Posts Tagged ‘fefe dobson’
Greedmont Park Magazine #4 [Fall 2011]
Tuesday, September 20, 2011 by
Team Greedmont |
3 Comments; |
Category: Art, Culture, Entertainment, Fashion, Music
This issue is the BIG issue and we’ve got some big names and people doing big things. We get a first look at the big debuts from Kreayshawn, Iggy Azalea, and T. Mills. We introduce you to the next big artist in the visual art world. We delve into the Big Gay Weddings in NYC. We even learn some tricks on how to make an, ahem, “big splash”. So we hope you’ll stick around for another year because we’ve got even bigger tricks up our sleeves. As always, our online followers are lucky enough to see it first! Welcome to Greedmont Park!
In Stores Now!
Wednesday, December 1, 2010 by
Team Greedmont |
No Comments |
Category: Alternative/Rock, Entertainment, Music, Rap
A couple of stars of our #Greedy (yes, trend it!) family, Fefe Dobson and Yelawolf, released albums this past two weeks and we should definitely show love and support great music! Pick up FeFe Dobson’s “Joy” and Yelawolf’s “Trunk Music 0 – 60″ wherever CD’s are sold! Also check out Greedmont Park’s exclusive chats with the stars!
Yelawolf [Interview] by @RaptureJohnson | FeFe Dobson [Interview] by @RoseyBellafonte
Greedmont Park Magazine #1 [Summer 2010]
Wednesday, July 28, 2010 by
Corey Davis |
22 Comments; |
Category: Alternative/Rock, Art, Culture, Electro, Entertainment, Fashion, Music, Pop, Rap, RnB/Jazz/Soul, Sex Love Money
With bundles of hard copies coming fresh off the press and being packaged to be distributed across America (more specifically NY, LA, and ATL). I am proud to present you the first issue of Greedmont Magazine! A free bimonthly publication we’ve been working on extensively with our team “bloggers” over the past month to put together. In the beginning I didn’t think it was possible, but everyone agreed it was time to take the blog to the next level by turning it into a magazine. The first issue features interviews Fefe Dobson along with Fool’s Gold artist, Kid Sister and A-Trak; and with some of our favorite local artist like Brandon Sadler and Carla Aaron-Lopez. Enjoy!
[Cover art by Tunde Ogunnoiki]
Fefe Dobson x Greedmont Park [Interview]
Tuesday, May 4, 2010 by
Team Greedmont |
5 Comments; |
Category: Alternative/Rock, Entertainment, Interview, Music, Pop
Fefe Dobson, Mean Girls, and Seventeen Magazine were the epitome of my pubescent years. It was the summer of my ninth grade year in high school, I was no longer a freshman, but I wasn’t an official sophomore yet. Training bras to Victoria Secret soft flex, Paul Frank kiddie panties to Bare Necessities boy shorts, transitions were in full affect. Seventeen was my Bible, drilling false notions of beauty into my head. The story line of Mean Girls was my mantra, I was caught up in the in crowd trading braces and my soul in exchange for a one-way ticket to coolness, once I got in there was no way in hell that I planned on returning to mingle with the squares. Fefe Dobson was to me what Grace Jones was to Warhol, my muse. At a time when uber commercialized artist like Britney Spears and ATeens were spitting out chart topping singles and Dance Dance Revolution anthems like “Hit me Baby One more Time”, “Oops I did it Again” and “Dancing Queen”, Fefe Dobson stood out like a emo kid in a stadium full of cheerleaders. The drums, electric guitars, rebellious microphone cord swings gave her an idiosyncratic sound that could be heard on all frequencies. The ripped pre-Kate Moss pantyhose, crinkled leather jackets, safety pinned slub ensembles, black chipped nail polish and studs gave her a bad ass aura that commanded attention on all red carpets.
“I was wondering if I was good, or pretty and skinny enough”
We started off with the rich, knitty gritty and personal stuff. Few know this, but when Fefe Dobson was younger, her younger brothers were given to the system. With the bonds of siblinghood severed, the pain that she felt found its way into her lyrics “When you have pain in your household, childhood issues, or break up with someone you love. That is where those deep feelings and thoughts come from. I think about it and write about it. I write about issues and happiness in my life” Fefe explains to me. At that point in her career, she was a teenager undergoing not only family issues, but also love and self-confidence issues too. “ Don’t Let it Get to Your head” (2005), one of her most candid and tangible singles, was written when the canadian beauty was going through some emotionally draining love issues. “[I was going through] a lot of stuff, a serious breakup, it was confusing for many years. At that point I was wondering if I was good enough, or pretty and skinny enough”. Now, the singer has comes to accept herself, “[I’m] older, I’ve learned to be more patient about myself and the little things,” she says when describing the changes that have occurred between the interlude of that single and now, “I’m at a point where it doesn’t matter, I’m me. All girls need to find happiness within themselves”. (more…)
Greedmont Park Magazine #4 [Fall 2011]
Tuesday, September 20, 2011 by Team Greedmont | 3 Comments; | Category: Art, Culture, Entertainment, Fashion, Music
This issue is the BIG issue and we’ve got some big names and people doing big things. We get a first look at the big debuts from Kreayshawn, Iggy Azalea, and T. Mills. We introduce you to the next big artist in the visual art world. We delve into the Big Gay Weddings in NYC. We even learn some tricks on how to make an, ahem, “big splash”. So we hope you’ll stick around for another year because we’ve got even bigger tricks up our sleeves. As always, our online followers are lucky enough to see it first! Welcome to Greedmont Park!
In Stores Now!
Wednesday, December 1, 2010 by Team Greedmont | No Comments | Category: Alternative/Rock, Entertainment, Music, Rap
A couple of stars of our #Greedy (yes, trend it!) family, Fefe Dobson and Yelawolf, released albums this past two weeks and we should definitely show love and support great music! Pick up FeFe Dobson’s “Joy” and Yelawolf’s “Trunk Music 0 – 60″ wherever CD’s are sold! Also check out Greedmont Park’s exclusive chats with the stars!
Yelawolf [Interview] by @RaptureJohnson | FeFe Dobson [Interview] by @RoseyBellafonte
Greedmont Park Magazine #1 [Summer 2010]
Wednesday, July 28, 2010 by Corey Davis | 22 Comments; | Category: Alternative/Rock, Art, Culture, Electro, Entertainment, Fashion, Music, Pop, Rap, RnB/Jazz/Soul, Sex Love Money
With bundles of hard copies coming fresh off the press and being packaged to be distributed across America (more specifically NY, LA, and ATL). I am proud to present you the first issue of Greedmont Magazine! A free bimonthly publication we’ve been working on extensively with our team “bloggers” over the past month to put together. In the beginning I didn’t think it was possible, but everyone agreed it was time to take the blog to the next level by turning it into a magazine. The first issue features interviews Fefe Dobson along with Fool’s Gold artist, Kid Sister and A-Trak; and with some of our favorite local artist like Brandon Sadler and Carla Aaron-Lopez. Enjoy!
[Cover art by Tunde Ogunnoiki]
Fefe Dobson x Greedmont Park [Interview]
Tuesday, May 4, 2010 by Team Greedmont | 5 Comments; | Category: Alternative/Rock, Entertainment, Interview, Music, Pop
Fefe Dobson, Mean Girls, and Seventeen Magazine were the epitome of my pubescent years. It was the summer of my ninth grade year in high school, I was no longer a freshman, but I wasn’t an official sophomore yet. Training bras to Victoria Secret soft flex, Paul Frank kiddie panties to Bare Necessities boy shorts, transitions were in full affect. Seventeen was my Bible, drilling false notions of beauty into my head. The story line of Mean Girls was my mantra, I was caught up in the in crowd trading braces and my soul in exchange for a one-way ticket to coolness, once I got in there was no way in hell that I planned on returning to mingle with the squares. Fefe Dobson was to me what Grace Jones was to Warhol, my muse. At a time when uber commercialized artist like Britney Spears and ATeens were spitting out chart topping singles and Dance Dance Revolution anthems like “Hit me Baby One more Time”, “Oops I did it Again” and “Dancing Queen”, Fefe Dobson stood out like a emo kid in a stadium full of cheerleaders. The drums, electric guitars, rebellious microphone cord swings gave her an idiosyncratic sound that could be heard on all frequencies. The ripped pre-Kate Moss pantyhose, crinkled leather jackets, safety pinned slub ensembles, black chipped nail polish and studs gave her a bad ass aura that commanded attention on all red carpets.
“I was wondering if I was good, or pretty and skinny enough”
We started off with the rich, knitty gritty and personal stuff. Few know this, but when Fefe Dobson was younger, her younger brothers were given to the system. With the bonds of siblinghood severed, the pain that she felt found its way into her lyrics “When you have pain in your household, childhood issues, or break up with someone you love. That is where those deep feelings and thoughts come from. I think about it and write about it. I write about issues and happiness in my life” Fefe explains to me. At that point in her career, she was a teenager undergoing not only family issues, but also love and self-confidence issues too. “ Don’t Let it Get to Your head” (2005), one of her most candid and tangible singles, was written when the canadian beauty was going through some emotionally draining love issues. “[I was going through] a lot of stuff, a serious breakup, it was confusing for many years. At that point I was wondering if I was good enough, or pretty and skinny enough”. Now, the singer has comes to accept herself, “[I’m] older, I’ve learned to be more patient about myself and the little things,” she says when describing the changes that have occurred between the interlude of that single and now, “I’m at a point where it doesn’t matter, I’m me. All girls need to find happiness within themselves”. (more…)



