Category Archives: Featured

Georgia Wrestling Now broadcasts live from PCW’s Sacred Ground: Chapter Three

Georgia Wrestling Now, with Wrestling with Pop Culture‘s Jonathan Williams, Team All You Can Eat’s Matt Hankins and Georgia Wrestling History‘s Larry Goodman, does a special broadcast live from Platinum Championship Wrestling’s Sacred Ground: Chapter Three on Sept. 29. Our broadcast begins during the first match, so whether you were there or want to try to find out what you missed, listen here. This show was our first attempt at broadcasting live from a wrestling event, so please excuse the audio issues and other mishaps. And if Matt and my self-indulgent attempt at being wrestling commentators is unbearable, you can just read Larry Goodman’s Sacred Ground review.

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John 5 shreds with Rob Zombie on the Twins of Evil tour

Though he received his first big jolt of recognition when he became Marilyn Manson‘s guitarist in 1998, for the past seven years John 5‘s shredding skills have been utilized as part of Rob Zombie‘s band. So when Manson and Zombie take to the stage tonight at the Desert Uprising festival in Phoenix for the first night of the Twins of Evil tour, it will be especially exciting for 5 given his history with both bands. Having released his latest solo CD God Told Me To a few months ago, 5 also contributed some guitar work for Zombie’s recent remix album Mondo Sex Head. Before taking the stage for the Twins of Evil tour, 5 talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about the tour, the next Zombie album and other upcoming projects.

Rob Zombie’s recent remix CD featured some of his older material remixed by several of today’s top DJs and electronic musicians. But you also contributed some guitar work to the album. Which songs did you work on?

John 5 (left) is part of the gruesome twosome on the Twins of Evil tour (photo by Rick Fagan)

That’s right. There’s a lot going on right now. The remix CD just came out, we just finished up the new Zombie record, we’re doing the The Lords of Salem movie and the Twins of Evil tour is starting. A couple of DJs got a hold of me and said, “Hey, would you mind putting this, that and the other thing on there?” And I said, “Absolutely. It’ll be fun.” And for Jonathan Davis’ J Devil remix I did a little work and it came out really great. I love that album. It was a lot of fun and it’s cool to hear the songs remixed that way. I did some stuff on “Thunder Kiss” and “Superbeast.”

You mentioned the new Rob Zombie record. What can you say about that at this point?

I’m not sure when it comes out, but I just listened to the whole record and it is an aggressive, in-your-face record. I’ve been a fan of White Zombie and Rob Zombie since long before I was in the band, and from a fan’s outlook when listening to this record I hear a lot of the live, raw aggressiveness of White Zombie. A lot of artists say, “This is our best record and blah blah blah blah blah,” but I really am super excited about this and I think people are really going to enjoy it. It’s still very early and Rob is definitely going to come up with something great for the title of the record. These are really great songs and people are going to dig it. I’m looking forward to playing these songs live.

This will be your first record since your former Marilyn Manson bandmate Ginger Fish joined Zombie’s band. How involved was he in the recording process?

I’ve known Ginger forever and when we go in to record, I bring guitars and some pedals and this and that. Ginger came to the studio, I swear to God, with a semi full of drums and mics. I thought he was moving in or something. It was crazy all the stuff he brought. I was like, “What is going on here? He’s just playing drums!” But he’s great and he did a phenomenal job. That’s another great thing about the record is that it’s so alive with his crazy energy.

It’s been a few years since you and Ginger played in the same band together. What has it been like playing with him again?

John 5 (right) is a musical and visual presence in Rob Zombie's band (photo by Rick Fagan)

I always kept in touch with Ginger, so it’s been like jamming with an old friend. It worked before and it just seemed to fit perfect. I told Rob that Ginger would be perfect because I had played with him before, he’s loyal and he’s a great drummer. And it’s been working perfect. He’s been in the band for a little while, we’ve done a few tours with him and now we’ve done a record with him. It really is a perfect fit. Now we’re doing this tour together and it’s really going to be a lot of fun. It’s going to be a huge show and what better thing to do around Halloween time than go see Marilyn Manson and Rob Zombie?

That’s a pairing a lot of people have been wanting to see since the late ’90s. But now with the added dynamic of yours and Ginger’s history with both bands just makes it that much more interesting.

It’s going to be exciting, to say the least. A lot of people are going to really enjoy it and it’s such a perfect time of year for it.

Both bands are known for putting on huge stage shows. Have the two bands been communicating about coordinating their shows or will there be a bit of one-upsmanship going on during the tour?

The only thing I’m sure of is Rob Zombie has always had such a massive show, but this tour is going to be even bigger. Our show is going to be so big and mammoth that people are going to be holding their heads and saying, “I can’t believe what I just saw.”

You also mentioned the The Lords of Salem movie. Are you involved with that in some way?

Yeah, I did the music score for the movie. It was a challenge to score a movie, especially a Rob Zombie movie. I used a lot of weird things to create the sounds like violin bows, banging on the guitar, quarters on the strings and all sorts of weird instruments. I’m really proud of how this music came out. It was one of the most challenging things I’ve done in a long time.

Was Zombie involved in the recording process at all?

John 5 (second from right) and Ginger Fish (right) reunite in more than one way on the Twins of Evil tour (photo by Rick Fagan)

Rob was actually directing, editing and talking to me about the score. We did a couple of pieces together and the guy’s a genius. I sit back and think about how he makes hit records and he does these movies, but for my birthday he painted me the Creature from the Black Lagoon. The guy can do everything. The painting is amazing, he does music, movies, but you know what? I can beat him at air hockey. That’s what I can beat him at. We played air hockey at the movie and I beat him, so I’ve got that going for me.

You also released a new solo album a few months ago, which is probably your most ambitious solo effort to date. For those who haven’t heard it, what would you like to say about that album?

I really can’t believe how well it’s doing. People enjoy when I put out this instrumental music because they never know what they’re going to get. They’re kind of like Forrest Gump’s box of chocolates. But with God Told Me To, there’s a DVD that goes with the record and Rob Zombie painted the cover. I’ve gotten a lot of love from that record and I appreciate that. And it really takes you on a journey, that’s for sure.

www.john-5.com

www.robzombie.com

Boobs, blood and the Butcher Babies

What’s not to like about the Butcher Babies? There are boobs, there’s blood, and the band’s brand of horror metal is about as heavy as metal gets. Sure, a majority of the attention is intentionally directed at the blood-spattered and nipple-taped front women (former Playboy TV personality Carla Harvey and statuesque model/actress Heidi Shepherd), but the Butcher Babies are not just about the boobs. Instead, that’s almost like an insidious setup to lure listeners in before the macabre musical onslaught of Harvey, Shepherd, Henry Flury (guitar), Jason Klein (bass) and Chrissy Warner (drums) shrieks and shreds your ears into submission. Though they admittedly revel in the shock value of it all, there’s a little bit more to the band’s songs of serial killing and torture tactics. The video for “Mr. Slowdeath” from the band’s self-titled (huh huh, I said “tit”) EP plays out like a mini horror film, and the Harvey-penned Butcher Babies comic book further’s the band’s creepy concept. Just off Otep‘s Destroy to Create Tour with One-Eyed Doll and Arcanium, the Butcher Babies return to their Sunset Strip slaying grounds tonight for a show with Fozzy and Picture Me Broken at The Roxy Theatre tonight. Then the band heads out on a West Coast tour in November with Gemini Syndrome and Dr. Acula. In the meantime, here’s a recent interview Wrestling with Pop Culture did with the Butcher Babies.

Carla and Heidi met while working for Playboy TV, and the rest of you guys have played in bands like Amen and Scars of Tomorrow. But how did the five of you come together to create the Butcher Babies?

Shepherd: Carla and I played in a punk/metal cover band years ago, and Chris actually used to come to those shows, and Henry had gone to a couple, too. But we all didn’t know each other. Carla and I quit that band and wanted to do something heavy and original together. So we took what we liked, which was each other and nipple tape, and formed the band.

Looks like Heidi Shepherd (left) and Carla Harvey (right) need a ride. Would you pick up these hitchhikers?

So it was a pretty organic process of forming the band?

Harvey: It turned out that way, but it wasn’t at first. We went through a lot of band members at first and we just couldn’t find the right core group of guys. But when we just looked in our own backyard and realized they were right there, it got a lot easier.

Warner: I was spying on her!

Shepherd: Yeah, peeping Chris over here. It was interesting because we did go through a couple of members and we just couldn’t find people that had the right vision or that had the same vision as us. Finally, the second we stepped in a room together, it was really apparent that we all had the same exact vision. And it all took off from there.

The band obviously has a strong visual presence. How did the whole blood-and-boobs thing manifest itself?

Harvey: Every band has an identity and we all are fans of horror films. So putting on some blood just added to our show and it felt kind of natural, especially with our music because it’s dark, heavy, groovy thrash metal.

Shepherd: We write about a lot of things that give you nightmares, things that scare you like serial killers, monsters and things like that. So it definitely fits in with that realm. With the nipple tape, Carla and I and the whole band are big fans of Wendy O. Williams. She was the first female to really go balls out – or tits out, if you will – in heavy metal. So we really appreciate that she paved the way for females like Otep and ourselves to really explore everything we wanted to do. So it’s more of an ode to the late Wendy O. Williams.

Klein: Chris has some nipple tape on right now. I haven’t been able to get it to stick. I tried once, but I have too much chest hair.

Harvey: Heidi had that same problem, but we got that taken care of.

Klein: Yeah, she ate up the razor so it wasn’t sharp enough for me to use.

How involved are each of you in writing the songs? Is it more of a band effort or are certain members more involved in coming up with the songs?

Even when not covered in blood, the Butcher Babies are intriguingly menacing

Harvey: We all sit in a room and write together. It’s very important to us that our songs represent each member, so we are very hands on.

Shepherd: Musically and lyrically everyone puts a hand in the cookie jar. So it’s a very collective process where we all feel free and comfortable to get very creative with each other. Every person here is very talented at writing lyrics and music, so why not use them all to their full potential?

Harvey: It also makes everybody, when they’re performing, feel like the song is coming from them. If we had one member writing everything, we’d be up there performing, but not really feeling it.

You have an EP out, but when will there be a full-length album?

Shepherd: We are always writing, but we’re looking to have our full-length out early next year. We definitely have enough songs for it, it’s just about finding which songs we want to really represent ourselves with. The EP took a long time because we’re always evolving and we wanted to really put out something that we felt was 100 percent worthwhile.

Carla, you also have a comic book out. Tell me a little about that.

Harvey: You can get it at Deepcutproductions.net and it adds a bit of mythology to our band. People seem to love it and I get emails every day about how much people like it. I wrote it, so it’s just really fun to see it come to life. We worked with an artist named Anthony Winn, who works for Stan Lee, which is amazing because Heidi and I have gotten to pal around with Stan Lee a little bit.

And you’re working on a novel?

Harvey: Yeah, I’ve written a novel that I hope will be out at the beginning of next year. And I have another comic book coming out. We’re all very creative people. Our main focus is the band, but I’ve loved writing since I was a kid and I’m able to use my band as a platform to get my other material out to people. I’m so thankful for that.

I doubt many people would hesitate at helping Heidi Shepherd (left) and Carla Harvey (right) get cleaned up (photo by the Psyco Boys)

Shepherd: We all have careers besides the Butcher Babies. Butcher Babies is our main squeeze and it’s all of our dream that’s coming true. But we all have other gifts and talents.

Klein: I’m a stripper and that’s kind of paying for our fuel.

Flury: I’m a rodeo clown and that also helps pay for gas.

Shepherd: I’m a Justin Bieber impersonator and I’m really good at looking like a 40-year-old lesbian.

Warner: So those are your other jobs? My other job is riding your mom!

You get paid for that? But back to the book. What’s the novel about?

Harvey: It’s about loneliness and the breakdown of the American family. That’s all I want to say about it right now, but I’ve had a lot of interest in it and I’m really proud of it. I know it sounds funny talking about such serious things when we wear nipple tape on stage.

So what else do you all actually do outside of the band?

Shepherd: I do commercials for television and that’s a lot of fun. I’ve been in television my entire life and I was a radio DJ on morning shows for a long time. Eventually I would like to get back into radio, but Butcher Babies is the center of my attention now.

Flury: I’m a graphic artist.

Warner: Me? What job? This is the only one I’ve got. Drums, baby. That’s my life.

www.butcherbabiesofficial.com

 

Susan SurfTone still making waves in the surf rock scene

For almost 30 years, Susan SurfTone has been quite comfortable being a woman in the mostly-man’s world of surf rock. But even before she made a career out of strumming jangly riffs and garage-y instrumentals, SurfTone was kicking ass as a Federal Bureau of Investigation agent, where her training included squaring off against male opponents in the boxing ring. After releasing her first solo album Shore last year, SurfTone has been instrumental (pun intended) in unifying the surf scene in her new hometown of Portland, Ore., most notably with the recent compilation PDX A G0-Go: Making Waves Up North. Featuring contributions from bands such as the Surf Weasels, the Outer Space Heaters and, of course, SurfTone herself, PDX A Go-Go can also be credited for the newest addition to SurfTone’s live show: go-go dancer and PDX A Go-Go cover model Seana Steele. “I saw her dancing with the Surf Weasels and I guess you could say I stole her away from them,” says SurfTone. “They’re on the comp with us, so they weren’t too mad about it. Actually, they’re drummer’s playing with us now, so I guess I raided them.” Already working on a new album for release early next year, SurfTone and her band embark on a brief West Coast tour beginning tonight and concluding Saturday with a performance at the L.A. Derby Dolls roller derby bout. Before hitting the road, SurfTone and Steele talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture about PDX A Go-Go, FBI sparring and general badassery.

How did the PDX A Go-Go compilation come about?

SurfTone: I hadn’t played live in Portland in about six years, but right after Shore came out I started getting some gigs and realized there were some really good surf bands in Portland. They had a steady crowd of people coming to the gigs and I thought it would be good to document that with a compilation CD because I don’t think there has been a compilation CD that had anything to do with Portland surf bands. I thought it was a new thing to do and it also helped solidify the relationships between the bands. Now we’re all friends and it’s a virtual love fest up here.

You’re doing a few West Coast shows this week. Do you have any plans to continue touring and maybe taking some of these bands on the road with you?

SurfTone: I hadn’t planned on taking any of those bands out with me. Sometimes day jobs get in the way. But we’re thinking of doing another European tour in 2013. I’ve done four European tours, the first of which was in ’96. Then I did some more tours there between 1996 and 2001 and I haven’t been back since. So I think it might be time.

One of this week’s tour dates is at a L.A. Derby Dolls bout. I’d imagine Susan SurfTone and roller derby will complement each other nicely.

SurfTone: The Derby Dolls seemed like a good gig. My dad was a baseball player, so I guess I just kind of like sports.

Before you were a badass surf guitarist, you were in the FBI and did some boxing. What was it like being that kind of badass before getting into music?

Paul Barrall, Avory Gray, Susan SurfTone, Seana Steele and Dan Ferguson (photo by Jeff Wong)

SurfTone: Some people say I’m a badass, but I don’t know if I believe them. I’m afraid of spiders, so I don’t know what badass is afraid of spiders. But I went into the FBI right after law school. We went to Quantico, Va. to the FBI Academy for training and part of the training was boxing. My father had shown me how to box because I’m an only child and, like I said, my dad was a baseball player, he was good at football and he was pretty much a natural sportsman, so I learned how to play everything. He taught me how to box and I was one of the few women who really knew how to do it. My fight partner was the smallest guy in the class and I always felt really bad for him because I could always give him a pretty good go-round and all the other guys in the class would make fun of him if I decked him, which happened a few times. He got me good a few times, too. I learned what it felt like to have your head snapped back, that’s for sure. We also had a guy who had been a Golden Gloves champ in our class and we had this one woman who wasn’t very popular. The day before I had to fight her, he came to me and gave me some lessons so I could go out and make short work of her, which I did. So that was kind of fun.

How long were you in the FBI and how did you go from that to fronting a surf band?

SurfTone: I was in just short of three years. I quit because I wanted to play music. I was working in New York City and I really wanted to put a band together and start playing in the clubs. I asked them if they had a problem with it and they said they did, so I had to quit. I was 28 at the time and it was either do music or not do music, and I decided I wanted to do music. So I left the Bureau and started a band and 30 years later, here we are.

Did you ever consider pursuing fighting since you seemed to be pretty good at it?

SurfTone: Oh, God no. Back at that time, women didn’t box. This is all new. I think I’d be too small for it anyway. I’m not all that big, so I think I’d probably get knocked on my ass by a good female boxer.

Maybe you’d have a fighting chance in wrestling.

SurfTone: No. I’d get pinned, believe me.

Seana, how do you fit in with the band? Do you rehearse with them before going on stage or do you just go with the flow of the music?

Susan SurfTone by the "Shore" (photo by Robbie McClaran)

Steele: I normally do one rehearsal so I can become familiar with the set and have practice doing it live. But overall I just do freeform dancing. That’s kind of the spirit of go-go dancing is just letting go and having fun. Susan and I are also working on bringing a fusion of fashion and music because I’m also a model. We recently did a photo shoot for the artwork for the next album, so I’m assisting in creating that amalgam.

You mentioned your recording schedule a little earlier. Do you have any idea when the new album might be out?

SurfTone: We’re recording it the first week of February and if all goes well, I would expect to see it sometime in April. I think I’ve got two more songs to finish writing for the new record. Then I go through the process of re-demoing that to have clear versions of them in the studio. Seanna’s walking in Portland Fashion Week for one of the designers and will be walking to one of the songs off Shore.

Steele: That’s on October 11 and Nelli Millard is the designer.

SurfTone: Nelli’s Russian, and part of what I did when I was in the FBI was I worked in New York and I was in the foreign counterintelligence unit. I chased KGB agents around New York City and just kind of kept an eye on them to make sure they weren’t doing anything they shouldn’t be doing. So I keep making these jokes about Nelli being a Russian designer.

For more information, go to www.susansurftone.com.

Georgia Wrestling Now welcomes PCW’s Stephen Platinum

For almost three years, Platinum Championship Wrestling has been one of the most talked about wrestling promotions in Georgia. The EMPIRE, which took over the Friday night Academy Theatre shows last November, has vowed that the night before Sacred Ground: Chapter Three will be the final Academy show. This Saturday is Sacred Ground in PCW’s new home of Porterdale, and Stephen Platinum is our guest on this week’s Georgia Wrestling Now to discuss PCW’s past and future, as well as where things will go following Sacred Ground. Listen live Mondays at 7 p.m. and call 347-324-5735 with your questions and comments.

PCW's Stephen Platinum is ready to fight the EMPIRE (photo by Harold Jay Taylor/Headlocks and Headshots)

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Wood Harris is breaking the law in “Dredd 3D”

Judge Dredd (Karl Urban) and Cassandra Anderson (Olivia Thirlby) in "Dredd 3D" (Photo by Joe Alblas)

Based on the pulpy British comic strip (and the 1995 Sylvester Stallone-starring film adaptation) Judge Dredd, Dredd 3D is a dystopian action thriller that jumps off the screen thanks to its ambitious use of 3-D technology. But for a film so focused on the sights and sounds of the judges, who act as police, judge, jury and, if needed, executioner, the film is often just as much about what’s not being seen or heard. And Wood Harris’ character Kay is the perfect example of this point. A member of drug lord Ma-Ma’s (Lena Headey) clan, Kay is a street thug taken into custody by Judge Dredd (Karl Urban) and his clairvoyant trainee (Olivia Thirlby). Best known for his own role as a drug lord on The Wire, Harris’ character exercises his right to remain silent for a good portion of Dredd as Ma-Ma and her goons hunt down the very officers who have taken Kay into custody. But with a mind-reading rookie largely in charge of his fate, Kay eventually gets in on the action, verbally and physically. Judgment is out now that the movie is in theaters, and Harris talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about Dredd‘s filming process and the similarities between the ruthlessness of the criminals and the judges.

For a movie that’s as visually ambitious as this one is, what was the filming process like?

We shot for six months in Africa. I had a driver each day and it took about 40 minutes to get to the set each day. On the drive, we would go from the swanky area I stayed in through the underdeveloped African society. It was so underdeveloped that I thought it was a wasteland. After three or four weeks, I said to my driver, “There’s a lot of garbage.” He was like, “No, those are people’s homes. I must take you to see.”

I had never experienced anything like that. There were brothers and sisters there that dress like me and you, have cell phones and no plumbing. Imagine a whole community with no infrastructure and five Porta-Potties within two or three miles. It really raises your eyebrows to what’s going on politically. If you were born over there and lived over there, the land you stood on you could build a house on and you’re not going to pay rent or tax or anything. But you don’t have any resources. And there are beautiful women there, but you meet them and go back to the crib and there is no crib.

So that environment parallels what’s going on in the movie where the people with money have more control.

Judge Dredd (Karl Urban) is the law in "Dredd 3D" (photo by Joe Alblas)

Yeah, it’s definitely like that. They have gangs over there that are very ruthless, and they’re named after American cities. There’s a gang called New York and they wear Yankees hats twisted on their heads and act like Americans. When I say ruthless, I’m talking about cutting heads off and leaving them at grandma’s house. At the same time, the homicide rate there is lower than most American cities. So it’s still more peaceful there. Over here, if black people and white people play basketball, you always see the black dude win the game. We just dominate most sports. Not over there. You can turn on the TV and see brothers losing at sports all the time. It was just unbelievable. So they have a fondness for American black culture because 50 years before they stood up and said, “No more apartheid,” we were already civil activists. They just stopped being the way we were in the ’40s and ’50s in 1996. In 1996, you would need a dummy  pass to go from a black area to a white part of town. It would last ten hours – eight hours to work and two hours for the commute. They would do sweeps every day, so if they caught a brother walking down the street after a certain time, he went to jail. I just realized a lot from that experience. We still have residue, but at least it’s smoke. They’re dealing with fire still. It made me realize that the sacrifices and struggles that people are going through over here are not to be taken for granted.

For a movie that is as focused on the sights and sounds of 3-D as Dredd is, it’s interesting that you never see Judge Dredd’s face and your character doesn’t even speak until pretty far into the film. And even then, you don’t have a lot of lines since so much of it is action and psychology. What was it like working in an environment where it’s often just as much about what you’re not seeing and hearing?

That was a challenge, but I liked that challenge. I didn’t have to memorize a lot, but I still had to figure out what they were saying and if I was giving the right responses and I still had to be in the moment. It might seem easier, of course, but at the same time it’s not because you could easily get lost in what’s going on because you don’t have to say anything. But the good thing about not having a lot of lines was that I didn’t have to do a lot of memorizing.

I would imagine that it was even harder in a movie like this where so much of the action isn’t actually happening in front of you.

Wood Harris plays the thuggish Kay in "Dredd 3D" (photo by Joe Alblas)

There’s lots of action happening in the film. There’s one scene where we’re against this wall and Judge comes running down the hall and they’re shooting at him and the wall gets blown out. That was a squibbed wall with real explosives and we had to be in front of it when it was blowing up for real. So a lot of the effects were right there in front of us. I had a stuntman in that same scene and when the wall gets blown out, Dredd, his partner and myself jump out of this rooftop. It was about a one-story drop and my stuntman broke his femur bone because they had him handcuffed and he just didn’t have any hands to land on.

You play the villain, but there seem to be some parallels between the criminal you play and Judge Dredd, who has the authority to do some of the same things you do because of his badge.

What I hope people will think about after seeing this film is if you really consider a judge to be a judge, jury, cop and executioner all in one person, that’s pretty terrible. And it’s possible. If there is a police state, it could be like that. With these guys, there’s no court date. They catch you, you did it wrong, the sentence happens and if an execution happens, it happens where you stand. That helped fortify me in the role of Kay because when you play a bad guy, you really have to just try to be a normal person who does bad things. With Kay, I didn’t have room to do that because this is a comic book-based film where the villains have to be villainous and they can’t be based on the real stuff that I would like to base it on. But when I considered Dredd being an executioner, a judge and a law enforcement person, he’s not a good guy. He’s a hero because they say so, because he’s a cop.

For more information, go to www.dreddthemovie.com.

“Dracula: The Rock Opera” gives rock ‘n’ roll life to the undead

When the Little 5 Points Rockstar Orchestra first gathered for its low budget interpretation of Andrew Lloyd Webber‘s Jesus Christ Superstar a few years ago, it seemed like a self-indulgent undertaking by a bunch of Atlanta rockers who had little, if any, knowledge of how to properly stage a theatrical production. Sure, they had seen their share of stage theatrics, but the spontaneous energy of a live rock performance is very different from a well-rehearsed stage production, even when music is involved.

Over the years, the Orchestra became more ambitious, staging theatrical interpretations of Iron Maiden‘s The Number of the Beast and Rush‘s 2112, as well as absurdly sacreligious holiday productions such as Christmas with the Devil and the Krampus Xmas Spectacular. The group graduated from the tiny stage of the Five Spot to the legitimate theater space at 7 Stages. And in February of last year, the Orchestra staged its most impressive production yet: Haus Von Dracul, a rock opera interpretation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula.

Rob Thompson as Dracula (photo by Yvonne Boyd)

Haus Von Dracul, the first act of a work-in-progress, revealed a more sophisticated side to the Orchestra. With Orchestra leader Rob Thompson now working with theatre veteran Del Hamilton and the rest of the 7 Stages staff, the marriage of rock and theatre he originally envisioned was finally complete. And last weekend, the Orchestra staged the world premiere of Dracula: The Rock Opera, which builds upon Haus Von Dracul‘s foundation to bare theatrical fangs worthy of it’s namesake vampire.

Directed by Hamilton and accomplished actor Justin Welborn (The Final Destination, The Signal), Dracula is perhaps the most accurate depiction of Stoker’s novel to ever have been conceived theatrically. Rather than the dark lover Hollywood would tell us is Dracula, this production retains the demonic fashion sense established by Bela Lugosi and Gary Oldman with the monstrous demeanor of Max Shreck’s Nosferatu.

“You get Max Shreck as Nosferatu, then he starts to morph into Lugosi a little bit, then he turns into Christopher Lee,” says Shane Morton, who plays Texan Quincy Morris (and also runs attractions such as the Silver Scream SpookShow and Atlanta Zombie Apocalypse). “You see him do the whole gamut and you can tell he’s been working hard on it and studying a lot. Rob’s jump in acting has been insane. I snuck out and watched the first act and I couldn’t believe it. I know Dracula, and this is the best Dracula I’ve ever seen. I know I’m too close to the project to say anything unbiased, but I really feel that way watching his performance. And that’s all because of Justin and Del really getting on everybody and making actors out of a bunch of musicians and stuff.”

“We’re working towards a more professional atmosphere,” adds Welborn, who has been largely responsible for the Orchestra’s evolution over the past few years. “We told them we could make it bigger if we rehearsed a little bit longer, if everyone showed up on time, and this time it was very much about being as professional as we could be and not getting drunk during rehearsals. There are just certain things you do if you’re going to take something as serious and invest as much money, time and effort as we have in this. For everybody to actually come to that mutual agreement makes Del and my job so much easier because that’s what you have to do. Everybody’s performances came up – our ensemble had a chance to really gel together and work on what they were going to do, and the innkeeper woman (played by Naomi Lavender, who also plays Mina Harker and one of Dracula’s brides) didn’t look like something out of Disney, she looked like something out of a horror movie. I agree that Rob’s Dracula is one of the spookiest, weirdest, craziest that I’ve gotten to see. He’s taken his natural moves and put those natural moves into something very streamlined and knows what he’s doing the whole time. That’s the thing that takes it from out-of-control rock ‘n’ roll to a focused and true artistic performance.”

Dracula (Rob Thompson) and his brides Naomi Lavender (left), Madeline Brumby (center) and Jessika Cutts (right) (photo by Yvonne Boyd)

Though last year’s production was essentially the first act of Dracula, a lot of changes have been made between that show and the current one (running through Oct. 14). The stylized stage itself has been completely reconfigured to help the show (and blood) flow a little better, the costumes are a little more flamboyant, and some fresh blood has been added to the cast. One of the standouts of this new cast is Jeff Langston, whose Van Helsing is just as eccentric as Thompson’s Dracula. In fact, between the costumes and makeup, the two characters almost look as if they could be related. And like Thompson, Langston, whose only prior stage time was as singer for Ledfoot Messiah, is the latest example of a musician previously unfamiliar with the acting discipline.

“The directors had never met him at all until the first day or rehearsal,” says Welborn. “And he began by saying, ‘I just want you to know I’ll accept any help because I’ve never acted in any play ever in my life.’ Then he began to sing and it was like, ‘OK, we can work something out here.’ He probably worked harder and came farther than anyone else because he’s never worn a costume or gone onstage without a guitar. He told me the other day that he used to think he was born to play music, but now he thinks maybe he was born to perform.”

There’s no shortage of great performances in Dracula, and most everyone involved has to perform in both musical and theatrical capacities. But it’s the music that helps convey the drama and emotions, whether it be through seriously psychedelic scenes or funk-laden numbers with a sense of humor.

“My inspiration grew out of my love for Jesus Christ Superstar and putting this group together to do that,” says Thompson. “I pretty much hate most modern music that comes out and the ’70s are definitely my favorite, so I was thinking of Alice Cooper, Rainbow, Deep Purple, Thin Lizzy. I just wanted a classic rock opera and this has turned out to be better than I imagined.”

And while the first act is dominated by the ominous sense of Jonathan Harker’s impending doom after arriving at Dracula’s castle, the second act, with it’s Gwar-like gore and lighthearted songs, really delves into the comedic value of it all.

“If you don’t give them a release valve and give them something to laugh at, they’re going to start laughing at stuff they’re not supposed to laugh at,” says Morton. “So these songs that, when I originally heard them I was like, ‘What the fuck is this?’, they have to happen because it helps the flow of everything. Between all the horror, you’ve got to give them some comic relief.”

Ledfoot Messiah’s Jeff Langston as Van Helsing (photo by Yvonne Boyd)

“I’ve never seen Dracula done without all this serious stuff,” says Welborn. “It’s almost never funny, and that’s why I don’t think I’ve ever seen one that I loved. I love the [Francis Ford] Coppola movie in it’s own way and I love Lugosi’s movie and some of the old ones, but you begin to laugh at things because it’s just kind of absurd. Every Dracula I’ve ever seen on stage, I’ve absolutely hated. The first time I heard we were going to do this, I was like, ‘Wow! OK. That’s a challenge in and of itself because it’s always so [romanticized].’ Then these guys start telling me he’s a monster and that’s it, and I began to think that gives humanity to everybody else around him.”

“The really great thing about this show is it’s not just another musical or another play or another rock show,” says Jessika Cutts, who plays Lucy Westerna and one of Dracula’s brides. “It’s got the intelligence and finesse of an opera, then it has this careless fun you have when you go to see a rock concert, mixed with all these spectacular effects.”

The Orchestra has big plans for Dracula once the coffin closes on this initial run. Welborn has already been talking to his agents and managers about possibly staging it in New York, Thompson hopes to properly record the score in a studio for a future soundtrack release and there are premonitions of taking the show on the road, or even overseas, if the opportunity arises.

“My whole life I feel like I’ve been gearing up to this,” says Morton. “I’ve been obsessed with [Dracula] since I was three years old. Jesus Christ Superstar is a great rock opera, but I think Rob has written a better rock opera and if the right people get ahold of this and it gets out, people will see that it’s really something special.”

For more information, go to www.7stages.org/dracula.