Program Council is proud to announce will be headlining with EXO b2b Optix, Carmeezyand Sorry Not Sorry on Saturday, April 13, in Club 156. The doors will open at 8:30 p.m., and tickets are $15 in advanceand $18 at the door.
Carbinhas close to 200,000 monthly listeners on Spotify, and the number isgrowing. His unique style and sound earned him far and wide praise from well-known figuresand led to his touring support for Datsik last year. Carbin, whose real name is McKenzie Morrow,is known for his heavy dubstep-inspired tracks.
Who: Open to the public
What: Carbin featuringEXO b2b Optix, Carmeezyand Sorry Not Sorry
When: Saturday, April 13, 8:30 p.m.
Where: Club 156
ŷڱƵ Program Council
Program Council has a history of presenting incredible artists that pass through the Front Range area. The Who, The Rolling Stones, Van Halen and The Grateful Deadall appeared on Folsom Field in the heyday of rock. Paramore, Nirvana, the Foo Fighters and Phish, however, are among the bands that have rocked out in Club 156.
ŷڱƵ Club 156
As much as the music and Program Council staff has changed over the years, Club 156 has remained a constant fixture, searching for the cutting edge of new acts, spanning every musical genre, and bringing them right to campus. Just as much as the music is underground, so is the club itself.
Westword describes it as, “a bizarre little world in the bowels of the UMC,” which is about an accurate location description as any. Entering The Connection on the first floor of the central hub on campus, one might be distracted by the pizazz of Boulder’s only bowling alley, but Club 156 is in there too, off to the right, displaying Duran Audio Axys Mini-Arena Loudspeakers and a 32 channel Midas Venice for the front of house. Which means, it might get loud.
Known as Quigley’s until 1991, Club 156 continues a long-standing tradition, much like Program Council itself. Hosting alternative dance parties in the late ’80s with KUCB (now known as Radio 1190/KVŷڱƵ), the “little venue that could” is looking to bring back something similar with a game plan of bi-weekly electronic DJ sets.
And the best thing: You never know when a band you see in Club 156 will appear in the next big festival or amphitheater.