Steam Powered Giraffe

Steam Powered Giraffe
Origin San Diego, California, United States
Genres Folk, rock, vaudeville
Years active 2008-present
Associated acts Rumbledore
Website www.steampoweredgiraffe.com
Members David Michael Bennett
Isabella Bunny Bennett
Sam Luke
Steve Negrete
Past members Erin Burke
Jon Sprague
Michael Philip Reed
Matt Smith

Steam Powered Giraffe (SPG) is a musical project formed in San Diego in 2008 that is popular in the steampunk subculture. Led by identical twins David Michael Bennett and Isabella "Bunny" Bennett,[1][2] and long-time friend Samuel Luke, the act combines mime, sketches, pop culture references, improvised comedic dialogue, and original music of various genres.

Career

The members of Steam Powered Giraffe met while taking Theatre Arts at Grossmont College. Afterwards, they became members of a local San Diego mime group called Troupe SD. Trained in pantomime by Seaport Village mime Jerry "Kazoo" Hager, and with collective backgrounds in clown, theater, music, and visual design, Jon Sprague, Erin Burke (a fellow mime artist) and the Bennett twins - Bunny and David - started street busking as quirky robotic characters (at the time known as Peoplebots) in January 2008 at Balboa Park, California. Due to personal reasons, Erin Burke left the group in 2011.[3]

Since their inception, the band has performed at popular Southern California venues including The San Diego County Fair, The San Diego Zoo,[4] The Wild Animal Park, Legoland California, Ontario Mills, The Queen Bee's Art & Cultural Center, and at numerous Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Steampunk Conventions.

In October 2009, the band released their first album, Album One. It contained the previously released single from May 2009 titled "On Top of the Universe".[5] In early 2011 the band released a single, "Honeybee", announcing that it would be on an upcoming second album,[6] and in late 2011 the band announced the release of an interim "live" album entitled Live at the Globe of Yesterday's Tomorrow.[7] Their second studio album, entitled The 2¢ Show, was released in May 2012.[8] Also, their music can often be heard on a number of steampunk radio broadcasts that stream worldwide, such as The Clockwork Cabaret.[9] The band's song "Electricity Is In My Soul" is available on the Rock Band Network.

On October 30, 2011, the band was mentioned by name in the comic strip Luann. The strip showed the title character and two of her friends dressed in steampunk attire, going out to attend a SPG concert.[10] The title frame, which didn't appear in the online version but only in print, showed a giraffe's head and neck with steam escaping its ears and nostrils.

In 2012, they were voted Best Live Comedy act (and runner up for Best Family Entertainment act) on San Diego A-List.[11]

Besides their musical endeavors, the band publishes a web comic[12] and has produced a card game based on characters in their backstory.[13] In April 2012 they released a DVD entitled, Steam Powered Giraffe: The DVD (and the Quest For the Eternal Harp of Golden Dreams).

On September 24, 2012, the band announced on their Tumblr that Jon Sprague was leaving/let go from the group.[14] On October 1 it was announced that Sam Luke, the drummer for the band at the time, would become the new robot in the band, "Hatchworth".[15] On 2 November 2012, Hatchworth made his stage debut with SPG at Youmacon in Detroit, Michigan with interim drummer Mike Buxbaum (of A City Serene). Later, Matt Smith was named SPG's new drummer.

During this time, SPG also introduced the characters of the Walter Girls into their shows. The Girls started out by manning the band's merchandise tables at performances, but have started figuring in to the SPG stage show and back story. Described as "blue matter engineers", the porcelian-white skinned and blue-haired Walter Girls (now called Walter Workers) are essentially the robot's caretakers on stage.

In June 2013, SPG released a cover of Rihanna's "Diamonds", essentially a solo performance by the Spine. The accompanying video, released to YouTube, introduced a new character to the SPG canon, a robotic giraffe puppet named GG (voiced by Bunny Bennett). GG appeared again in July when the band released a comedic video, "Walter Robotics Rap", to YouTube.

On 9 August 2013, Steam Powered Giraffe announced the title to their third album, MK III, on the band's website and tumblr page. The album was released on December 3.

In September, the band released a cover of Icona Pop's "I Love It" on their YouTube channel.

On March 18, 2014, it was announced that Michael Reed and Matt Smith would no longer be performing members of Steam Powered Giraffe. The Bennett twins stated that the reasons for their departure was to focus more on the theatrical elements of the act and to reduce the cost of touring.

Early in 2014, Bunny Bennett began to transition the character of Rabbit from male to female, coinciding with her own status as a Trans woman. In June 2014, Bennett stated on tumblr that her chosen name (to become legal in the future) is Isabella Bunny Bennett.

More videos have followed in the meantime. In May 2014, SPG released their third cover, this time a mostly acoustic version of "fellow 'robot' band" Daft Punk's "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger". This video marked the first "official" appearance by the female Rabbit to the general public at large (although the band had played some dates prior and some photos and raw audience footage had been seen). The band then followed up with two videos from their MKIII album: "Fancy Shoes" in June and "I'll Rust With You" in July, with the latter featuring live footage recorded at Anime Midwest in Rosemont, Illinois.

Steam Powered Giraffe recently released a Blu-ray/DVD/Audio CD combo pack, recorded in July 2013 at SPG's own Walter Robotics Expo in San Diego. This combo pack features former band members Michael Reed and Matt Smith, as well as documenting one of the last performances in which Rabbit appeared as male. The band has also stated on social media that work has begun on their 4th album, Vice Quadrant, which will be a space/sci-fi-themed concept album.

In September 2014, Steam Powered Giraffe gave their first international performance, playing at the Canadian Steampunk Exhibition in Niagara Falls, Ontario.

Backstory

The band's fictional backstory explains why they pantomime as robots. According to that narrative, the "musical automatons" were invented by a rich San Diego inventor named Colonel Peter A. Walter in 1896 and kept in the Walter family over the years. Called the 8th 1/2 Wonder of the World, the robots were a technological marvel that ran off steam powered engines and the mysterious Blue Matter, discovered and harnessed by Walter. The band's name is said to come from Walter's first robot, a giant mechanical giraffe named Delilah. A fictional timeline on the band's website chronicles the band's supposed "appearances" throughout the years at such notable places as the 1933 Chicago World's Fair and The Ed Sullivan Show.[16]

Rabbit's transition from male to female was explained in the backstory that the robot was originally intended to have been female, but due to time constraints (further explained in the backstory on the band's website), was left unfinished and appeared to be male. Nearly a century later, Rabbit began to malfunction badly, and in the process of repair, the robot's long-lost blueprints were located. Once the mistake was discovered, Peter Walter VI (the robots' current caretaker) completed Rabbit's build according to her original blueprints, and the malfunctions ceased (for the most part).

Fictional Characters

Band members

- lead and backing vocals, guitars, bass, mandolin, keyboards (2008-present)
- lead and backing vocals, accordion, keytar, megaphone, kazookaphone, melodica (2008-present)
- lead and backing vocals, bass, guitars (2012-present; session drums, bass and backing vocals: 2011-2012)
Session members

Past members

Former session members

Discography

Studio albums

Live albums

Singles

See also

References

  1. "Whut is Steam Powered Giraffe". Steam Powered Giraffe. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  2. "GG: The Giraffe". Steam Powered Giraffe. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  3. "Steam Powered Giraffe - Artist Bio". ReverbNation. Retrieved 2011-10-31.
  4. "San Diego Zoo : Extended Summer Hours and Entertainment at Nighttime Zoo". Random San Diego. June 9, 2011. Retrieved 11-01-2011. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  5. "New Single With An Album On The Way!". Blogspot. Retrieved 06-12-12. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  6. The Spine (February 2, 2011). "Steam Powered Giraffe Blog: Honeybee Now Available!". Blogspot. Retrieved 11-01-2011. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  7. Steam Powered Giraffe (2011-11-16). "Live at the Globe of Yesterday's Tomorrow". Facebook. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  8. "The 2¢ Show Now Available!". Blogspot. Retrieved 06-12-12. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  9. "The Clockwork Cabaret Podcast". Retrieved 11-01-2011. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  10. Luann comic strip at Comics.com Retrieved 2011-10-30
  11. "2012 Award Winner". San Diego A-List. Retrieved 2012-09-24.
  12. "Steam Powered Giraffe The Webcomic". The Webcomic List. Retrieved 11-02-2011. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  13. "Steam Powered Giraffe The Card Game". Game Night Guys. February 24, 2011. Retrieved 11-01-2011. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  14. http://officialsteampoweredgiraffe.tumblr.com/post/32204911846/jon-sprague-departing-steam-powered-giraffe-dear
  15. http://steampoweredgiraffe.blogspot.com/2012/10/welcome-hatchworth.html
  16. "Steam Powered Giraffe Pseudo-History". Retrieved 2011-10-31.

External links