12/22/2024
Needs some rearranging, but this has been the battle station as of late
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Robot Academy Music, 6587 S. Las Vegas Blvd. Suite b172, Las Vegas, NV.
12/22/2024
Needs some rearranging, but this has been the battle station as of late
11/02/2024
I needed something to play my AI riffs 👀💅💄
Taking it home in a few days!
02/08/2024
The BKP nailbomb has arrived... and it’s going in the performer 😎
Can’t wait to hear this thing!
11/29/2023
(2/2) Testing out my new camera at a local show
11/29/2023
(1/2) Testing out my new camera at a local show
11/20/2023
A rare photo of me in the wild - Warped Tour 2000. One of my best memories, with a crazy story attached of how we even played in the first place. And I still use that guitar!
10/18/2023
not music, but we gaming now
04/13/2023
Wow! Ten years exactly since my weekend of shows for Art X Detroit. Pictured here was the debut of at the DIA, following the final performance of Junecast. We hired a guy to run old school psychedelic oil blob projection (what is it called? lol). The following day we had a Bahamut show at the Scarab Club, and the day after that I had my piano professor Robert Conway debut a new piano piece that I wrote for the fest. Video exists of these shows and I still haven’t seen it! It’s only been a decade... I do hope we get that footage together soon 😂
09/01/2022
Been on a strat kick lately and I’ll be taking this 2018 american performer home in two weeks to add to the family! I’ve been lugging my ‘89 strat (the nipon guitar) around to my lessons but it deserves to be on display instead. This thing plays way better anyway! Even though I just wanna play punk rock on it 😂
My proudest moment... I can’t believe it’s been ten years since this day!
Some highlights from a full playthrough and mini lesson/discussion of The Man You Were by Bahamut. Full video in bio, more of these to come
Impressionism and ambiguity... when presented with the C and E arpeggio in the beginning, what does your ear assume? Most likely a C major chord, although they could be members of a different chord. When the Ab and Bb come in, the informed listener realizes it’s not that, and perhaps it’s a whole texture I’m creating. As soon as I introduce the G, the picture is now unfolding even more and the whole tone scale is thrown out the window. Turns out the C major chord was correct in a way... but there was much more to this story. What goes through your head when you improvise?