Saturday Oct 05, 2024
Saturday Oct 05, 2024
4-Ize
Flash E. Williams
El Da Sensei
w/ C-Red | God Bless Beatz | Illastrate | DJ Jaycee | Hosted by Fort Knox | DJ Deliver
Sunday Oct 06, 2024
Loraine
w/ Sleep John B | Jeffrey Butzer | Couples Therapy
Monday Oct 07, 2024
Cancelled:
Kaleta and Super Yamba Band
w/ Bird City Revolutionaries
Tuesday Oct 08, 2024
Kooley High
w/ Tuamie | Lord Jah-Monte Ogbon | Dillon | Rogue Dynamo
Wednesday Oct 09, 2024
ULTRA SUNN
w/ Entertainment | MINIMA
Thursday Oct 10, 2024
Flea Circus
w/ 10th Letter | Nina Garbus | Annie Leeth
Friday Oct 11, 2024
SUGAR SHACK!
Saturday Oct 12, 2024
T4T!
Saturday Oct 12, 2024
The Mic @ 529
Monday Oct 14, 2024
Being Dead
w/ Monsoon | SMALL
Tuesday Oct 15, 2024
Mint Field
w/ After Care | Slomoon | Yearn
Thursday Oct 17, 2024
Mercury
w/ Myaap | Father | Ethereal | Itgirl
Friday Oct 18, 2024
CDSM
w/ Thick Paint | Nihilist Cheerleader
Saturday Oct 19, 2024
The Mic @ 529
Saturday Oct 19, 2024
Sidewalks and Skeletons
Brothel
w/ Suffer Ring
Sunday Oct 20, 2024
Kris Baha
w/ Normal Bias | Dyskrasia | Anticipation (DJ Set)
Monday Oct 21, 2024
French Police
w/ Wisteria
Tuesday Oct 22, 2024
quickly, quickly
w/ Doud | Suede Cassidy
Wednesday Oct 23, 2024
Pearl & The Oysters
w/ Gabriel Da Rosa | Klark Sound
Thursday Oct 24, 2024
Daddy’s Beemer
w/ Dinner Time | O Key
Friday Oct 25, 2024
Psychic Death
w/ Harmacy | Whiphouse | Coma Therapy | Why Girls Kill
Saturday Oct 26, 2024
The Mic @ 529
Monday Oct 28, 2024
Uz Jsme Doma
Monday Oct 28, 2024
Uz Jsme Doma
w/ W8ing4UFOs | Midnight Crush
Tuesday Oct 29, 2024
Teenage Halloween
w/ Teens in Trouble | Kerosene Heights | Sunset Honor Unit
Thursday Oct 31, 2024
COVERED in BLOOD
w/ Copy of a | 666 Underground | Slick | Pinkest | Thousandaire
Friday Nov 01, 2024
COVERED in BLOOD
w/ Wieuca (album release) | The Sporrs | Zoe Bayani | Dinner Time | Snoz!
Saturday Nov 02, 2024
COVERED in BLOOD
w/ Breathers | Come Weenior feat. Atticus Weenus | The NRA | Hail Gail | Split Silk
Friday Nov 08, 2024
Arkose
w/ JIT JR | Ronny DoGood
Wednesday Nov 13, 2024
Hubble
9Million
w/ A Blue Room | Elesa Sparkle
Saturday Nov 16, 2024
Extra Life
w/ Camp Saint Helene | Mute Sphere | Nova Aurum
Tuesday Nov 19, 2024
Body Meat
w/ Anysia Kym | DORIS
Friday Nov 22, 2024
Ed Schrader’s Music Beat
Monday Nov 25, 2024
Angel Du$t
w/ RMBLR
Friday Dec 13, 2024
Improvement Movement
Saturday Dec 14, 2024
Improvement Movement
Tuesday Apr 01, 2025
ELUCID
529Logo_1022-1
Tuesday Apr 30, 2019
21+ | 8:00 pm | $20.00
529 & Speakeasy Promotions Presents:
Unfortunately, due to unforeseen delays with Damo’s visa, the upcoming Damo Suzuki’s Network U.S. dates have been canceled. All refunds will be issued automatically by Eventbrite. We are in the process of rescheduling these performances to 2020, with dates to be announced soon. Please be alert for more updates and announcements.
We will also be putting together a special show for the April 30 date. Stay tuned for that as well.

POSTPONED: Damo Suzuki's Network

Damo Suzuki’s Network

Nest Egg | Psych Army Deejays

Damo Suzuki's Network

Damo will be backed by Atlanta sound carriers Gage Gilmore, Cyrus Shahmir, Saira Raza, Scotty Bryan, and Chris Brooker

Best known for his work with the pioneering German group Can, Damo Suzuki is a vocalist and improvisational musician whose creative wanderlust has taken him around the world, performing with a dizzying variety of collaborators. Suzuki had little experience as a musical performer before joining Can in 1970, but his bold, theatrical style and abstract lyrical sensibility put its stamp on three of the group’s most memorable albums (1971’s Tago Mago, 1972’s Ege Bamyasi, and 1973’s Future Days) before he left the group in 1973. After a decade away from music, Suzuki returned in 1983, shunning the recording studio in favor of improvised live performances, a number of which have been recorded and released, among them 2000’s Seattle, 2002’s P.R.O.M.I.S.E., and 2007’s The Fire of Heaven at the End of the Universe. Working with established groups as well as “sound carriers” he often has never met before walking on-stage, Suzuki’s music in the 21st century has found him relentlessly exploring the boundaries of spontaneous creativity.

Kenji “Damo” Suzuki was born in Kobe, Japan on January 16, 1950. Growing up, Suzuki’s sister encouraged him to play music, giving him his first instrument, a flute, when he was eight years old. Suzuki developed a keen interest in classical music as a child, and in his teens he discovered American R&B music and the popular British acts of the day, especially the Kinks (he briefly ran a Kinks fan club). When he was 17, Suzuki left Japan to explore the world, living in a Swedish commune for a while (where he formed a short-lived folk music duo) before making his way through Denmark, France, England, and Ireland. By 1970, Suzuki had landed in Germany and was cast in a Munich production of the countercultural musical Hair. During his travels, Suzuki had occasionally made money by busking in the streets, and feeling hemmed in by the rigors of performing the same songs each night, he took to performing in the streets in his free time. One of his improvised street performances was seen by Holger Czukay and Jaki Liebezeit, the bassist and drummer with the German progressive band Can. Can’s vocalist, Malcolm Mooney, had recently left the band, and they were wondering how to fill his place for a gig that evening. Czukay invited Suzuki to perform with them, and the band was impressed with the strength and imagination of his improvised delivery. Suzuki joined Can full-time, making his recorded debut with the group on the song “Don’t Turn the Light On, Leave Me Alone,” featured on the 1970 album Soundtracks. Suzuki would record three albums with Can — 1971’s Tago Mago, 1972’s Ege Bamyasi, and 1973’s Future Days — with the singer often creating spontaneous lyrics during studio jams that would be later edited into completed songs.

In 1973, Suzuki left Can, and for the next ten years, he stayed out of the spotlight as he got married, became a Jehovah’s Witness, and dealt with health problems. In 1983, Suzuki returned to performing, appearing on-stage with Dunkelziffer, a group led by Jaki Liebezeit, and recording a pair of albums with the band, 1984’s In the Night and 1986’s III. (A Dunkelziffer concert from this period featuring Suzuki was released in 1997 under the title Live.) In 1986, Suzuki and Liebezeit formed the Damo Suzuki Band, which also included Dominik von Senger on guitar and Matthias Keulon keyboards. By this time, Suzuki had become disenchanted with the studio recording process, but he gigged regularly and often recorded his shows, and in 1998 two archival releases from the Damo Suzuki Band were issued, V.E.R.N.I.S.S.A.G.E. and the seven-disc set P.R.O.M.I.S.E. In the late ’90s, Suzuki formed what he called Damo Suzuki’s Network, his umbrella name for improvisational performances with musicians from all over the world. For his Network shows, promoters for each appearance would provide Suzuki with a band, and they would generate spontaneous music with Suzuki on vocals (the vocalist describes his collaborators as “sound carriers”). Suzuki would release more than a dozen live albums under the Network rubric, and he’s also issued collaborations with existing groups and soloists, including Cul de Sac (2004’s Abhayamudra), Omar Rodriguez-Lopez (2007’s Please Heat This Eventually), the Holy Soul (2010’s Dead Man Has No 2nd Chance), Mugstar (2015’s Start from Zero), and Jelly Planet (2018’s Damo Suzuki & Jelly Planet). In 2014, Suzuki was diagnosed with colon cancer, and his treatment left him unable to travel or perform for a spell, but in 2016 he was well enough to return to the stage, and still performs regularly. He will embark on a coast to coast tour of the United States in the spring of 2019. This will mark Suzuki’s first run of U.S. performances in over 10 years.

Damo Suzuki's Network

Nest Egg

Asheville, NC project “Nest Egg” is Jamie Hepler alongside a revolving cast of musicians (Kyle Tompkins, Cyrus Shamir, Ross Gentry, etc.) The aesthetic calls to mind anything from the dirge of Indian ragas to the the most esoteric of 80′s UK space rock. Infinite layers of synth and guitar create what feels like a cerebral drug drone.

Nest Egg

Psych Army Deejays

Psych Army Deejays