fbpx
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Legal Notices
Lagniappe Mobile
  • News
    • Cover Story
    • Latest
    • Serial Stories
    • Bay Briefs
    • Community News
    • Open Documents
    • e-Edition
  • Baldwin
  • Commentary
    • Damn the Torpedoes
    • Hidden Agenda
    • Beltway Beat
    • The Real Deal
    • Weather Things
    • The Gadfly
    • Letters to the Editor
  • Cuisine
    • The Dish
    • Word of Mouth
    • Beer and Loathing
    • Cuisine Directory
  • Arts
    • Artifice
    • Art Gallery
    • The Reel World
    • Calendar
  • Music
    • Music Feature
    • Music Briefs
    • Music Listings
    • Submissions
  • Sports
    • The Score
    • The Starting Line-Up
    • From Behind The Mic
    • Upon Further Review
  • Style
    • Media Frenzy
    • Mobile Magnified
    • Horoscopes
    • Master Gardeners
    • Style Feature
  • Lagnia-POD

Select Page

Mini metalheads, unite!

Posted by Stephen Centanni | Jan 12, 2022 | Music Briefs | 0 |

Photo | facebook.com/DARKSTARCOVEN

Band: Make A Scene XI
Date: Saturday, Jan. 15 at 5 p.m.
Venue: Alabama Music Box, 12 S. Conception St., alabamamusicbox.com; The Merry Widow, 51 S. Conception St., themerrywidow.net
Tickets: $15 at the door (all ages)

 

The Make A Scene festival has spent the past decade bringing together a hellish menagerie of heavy metal bands for a day filled with crunchy riffs and demonic vocals. Make A Scene has become the Azalea City’s yearly reminder the local metal scene is alive and well. With its all-ages policy, this annual event is a chance for older metalheads to enjoy the culture while also kindling future additions to the scene. 

facebook.com/konstricted

Make A Scene XI will be bigger than ever with an extensive lineup that will span across two venues. The crowd will be overwhelmed with performances from D.R.E.A.D., Countermand, Son of a Gun, Konstricted, Knives, Dark Star Coven, Modown, Oracle, Honor of Thieves, Southern Grudge and Parabellum. Local scenesters might even be surprised at one blast from local punk rock’s past that will be included amongst the metal masses. Criminal Class U.S.A. will be emerging from the shadows to join their metal brethren in this dark celebration of underground sounds. 

 

This page is available to our subscribers. Join us right now to get the latest local news from local reporters for local readers.

The best deal is found by clicking here. Click here right now to find out more. Check it out.

Already a member of the Lagniappe family? Sign in by clicking here

Share:

Rate:

PreviousThe end of Peek?
NextStupid problems

About The Author

Stephen Centanni

Stephen Centanni

With the exception of two years spent at Auburn University, Steve Centanni has spent his life in Mobile County while focusing on his two passions: music and the written word. As soon as he was issued his driver’s license, Centanni began to explore the local music scene in the early ‘90s. He filled his weekend with visits classic local venues such as the Four Strong Winds Coffee House, Vincent Van Go-Go’s and Culture Shock, all of which welcomed those who had yet to reach 18. After high school, Centanni traded Mobile for Auburn to complete his B.A. in English with an emphasis on general writing. While at Auburn, he had the honor of studying under the Pulitzer-winning poet Natasha Trethewey, who served as the nation’s Poet Laureate in 2012 and 2014. After receiving his diploma, Centanni quickly moved back to Mobile and completed the University of South Alabama’s graduate program with a M.Ed. Eventually, he was tapped by the nationally distributed Volume Entertainment Magazine to serve as the magazine’s managing editor/senior writer. His time with Volume allowed him to exercise his love for both music and writing. As Volume began to fade, Lagniappe recruited Centanni as their Music Writer and later their Music Editor, where he has remained for a little over a decade. As far as his involvement in the local music scene, Centanni organized Cess Fest at the Langan Park, which was a mini-festival focused on original local music in a time when original local music was veritably taboo in Downtown Mobile. For a short time, he brought original music to Downtown Mobile as the in-house promoter for the now deceased venue Cell Block. He managed local underground powerhouse Fry Cook, until the members parted ways. Centanni has lent his bass to bands such as Keychain Pistol and The F’n A-Holes, and he toured nationally as a member of Abstract Artimus & the Torture Children. Currently, he provides vocals for the garage blues rock outfit Johnny No. Ultimately, Centanni’s experience in the local music scene as both a participant and an observer has allowed him to witness the ever-changing persona of Mobile’s enigmatic music scene, which continues to leave him with more questions than answers.

Related Posts

Bless this ‘Mess’

Bless this ‘Mess’

December 4, 2019

After-school special

After-school special

December 23, 2019

London calling

London calling

September 30, 2020

Banditos bring hybrid of genres to Alchemy Tavern

Banditos bring hybrid of genres to Alchemy Tavern

June 11, 2014

Recommended Stories

‘Enough’ is enough for Erdman

By Stephen Centanni

And the Campie goes to …

By Ashley Trice

NIL could flip the script on college sports

By Rob Holbert

Troubled youth debut poetry collection

By Kevin Lee

Symphony finale focused on American film titan

By Kevin Lee


  • Advertising
  • About Us
  • Contacts
  • Jobs
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Join the Sunday Brunch Newsletter

Search This Site

Browse the Archives

© Lagniappe Mobile 2022