KATIE FERRARA DOES THE TRIBELA MUSICIANS ACROSTIC INTERVIEW
Katie Ferrara’s sound places me in a coffee shop: I’m sipping a house blend and reading the paper in some folksy joint, letting her melodies clear my head. It’s Sunday music; it’s food for the soul. The Los Angeles-native makes “funky,...BEVIN DOES THE TRIBELA MUSICIANS ACROSTIC INTERVIEW
photo by Fredrick Vang AMERICAN GOTHIC ROCK. T Natalie Durkin (TribeLA Magazine): Give yourself and your work a tagline and tell us why. Bevin: “Empowerment and Activism through Music”. I truly believe that each person can unlock their potential through...Meet Rohitash Rao and check out his TribeLA Magazine Acrostic Interview
I’ve created over 150 fake album covers for bands that don’t exist, as well as fake concert posters and T-shirts. I’ve also enlisted a music company called Jingle Punks to create original music and we’re releasing our first record on vinyl called “Rohit Records Greatest Hits Volume 1.” I’ve also directed a music video for one of the songs called “Coastal Elites.” So to answer your question, that’s my new favorite piece of writing/art/music.
041318 “Facebook” – Rohitash Rao’s favorite drug is Peanut Butter and Chocolate smoothies that aren’t cheap, especially in Venice! Enjoy this Snapple “Chaplin” short film with your favorite indulgence
Besides Rohit’s prolific animating and bookmaking career, he also finds time to paint. No matter what city he is in, he has always found random items of trash on the streets to paint on. His paintings reflect our cultural consumption created on the very things that we throw away. They are conceptual and clever and are a thought-provoking (and often funny) take on the way we live.
ART TODAY 041218 The “Album Covers” exhibit for bands that don’t exist is coming to Downtown LA in May… Details soon + Sci Fi channel’s “Bucket” promo
In 2015 Peter and Rohitash created a number of animated short films for Comedy Central called “Anau Jiram” which airs on an animated block of comedy called “Trip Tank.” Peter and Ro call this their “Beavis and Butthead” — about two idiot 20-something roommates who have surreal adventures. (“Anau Jiram” is “marijuana” spelled backwards.)