TBN Collective Presents:
Levitation Jones w/ Parrotice and Chark
March 9, 2018 9:00 pm CST
$12.00
Levitation Jones

Hailing from a small town in Rhode Island where top 40 is the norm; “Levitation Jones”, Brian Gardner, steps up to the plate with quite a surprising, rule bending, curve ball approach, stretching the spectrum of bass physics. Heavy influences from dubstep and future bass - Levitation Jones blends his original productions with a unique take on the fundamentals and ordinance of a live performance. Keep your arms and legs inside the space ship at all times and prepare yourself for a journey into the depths of the strange and the weird.

With performances on Disc Jam Music Festival, Moonshine Music and Arts Festival, F.A.R.M Fest Music Festival, Big Dub Fest, Pass The Good Festival, Wild Woods Music and Arts Festival, Creatures of the Night Festival, and many more, 2015 is shaping up to be quite a summer for this upcoming, unique, producer.

Catch Levitation Jones at these performances and on the Creatures of the Night Official Pre-party Tour.

Parrotice

ParrotIce, aka Jon Shuttleworth, is a breakthrough producer reigning from the Nashville/Chattanooga area. Producing deep dubstep and hybrid hip hop beats, the name parrotice itself is a misleading conception. The pressure weight and grooves in his production arsenal will bring you to your knees as his sound crushes the dance floor. An honorary member of 1155 TN label and a co-creator of MELT productions, ParrotIce has established deep roots in the middle Tennessee area. Recently expanded and now freshly thriving in the Atlanta scene, Jon plans to take his even music further. Chopped and screwed melodies complimented by massive skull-crushing bass-lines is the signature feel from ParrotIce. Your ears are the canvas, so take the trip and experience the full wave of bass art ParrotIce has to offer.

Chark

Chark began expressing his interest in music early on as a member of the Birmingham Boys Choir. In his early teens, he began to gravitate towards the punk and metal underground, which would quickly encourage him to break in his own musical chops in a series of hopeful high school garage bands, as a lead vocalist, trying to find his place in the music world. His first forays into electronic music came through classic house channels, like Justice and Crookers, but the first time he heard a dubstep track by Distance, he knew he wanted to recreate that weird, wompy feeling it gave
him. Chark began djing in 2011 at local venues, with an incredibly supportive response from the community, and has never looked back.