Concert announcement: Atmosphere at State Theatre

June 16th, 2009 by Leilani Polk in Concerts, News

This just in from No Clubs Productions:

ATMOSPHERE w/Special Guest TBA
Saturday, August 1, 2009
THE STATE THEATRE
Doors: 7:30 p.m.
Tickets: $21 in advance/ $23 Day of Show
ON SALE SATURDAY 6/20/09
Ticket Link

Atmosphere is a hip-hop group from Minneapolis that centers around rapper Slug (aka Sean Daley). The son of a black father and a white mother who divorced when he was a teenager, Slug became entranced with hip-hop, graffiti, and breakdancing, and formed the Rhyme Sayers Collective with two high school friends — Siddiq Ali (Stress) and Derek Turner (Spawn). (VIDEO AFTER THE JUMP) After some early gigs as Urban Atmosphere, where Slug DJed behind Spawn‘s rhyming, the pair hooked up with producer Ant (Anthony Davis), as well as like-minded locals such as MC Musab, Mr. Gene Poole, and the Abstract Pack, forming an underground hip-hop clique dedicated to freestyling, clever and complex lyrics, and anti-gangsta positivity. In 1998, Atmosphere released its debut album, Overcast!, which quickly became regarded as an underground hip-hop classic thanks to Slug‘s deeply personal, poetic musings, as well as Ant‘s bare bones — but inventive — production. The next Atmosphere album was titled Sad Clown Bad Dub II, a 2000 set originally sold while the group was on tour. (Now out-of-print, it‘s a highly sought-after collector‘s item). A year later, the group released Lucy Ford: The Atmosphere EPs, a collection of three EPs built around the theme of Slug‘s complicated relationship with his ex-girlfriend, the lost love of his life. The group has toured consistently, both at home and overseas; while Ant usually doesn‘t accompany the group on the road, Mr. Dibbs of the group 1200 Hobos often joins in behind the turntables and Slug is usually assisted on the mic by young rappers like the teenaged Eyedea. In June 2002, the group — down to the duo of Slug and Ant — unleashed God Loves Ugly, an 18-track effort that returned to previous themes (”F*@k You Lucy”), but also contained the group‘s most pop-friendly single to date, “Modern Man‘s Hustle.” -Dan LeRoy, AMG

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