Frondo Ediacar: Difference between revisions

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== Biography ==
== Biography ==


* Early years - contributed to [[A Field Guide to Edible Theropods]] at the age of seven after surviving five weeks alone in the late Cretaceous era (within a half-million years of the [[Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event (nonfiction)|Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) extinction event]].  He would later write about this experience in the song "[[Warm Blood Rules]]".
* Early years - contributed to [[A Field Guide to Edible Theropods]] at the age of seven after surviving five weeks alone in the late Cretaceous era (within a half-million years of the [[Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event (nonfiction)|Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) extinction event]].  He would later write about this experience in the song "[[Asteroids Belt]]".


* Formed his first band of paleontologist-musicians, "Frondo Ediacar and his Mighty Mighty Rangeomorphs" at the age of fourteen.  
* Formed his first band of paleontologist-musicians, "Frondo Ediacar and his Mighty Mighty Rangeomorphs" at the age of fourteen.  

Revision as of 14:16, 18 December 2020

"Frondo Ediacar and his Mighty Mighty Rangeomorphs" (Front album cover).

Frondo Ediacar is the stage name of paleontologist and musician [REDACTED].

Ediacar is known for his elaborate stage productions, including hermetically sealed performance spaces which replicate environmental conditions of the pre-Cambrian era.

Biography

  • Formed his first band of paleontologist-musicians, "Frondo Ediacar and his Mighty Mighty Rangeomorphs" at the age of fourteen.
    • The next day the band released their now-famous album of the same name to disappointing reviews.
    • The prestigious Journal of Aberrant Paleontology called the album "a seemingly random re-evaluation of well-established paleontological music theory."
  • Accusations of genetically engineering dinosaur-musicians in violation of musician's union contract, and subsequent retirement from the music-paleontology business.
  • Solo work - commercially unsuccessful but critically acclaimed albums "Ocean Soup" and "Trilobite Blues" ... what music critic Fell Swoop called (in a rare moment of decency) "critically becalmed".
  • Recent work ...

Discography

TO_DO - discography

Film and video

TO_DO - film and video

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links

Social media