Author Archives: Jonathan Williams

Dubstep DJ Leah Culver imagines big things in her future

Formerly known as MK Ultra, Leah Culver established herself in the Atlanta EDM scene before venturing out to Los Angeles to take her career to the next level. Known for dynamic performances that range from catchy pop hooks to aggressive breakbeats and low end, she now splits her time between the two cities. Following a massive performance at Imagine Festival last month, Culver returns to Atlanta for Iris Presents‘ Halloween party with Laidback Luke at Believe Music Hall. Wrestling with Pop Culture had a chance to talk to her about this show and other upcoming developments following her Imagine Festival set.

Leah Culver at this year’s Imagine Festival. Photo by DV Photo Video.

We last encountered each other at the 3Teeth show at The Masquerade last August. I take it you’re a fan.

I am absolutely a fan. Chase [Brawner, guitarist] worked at the production school I went to in L.A., so I met them out there. They’re just so insane to watch. I wouldn’t miss their show ever. It’s so raw and it makes you feel how you really feel.

You’ve played every Imagine Festival so far and you always bring a big production. In addition to having a full band and other performers on stage with you this year, you also had fellow Atlanta DJ SyLo helping you out. How did all that come together?

SyLo is so special and important in general to me because he started DJing a little bit before me, but I started in 2011 and he was a homie from the very beginning. I remember the day I met him, he just shook my hand and welcomed me in like one of the boys. Back then there weren’t a lot of girls, so it was nice to have a good friend like that. Over the years, we’ve played a million shows together. Then we did our Sex Sells duo for a while where we were performing together.

When I started singing on songs and decided I should be singing on my sets, at first I was running back and forth DJing and singing. It looked ridiculous because it was ridiculous. Then I was like, “I’m going to be smarter about this and section the songs. Who should I have do this with me? Of course, I want SyLo. He’s been so amazing!” Without him, that production this year wouldn’t have gone off the way it did.

Leah Culver at this year’s Imagine Festival. Photo by DV Photo Video.o

Jon Wilkes was my first roommate in L.A. and he used to be the drummer for Red Jumpsuit Apparatus. His energy level never changes. He is continuously nailing it and drumming with a lot of energy. We had violins, guitars, drums, an electronic percussionist, a choir that I pulled out of my butt the other day. We called that set Leah Culver & Friends and it really was. It’s a 69-person production and it just keeps getting bigger. It takes so many people to get this done. We rehearsed choreography for weeks and [our choreographer] was Eric from Jamaica Craft’s crew.

This year was just so next level from last year because of the amount of hands on and the amount of care we put into this one. Just doing choreography was kind of scary because I’d never done that, but it worked out. I knew it was going to go one of two ways: I either totally black out [from the adrenaline] and maybe it works or I totally black out and it definitely works.

For people who have only seen you at Imagine Festival and may not have been to one of your other shows, you don’t typically have such a large production in club settings, right?

It won’t be just at Imagine Festival for much longer. But, yeah. For club settings I can’t do as much a lot of times. A lot of things are changing right now in a really good way. There will be more bigger stages to fill with very talented musicians that I’m lucky to get to play with. I’m working with Mama Jan, who is home-based Atlanta – she’s a powerhouse, she’s incredible, she’s very inspiring. She’s a vocal coach, a vocal engineer and now she has formed a label with Brian Miller, who is my manager. They’re so much more connected than I’ve ever been and hopefully what it takes is being connected with the right people and having something to offer. I think we showed the right people last night [at Imagine Festival] what we can do. With that comes the good things that are going to happen with those people in the crowd that we impressed, hopefully.

What can you tell me about any new music you have coming out or other happenings in your world?

I made a song “It Ain’t Easy” that’s kind of like we flipped the Eagles’ song and made it a little harder. We’re going to release that soon. We’re going to be releasing a lot of new music. I say “we” all the time because I really do feel like it’s such a big team effort. I don’t feel alone in it.

Will that all be released digitally or will you be putting out vinyl or physical releases?

We did go to Kindercore Vinyl in Athens, Ga. and met them. We do plan on doing vinyl and CDs, if people want that. I’ve definitely always wanted to do real distribution through bigger outlets. Again, it’s not something that I did. That’s going to be with the help of these wonderful people that I’m grateful to have aligned with me.

What can you tell me about your Halloween performance Believe Music Hall?

That one’s going to be really important to me. Not to go too dark, but I lost somebody and he died right before his birthday, which is also Halloween. So, that time period is going to be kind of tough. But I’m going to be able to rely on the crowd to let me sing to them, so that’s nice.

Photo by Roxanne Chandler Photography.

When and why did you decide to start singing?

As long as I can remember, I’ve been singing. There’s a girl named Jenny Helms who was my first friend in kindergarten. She’s an amazing singer, one of those little kids that are made to be a Disney Channel-type kid. I think because she was my best friend and she was always singing, my memories of that time period are we’d be playing, but we were always singing. One of us could be talking, and the other one would just be singing. But it was fine because it was respectful. I think that influence at such a young age really did this ultimately. I grew up in a very musical family. Everyone plays drums, DJs, produces. My mom played bagpipes and a big bass drum. She’s like five feet tall, so that was funny.

Are you back in Atlanta now or still based in L.A.?

I pay rent in L.A., but I stay [in Atlanta] with family. I might come back soon because there might be work to be done. My team, at one point, was like, “Let’s move you back for six months. We have work we need to do here.” Now, every two months or so I’m like, “Am I moving back to Atlanta?” Right now they’re saying they’re going to put me on the road.

The ESO Pro Wrestling Roundtable talks to “GLOW” documentarians

ESO Pro Wrestling Roundtable Episode 37On this first in a three-part series dedicated to women in wrestling, the ESO Pro Wrestling Roundtable talks to Bradford Thomason and Brett Whitcomb, the filmmakers behind the award-winning documentary GLOW: The Story of the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling. Episode 37 is also the first in a three-part series dedicated to women in wrestling, so Wrestling with Pop Culture, John Neal and Richard Ewell discuss the early days of women’s wrestling up to 1990.

Wrestling with Pop Culture and R.T. Ewell launch “Stranger Things” podcast

The Upside Down Podcast Chapter One: It All Begins SomewhereWrestling with Pop Culture is proud to be involved with The Upside Down Podcast, my new Stranger Things podcast with Richard Ewell! Here’s the first episode.

https://soundcloud.com/user-373903977/chapter-one-it-all-begins-somewhere

CM Punk transitions from in-ring to comic book storytelling with “Drax”

Drax Vol. 1: The Galaxy's Best DetectiveBefore he began his transition from the wrestling ring to the Ultimate Fighting Championship octagon, former WWE Champion CM Punk started writing for Marvel Comics, another of his non-wrestling dreams. Ironically, the Straight Edge Superstar’s first foray into comics was a short story for the Thor Annual #1, released in February of 2015, in which a brash young Thor guzzles gallons of alcohol. Punk’s first ongoing series for Marvel is a solo outing for the character portrayed by Batista in the Guardians of the Galaxy movie (who, in another twist of irony, won the 2014 Royal Rumble match that ended up being Punk’s WWE finale) beginning in October of 2015.

With issue #11 being released later this month, Marvel recently collected the first five issues of Drax into a trade paperback. Co-written with the accomplished Cullen Bunn, Drax Vol.1: The Galaxy’s Best Detective sees the Destroyer going solo as the rest of the Guardians begin their own adventures. With nothing better to do, his first objective, of course, is to find Thanos and exact revenge for the loss of his family.

Despite his tragic motivations, Drax’s journey becomes comical after the Space Sucker — the hunk-of-junk spaceship Rocket Raccoon loans him — crash lands on a desolate moon. Thankfully, Drax soon finds a bar where he can drown his sorrows. It is here that Drax meets an unlikely ally in former foe Terrax, and an equally unlikely mechanic in Ora, the hot pink bartender. Ora offers to repair the Space Sucker if Drax will find out who has been stealing valuable pieces of technology from her and others around town.

Drax, with his impeccable investigative skills, tracks down the thief, who has also been kidnapping the town’s children and using them as slave labor. This monster ends up being a bigger problem than anyone anticipated, but Drax ain’t scared, especially with the help of a disembodied robot head and other new allies. Together, they are able to free the kidnapped children and figure out why this larger-than-life threat has been absconding with random mechanical gadgetry. This story arc comes to a comically anticlimactic climax that is just as quirky as the rest of the story, leading right into the issues that will be collected in a second volume later this year.

Punk and Bunn’s writing is complemented by Scott Hepburn’s illustrations to create a fun new sci-fi adventure serial. Say what you will about his other post-wrestling endeavor, but Punk was always a good storyteller in the ring. Though he wasn’t able to escape a clobbering in his UFC debut, his work here is delightful antihero escapism.

The ESO Pro Wrestling Roundtable talks to JTG and Jake Roberts

ESO Pro Wrestling Roundtable Episode 35

 

On a very special episode 35 of the ESO Pro Wrestling Roundtable, Wrestling with Pop Culture, John Neal and Richard Ewell talk to two wrestling greats. First we talk to former Ohio Valley Wrestling Southern Tag Team Champion Jayson “JTG” Paul about his WWE career with Cryme Tyme, his Damn! Why Did I Write This Book? series, the Kickstarter campaign for The Ultimate Spider-Man: Miles Morales (in which he will portray Venom) and more. Then we talk to WWE Hall of Famer Jake “The Snake” Roberts about his Unspoken Word tour dates, the new DVD/Blu-ray release of The Resurrection of Jake the Snake and several of his wrestling memories. It’s one of our biggest episodes to date and will give you plenty of entertainment this Labor Day weekend.

The ESO Pro Wrestling Roundtable recaps SummerSlam

ESO Pro Wrestling Roundtable Episode 34On episode 34 of the ESO Pro Wrestling Roundtable podcast, Wrestling with Pop Culture, John Neal, Richard Ewell, Michael A. Gordon and Mark Bousquet discuss the aftermath of SummerSlam, including the subsequent Raw and SmackDown Live. We also talk to Dragon Con Wrestling booker Slim J about this year’s DCW event, his work with Total Nonstop Action and Ring of Honor, and more.