King Cheese
* POB 8600 * Austin, TX 78713-8600
(512) 494-9226-cheeseline
* Email
What's King Cheese?
|
Upcoming Shows
|
Mailing List
|
Songs We Play
|
KC Trivia
What our Fans Say
|
Press Clippings
|
Who We've Played
With |
Places We've
Played |
Parties!
After three and a half years of fun, King Cheese has called it quits. The rest of the page appears below, only for historical interest. Thank you for your support! -- Michael Bluejay, 1-99
King Cheese is a two-man band performing the hits of the 70s and early 80s -- everything from John Denver to Prince. We're a cross between a lounge act and a karaoke machine. Michael Bluejay plays keyboards, and Lightnin' Lee sings. Lee also plays drums live on half the songs, and on the other half we use a MIDI sequencer. Lee is more than just a vocalist, he's a vocalist impersonator -- he does dead-on copies of Michael Jackson, Elton John, Steve Perry, Michael McDonald, and more! And it's not just singing -- Lee can give Michael Jackson a run for his money with his dance moves (especially on "Billie Jean").
Michael Bluejay plays attack keyboards. He works hard to create a wall of sound all by himself. And he likes to keep things lively by thrashing around violently or playing two or three different instruments (guitar and two keyboards) during the same song.
Do we play dance music? You bet! Slow songs? Sure! Metal? Of course! We've got something for everybody!
One thing we're known for is trying to play requests that we've never attempted to play before. In fact, more than once when we've done this, we've discovered that a song worked so well the first time that we just added it to our song list right then and there. Another curious thing about us is that we've only practiced once since we first got together nearly two years ago. The closest we get is sometimes Michael will play something over the phone to Lee and he'll start singing it. :-)
As we hope you can tell by our name, we don't take ourselves too seriously. King Cheese is just about having a good time, and we got the cheese to please!
I don't get around to updating the website very often, so simply subscribe to our mailing list and never miss another show.
3-99: King Cheese placed 3rd in the Cover Band category in the Austin Chronicle's 98-99 Music Poll. (The previous year we placed 6th, and the year before that we placed 10th.)
We played Hole in the Wall in March '98, following Bunny Stockhausen, who followed Peen Beats. The other bands were GREAT and it was a lot of fun playing wit them. At one point in our set, a woman got up on stage, pulled my pants down, and then pulled her shirt up. Okay, so that part's not unusual. But after that, some guy must have felt all inspired, so he got up on stage and took ALL his clothes off, and danced for quite a while that way. Considering that, I'm surprised that Hole in the Wall let us play there again...
I just spent $2000 on a new keyboard and a case, and I've spent several days reprogramming it to work with our 70+ songs. It sounds really good, and I think it represents a big step forward for King Cheese. And to create as much equipment debt as possible, I also just bought a really nice PA mixer, which should also improve the quality of our sound. (It may not arrive in time for our 6/6 show, but my fingers are crossed.)
We just added "Ain't Talkin' 'bout Love" (Van Halen) and "Brandy" (Looking Glass) to our playlist.
We placed #6 in the "Best Cover Band" category in the Chronicle's Music Poll, same as we did last year. In the "Best Lounge Act" category, we placed #6 *AND* #8. I know, I know, I'm wondering about that too. I think one of those listings was supposed to be King Soul. In any event, whether we really got #6 or #8, we've moved up, because last year we only got #10 in that category. Last week I had a letter to the editor in the Chronicle about the #6/#8 mixup, and they ran my letter but they didn't bother to clarify which place we actually got.
I haven't quite finished adding all the sonic touches to "Thriller", but I've got enough of it down so we can at least play it at gigs. You all were merciless about demanding more Michael Jackson, so we rushed our time to market.
My big news is that I got to play onstage with my favorite band, Ben Folds Five, at their soldout show in Dallas in February. When I told Lee, his reply was, "You kicked its ass, didn't you? Tell me you kicked its ass!" (Yeah, I kicked its ass.)
King Cheese has recorded our selection for "Wheatstock", a CD compilation featuring bands which have at least one member working at Wheatsville. (Lee works in the deli, and I'm waiting for a cashier sub position to open.) Our choice was "You Should Be Dancing" by the Bee Gees from Saturday Night Fever. Special thanks to Chris Smith of Sixteen Deluxe for recording us (and to Carrie Clarke of the same for letting me use her guitar.) The CD is scheduled for release in February 1999, and will be available at Wheatsville.
[Update, in a 2009 Austin Chronicle article about Wheatsville: "In 1998, this affinity resulted in The Wheat Album, " a store-produced CD that featured such totally Nineties bands as Sixteen Deluxe, King Cheese, and Palaxy Tracks, all boasting members who worked there." - 9/14/2009, p. 58]
1999 -- Prince |
|
* As amazing a singer as Lee is, in all the previous bands he's been in, he was just the drummer! It took him a while to realize that he should really pursue his singing.
* Michael Bluejay has been a vegan for many years, and actually doesn't eat cheese. (Well, soy cheese on rare occasions...) Michael is starting a punk band on the side called Ice Cream Headache -- he seems to have a thing about being in bands named after dairy products.
* For its first two years, King Cheese packed all its equipment and both its members into a single car. The keyboard & PA went into the trunk, the drums went in the back seat, and Michael & Lee were in the front seat, with the white stone pedestal between them! (Last summer, Lee's dad bought him a van, so at long last the duo is not so scrunched.)
* Michael played by ear at an early age, and annoyed his piano teacher by playing "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy" during lessons at age 12 in 1979.
* Lee's bass drum was a Christmas gift from his father in 1995. Before he got it, his previous bass drum was so large it had to go in the front seat of Lee's car because it wouldn't fit in the back, requiring Michael to squeeze into the back seat with all the other drums on the way to each gig.
* Michael & Lee have only practiced once together since their first gig.They generally learn the songs independently and then try them for the first time on stage. In addition, they try to play songs out of the blue that they've never played before when the audience requests them, and sometimes those songs have turned out so well the first time that those songs are immediately added to their play list. Those songs include Jump, Looks that Kill, and Magnet & Steel.
* Michael fulfilled a dream by playing piano onstage with Ben Folds Five at their soldout show in Dallas in February 1998.
* Michael has a tattoo of a red grand piano on a black oval background on his right arm (the Ben Folds Five logo). (He would like to point out that he got the tattoo long before Ben Folds Five became popular.) He also has a tattoo of a band of piano keys around his left arm. Both were done by Karen of Incredible Ink, a fellow vegetarian bicyclist. Lee doesn't like Michael's tattoos, and doesn't have any of his own.
* Lee and Michael both own stock in Odwalla. Go buy some juice.
* Lee's day job is working in the deli at the Wheatsville Food Co-op. Michael is trying to start a bicycle rickshaw service. Both would rather earn their living through music.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
KING COFFEY, drummer for the
Butthole Surfers:
"King Cheese plays the best rock! Me gusto King Cheeso mucho!"
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
BILL BUNCH, noted environmental
attorney:
"Looking forward to hearing some of those songs I really hate again soon."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
JOAN JETT, 80's rock goddess:
"I loved the show! Thanks, and keep rockin'!"
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
NICOLE HOLFORD, typical fan:
"King Cheese is my favorite band. They rock my world!"
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
VEKQUIN, atypical fan:
"If i need a break from studying philosophy of art, your show may be the perfect excursion from the seriousness of the subject matter, into a strange, cheezy realm wherein art and anti-aesthetic and kitsch and pastiche and ludic post-modernism all become incestual, producing an in-bred outback offspring found only in the very middle of a territory famous for its incestual breeding."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
TIKTOK, a.k.a. Travis Hartnett,
local musician
"Only one Styx song? You suck."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
KIRK WATSON, mayor of Austin:
"King who?"
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
(this section under construction)
Media Sluts. A
full-page story/photo on us appeared in XLent on 7/31/97. We made the
Recommended section (again) in the Chronicle on 7/31. The Chronicle
quoted me (Michael) extensively about the band in the 7/24 article about
90's new wave. We were mentioned in the Austin Chronicle three out of
four weeks in a row in June, twice in "Recommended".
DANCING ABOUT ARCHITECTURE (Austin, Chronicle, 6-27-97)
RECOMMENDED (Austin Chronicle, 6-13-97)
RECOMMENDED (Austin Chronicle, 6-6-97)
POSTMARKS (Letters to the Editor) (Austin Chronicle, 12-13-96)
RECOMMENDED (Austin Chronicle, 11-22-96)
|
|
In our first year, when we made nearly $100 one night just in TIPS, I thought we'd really become successful.
Then we opened for Ed Hall at their request, and I thought, wow, now we've REALLY made it.
Then Emo's offered us a weekly gig, and King Coffey from the Butthole Surfers sat in with us at a party. I thought, Jesus, things just can't get any better than this.
Then our shows started getting Recommended by the Chronicle and XL, and we opened for Frenchy (featuring East Bay Ray of the Dead Kennedys). We also started making $200+ at parties. I thought, is there any end to this madness?
Then Joan Jett saw our show and loved it, we placed in two different categories in the Chronicle's music poll, and XL did a full-page story on us. I started worrying that something really bad was gonna happen to me to make up for the run of good luck I'd been having.
Then we started headlining our own shows on Sixth Street and at Hole in the Wall, managed to get up to $400 for shows, and bettered our standing in the Chron's music poll vs. what we scored the previous year. I decided that drugs and alcohol were unnecessary because there was no better high than being a rock star and being recognized when I go around town.
Lee and I started this band without any real expectation that people would actually like it, or that we'd still be doing it three years later. But you all have been so good to us, so we've worked hard to keep learning new songs and upgrade our equipment to give you the best show possible.
I don't know how long we can keep this up (or you can maintain your interest), but whatever happens, I guess we're riding the wave for the time being. Come ride it with us while it lasts. It can't last forever, you know. I wonder if we're gonna be doing this act in Vegas when we're 50...
Make your next party unforgettable with King Cheese. Rates start at $250 (nudity extra). As we become more popular prices will skyrocket, so book us for your party now! If you're having a small party, or if you can convince us that it will be a LOT of fun, we may play for less. Call (512) 494-9226 or send us email.
Last updated: January 1999
Back to Michael Bluejay's home page