Molly Lewis | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Also known as | Sweetafton23 |
Born | [1] California, U.S. | November 23, 1989
Origin | Orange County, California, [2] U.S. |
Genres | Acoustic |
Instrument(s) | Ukulele, kazoo, accordion, stylophone, melodica, piano, whistle |
Years active | 2008-present |
Labels | DFTBA Records |
Website | mollylewis.wtf |
Molly Lewis (also known as Sweetafton23) is an American musician who is known for her ukulele playing and who rose to prominence on the Internet. She plays both covers and original songs. Her original music consists of comedic songs that deal with relevant pop culture topics. [3] She is currently signed with DFTBA Records through which she released her first EP I Made You A CD... But I Eated It. [4]
Lewis attracted attention by recording ukulele covers of popular songs such as Britney Spears' "Toxic" [4] and Lady Gaga's "Poker Face", then posting videos of her performances on YouTube. [5] She also recorded videos with other Internet-based musicians, such as 'WadeJohnston', [6] 'thedoifter', [7] and 'doctornoise'. [8] For Mother's Day in 2009, Molly recorded a cover of "Two of Us" by The Beatles as a duet with her mother. [9] Her version of Jonathan Coulton's "Tom Cruise Crazy" was featured on Episode 226 of the UkeCast. [10] Her song "It All Makes Sense At The End" appeared on the creator album from the first VidCon conference in 2010.
She uploads YouTube videos under the name of SweetAfton23, [11] an allusion to a Scottish poet Robert Burns' lyrical poem Sweet Afton . She was inspired by a rendition of Jonathan E. Spilman's 1837 musical accompaniment to the poem, as played by Chris Thile with Nickel Creek. The 23 refers to her birthday, November 23. [12]
She was a regular performer at w00tstock, [13] a traveling variety show that began in 2006, alongside Paul and Storm, Adam Savage, and Wil Wheaton. She has also performed with the Presidents of the United States of America. [3] During live performances, she occasionally forgets to bring key instruments, like the kazoo from "I Pity the Fool", and substitutes other things from her pocket, notably a rape whistle. In an animated music video of "I Pity the Fool", the kazoo solo is shown being played by a cartoon version of Mr. T. [14]
Lewis has appeared on NBC's Los Angeles' show Music LA. [4] She recorded the theme music for Episode 2 of Season 3 of The Legend of Neil . [15] She performed at Jonathan Coulton's first JoCo Cruise in 2011 [16] with John Hodgman, Wil Wheaton, Paul and Storm, Bill Corbett and Kevin Murphy from Mystery Science Theater 3000 and RiffTrax, and Mike Phirman, and remained a regular performer at the event for many years. [17]
On February 22, 2011, Lewis performed her song, "An Open Letter to Stephen Fry", to Stephen Fry himself at Harvard University, during an event marking the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard giving its Lifetime Achievement Award to Fry. [18] [19] [20]
In fall of 2012, Lewis toured as a solo act for the first time (outside of w00tstock shows) as part of the "Ladies of Ragnarok" tour with the Doubleclicks, performing 19 concerts in the Northeast and Midwestern United States. [21] In January 2013, Lewis toured the West Coast for the first time, also with the Doubleclicks, performing nine shows in California, Oregon and Washington. Both tours were sponsored by fans who could buy postcards or T-shirts to help the musicians cover costs. [22]
In 2014, Lewis co-wrote a musical with screenwriter Josh A. Cagan titled Thanksgiving vs. Christmas, which was staged live on November 19, 2014, at The Triple Door concert venue in Seattle. [23] The show mimics classic holiday television specials, and features appearances by Joseph Scrimshaw, the Doubleclicks, and others, with Kevin Murphy of Mystery Science Theater 3000 and RiffTrax as Santa Claus. [24] It was recorded and released on CD in 2015. [25]
Starting in 2019, Lewis hosted "The Panalysts", a YouTube web series produced by LoadingReadyRun.
Her cover of Coulton's "Tom Cruise Crazy" earned Ukulele Hunt's "Ukulele Video of the Year" for 2007. [26] That video brought her to the attention of Coulton, [27] [28] which led to her opening for him on several occasions. [29] [30]
She won the third edition of Quick Stop Entertainment's Masters of Song Fu competition in 2009, [31] defeating 16 other artists, including Hank Green and Paul and Storm. [32]
The ukulele, also called a uke, is a member of the lute family of instruments of Portuguese origin and popularized in Hawaii. It generally employs four nylon strings.
"Baby Got Back" is a song written, co-produced and recorded by American rapper and songwriter Sir Mix-a-Lot. Released in May 1992 by Def American and Reprise as the second single from his third album, Mack Daddy (1992), the song samples the 1986 Detroit techno single "Technicolor" by Channel One. At the time of its original release, the song caused controversy because of its outspoken and blatantly sexual lyrics objectifying women, as well as specific references to the buttocks, which some people found objectionable. The song's accompanying music video was briefly banned by MTV. Mix-a-Lot defended the song as being empowering to curvaceous women who were being shown skinny models as an ideal for beauty.
Jonathan William Coulton, often called "JoCo" by fans, is an American folk/comedy singer-songwriter, known for his songs about geek culture and his use of the Internet to draw fans. Among his most popular songs are "Code Monkey", "Re: Your Brains", "Still Alive", and "Want You Gone". He was the house musician for NPR weekly puzzle quiz show Ask Me Another from 2012 until its end in 2021.
Gregory A. Hawkes is an American musician who is best known as the keyboardist and founding member of the American new wave band the Cars. Hawkes is credited with helping popularize new wave and synth-pop in American popular music as a member of the Cars.
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Charlotte "Charlie" McDonnell is a British filmmaker, screenwriter, musician, former vlogger, author and Twitch streamer from Bath, Somerset. On 15 June 2011, her YouTube channel charlieissocoollike became the first in the United Kingdom to reach one million subscribers.
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w00tstock was a touring variety show billed as "3 Hours of Geeks & Music". It was created in 2009 by Wil Wheaton, Adam Savage and Paul and Storm. The first shows took place in 2009 in San Francisco and Los Angeles, and continued until 2016, a total of 21 shows having been presented.
Victoria Davitt, better known by stage name Victoria Vox, is a singer, songwriter and musician specialising in the ukulele. A native of Green Bay, Wisconsin, Vox now resides in Costa Mesa, California when not on tour.
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Thing a Week is a series of studio albums released by rock musician Jonathan Coulton in 2006. He compiled these albums from his weekly podcast, where he challenged himself to write, record, and produce a new song within a week, every week, for an entire year. He had done this to prove to himself, and to fans, that he was capable of working with a deadline.
Portal 2 is a physics-based puzzle-platform game created by Valve and released on Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and Linux in April 2011, followed by a Nintendo Switch version in June 2022. The game, set in the desolate, labyrinthine Aperture Science facility, challenges the player to navigate test chambers created by the artificial intelligence GLaDOS, using a portal gun, a device able to create portals that link two points in space like a wormhole. The game expands on the original Portal by adding new puzzle elements, such as paint that imparts properties to surfaces, plates that can launch the player and objects over distances, tractor beams and bridges made of light.
Michael Lawrence Lombardo is an American former piano rock musician. He was known for writing piano-driven rock songs and posting them on YouTube under the username "MikeLombardoMusic", until his 2013 conviction on child pornography charges. He was previously signed to DFTBA Records through which he released one LP, Songs for a New Day, and one EP, The Alchemist. Lombardo posted music videos, song tutorials, and personal updates on his YouTube channel which had over 20,000 subscribers before its closure.
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The Doubleclicks are a nerd-folk musical duo based in Portland, Oregon and Los Angeles, California, consisting of siblings Laser Webber and Aubrey Turner. They first became known for performing nerd-friendly comedy music, including songs about Dungeons & Dragons, dinosaurs, and other geeky themes. While their later songs retain those elements, there has been a stronger focus on feminist and other social issues, and more personal themes.
Joseph Scrimshaw is an American comedian and writer for radio, television and theater, whom City Pages, a Twin Cities newspaper, describes as having an "irreverent and insightful wit." He is the author of a book of comic essays called Comedy of Doom and hosts a monthly podcast called Obsessed with Joseph Scrimshaw, where he and his guests discuss their obsessions. He performs across the country in a variety of venues, including comedy festivals like San Francisco's SketchFest and science fiction conventions such as Dragon Con and CONvergence, and his plays have been performed internationally. He has collaborated with performer Bill Corbett on a number of plays and written for RiffTrax, Corbett's joint comedy venture with Kevin Murphy and Michael J. Nelson. Scrimshaw has toured with musicians Molly Lewis and the Doubleclicks, and performed live for musician Jonathan Coulton's JoCo Cruise and the geek vaudeville w00tstock. Scrimshaw has been involved with writing and performing for American Public Media's radio variety show Wits, writing sketches and appearing as the character Theater Ghost. He has also written for the national sketch comedy television show M@dAbout.
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