Nevada Hill

Artist Nevada Hill creates vibrant prints that are raw and full of energy.  The artist/designer has been making prints and designs in the Dallas/Fort Worth area for seven years and has designed merchandise for  companies such as Cartoon Network/Adult swim, as well as posters for local bands.  

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Hill recently had his second show at MeMe gallery.  "This show had a lot more art prints in it and less posters," Hill said. "The pieces are definitely larger but still retain the raw quality I strive for in all my work."

"A lot of my inspiration has to do with music and noise that I'm working on.  I try to make work that has a comic approach," Hill said.

In addition, the artist sites his young daughter's drawings and doodles as an inspiration.

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Hills work has also been influenced  by his travels to Portugal ,as well as past work with the  now defunct Denton gallery and magazine Art Prostitute.

"I learned a lot working at Art Prostitute," Hill said."They taught me how to survive as an artist, how to get jobs, and be a jack-of-all-trades."

"The experiences in Portugal were amazing.  I got to be a part of a local art collective there, Tremazul, and got to participate in music and art shows," Hill said., "It really allowed me to continue expanding my horizons."

The artist hasn't slowed down since.  Hill is continually  occupied with new and exciting projects.  "I'm currently doing a redesign for Good Records and designing posters for up and coming bands."

"Im just looking forward to the future and making new work."

Check out artist Nevada Hill at www.nevadahill.com

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Secrets of Denton County

August is the month when we have to stop shopping at Kroger. It also happens to be the month when Denton is filled to the brim with fresh-faced UNT and TWU students. As these students attempt to grow out their first beards and lady-beards, they also miss out on a lot of cool stuff because they just didn't know any better.

The following list of secrets, tips and tricks about Denton is for those uninformed youngsters. Read through the lot of 'em. If you didn't know one or two of them, it's new to you, also. Feel free to add your own tips and tricks to the comments section of this post and inform us, too!

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Loco Café

From the people who brought us Denton favorite The Greenhouse Restaurant, Loco Café offers a casual dining breakfast and lunch menu with drink options to compete with the many coffee joints around town. I step up to the counter and place my order, have a seat and take in the local vibes as I wait for my food to be delivered (I don’t have to wait for long, though; service is quick). The décor is streamlined, minimalist and diner-chic, with photos of local sites and delights hung about for nostalgic enjoyment. A compass on the wall compels me to think I’ve been guided to just the right place for a Monday morning brunch.

The menu offers a unique selection of breakfast and lunch dishes. The produce is local (hell yeah!) and all the food is prepared in-house. For breakfast you’ll find choices ranging from huevos rancheros, to Johnnycakes (a solid stack of cornmeal pancakes soaked with maple butter), to the Loco Café signature, Loco Moco. Inspired by the popular Hawaiian dish, but with an all-American breakfast twist, the Loco Moco is a stack of biscuit, hash browns, eggs cooked-as-you-like, cheese, and their exceptional 603 salsa. I kept it simple and ordered the “Kid’s Meal”, which comes with an egg, savory hash browns, and a hearty honey butter-drizzled biscuit that was simultaneously doughy and flaky and left me perplexed and amazed and wholly satisfied. At only $4, I thought I’d died and gone to Americana breakfast heaven. For lunch the highlight is red snapper—you can get it in a sandwich or in some tacos; both are topped with carrot slaw and served with a side of black beans. Not big on fish? Get yourself a grilled three-cheese sandwich or a B.L.T. Sounds simple enough, but I’m sure the Loco Café has found a way to make their sandwiches distinctive. And for all you vegetarians out there, this place will surely please with its many veg-head options.

With my brunch, I ordered one of their shaken iced teas. Best. Idea. Ever. Iced tea and homemade fresh flavors like hibiscus and blueberry, tossed into a cocktail shaker with ice, then poured into a frosty glass… it was the perfect post-bike excursion tonic. I had the fresh mint flavor and learned the mint was picked from just across the street on Greenhouse property. I was ecstatic—local-food fanatic ecstatic. Their coffee is local, too; it comes from the Ruta Maya Coffee Company in Austin, TX. All fruit juices are fresh-squeezed and their wide variety of tea is all loose-leaf. Get creative with any drink and add one of their fresh flavors to your coffee, tea, juice or soda; the flavors are just too good to pass up.

You can book your next company luncheon, book club meeting, or motorcycle gang reunion in their private room. A special group menu is available. If you like fresh, local food that mixes the traditional with the unique, be sure to check out Loco Café. Hangovers welcome.

-- by Liz Hopper

Loco Denton Online

Ruta Maya

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Loco Café

603 N Locust

Denton, TX76201(940) 387-1413

Hours:

Mon-Fri 6 am - 2 pm

Sat-Sun 7 am - 3 pm

Cardo's Farm Project

There's a lot of cool stuff a-brewin' at the local community market. We decided to take a closer look at where some of the items come from. In the first installment of our Grow Your Own series, we venture out to Cardo's Farm Projectand visit with Amanda Austin and Dan Moon.

Cardo's Farm Project from WeDentonDoIt on Vimeo.

If you're interested in Cardo's Farm Project, make sure and attend their Vegetable Festival fundraiser on Saturday, July 30th. For 10$/$7 (student), you get access to some great music provided by Gutterth, free beer (from the ever-awesome Armadillo Ale Works) and food/drink from the Denton Juice Co. and Peace Kitchen. More info can be found on the flier below.

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Iceage at Rubber Gloves

Forget all the historic connotations that exist that should be required in an elementary understanding of punk music and it’s role in society. In the end, all it really stands for is youth and aggression. On Sunday night at Rubber Gloves Rehearsal Studios, Iceage didn’t give the audience even a chance to breathe, let alone question what they were experiencing and where it was coming from. Their 22 minute pummeling was punctuated in between songs only with ear splitting feedback from guitarist Johan Wieth’s amp (which funnily enough was a notoriously clean Roland JC-120, but more on contrasting image later…) Wieth, vocalist Elias Bender, bassist Jakob Pless, and drummer Dan Kjær Nielsen could care less about all sorts of technical issues the entire night, because they were irrelevant. The theme for Iceage is volume, punch, and simplicity and it was wildly effective and contrastive to openers Midnight Society and Marriage Material, who opt for a more washed out/electronic approach.

The only words in between each song were the song titles yelled indecipherable over piercing feedback that would suddenly disappear into a wall of power after every stick count off. The band jumped off the stage ending their show a good 30 seconds before the audience even caught on it was over, still in shock. While Iceage gave no opportunity during their performance for any thought whatsoever due to it’s sheer raw power, the time spent in the venue watching the band mill about among the crowd was entertainment in itself. Iceage, whose members are in the 18-19 age range, look no older than 14-15 in real life. Their almost matching black jeans, tucked in tees, and Adidas shoes really added to their youthfulness. Their look, quietly reserved attitude, and politeness in making sure to watch every single local opening act made me question whether or not it was perpetuated purposefully to push the youth factor that has surrounded their recent buzz. Can kids this young even get the complicated punk history they are seamlessly blending together? Once the band finished their first song and the piercing feedback that would never let up started, none of the preconceptions mattered whatsoever. The music was real and so was the aggression, and that’s all that punk is supposed to be. Some kids are just smart and there’s no time to wink when pummeling an entire crowd.

By Blake Panter