Well, here it is. If you’re having a problem where something doesn’t seem right, clear all of your cookies related to dallashardcore.com. Let me know if you find something I overlooked.
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Instead of trying to re-invent the wheel and add a new level of maintenance I have created a Facebook page for DHC. The main purpose of the page is to use Facebook’s events capability to promote shows at least that’s all I have planned for now. I know there’s a handful of people that promote shows here. If you want to ensure that the show you’re promoting makes its way to the masses please PM me on the forum or email me dallashc ATATATAT gmail.com. This doesn’t mean the Facebook page should be the only source of promoting shows. You’re still welcome to post them on the forum as there’s quite a few people that frequent the forum that avoid Facebook.
A few others will be allowed to post to the Facebook page without my intervention. For those few, please be mindful of what you post under the page.
Dallas Hardcore
Thanks
I’m going to have to change the style of the site and the theme for the forum. The reason is WordPress is approaching 3.0 and the author of this theme has pretty much abandoned it and I do not want to sink more time into maintaining it. I’m going to have to choose a new theme that is consistently updated and maintained by its Author. In light of this, do you want it to be a “dark” or a “light” theme, most of you used subSilver when we ran phpBB which was a pretty light theme.
Let me know.
Thanks
Howdy,
New users now have the option to login using existing accounts of some pretty popular sites and you do not have to register and create your own account specific to this site. Existing users though should still use their existing accounts in order to keep things in sync.
Friday May 7th
Lola’s in Ft. Worth @ 9pm
Garuda
Transistor Tramps
Skitz O’ Fuel
The Beautiful Train Wreck.
The clock is ticking and we have to get our permanent C.O. before the temporary one expires…we have a lot of simple last minute work that needs to be done before we can get it so this is a final RALLY CALL to all of our supporters! There is plenty to be done…inside and outside the space!
FOOD NOT BOMBS will be serving up food for volunteers and we will be jammin to the fun tunes of DJ Gigantrathor…aka Jason Barnet.
Also, for ever 2 hours you work, volunteers get a raffle ticket. After 4 hours, your tickets double!! At the end of the day we will be raffling off 3 free show passes!! Each pass gets you into 5 free shows of your choice with in the next year!!!
SPREAD THE WORD AND COME SUPPORT DALLAS DIY!!!!!!
Work starts at 10am till we drop! Raffle at 6pm!
http://i46.photobucket.com/albums/f150/deadbyrde1/MaydayWorkday.jpg
Send me a link to an mp3 of yours, I’m working on a media player for the site to help promote local hc/punk. One song per band only.
Howdy,
I purged quite a few inactive users so if you can’t login for some reason you may need to re-register.

Tommy Atkins (1974-2010)
Wednesday, 03 March 2010 KEN SHIMAMOTO
Tommy Wayne Atkins, bassist for the Fort Worth experimental hard-rock trio The Great Tyrant, was found dead at home last Thursday afternoon. His two longtime friends and bandmates, Jon Teague and Daron Beck, worried when he didn’t show up for band practice Wednesday night, and Teague became more concerned when the manager of the Half Price Books where Atkins worked called Thursday to ask if he’d seen his friend. Atkins had struggled with depression for years. His trough of despond was deep, and he left by his own hand.
Tommy Atkins was one of the most masterful experimental bassists in North Texas.
Atkins was revered by his musical peers for the monolithic wall of sound that issued from his Sunn bass amp and his somewhat menacing, monk-like stage presence. Atkins’ favored tone was the deepest and darkest tectonic rumble imaginable, one that you felt through your solar plexus before you heard it. He and Teague, who’d played together for half their lives, formed the heaviest — and, some would argue, the best — rhythm section in town. When they interlocked their syncopations, you could imagine them conjuring a lumbering behemoth — and making it dance. On his own, Atkins recorded atmospheric ambient soundscapes under the rubric The DSA Working.
From Halloween 1998 to Easter Sunday 2005, Atkins played with Teague, keyboardist Doug Ferguson, and guitarist Eric Harris in Yeti, a trailblazing, jazzy progressive rock outfit. Following Ferguson’s death in February 2002, their sound became heavier, with Atkins and Teague splitting keyboard duties. Yeti released two albums, 2000′s Things To Come and 2004′s Volume, Transcendence, Oblivion, and disbanded following their second tour of the West Coast.
Since coalescing in early 2006, The Great Tyrant blended gothic horror and doom-metal influences, played hypnotically theatrical live shows, and wrote and recorded a steady stream of new material. To date, only a 7-inch single and four-song EP (2007′s Candy Canes) have been released. In the wake of Atkins’ passing, Teague and Beck announced that they will continue performing together but not as The Great Tyrant. “This isn’t the kind of band where anyone can be replaced,” Beck said.
They plan to release the two albums completed with Atkins, as well as some of his solo music. “Thankfully,” Beck said, “everything we wrote together was recorded.”
Last Sunday, a benefit show to raise funds to cover Atkins’ cremation costs was held at the recently refurbished Kessler Theater in Oak Cliff. The event was organized by Darktown Strutters chanteuse Kara Howell, who managed to negotiate free use of the theater, the services of 13 bands, a DJ, projection artists, Gutterth Productions’ P.A., and food from an Oak Cliff pizzeria on just three days’ notice. Friends of Atkins will gather to share memories of him on Sunday at Lola’s Saloon-Sixth, and another memorial show will be held there in May. Donations are being accepted via a Paypal link: http://www.tinyurl.com/TommyAtkins.
“This broke our hearts,” Beck said. “We really loved Tommy, and we knew he had a lot going on in his head. He was a crazy, private genius: super-intelligent, soulful, and sensitive. The outpouring of support since this happened has made us realize that a lot of people cared a lot more [about Tommy] than we knew. But he always viewed himself differently than other people did.”
Atkins was a shy and private individual; a connoisseur of challenging music, film, and literature; and a generous spirit known to his friends for his searching intellect and quiet humor. His departure leaves a hole in the local musical landscape — and in the hearts of his family and many friends — that will never be filled.
Tommy Atkins Memorial
Sun at Lola’s Saloon-Sixth, 2736 W 6th St, FW. 817-877-0666.
Original source of post: Fort Worth Weekly
I’ve added updates for what I could find. If you have anything to add, please comment here.
