprague stressed the importance of women’s visibility in music and spoke of her own experience in dealing with the “core of doubt” most women are up against in any music scene, “…I think you seriously have to prove to everyone (the guy at the guitar store, the sound person, the booking agent, etc.) that
"...you have to that for that should seriously."
you are for real, and that you can and should be taken seriously.”
Daddy Issues may embrace the term “girl-band,” but that certainly shouldn’t change how people perceive their talent or validity.
From musical goddess Bjork to one of our favorite local bands, it’s obvious that these issues are very real. The Triangle has a lot of influence on North Carolina music, and I think we could make a difference if our community continues to make space for women in music. Let’s keep sexism out of what Sprague calls, “the most open and welcoming music scene ever.” 3
"...you seriously have to prove to everyone... that you are for real, and that you can and should be taken seriously."
HOPSCOTCH
2014
photos by: & MUTAGUERILLATOSS BIGPOOH
coke WEED
PALEHOUND bllonde
AFTERHOURS
I’m Ready - DJ Paypal
Kickin the Moon Across the
Saint Germain - Ghibli
Missing Peace - Dream Beach
Farm - Nok from the Future
Orange Ones - Funkss
Invitation to Love - TB
Sink - HANZ
Bipp (Tielsie remix) - Sophie
Powder - Sam Gellaitry
BY DJ AIRPLANEElephant - Professor
Django - Well$
Bow Down - Dinero
Gold Soul Theory
Gabriel Ratchet
Free the Robots
Y’all Trippin’ -
222 - Flatbush Zombies
The Green Balloons
OVA - Kami
Fonzo
the Sky - Opal Block
Beach
Future
Sophie
AIRPLANE MODE
Theory - Underachievers
- Deca
- Capital STEEZ
- Michael Christmas
Zombies
Balloons - Sky Blew
Fonzo
Professor Toon Dinero Farrar, Denzel CurryA GUIDE FOR FIRST HARDCORE
1. Before the show, practice your ninja kicks and any other type of of the mirror. Make sure your khaki needed mobility.
2. Wear the freshest merch possible. super rare and obscure like Pungent varsity font shit out of here and of the bands whose shit you wear up before your birth.
3. If you’re SXE, tattoo big black your hand. Do this even if you’re
4. Get in the pit.
5. It’s time to get off that late ALL ABOUT ‘90s funk metal now. Primus, etc. Slap bass is a must.
6. Kill the crowd before the crowd
FOR YOUR HARDCORE SHOW
BY SONIC THE EDGEHOG AND ENGLISH SOCCERyour windmill kicks, of kicks in front khaki shorts provide
possible. Make sure it’s Pungent Stench. Get that and Terror. 90 percent wear should have broken black Xs on the back of you’re not SXE.
late 90s death metal tip: Primus, Faith No More, crowd kills you.
LOCAL
Arthur’s Song - Black Santa
Devious - Gross Ghost
Baby Man - Lonnie Walker
Untied Laces - Naked Naps
Blondes - Ghostt Bllonde
Sex on the Beach - Daddy
Crocodile - Museum Mouth
Neon Visions - SMLH
A Fire - Magpie Feast
Blue Eyes - The Rosebuds
World’s Apart - Pallbearer
From the Kettle
Onto the Coil - Deafheaven
White Walls - Between the Buried and Betrayed by Light - Young and in the Dopesmoker - Sleep
Oblivion - Mastodon
Obfuscation - Between the Buried and Raining Blood - Slayer
The Night and the Silent Water - Opeth
The Family Ghost - King Diamond
- Slaughterhome & 10
-jake
from state farm & Mattador
Deafheaven and Me the Way and Me Opeth
Slaughterhome 12 speed
THINGS A CAPELLA
with Glenn Weeks
c’mon, you love it
LOBOS CANTO DE
¡toco reggaetón, salsa, rock, bachata, pop, alternativa, cumbia, rap y que sea después que sea buena música!
KINDS RADIO
12-2pm
and Allison Wonderland with Big Fat Sac
DJwithCancel
3-4pm
4-6pm
country and western music - a labor of love
Cabbage
and Riff Raff
10-12pm
with DJ CJ
y’all come listen...
THAT EMO SHOW
with English Soccer
get sad, stay sad
12-1pm
AmericaNA, Blues, and company SOULTOWN SATURDAYS
with The Good Son
playing your favorite classic soul and funk grooves from the ‘50s on up
5-6pm
SATURDAYS
ARROZ con pollo
algo diferente con un sabor familiar
local hardcore from North Carolina, the finest in tobacco mosh.
Shut the punk up
the Mattador's guide to:
DIY
BLEACH
STUFF YOU’LL NEED:
shirt to bleach (100 percent cotton bleach (not the color safe type)
freezer paper (freezer paper is side and wax paper on the other spray bottle (a fine mist is best)
iron bucket of water
X-acto knife
STEP 1:
draw out/trace your design on freezer paper
BLEACH STENCILING
YKNOW, like screen printing..
cotton seems to work best) type) is like normal paper on one other -- Walmart has it) best)
STEP 2: cut out your stencil
STEP 3:
iron the stencil to the shirt
STEP 4: mist the bleach water
STEP
5:
let it sit for 15 minutes-if looks lighter dunk the shirt bucket of water to stop the otherwise mist with the bleach
the design with a 50/50 water solution
RIP MATTRESS BY DJ/ DX
MATTRESS FORT
Squeeze your way up the the sagging back porch, past the flannel-clad bodies and PBRs, through the cloudy sliding-glass door, and into the living room. The walls are lined with mattresses, and music blares from amps and a single broken PA balanced on a precarious side table. Where are you? You’re at Mattress Fort, one of Raleigh’s most substantial house show venues.
Prior to Mattress Fort, house shows in Raleigh were sporadic and dominated by metal and hardcore artists. Catie Yerkes, at the time only a twenty-year-old college student, decided to create a space for people to enjoy great music in an intimate setting that was by donation and available for all ages. In doing so, not only did she manage to bring incredible bands to the area like Radiator Hospital, Krill and Modern Baseball, but she was also responsible for creating an inclusive community of music enthusiasts and musicians in the Triangle. These shows were attracting people that cared about the
music and creating an environment and a network for these people to interact. It encouraged the DIY mentality, and was the birthplace of many local favorites, including the bands
Celebrity Jeopardy, GHOSTT BLLONDE and Naked Naps. The house went out with a bang this past July with Cuddle Fest, a two-night farewell show featuring 11 Mattress Fort alumnus bands. Catie and her roommates have since moved out, but the DIY legacy of Mattress Fort lives on in the community it cultivated. So what was Mattress Fort? Ask a punk.