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Coca-Cola Roxy

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Stylish, 2,650-capacity venue featuring a concert series, private events, and dining.

Events

October 2025
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10/15/2025, 08:00 PM EDT
Thundercat

Thundercat released his new album It Is What It Is on Brainfeeder Records on April 3, 2020. The album, produced by Flying Lotus and Thundercat, features musical contributions from Ty Dolla $ign, Childish Gambino, Lil B, Kamasi Washington, Steve Lacy, Steve Arrington, BADBADNOTGOOD, Louis Cole and Zack Fox.   It Is What It Is follows his game-changing third album Drunk (2017). That record completed his transition from virtuoso bassist to bonafide star and cemented his reputation as a unique voice that transcends genre. "This album is about love, loss, life and the ups and downs that come with that," Bruner says about It Is What It Is. "It's a bit tongue-in-cheek, but at different points in life you come across places that you don't necessarily understand... some things just aren't meant to be understood."   The tragic passing of his friend Mac Miller in September 2018 had a profound effect on Thundercat and the making of It Is What It Is. "Losing Mac was extremely difficult," he explains. "I had to take that pain in and learn from it and grow from it. It sobered me up... it shook the ground for all of us in the artist community."   Comedy is an integral part of Thundercat's personality. "If you can't laugh at this stuff you might as well not be here," he muses. He seems to be magnetically drawn to comedians from Zack Fox (with whom he collaborates regularly) to Dave Chappelle, Eric Andre and Hannibal Buress whom he counts as friends. "Every comedian wants to be a musician and every musician wants to be a comedian," he says. "And every good musician is really funny, for the most part." It's the juxtaposition, or the meeting point, between the laughter and the pain that is striking listening to It Is What It Is: it really is all-encompassing. "The thing that really becomes a bit transcendent in the laugh is when it goes in between how you really feel," Bruner says. "You're hoping people understand it, but you don't even understand how it's so funny 'cos it hurts sometimes."   Thundercat forms a cornerstone of the Brainfeeder label; he released The Golden Age of Apocalypse (2011), Apocalypse (2013), followed by EP The Beyond / Where The Giants Roam featuring the modern classic "Them Changes." He was later "at the creative epicenter" (per Rolling Stone) of the 21st century's most influential hip-hop album Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp A Butterfly, where he won a Grammy for his collaboration on the track 'These Walls' before releasing his third album Drunk in 2017. In 2018 Thundercat and Flying Lotus composed an original score for an episode of Golden Globe and Emmy award winning TV series Atlanta (created and written by Donald Glover). For his latest album, Thundercat took home the Grammy Award for Progressive R&B Album. And in a truly full-circle moment, he contributed an original song for the reboot of anime he took his name from, Thundercats.

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10/19/2025, 07:00 PM EDT
Mudvayne

Mudvayne frontman Chad Gray doesn't have time for the delicacies of political correctness. "You look at what's going on in the world today, and sometimes the only explanation that makes any sense at all is to just point your finger at people being f**king crazy!"But make no mistake, when you point one finger at someone else, you're pointing three at yourself, and Gray isn't about to deny the manic zeitgeist that overwhelmed his lyrical process throughout The New Game [Epic Records], the band's first studio album in three years and fourth full-length studio album overall. Featuring the lethal first single "Do What You Do," the album is an electrical storm of musical fury, a lesson in controlled chaos that tempers hard rock, heavy metal, prog rock and sadistic splatters of pop into an onslaught of metallic highs and emotional lows, rushing surges and pronounced blows. The album ups the ante for Mudvayne, one of the most creative and distinctive bands in the aggressive music world with sales exceeding 5 million units worldwide."It's been said that music should charm and flatter the ear," explains bassist Ryan Martinie. "We want to do that very thing, to grasp you and spin you into oblivion with a contrast of movement and momentum. There has to be something effectual there. We want to keep people interested and engaged through every individual song--to let you off the hook is good, but only if you're still swimming around and want to bite back down on that hook. Every song has its own personality, its own force, its own being. It's a living entity unto itself that lives in the larger microcosm that is Mudvayne. It is its own presence."That presence permeates The New Game. The band produced the album with Dave Fortman (Evanescence, Slipknot), capturing the wily charisma and hyper-kinetic energy of a band who survived their seven-year itch by embedding their claws into the heart of their music. And it shows. "In some ways, this is the most accessible record we've ever done... And I mean that in a positive way," offers drummer Matt McDonough. "We've done it by honing our arrangement skills and making our music quickly accessible. I don't want to say we're less esoteric, but on The New Game we've stripped away a lot of the extraneous stuff. Instead of making people try to figure out what we're doing, we're explaining it better with our music. By focusing and streamlining our sound, we've found the quickest way to explain what we're trying to achieve as artists."As musicians, McDonough, Martinie and guitarist Greg Tribbett haven't shifted their songwriting focus from what they've always tried to achieve. In the words of the bassist, "it's an honest representation of who we are as people. We love getting high on music, whether it be crazy blast beats, European black metal, dance music, electronic music, or stuff we grew up with, like Van Halen, Rush, Iron Maiden and Metallica. The things that we like to hear are the things that come out when we write together, and when you put them together, it's Mudvayne."At the lyrical helm of Mudvayne is Gray. While he echoes his band's sentiments in regards to their songwriting process, his personal inspirations cast a darker light on The New Game. "There is an overall vibe of chaotic helplessness, loss and fear, and that's not something that I've experienced in putting a record together before. It's always been more esoteric and universal. I felt like there was a more human feel to Lost And Found, but this album is more about the inner workings of people. The album has a lot of anger and frustration, and there's a sense of wanting to kill, but it's through the eyes of different crazy characters."Gray elaborates: "'Dull Boy' is the crazy guy just losing mind, like Jack Nicholson in 'The Shining,' 'A New Game' is just twisted, then you've got the political songs from the perspective of a world leader, then the political songs from the perspective of being in the service. It's killing at different levels," Gray explains. "Just because you're not pulling the trigger doesn't mean you're not killing people. I started to analyze all the different levels of consciousness and what made people feel and act that way. The album is like a psychological profile of a lot of different characters."Work on The New Game began in Chicago in August 2006, then ended in a remote corner of Idaho not far from the Canadian border seven months later. It was there that Gray became a little too close for comfort with his inspiration for "Dull Boy." "In Idaho, Greg and I stayed in a modular house about a mile back from the main house, where Ryan and Matt stayed. I didn't leave that place for two or three weeks, except to go to the gas station to get beer or whatever, and one day it just hit me--six feet of f**king snow on the ground, barren nothingness as far as you can see, and I just lost my shit, just sat there on the couch and started saying, 'all work and no play makes me a dull boy...' I don't remember consciously thinking about it, I just remember saying it, sitting in front of the sliding door, a wall of snow in front of me, and lyrics going through my head."While the rest of Mudvayne didn't necessarily share in Gray's emotional catharsis, they know where he's coming from. Sort of. "Unlike any other band I know, Mudvayne is singular in the sense that we've written and recorded every record in a completely different place in the country," recalls McDonough. "We wrote L.D. 50 in Peoria [IL] and recorded it in Vancouver; we wrote End Of All Things To Come in Minneapolis and recorded it in Southern Minnesota; we wrote Lost And Found outside Santa Cruz [CA] then recorded it outside San Francisco; we wrote in Chicago and Idaho for this album and recorded in New Orleans; and we just did our new album [more on that in a bit] in El Paso and Phoenix."That said, every place we record in absolutely affects the creative process and us as people. We're in a new environment and there are all kinds of things to experience. That's part of what makes Mudvayne, though. Being in this band is a lot about not having expectations and dealing with change, and a lot about adapting and learning how to work with the forces that are coming at you."Although recording for The New Game began in 2006, fans may wonder why it's being released more than a year-and-a-half later. After completing The New Game, the band--on a creative roll--went back into the studio to record another Mudvayne album, due for release in 2009."Someone may ask where Mudvayne went, well, we went into the Mudvayne woodshed and wrote two records!" says Martinie. "It's been different, but it's been great, it's being able to have our cake, and eat it, too. We got to have something that we love, that is a part of us, and we're able to connect with it at a personal level before we go out and give it to everyone else after we've had our chance to live with it. It gives the whole album more of a cliffhanger feel for us, sitting on the edge of our chairs for a year-and-a-half going, 'This is our record, we love it, but what's everyone else going to think of it?' The New Game was our baby, it still is, and we're proud to put it out and let everyone else enjoy it for a while."So while one baby grows, Mudvayne have another baby in the oven... How's that for f**king crazy?

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10/19/2025, 07:01 PM EDT
Mudvayne Parking

Mudvayne frontman Chad Gray doesn't have time for the delicacies of political correctness. "You look at what's going on in the world today, and sometimes the only explanation that makes any sense at all is to just point your finger at people being f**king crazy!"But make no mistake, when you point one finger at someone else, you're pointing three at yourself, and Gray isn't about to deny the manic zeitgeist that overwhelmed his lyrical process throughout The New Game [Epic Records], the band's first studio album in three years and fourth full-length studio album overall. Featuring the lethal first single "Do What You Do," the album is an electrical storm of musical fury, a lesson in controlled chaos that tempers hard rock, heavy metal, prog rock and sadistic splatters of pop into an onslaught of metallic highs and emotional lows, rushing surges and pronounced blows. The album ups the ante for Mudvayne, one of the most creative and distinctive bands in the aggressive music world with sales exceeding 5 million units worldwide."It's been said that music should charm and flatter the ear," explains bassist Ryan Martinie. "We want to do that very thing, to grasp you and spin you into oblivion with a contrast of movement and momentum. There has to be something effectual there. We want to keep people interested and engaged through every individual song--to let you off the hook is good, but only if you're still swimming around and want to bite back down on that hook. Every song has its own personality, its own force, its own being. It's a living entity unto itself that lives in the larger microcosm that is Mudvayne. It is its own presence."That presence permeates The New Game. The band produced the album with Dave Fortman (Evanescence, Slipknot), capturing the wily charisma and hyper-kinetic energy of a band who survived their seven-year itch by embedding their claws into the heart of their music. And it shows. "In some ways, this is the most accessible record we've ever done... And I mean that in a positive way," offers drummer Matt McDonough. "We've done it by honing our arrangement skills and making our music quickly accessible. I don't want to say we're less esoteric, but on The New Game we've stripped away a lot of the extraneous stuff. Instead of making people try to figure out what we're doing, we're explaining it better with our music. By focusing and streamlining our sound, we've found the quickest way to explain what we're trying to achieve as artists."As musicians, McDonough, Martinie and guitarist Greg Tribbett haven't shifted their songwriting focus from what they've always tried to achieve. In the words of the bassist, "it's an honest representation of who we are as people. We love getting high on music, whether it be crazy blast beats, European black metal, dance music, electronic music, or stuff we grew up with, like Van Halen, Rush, Iron Maiden and Metallica. The things that we like to hear are the things that come out when we write together, and when you put them together, it's Mudvayne."At the lyrical helm of Mudvayne is Gray. While he echoes his band's sentiments in regards to their songwriting process, his personal inspirations cast a darker light on The New Game. "There is an overall vibe of chaotic helplessness, loss and fear, and that's not something that I've experienced in putting a record together before. It's always been more esoteric and universal. I felt like there was a more human feel to Lost And Found, but this album is more about the inner workings of people. The album has a lot of anger and frustration, and there's a sense of wanting to kill, but it's through the eyes of different crazy characters."Gray elaborates: "'Dull Boy' is the crazy guy just losing mind, like Jack Nicholson in 'The Shining,' 'A New Game' is just twisted, then you've got the political songs from the perspective of a world leader, then the political songs from the perspective of being in the service. It's killing at different levels," Gray explains. "Just because you're not pulling the trigger doesn't mean you're not killing people. I started to analyze all the different levels of consciousness and what made people feel and act that way. The album is like a psychological profile of a lot of different characters."Work on The New Game began in Chicago in August 2006, then ended in a remote corner of Idaho not far from the Canadian border seven months later. It was there that Gray became a little too close for comfort with his inspiration for "Dull Boy." "In Idaho, Greg and I stayed in a modular house about a mile back from the main house, where Ryan and Matt stayed. I didn't leave that place for two or three weeks, except to go to the gas station to get beer or whatever, and one day it just hit me--six feet of f**king snow on the ground, barren nothingness as far as you can see, and I just lost my shit, just sat there on the couch and started saying, 'all work and no play makes me a dull boy...' I don't remember consciously thinking about it, I just remember saying it, sitting in front of the sliding door, a wall of snow in front of me, and lyrics going through my head."While the rest of Mudvayne didn't necessarily share in Gray's emotional catharsis, they know where he's coming from. Sort of. "Unlike any other band I know, Mudvayne is singular in the sense that we've written and recorded every record in a completely different place in the country," recalls McDonough. "We wrote L.D. 50 in Peoria [IL] and recorded it in Vancouver; we wrote End Of All Things To Come in Minneapolis and recorded it in Southern Minnesota; we wrote Lost And Found outside Santa Cruz [CA] then recorded it outside San Francisco; we wrote in Chicago and Idaho for this album and recorded in New Orleans; and we just did our new album [more on that in a bit] in El Paso and Phoenix."That said, every place we record in absolutely affects the creative process and us as people. We're in a new environment and there are all kinds of things to experience. That's part of what makes Mudvayne, though. Being in this band is a lot about not having expectations and dealing with change, and a lot about adapting and learning how to work with the forces that are coming at you."Although recording for The New Game began in 2006, fans may wonder why it's being released more than a year-and-a-half later. After completing The New Game, the band--on a creative roll--went back into the studio to record another Mudvayne album, due for release in 2009."Someone may ask where Mudvayne went, well, we went into the Mudvayne woodshed and wrote two records!" says Martinie. "It's been different, but it's been great, it's being able to have our cake, and eat it, too. We got to have something that we love, that is a part of us, and we're able to connect with it at a personal level before we go out and give it to everyone else after we've had our chance to live with it. It gives the whole album more of a cliffhanger feel for us, sitting on the edge of our chairs for a year-and-a-half going, 'This is our record, we love it, but what's everyone else going to think of it?' The New Game was our baby, it still is, and we're proud to put it out and let everyone else enjoy it for a while."So while one baby grows, Mudvayne have another baby in the oven... How's that for f**king crazy?

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10/20/2025, 08:00 PM EDT
Magdalena Bay

Somewhere in the ether/net of our collective social cosmos soup floats the magical, masterful pop music of Magdalena Bay, the duo from Los Angeles composed of Mica Tenenbaum and Matthew Lewin. While the pair may claim California as its terra firma, its true home is in the clouds, from where the two emit and output the unique yet familiar frequencies of synthesized nostalgia, kitschy catchiness, and bombastically warped neo-hooks for which the group has become celebrated. Transmitting in both the audio and video realms, Magdalena Bay is an entity adroitly suited for these times, caught in a haze of the known and felt while pushing sonic landscapes woven with the now into the next.   Having met as teenagers in a high school music program in their hometown of Miami (Tenebaum having moved to Florida at age 1 from Buenos Aires), each quickly recognized a kismet and kindred spirit in the other, resulting in the formation of a band, the prog outfit Tabula Rasa, as well as a romance. Lewin was a self-styled guitar shredder armed with his dad’s prog and concept rock records — The Wall, The Bends, Genesis, Fiona Apple — while Tenenbaum was a pianist and singer dipping toes in indie (Modest Mouse) and emo (My Chemical Romance) rock as well as pop made by princesses (Shakira, Britney). Both could read music and Lewin had even studied music theory, also teaching himself how to produce, record, and mix while making two Tabula Rasa records. The pair took a brief break from dating and headed to different colleges but kept the band together, often trading eight-hour bus rides from Penn to Northeastern and vice versa to rehearse, before eventually realizing two things: one, their relationship was too real to be denied, and two, no one young likes prog.   “It was like, ‘No one's listening to our prog music, what a shame,’” Tenebaum says with a laugh. “We were excited to try something different. So we got into the mechanics of ‘what does it mean to write a pop song?’ and ‘what is this craft?’ and that was the beginning of Magdalena Bay.”   “I remember thinking, ‘Pop music is simple, so we should be able to make it,’” Lewin says. “And then, of course, there's way more to it, lots of complexities in the writing and production that I wasn't aware of. We had no artistic perspective at that point because we were still figuring out the genre and how to make something that resembled pop music before we could think about how we could make it interesting. So that was our early process.”   Holding tight to that all-encompassing genre descriptor (“We make pop, but what really is pop anyway?” Tenenbaum asks, while Lewin counters, “We're a pop group making pop music; all the rest is implied…I think it's fun to imply that pop music is a wide range of things”), the duo released a grip of EPs and singles before launching its debut album Mercurial World in the fall of 2021. Many outlets, while uniformly praising its melodic hooks, sing-song vocals, and meticulously-crafted production, called it “synth-pop,” which is probably the most specific subgenre Lewin and Tenenbaum will allow. Regardless, the mark had been made, and Magdalena Bay soon began to gather respect, adulation, and fans in the true currency of the day: streaming numbers, social media followers, support slots, festival appearances, and creative collabs. All the while, aided by its highly stylized online aesthetic and internet presence, the band was inching closer to realizing something of an artistic perspective after all.    “We love extending the world of our music past sound into videos or a website or graphics or whatever it might be,” Tenenbaum says.   “We like to think of them as one and the same, but I think it has to start with the music,” Lewin says. “We're trying to create an atmosphere or an emotional quality with it.”   “It's the jumping off point that inspires the rest,” Tenenbaum agrees. “But as the years have gone by, as we’ve made more and more videos and such, the process has become more integrated. We were having visual ideas, which was never the case before. I guess people call it ‘world-building."  

Contacts

800 Battery Ave SE #500, Atlanta, GA 30339, USA