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Prom Date wins annual Battle of the Bands competition

Students vote for their favorite group

By By Lindsay Nunez

Entertainment Writer

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Published: Sunday, November 1, 2009

Updated: Sunday, November 1, 2009

prom date

SHAINA HUNTSBERRY / The Daily Reveille

Prom Date performs Saturday morning at the Battle of the Bands in the Greek Amphitheatre. They will perform at Groovin’ on the Grounds next semester.

Tailgaters not only enjoyed gameday spirit and Halloween candy Saturday afternoon, but also the musical stylings of some of Baton Rouge’s best bands.

Students On Target hosted the annual Battle of the Bands competition in the Greek Theatre. Leaving Brightside, He Bleeds Fireman, Prom Date, The Kids in Sandbox and MeloMania performed.

Prom Date took first place and a set as opening act at this spring’s Groovin’ on the Grounds.

“I’m really excited we won,” said Nick Boudreau, Prom Date member and engineering senior. “Everyone just got really into it. It was a good day for music.”

All the members of Prom Date said they are enthused about performing at Groovin’ on the Grounds in the spring.

“They really love what they do,” said Elizabeth Lagarde, the band’s publicist. “They love music, and I think that’s really what people got out of it.”

During the last band’s performance, students were allowed to vote for their favorite group. More than 100 students voted, said Melissa Guidry, political science junior and director of involvement for Students On Target. The Kids in Sandbox won the Students’ Choice Award.

The day started out slowly with only about 50 people in the auidence. But more people came to watch as the sun came out and the Greek Theatre’s seats dried.

“I didn’t even know it was going on until I heard them while walking by,” said Chase Bouchie, theatre sophomore. “I missed the first bands — it was just really early. But I thought it was great — a very cool environment.”

Students On Target estimated more than 200 people attended during the course of the event, far surpassing its original goal.

“I think the whole event was an overall success,” said Brent Benoit, member of Students on Target and biological sciences senior. “The bands were awesome, and they reacted with the crowd really well.”

Battle of the Bands began with the pop rock sounds of Leaving Brightside. The band did a crowd-pleasing rendition of Leona Lewis’s “Bleeding Love”.

“They had really good energy,” said Domino of 104 the X, a Battle of the Bands judge. “Their sound and stage presence was good.”

The Slidell-based group He Bleeds Fireman took the stage second. The band had a slower rock sound and brought a large following to the show.

The band recently recorded its first album.

“I really like He Bleeds Fireman,” Domino said. “They had a good sound.”

The third band to perform, Prom Date, donned tuxedos and suits. 

The band had a few technical difficulties because of slight water damage to their equipment from performing at the Carlotta Street party in the rain Friday night, Lagarde said.

The New Orleans-based group, The Kids in Sandbox, changed up the atmosphere and completed its upbeat reggae sounds with a bongo player. The band showed off its Halloween spirit with each member wearing a costume.

The band educed a full-audience clap-a-long, and many audience members danced in front of the stage.   

The final band to take the stage, MeloMania, altered the scene with its hip-hop sound. The band incorporated both rapping and dancing into its show.  

MeloMania’s “Take You Home” is currently being played on KLSU.

“I had an amazing time,” said Jordan Bridges, member of MeloMania and biology senior. “The atmosphere was really awesome.”

The four judges said they were impressed by the bands.

“Each band brought something different,” said Peter Frost, DJ for KLSU, Battle of the Bands judge and English sophomore. “With their different styles, you can find one you like, and they all did something I couldn’t do ­— get on stage.”

The concert was interjected with alcohol statistics. Students On Target stressed the perceived amount of students who drink and actual amount are different, stress-induced drinking does not solve problems and there are other options for a fun night outside the realms of a drunken stupor.

“We really tried to get out our message for a good time not wasted,” Benoit said.



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Contact Lindsay Nunez at lnunez@lsureveille.com

Comments

4 comments
Beau
Wed Nov 4 2009 20:52
@Good Music: It sounds weird that they have a publicist, but the publicist is an LSU student... in Public Relations. All of the band members from Prom Date are college students and all but one hail from LSU. They aren't on a label, they are from the Baton Rouge area, and they take gigs where they can get them. Sound underground enough to you? Just because they have aspirations of doing more in the future doesn't mean they don't deserve to play at Battle of the Bands or get recognition for their hard work and good sounds, and that goes for all of the bands.
Good Music
Tue Nov 3 2009 00:35
All of those bands are stale, commercial crap. Publicists? Albums? Songs on the radio? Why are you competing in a battle of the bands competition that is supposed to give recognition and studio time to underground bands? Underground bands don't have publicists. Also, is the irony of a band with a song like "Red Cup" playing at a supposedly "alcohol awareness/safety" event lost on everyone but me? The name of the winner (Prom Date) truly represents what music and contests like this have become: high school popularity contests.
Samuel Gipson Wilson
Mon Nov 2 2009 18:05
MeloMania is the musical equivalent of the Evergreen State College Geo Duck + a bucket-o-vitamins + an impotency curse + finding an eviction notice in your pocket. An unbeatable equation!
David Lane
Sun Nov 1 2009 23:08
Prom Date is the musical equivalent of Mike the Tiger + a bucket-o-candy + a wine-out-of-nowhere spell + finding $20 in your pocket. An unbeatable equation!






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