Vedana, Thursday Nights

May 17, 2012 in Events

 

Seth Nichols and Kevin Callison, the brains and muscle behind the Thursday night weekly, have been doing a nice job developing community around Vedana Thursdays .

Taking place in the upstairs of the Funky Buddha, the two of them usually host a guest DJ each week, playing individually, then tag team sets around said featured guests. The two of them have quite exquisite tastes in music, in particular the techno music. They both play all vinyl, which, you know, makes us non-all vinyl guys feel like we’re cheating…well not really at all, as in the end it is all about output, but they both mix a mean piece of wax.

Last week, I had the joy of playing tunes from 11-12:30 on a warm, blustery evening. The upstairs of the Buddha is a terrific space, mostly open air and a cozy size. Kevin had great vision with the visuals, using three projectors, he engulfed most of the room with a National Geographic like film of nature. A good part of  it was projected on to white sheets, that were  neatly hung opposite of the DJ booth. The result was almost a third of that wall was moving and swimming with the film, while there was a warm glow cast across the top of the dance floor…well played Kev! He also through down a techno set to open the evening, that was right on the money. There were about twenty five people in the room as I went on, a nice little crowd stayed and conversed in the lounging area around the dance floor. It’s always enjoyable to provide a back drop to a setting where it is mostly conversation, while attempting to coax people on to the dance floor.  Especially in this relaxed setting at an earlier point in the night, deeper textures seem to go over well. Towards the end I ramped it more into techno land, as a late burst of boozers stumbled in and instantly began making shapes on the dance floor. Seth and Kevin tagged for the duration and openend the throttle up, keeping everyone there until everyone was told to leave at 2:00 a.m.

Another great angle these two fine hosts play, is inviting a local artist in each week to display and sell their work, some doing live painting as the night carries on…we picked up some cool art and I will update the post with that particular artists’ contact information. The night is refreshingly unpretentious and when the Funky Buddha gets their sound system dialed in, this night will only continue forward with tasteful, community building.

Check out our little homie from Boulder, Brent Fosdick. He is the guest tonight and will no doubt hold his own among the two fine hosts of the evening. Splendid drink specials, including $2.00 PBR’s make it that much more of a no brainer.

Event page:

http://www.facebook.com/events/198012506977675/

Short video of last week courtesy of Kevin Callison.

http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=10150789965641717

 

 

 

Reviewed : CMKY Presents: Tim Hecker 3.30.12

April 5, 2012 in Events, Reviewed

Event reviewed by our new scribe, Seth Nichols.

 

I have heard so many good things about the Communikey group of Boulder, and I was excited to have my first Boulder music experience be provided by them.  Tim Hecker of Montreal was in town to do a show at the Odd Fellows Lodge.  The lodge is a very unique venue with a large high-ceiling room and large stain glass windows.

I entered the dark room while Married In Berdichev was filling the room with her swirling vocals and progressive loops and samples.  Her set was a very cool and peaceful sound that brought the whole room into a vibey space.  A perfect setting to what was to come.  This event was very different from other events I had been to in the past, no one was standing.  There were chairs around the perimeter of the room where patrons sat, but the carpeted floor in the middle was full of people either sitting, laying, or meditating.  The lights were very dim and grew progressively dimmer as the night went on.  There were no moving lights or strobes or anything ‘flash’ about the production.  A stripped down spiritual setting with top notch sound being the main focus…just as it should be.

The following set by Boulder native Radere was on point.  Lots of live sample cuts from his guitar licks with an ever increasing energy in his intense, yes intense, ambient sound.  I just closed my eyes and visualized the streaming soundscapes and could begin to see the form of his sound in my own minds interpretation.  The atmosphere and setting was quite conducive to getting completely lost in the music.  Barely even a chatter was heard from other attendeses, and the room was packed!

Next up was the main attraction Tim Hecker.  He took a seat at the desk and prepared to melt our musical minds with his genius. His set did just that!  The whole night progressed perfectly as each set brought the energy a little bit higher without blowing the roof.  Hecker’s  sound was the most bass heavy of the three sets which really intensified the whole vibe of the room and gave it a buzz.  The music is comprised of surging tones and swelling sounds, not really melodies or any noted lines.  A very hypnotic and powerful sound once you can find the patience to settle into it.

All in all it was an amazing night of music and I will be looking forward to more events like it.  A great change of pace from the typical club event, all part of the spice of life.

Events – Reviewed, Tiefschwarz @ Beta 3.24.12

March 29, 2012 in Events, Reviewed

Having only been a CO resident for a little under 2 years, the novelty of a club the status of Beta,  being in my town of residence has not worn off.  I’m not all Beta jaded just yet, but I surely have developed a few reasons to be.  Often times the 18-21 crowd can be mindless and inconsiderate to those around them that are also trying to enjoy their night.  But my expression here is more to do with my observation of the talent witnessed in the Beta main room prior.  Almost every major headliner, of personal interest, that I have seen play a set in the main room,  has always seemed to adapt their sound in a commercial way to appease the audience.  Or so they think that is what the crowd is yearning for.  Tiefschwarz walked into the Beta main room with a big pair of underground fueled kahuna’s, aiming to please the more astute minded electronic folk, but still sprinkling just the right amounts of perk and flare to keep the club kids bouncing.  Such a pleasant surprise to hear hot and forward-thinkin music, rumbling through that Funktion One sound system!  My homies and I staked our claim to the mid-middle of the room and dialed into their sound for the full 2 hours.  The charismatic German duo in their mid-40’s, didn’t let up and kept the room slamming till the end…well played!  I can only hope more headliners that come to Beta in the future will take note that an underground sound can please both sides of the club culture if done right.

Keep it real for the people who know who you are, and make their way out to see you play.  Don’t focus on pleasing the folks that have no idea who you are, just to keep your job.  Pushing boundaries of what people expect can be a dangerous thing, but it is also the only thing that will keep the sounds of club culture moving forward, in an inspired direction.

Events – Reviewed | Mike Huckaby @ BPL | 3.16.2012

March 19, 2012 in Events, Reviewed

 

After making his way to Colorado last year to play the Communikey Festival in Boulder, Mike Huckaby has since forged friendships with a number of the good folk out here and has been back numerous times with in the past year. I got to witness him for years as a fledgling raver in the midwest years ago, where he was on constant rotation through out Pittsburgh, Cleveland and his hometown of Detroit where he is still lives. He is well documented with his work with Native Instruments Development and his instruction work at the brilliant Youthville facility in Detroit. So aside from being a complete badass and legend of a producer/DJ, he is a really good guy too, so it’s easy to see why he is just plain fun to be around.

Fresh off his nomination for Westword, brother in arms John Templeton hosted Huck at his monthly Emote music night, in the Beatport Lounge this past Friday, put on by our friends at PUNCHIS. After a nice dinner out, we crewed up and headed to Beta, which on this night had legendary Andy C of RAM Records fame, dropping the slam on the main floor, hosted by Sub.Mission. An all around good music night at Beta…way to go Beta.

Upon Arrival, the very talented and very kind Benjamin Shreeves, was warming the room up with a nice mix of electro and steely techno. The BPL was still in it’s transient stage of the night, where a good amount of clubbers make the loop around from the main floor, stop in to check out the lounge upstairs and maybe hit the patio for some air.

Ben left off nicely for the dynamic live duo of Jahnavi Stenflo and Nathan Jantz aka, the Normal Ones. Everything about their live show ruled…it always does. The most obvious thing to note was their position in the room this night. Their gear and themselves were perched a top the cabinets to the left of the DJ booth (if you’re looking at the booth), which changed the landscape of the intimate room dramatically. It was a blast of fresh air , as the dance floor instantly became  wider with the length of the room in full use and the focus away from the usual. From there, the pair just laid a fantastic vibe of skeletal electro-ish 4/4 with quite varied, beautiful vocals. Nathans programming is incredibly clean and punchy, coupled with Jahnavis natural stage presence and enthusiastic vocals, they are a quality to the core and had the vibe slammin.

As their last track ended, the focus went immediately back to the DJ booth, where Huck dropped his first record to the sound of machine tinged  techno with pace. A perfect segue out of the two opening sets, he may have thrown a few people off expecting stuff more on the house tip. Being the professional he is, he knew where he was taking us…also on being a professional, he did not bat an eye at the countless (and I do mean countless) times the needle skipped on his records through out his entire set. Now I know Justin the sound guy over at Beta took offense to our review of the sound issues a few weeks ago at the Martin Buttrich event in the BPL and maybe he was in the right. However, Beta again appears amateur in the contrast of the accolades they tote of being the best. They have two bass bins pressed directly against the DJ Booth, when at peak time whether the sound is dialed in or not, will produce enough vibration to shake anything off that booth…drinks, laptops and especially needles. Thankfully Mike Huckaby is such a pro, he just plowed through and progressed his set from the techno he started with to saxophone laden Detroit house sound and kept the heads happy as could be, despite the constant sound issues.

Did not spend too much time downstairs, but did catch some of Andy C’s set which was as expected, really good. Between the gorgeous mild weather and the combined years experience in the house that night, a good time was had by all. From there, our group widdled down to three and we cabbed to afters organized again by Emote. Make Mistakes darling Tom ‘Attentat’ Kamholz was banging some no nonsense techno when we got there to a small crowd, in a great little space in the Santa Fe Arts district. A burst of friends and faces came by from the club, Huck among them. The end of Tommy’s set was the highlight of the music for me, getting back to his weirdo-deep-slightly eclectic brand of techno. The Traveling S#!+ Show – a new DJ/live trio featuring The Missing Link, Sequence and John Templeton came on to finish the night. Heard about 20 minutes of their set before taking off, but it was good and techy, with warm undertones.

All in all a night out with a load of laughs and smiles…and was a perfect primer to the madness of biking around in the sunshine and drinks, that was a St. Patricks Day on a Saturday, in rowdy Denver.

Reviewed | Martin Buttrich | PUNCHIS & AA/MP Denver 2.24.2012

March 5, 2012 in Events, Reviewed

Good times out on this one.

It started by Sammy and I meeting our brother in arms John Templeton, the lovely Zaira and Herr Buttrich at Lous Food Place around 9:30…love that place. A nice intimate sit down with someone I have admired for years was perfect…more perfect, as Martin turned out not to be the steely German I projected of him, with his clinical productions and all.  Instead, he is a happy-go-lucky ‘bro’, who laughed, knocked back brews, joked on his local football team and spoke modestly of gigs in Ibiza and the Caribbean (where he fell off a stage and broke his foot a while back, there for could not snowboard with us while in town).

From Lou’s, we all ran back to our house around the corner for a quick chill, then on to Blake Street where the BPL awaited us. Since the advent of 18+ upstairs in the BPL, attendance has been up on every new visit. Lines are a bit blurred as to who is passing through or who is there for the specific music that is played, but regardless the room has benefitted from more enthusiastic bodies in it. PUNCHIS resident Diizel was on when we arrived, playing a varied selection of not so varied tech house to a packed room. It worked though as woops and cheers rang out as he smoothly mixed through until our German friend had his laptop set up and ready to rip.

Martin’s live set was solid as expected. He ran through bits of his vast catalog in an hour and a half.  His remix of Luca Bacchetti & Davide Squillace’s “Around The Bay”,  another of his remix’s,  ”Telesto” on Systematic making appearances.  These tracks strike a nice balance between warm tones with playful attitudes and straight dance floor functionality.  The room stayed full for the most part…even after the sound cut out THREE times, which I really don’t understand as high profile as Beta is.

On to the ‘AM’ segment of the night, a gang of us headed to the RiNo warehouse complex about 5 minutes north of Beta. A few parties have been held there, this was the first time I made it to one.  Afterhours Anonymous and Mahesh Presents hosted the event, which was impeccably produced. Turbo Sound was dialed in, a full bar, massive visuals and plenty of room to dance. The vibe was upbeat from the start, the tall and talented Bones (ala Nick Wilson) was laying down his birthday set nicely, blending his brand of pleasant tech house to an already well populated room. Martin came on for his second live set of the evening, which apparently he did not know about until he landed in Denver. He had no issues with it and honestly, it worked better than his club set.  The set was a lot more stripped back, chugging and hypnotic. Take a listen to his track “Back It Up”, this is what the set sounded like in some form through out, simple and effective. Denver’s own Little Mike closed the night out with a good demonstration of why he is holding his own in Berlin currently. Fairly safe records more on the tech house tip, but well mixed and programmed. The party literally felt like an extension of the club, as it was so well produced and lured in a bulk of the club goers itself. Hopefully the sound guys at Beta were lured in as well to learn a thing or two…with out a Function 1, the sound system at the afters was hands down better and did not cut out once.

Hats off to PUNCHIS, AA/MP and all others that participated in bringing Martin and making it a fun night out.  Hopefully we’ll see more of him as he seems to be happily based in Los Angeles at the moment.

Upcoming AA/MP shows: Radio Slave 3.24.12  http://www.facebook.com/events/361177960582197/

Bones set from this night

 

Martin Buttrich: 1/2 California Bro, 1/2 Steely German...all around great dude.

Martin Buttrich debuts in Denver

February 21, 2012 in Events, Music

As part of the PM//AM series in conjunction with the BPL, P.U.N.C.H.I.S and AA/MP, MM is excited to see Martin Buttrich in town this weekend.

The weekly party put on by P.U.N.C.H.I.S in the Beatport Lounge (BPL), which resides in the upstairs of Beta, is hosting Martin Buttrich this Friday night in conjunction with Afterhours Anonymous and Mahesh Presents (AA/MP). The party will take place in two stages. First, in the Beatport Lounge (BPL), the PM (p.m.) stage goes from 9:00-2:00, with P.U.N.C.H.I.S residents opening for Buttrich. Then, the AM (a.m.) portion kicks in at an after hours location, hosted by Afterhours Anonymous and Mahesh Presents (AA/MP). There, our friend Bones will play an opening set (on his birthday no less), followed by yet another set from Buttrich. To cap off this dizzying night of acronyms and shenanigans, Denver ex-pat Little Mike, returns home again to close out the night at some point in the AM (a.m.).

Here at the offices of MM (Make Mistakes), we are excited to see Herr Buttrich twice in person…in the same night…that whole PM//AM thing. Long a “ghost” producer for the likes of Timo Maas and Loco Dice among others, it is under his own name that his music is most enjoyable. Come Friday…it’s TGIF.

 

Beta:

Add yourself to the limited discount list by following this link: http://bit.ly/xku5Wi
21+ $5, 18+ $15 – Before 11PM (higher after)

Afters:

21+ w/ ID $15 before 1:30am or w/ Beta wristband // $20 otherwise

Turbosound by Paradigm

RSVP on the Facebook Event pagehttps://www.facebook.com/events/266075636795468/

Âme “A Love Bizarre” @ E-Villa, Baltimore

February 14, 2012 in Events, Reviewed

Âme at E-Villa

I arrived in Baltimore, Maryland two weeks ago to start a new life on the East coast. I was worried about where I would get my techno fix, as I have heard and found very little about the techno and house music scene here, though I have been assured by people in the know, that there would be much to do.

I was skeptical.

This changed while riding home on the train last week, a co-worker casually mentioned that her and some others were going to go see some artist named Âme at some small club that was in a converted row house in Mt. Vernon.

I freaked out at this point. I’m in Baltimore, I don’t know anyone, and I’m being told nonchalantly that some of my favorite producers in dance music right now were going to be playing in a tiny venue in the city.

So, I wasn’t lied to, that’s good. I quickly did some research on the show, and found out that it was happening at E-Villa, which, after being there, has already become my favorite club in Baltimore. In fact, if it were in Denver, it would be everyone’s favorite club in Denver. If there are going to be Make Mistakes events in the city, I would hope that I can pull them together here.

Imagine the house party of your dreams. Small, intimate dance floor, for about 100 people, and a classy, well stocked bar area with couches and posh decor. The club in and of itself was reason enough to go, I guess I’m saying. Âme being the headliner, just gave the experience the surreal tinge you’re looking for in a night out in a city you don’t know.

The crowd was positive and smiling, people knew what they were there for and quickly got down to the business of partying. The DJ opening for Âme laid down a thick vibe of deep, intelligent house and techno, and paved the way for Âme’s more psychedelic, floating in space house music.

And it was delivered, a beautiful set of warm, inviting music, matched with a tightly packed vibrating room filled with happy party people, created a perfect intro to the Baltimore scene.

Unfortunately, still being tired and in need of life organizing, my fiancee and I decided to skip the warehouse afterparty jam, but it’s worth noting that Kevin Yost was on the lineup for that, so I would assume that that was just as awesome.

 

M.E.S.S. & CP bring Kirk Degiorgio

February 7, 2012 in Events

Our homies at Mother Earth Sound System and Crowdpleaser are bringing in an old techno stalwart this weekend, Kirk Degiorgio. This is a great chance to get your brain pummeled, up close and personal. One thing I dig about Kirk, is how he can project a split image of his mug like you see here. That and how he started a party in London, where artists play live and HAVE to play all unreleased, new  material…or apparently their heads will be chopped off. It’s called Machine, check it.

 

See below for more information and stay tuned for a full review of the night.

 

Mother Earth Sound System + CrowdPleaser presents:
Friday, Feb 10
KIRK DEGIORGIO (UK)
aka As One / Future-Past / Esoterik
ART / Planet E / Rush Hour

Almost as if to try and throw his fans off the scent, Kirk Degiorgio has used As One, Elegy, Esoterik, Critical Phase, and Future/Past as recording aliases. In 1992 Degiorgio recorded his first release on B12 Records and shortly after founded the ART label (Applied Rythmic Technology) releasing early material by seminal artists such as Carl Craig, Aphex Twin, Stasis, and The Black Dog.

Degiorgio went on to record material for ART, Planet E and R&S before signing As One to New Electronica for the albums Reflections and Celestial Soul, which both made the Muzik Top 30 albums for 1994/5. Further albums for Clear (UK), Mo Wax, Ubiquity, Versatile and Neroli cemented Kirk’s reputation as a seriously heavyweight producer with a unique, individual sound, beautifully combining elements of jazz, soul, techno and funk into electronic tracks.

Bio + discography:

http://www.discogs.com/artist/Kirk+Degiorgio
http://planetary-folklore.blogspot.com/

Tracks + mixes:
http://www.soundcloud.com/kirkdegiorgio
http://www.bodytonicmusic.com/podcasts/2010/jan/20/bodytonic-podcast-066-kirk-degiorgio/
http://www.mixcloud.com/littlewhiteearbuds/lwe-podcast-36-kirk-degiorgio/

with DJs from MESS + CP

full details coming soon…

http://www.heartheearth.org/
https://www.facebook.com/CrowdPleaserTechno

Reviewed – Ryan Crosson & Lee Curtiss in Denver @ Cluster Studios (1.28.12)

February 3, 2012 in Events, Reviewed

Denver promoters Afterhours Anonomyous and Mahesh Presents (AA/MP) have been good at aiming for a specific group of people, the in between or ‘fringe’ crowd. Those who like to enjoy themselves outside of the club confines but might not necessarily be obsessive about what goes into it. Not quite as jaded and bitter as some of us around here…which is good.  This target audience needs to be cultivated to keep the underground scene progressing. AA/MP partnered with ROOTS Denver [super nice guy Bones (Nick Wilson) and local legend Hipp e] to bring in a few hotly tipped artists over last weekend.

This past Saturday they brought Ryan Crosson and Lee Curtiss of the freshly famed Visionquest outfit. Both are Michigan natives living in Berlin, both have had and still do enjoy solo careers.  The North Denver warehouse complex that is Cluster Studios was the space chosen for the event. We arrived about 12:30 after crushing on some raw fish rolled in seaweed and cold rice wine with friends, it was lovely. Cluster is one of the better venues in town to have a party save one mondo detail…acoustics. It has always been a challenge to dial in the sound in the cavernous main room. The high ceilings, open-movable walls, concrete floors and exposed metal beams all team up as if to  say, “I don’t think so, sound guy.”

Unfortunately, the space won again. Surely it did not help that the speakers sounded like they were submerged in water. Little to no highs or midrange, it was muffled bass all over the venue, aside from a few sweet spots. We missed both opening sets, my buddy Angel Castro and a fella that goes by Quinn, but heard both went down well. By 1:45 there was a great crowd assembled, pro grade lasers and hardly anyone really dancing. Halo, of H Foundation fame, was on the decks playing pretty straight forward tech house in the 125 bpm territory that could have used some love on the sound system. Was a bummer, as I’ve been a fan of him for a while and was excited to hear him play again.

Lee Curtiss would be my least interesting pick musically out of the four big Questers (Reeves, Troxler, Crosson, Curtiss), but he came through with the most interesting set of the night. He EQ’d the best out of the sound system, playing more stripped back techno and house, slowing the pace down. It was a bit groovier, a little more slinky and tad bit sleazy. The vibe felt like it was finally coming together at this point. Most of the set sounded like his unreleased track “I Can Make Your Body Twitch” which was welcomed, as it has a dirty, funky feel to it. Ryan Crosson came on around 4:00, smoothly mixing in Cajmere’s classic “It’s Time For the Perculator”. Only about half an hour later it was time for the car ride home to bed. The little that we did catch of him was solid. It sounded a bit more on the techno end, a bit harder than Curtiss and at that point the 420+  in the crowd were on board with him, sound issues or not.

All and all, Roots & AA/MP  started their New Year with momentum moving forward. Stay tuned for more AA/MP shows over the next few months, there are some good ones scheduled. Radioslave, Martin Buttrich and Jesse Rose among other confirmed names.

 

Reviewed – Sven Weisemann @ Shine in Boulder (1.27.12)

February 1, 2012 in Events, Reviewed

 

The good will of Communikey delivered again this past Friday, with a fabulously condensed night of music, smiles and dancing.

It was a group effort, the show was thrown in conjunction with Inciting and Prop Gay, the latter provided the backbone of the night in composing more than half the crowd. Prop Gay is a Boulder based organization, who navigates around the absence of a gay club/bar in town, by taking over a space once a month and having a party. Smart one eh? Inciting is a solid crew from Philly with ties to CMKY and Boulder.

After a road trip up from Denver with friends, we found ourselves at Shine, the freshly renovated restaurant/event space through the helm of the talented and adorable Trilogy sisters. Shine is basically two parts: big, open restaurant/bar in the front and a small, mostly self contained event room in the back with a small bar. When events are held in the back room as this one was,  you have to mingle through the front restaurant area to get to it…personally I’m undecided still as to whether this adds or subtracts from the party itself.

Ever reliable John Templeton laid down a cogent warm up with his soothing,  brand of loose, jazzy minimal. Starting deep and slow at 113 bpm, he politely warmed up the room, finishing around 120 bpm. Marc Neyens remix of Pheeks’ “Landing” on 31337 Records all pitched down was a highlight, that track is a winner.

Inciting artist Pandemix, or Justin Gibbon from Philadelphia, followed John with clearly a more agressive edge…maybe it’s because he’s from the East Coast, I don’t know.  It was a solid selection of weird, dark tunes albiet a bit shakily mixed at times. Towards the end he finished with a Mike Dehnart track that was super nasty, zoning along with a tight acid line that cast a spell over the floor.

Sven Weisemann…wow. The fresh faced German slammed it, plain and simple. Volume, vibe and pace went up as soon he dropped his first track. He definitely is the best ‘deep house’ Dj I have seen in a while…whatever ‘deep house’ really is anymore. Chugging bass lines and kicks were always complimented by the good end of cliched ‘deep house’…blips of warm Rhodes chords, some enveloping strings and effective vocal loops. Whatever remix he played of James Blakes ‘There’s a Limit to Your Love’, won him instant cred in Boulder. People were singing along with the emo – indie darling, as his melancholically beautiful words floated around the room. Sven enthusiastically played a lot harder then most of his productions and worked the mixer like silly because in his words, “I hate boring Dj’s”. We do too Sven and we’re glad you’re not one of them.

Attentat or Make Mistakes own, Thomas Kamholz finished the night off with class, as he only knows how to do. Bumping more on the house tip than usual, he read the room accurately and kept everyone locked in together. Even his razor like precision on the mixer was not thwarted by a full Traktor crash and an ultra- overly enthusiastic girl, who’s actions prompted Tom to proclaim, ” there should be bodyguards in the Dj booth”. These incidents Tom spoke of involved said girl are and are not limited to: jumping behind stage and grinding on our German guest Sven as he was mixing (had to be escorted off ); unplugging a turntable while jumping on stage while Tom was playing (was escorted off after refusing to move); confronting Tom after playing to assert she did nothing wrong and state, “there is a disconnect between the Dj and dancer these days and it’s not fair”….or something like that. Well honey, there are norms for a reason in life and you did an extremely good job of demonstrating why they are needed.

The night ended abruptly at 1:00 a.m. due to the venues new closing policies. All Dj’s and participants would have liked to have gone longer, but no time was wasted throughout the evening and the party seemed a success all around. Thanks to Ejay Toledo for providing a clear sound system, Prop Gay for their fun participation and Carl Ritger for keeping his Inciting family involved in Colorado.

Photo credits to the talanted Scott Kaplan, please check more of his work at www.pranaphoto.com

*(the harraser caught on tape...look at Sven, he is uncomfortable, you can tell)