MC Frontalot
MC Frontalot | |
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MC Frontalot performing in April 2007.
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Background information | |
Birth name | Damian Hess |
Also known as | MC Frontalot |
Born | December 3, 1973 |
Origin | San Francisco, California, United States |
Genres | Nerdcore |
Occupation(s) | Rapper, songwriter, web designer |
Instruments | Vocals (Rapping) |
Years active | 1999–present |
Labels | Level Up |
Website | frontalot |
Damian Hess (born December 3, 1973), better known by his stage name MC Frontalot, is a Brooklyn-based hip hop musician and self-proclaimed "world's 579th greatest rapper". He is best known in hip hop and video game culture, for naming the Nerdcore subgenre, and performing at Penny Arcade's annual Penny Arcade Expo. Hess graduated from Wesleyan University in 1996 with degrees in English and electronic music.
Contents
Career
Early days
Hess began releasing music as MC Frontalot in 1999. His first successes came through Song Fight!, an online songwriting and recording competition, where he became known for consistently beating opponents. Throughout his history at Song Fight!, he has never lost a competition as MC Frontalot, although he has entered only seven entries in that name.[1] In one such song fight, entitled "Romantic Cheapskate", he likens Song Fight! to a neglected lover who favors him regardless of how he treats her.[2] The song went on to garner a total of 614 votes, while the next closest song ended the round with 28.[3]
Nerdcore
In 2000 he released the song "Nerdcore Hiphop". The song became an immediate hit in the geek and nerd communities. The rap subgenre of Nerdcore, which had already been in development by various performers, embraced the title and has since been expanding rapidly.
Many consider Hess the founder of Nerdcore. However, he has pointed out on his information webpage that many artists came before whom he considers his peers.
Hess released his first studio album on August 27, 2005. Entitled Nerdcore Rising, the album contains six new songs, along with 10 remixed versions of past tracks. Some of the new tracks contain production by popular online musicians from Song Fight!, including indie rock and hip hop artist Doctor Popular.
Spotlight
On March 18, 2002, popular webcomic Penny Arcade (whose creators were long-time fans of Hess) declared Frontalot their rapper laureate, directing fans to his website.[4] He has acknowledged that single act made his popularity skyrocket. In appreciation, he wrote and recorded the "Penny Arcade Theme" a few months later, which was in his own (tongue-in-cheek) words: "an attempt to cash in on their huge and devoted audience."[citation needed]
He has appeared at every Penny Arcade Expo from 2004 to 2013. "Penny Arcade Theme" and "Which MC Was That?" both appear in the dance video game In the Groove. He also features on the Baddd Spellah track "Rhyme of the Nibelung", which was the winner of CBC Radio 2's Remix the Ring contest.
A new track 'Final Boss' featured over the end credits in the 2008 game Penny Arcade Adventures: On the Rain-Slick Precipice of Darkness- Episode 1.
MC Frontalot appears occasionally in the webcomic Overcompensating by Jeffrey Rowland
MC Frontalot has also been seen on commercials for G4 TV, as well as being on the show Freestyle 101 where he sang parts of his songs with freestyle lines connecting them.
Additionally, comic book illustrator Tony Moore became a fan of both Frontalot and fellow nerdcore artist MC Hawking, drawing both of them as zombies in an early issue of The Walking Dead series. Hess appears in a white shirt, tie and glasses, with the word "Front" written on his pocket protector; he is seen eating a deer.
A song written and performed by Frontalot based on the webcomic Achewood titled "Living At the Corner of Dude and Catastrophe" has been that website's theme song since 2006. On September 2, 2008 as part of a Penny Arcade download pack, "Living At the Corner of Dude and Catastrophe" was chosen for inclusion as a downloadable track for the video game Rock Band. The week of September 14, 2009 saw the release of "Origin of Species" (a satire of Creation Science) which was included in the Penny Arcade Expo track pack.
Live performances
Although most of his fanbase is online, Hess gave a handful of live performances while living in San Francisco, and several more after moving to New York City. His first official tour started on May 12, 2006, with shows mostly in the Southeast United States.[5] When he performs, he plays with a full ensemble, including keyboardist and frequent collaborator Gminor7, bassist Blak Lotus, and drummer The SturGENiUS. Other occasional band members include G.LATINusKY00B, The Categorical Imperative, Vic 20, and 56K. He finished a tour with Schäffer The Darklord as of 25 November 2007 and started another tour on 1 November 2008 with MC Lars and YTCracker. As of June 2010, he's been touring with alternative rock musicians, Wheatus, on their UK leg of their 10th anniversary tour; on occasion providing guest vocals on some of their live jams, as well as Wheatus offering musical accompaniment on some of his tracks.[6]
Film & Television
Hess starred as "TP Factory Rapper" in the Sesame Street direct-to-video movie Elmo's Potty Time.[7]
Nerdcore Rising is a documentary/concert film starring Hess and various other Nerdcore artists such as mc chris, Optimus Rhyme and MC Lars with contributors such as "Weird Al" Yankovic, Prince Paul and Brian Posehn. The film, directed and produced by Negin Farsad, premiered at the 2008 South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas. It combines interviews about nerdcore and its origins, with footage of Frontalot's 2006 Nerdcore Rising national tour.[8]
As the lead voice-box for nerd culture, Hess was interviewed in Alexandre O. Philippe's documentary, The People vs. George Lucas, which premiered at the 2010 South by Southwest Film Festival. Hess attended the festival as a musician and panelist.
Hess made an appearance as a judge on the sixth episode of the first season of TBS's King of the Nerds, originally aired February 21, 2013.
Musical influences
Much of his earlier music features samples from other artists' works, many times using music acquired from famous artists such as Paul Simon, They Might Be Giants, James Brown, Fiona Apple, and many others.[9] He addresses his borrowing of various drum beats in the song "Good Old Clyde", a song commenting on and using the popular "Funky Drummer" drum break by Clyde Stubblefield.[10]
Since he began selling his albums commercially, Hess has collaborated on almost all his tracks with Baddd Spellah, an electronic musician and hip-hop beatsmith, and Gaby 'Gminor7' Alter, a composer and keyboardist whose playing was the basis for many of Frontalot's earlier songs. Hess has also collaborated with fellow rappers such as MC Hawking and Canadian rapper Jesse Dangerously.[11]
Discography
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A short sample of "It is Pitch Dark" from the second album, Secrets from the Future (2007).
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Studio Albums
- Nerdcore Rising (2005)
- Secrets from the Future (2007)
- Final Boss (2008)
- Zero Day (2010)
- Solved (2011)
- Question Bedtime (2014)
Other Releases
- Nerdcore Hiphop (freely available demo)[12][13]
- Favoritism (greatest hits collective available exclusively in the Humble Music Bundle)[14]
- Front's Humble Remix Addendum EP (remix collective available exclusively in the Humble Music Bundle)
Non-album tracks
- "24 Hours" (abandoned demo)
- "Bitchslap" (by MC Hawking)
- "My Sister" (by Duboce Triangle with The JBB)
- "Oh, the Hilarity" (from Indie Pop Cares a Lot)
- "Rappers We Crush" (with Kompressor)
- "Rhyme of the Nibelung" (with Baddd Spellah)
- "Romantic Cheapskate" (with Baddd Spellah for Song Fight!)
- "Soda Water" (by Jess Klein)
- "Oneonta (Eli Porter)" (with YTCracker and MC Lars on The Digital Gangster LP)
- "O.G. Original Gamer (with MC Lars on the MC Lars album This Gigantic Robot Kills)
- "Don't Wear Those Shoes" (for the "Weird Al" Yankovic tribute album Twenty-Six and a Half)
- "Another First Kiss" (for the They Might Be Giants "Mink Car" tribute album.
- "Challenge Your Audience (Featuring MC Frontalot & More or Les" (by Mikal kHill)
Known recorded live sets
- July 7, 2001: "Songfight Live West Coast" — Hot Lunch, San Francisco, California, USA (two songs)
- October 24, 2002: "Young Zombies in Love Release Party" — Voodoo Lounge, San Francisco, California, USA
- July 26, 2003: "Song Fight Wet & Wild" — Finn MacCool's Public House, Seattle, Washington, USA (two songs, incomplete recording, the infamous "drunk set")
- December 12, 2003: "Both Hands on the Mic" — The Accordion, San Francisco, California, USA
- August 2004: Penny Arcade Expo — Meydenbauer Center, Bellevue, Washington, USA (a partial video recording of the set is available as well)
- May 15, 2004: Belladonna, Berkeley, California, USA
- June 15, 2005: Living Room, New York, New York City, USA (one verse of "unnecessary rap breakdown" during a Jess Klein show)
- June 23, 2005: The Bitter End, New York, New York City, USA
- August 27, 2005: Penny Arcade Expo — Meydenbauer Center, Bellevue, Washington, USA (video recording believed to be upcoming)
- August 26, 2006: Penny Arcade Expo — Meydenbauer Center, Bellevue, Washington, USA
- September 15, 2007: Kingdom of Loathing Convention - The Sets, Tempe, Arizona, USA
- November 25, 2008 Knitting Factory - Hollywood, California, USA
References
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- ↑ https://www.humblebundle.com/#popup-favoritism
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Damien Hess. |
- Official MC Frontalot website, includes official song lyrics, news, music, and forum
- Such a Scream, Hess's professional website
- MC Frontalot at the Internet Movie Database
- MC Frontalot convention appearances on AnimeCons.com
- MC FrontalotLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). discography at MusicBrainz
- Nerdcore Rising: The Movie Trailer on YouTube
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- Articles with hCards
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with unsourced statements from February 2007
- Articles with empty listen template
- Commons category link is locally defined
- Articles with MusicBrainz artist links
- 1973 births
- American atheists
- Living people
- West Coast hip hop musicians
- Nerdcore artists
- Wesleyan University alumni
- Rappers from the San Francisco Bay Area
- Web designers