Showing posts with label Athens vs. Sparta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Athens vs. Sparta. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Reviews from Elsewhere: Athens vs. Sparta, Adam Coronado in the San Antonio Current

Found at the San Antonio Current, on-line, January 12:


Live & Local Athens vs. Sparta in San Antonio (photo: Sara Maspero)


Athens v. Sparta at San Antone Café & Concerts (with video)


“Who wants violence? Raise your hands,” sang Kevin Higginbotham of Athens v. Sparta to a medium-sized crowd in San Antone Café. The song, “Mytilene Debate,” details a chapter in the Peloponnesian War, where the Athenian government voted to kill all the male citizens on the island of Lesbos. Bear in mind, only a portion of Lesbos’ citizens actually took part in a mutiny against Athens, but the vote ordered the death of all adult males and the enslavement of all women and children. A day after the government’s order, the Athenian citizenry came off the anger high and managed to prevent the massacre. Being a cautionary tale of political violence, it was no surprise that Higginbotham prefaced the tune by ceremoniously kneeling before his microphone, taking a pull from his Sierra Nevada and rising to say, “This next one is for Representative Giffords.” Suck on that, Zack Snyder.

The product of four years of research and composition, AVS is an edutainment band that puts the story of the Peloponnesian War to prog. Guitarist Charlie Roadman led his septet through an atmospheric rock odyssey (mostly) worthy of the war’s legacy. Nearly all of AVS wore black clothing and masks associated with classic Greek drama. Many songs were mid-tempo and mannered, emphasizing tone color, atmosphere, and dynamics over the nerd metal one would expect from the same source material as the movie 300. AVS are a macabre rock troop, underscored by Higginbotham’s hammy, boho dance steps and pseudo conductor gestures. He filled the shoes of a Greek Chorus, singing ably between narrator Ken Webster’s monologues. Webster, representing historian Thucydides, read with melancholic mysticism falling somewhere between Patrick Stewart and Clint Eastwood. The walls of San Antone Café responded well to AVS’s sprawling somber cinematic sound.

Read more at the San Antonio Current. . . .


Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Video Taste: Athens vs. Sparta, onstage at the Hyde Park Theatre on October 24

From information received directly:






The band Athens vs. Sparta is playing at the Hyde Park Theatre this Sunday night only at 8 p.m. It's likely to sell out. Why should you care?

Because their music is rocking and complex and gorgeous, because it's a song cycle based on the Peloponnesian War, and because Hyde Park Theatre Artistic Director Ken Webster narrates throughout.

I know you're thinking "Wha-?" but check out the brief, beautifully-made video taste and you'll see why Athens vs. Sparta has played from San Antonio to Dallas and sold out the Cactus Cafe twice. Come see them live and intimate at HPT. Tickets are $10-- call 479-PLAY (7529) for reservations.

Athens vs Sparta
Click for excerpts and further links to reviews on www.athensvssparta.wordpress.com

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Upcoming: Athens vs. Sparta, Hyde Park Theatre, December 17


UPDATE: Elizabeth Cobbe's comments, published at tripvine.com, December 21

The Hyde Park Theatre provides the venue on December 17 for a presentation of Charlie Roadman's Athens vs. Sparta. Ken Webster provides the narrative for the piece based on Thucydides' history of the Peloponnesian War, released on CD last January.

Chris Parker wrote last April in the San Antonio Current,

"A combination pop-opera, Greek drama, modern allegory, and historical CliffsNotes created by Trinity University history grad and musician Charlie Roadman, the album resonates on several levels and is likely unlike anything you’ve ever heard. It details how Athens’ cultural hubris, faltering democracy, self-serving oligarchs, indifference to its allies, and ill-considered military adventurism resulted in a war doomed by poor prosecution and overextended forces."

(Click for
full text of Parker's extensive article of April 15, 2009.)

Click for capsule review by Daniel Mee in the Austin Chronicle, January 23, 2009.

Photo from a slideshow published by band member Cliff Brown, Jr., with a May 30 post on his blog "The Life and Times of Cliff Brown, Jr."