Andrew Robert Nielsen
(born October 6, 1982) is an American rapper, known by his stage name MC Lars
. He is the self-proclaimed originator of "post-punk laptop rap".
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MC LARS TICKETS
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Career
Lars has toured with many different bands and rappers, including
The Matches,
Nas,
Something With Numbers,
Simple Plan,
Bowling for Soup,
Army of Freshmen,
Gym Class Heroes,
Say Anything,
Streetlight Manifesto,
Suburban Legends,
Test Icicles,
Jack's Mannequin,
Patent Pending,
Bayside,
Fightstar,
Make It Better Later,
MC Frontalot,
Wheatus,
The Aquabats,
Ludacris,
YT Cracker,
T-Pain,
Yung Joc and
Cartel. Some of these bands play the part of Hearts That Hate for the song "
Signing Emo" at live shows. He has collaborated with many different artists, including
Non-Phixion's
Ill Bill and rapper
mc chris, and was one of the first underground rappers to sample and reference
post-punk and
emo bands.
He has recorded for
Truck Records in the
UK,
Sidecho Records in the
USA,
Big Mouth Records in
Japan, and
Shock Records in
Australia. He was formerly known as
MC Lars Horris
but changed his pseudonym to MC Lars in 2004 for purposes of simplicity. MC Lars currently resides in
California.
In 2006, he released the single "
Download This Song" with it entering the Australian Singles Chart at number 29.
Nielsen appeared in the 2008 independent film
Community College
as MC Lars.
Nielsen was also a judge for the 8th annual
Independent Music Awards to support independent artists.
[1]
[2]
Education
He attended
Stevenson School and was the co-founder of the
Monterey Bay Area punk rock band
Amphoteric [3]. He would later leave and the group would switch directions and gain a progressive metal following (especially amongst Internet listeners). Although the line-up has changed entirely, the group still resides in central California and continues to release albums independently. While at Stevenson he had a morning radio show through the school's radio station,
KSPB. The show was called "Morning Madness", which featured Andrew and his co-host, Chris Gates.
Lars moved on as an
English studies-major student of
Stanford University in California who went on international study at
Corpus Christi College,
Oxford University in England
[4]. During his time at Stanford, MC Lars and fellow band member and Stanford student, Mike Love, co-created and appeared in
Good Morning Tresidder Union
[5] which appeared on Stanford Cardinal Broadcasting Network (SCBN). While at Stanford, Lars drew a comic strip called
27th Street for the
Stanford Daily. Following his graduation in 2005, it became a
webcomic.
[6] He had a radio show on Stanford's radio station
KZSU, playing
nerdcore hip hop and old school rap, prior to being discovered by Truck Records.
Style and culture
Originally releasing tracks under the name Lars Horris, he eventually dropped Horris which later became the name of his record label, in order to become MC Lars. In the past, MC Lars was backed by a single friend who handled laptop duties. However, today's MC Lars live experience is very different. With a punk rock band set to back him up, MC Lars plays a hip-hop set to a true punk rock background (a joining which he refers to as "post-punk laptop rap"). His band mates play live over the samples and loops contained in his recorded music - all stored on his laptop computer.
As with many other rap and
Hip-Hop acts,
samples play a key role in MC Lars' music. But, with intent to preserve his rock roots, MC Lars chooses to sample alternative bands such as the British band
Supergrass, Long Island, New York's
Brand New, as well as Fugazi, and Iggy Pop.
MC Lars has also shown an interest in using lyrics and song titles based on
English and
American literature. "Rapbeth" references
William Shakespeare's play
Macbeth
, whilst "Mr. Raven" is inspired by
Edgar Allan Poe's "
The Raven." Also, the song "Ahab", which is featured on one of his newer albums,
The Graduate
, sees Lars rapping about the novel
Moby Dick
while "Hey Ophelia" on
This Gigantic Robot Kills
retells the story of Shakespeare's
Hamlet
.
The term
iGeneration, used to describe the generation born primarily in the mid-to-late 1980s, was not actually coined by MC Lars, but it was used in his song of the same name, which was given out for free to
Facebook users in August 2006 in conjunction with
iTunes.
MC Lars'
MySpace profile includes exclusive tracks related to the MySpace social scene of the iGeneration: "Internet Relationships", "Hot Topic is Not Punk Rock", "
Download This Song" and "Signing Emo". Hearts That Hate, whose song "Cry Tonight" is sampled in Lars' "Signing Emo", is a fictional group created by the rapper. The Grammy-nominated Texan band
Bowling for Soup performed as Hearts That Hate when MC Lars has supported them on tour. A full version of "Cry Tonight" is available as a
B-side to the UK "Signing Emo" single.
In early 2006, his song "
Download This Song" was featured on the pop-culture
CBC Radio show, Definitely Not The Opera, during an exposé on
geeks.
The Graduate
In 2006, Lars worked with the Canadian independent record label
Nettwerk Records to release
The Graduate
. Following this release, Lars toured extensively throughout the U.S. doing nothing, then he moved to the UK and did shows in Japan
, and Australia. Not long after the album was released on
iTunes, Lars received an
e-mail from a 15-year-old fan Elisa Greubel on his web forum saying she identified with "Download This Song" since her family was one of many being sued by the
Recording Industry Association of America. This led to Nettwerk executive
Terry McBride and a team of major-label artists managed by Nettwerk to support the Greubels with their case.
MC Lars returned to the UK in October 2006, due to popular demand, to play more shows in support of his "Ahab" single and video.
This Gigantic Robot Kills
thumb
In April 2007, MC Lars and Nettwerk made the component tracks for his single "
White Kids Aren't Hyphy" available for remix under a
by-nc-sa Creative Commons license on the
Jamglue online mixing site as a contest.. In May, MC Lars toured the UK on the third installment of the
Good To Go Tour, making friends with Wheatus front man Brendan B. Brown. In July Lars and Brendan recorded a bunch of new songs, two of which would later appear on
This Gigantic Robot Kills. In November, Lars returned to the UK on tour with pop-punk band
Last Letter Read who performed their own set and then on stage with Lars, debuting Lars' new song "Hey There Ophelia".
In 2008, Lars worked with
"Weird Al" Yankovic, the Rondo Brothers, Nick Rowe and Mike Kennedy of
Bloodsimple, Daniel Dart of
Time Again, Donal Finn of
Flash Bastard,
Pierre Bouvier of
Simple Plan, MC Bat Commander of
The Aquabats,
Suburban Legends,
Worm Quartet, Gabriel Saporta of
Cobra Starship, Brett Anderson of
The Donnas,
MC Frontalot,
Jesse Dangerously, Jaret Reddick of
Bowling for Soup, Linus Dotson of
Size 14, Parry Gripp of
Nerf Herder,
Jonathan Coulton,
Aesias Finale, Sebastian Reynolds, Joe Ragosta of
Patent Pending and classical musician
Walt Ribeiro to complete his album "
This Gigantic Robot Kills".
B-sides and Rarities
Some demos of songs Lars finished but will not be releasing include "Dharma Police", "You Might Be Stoner", "Coming Up Short", "Ana's Song", "Wikipedia Song", "Lord of the Fries", "I Flow Econo", "Dudes Don't Text Dudes", "Everything I Ever Needed to Know About Religion I Learned from Daniel Johnston", "Pop Life", "Don't Fear the Ice Cream Monster", "Walt Disney the Fascist" and "Open Letter to the NME".
Record Label
MC Lars has his own record label, Horris Records. In 2008 Lars signed a two-record distribution deal with Crappy Records, founded by Jaret Reddick, from the American Rock band
Bowling For Soup [7].
Discography
Albums and EPs
- Nothing to Fear
(Noseman Records, 1999)
- Insectivorous
(Noseman Records, 2000)
- Radio Pet Fencing
(Truck Records, 2003)
- The Laptop EP
(Truck Records/Sidecho Records, 2004, Horris Records 2009)
- The Graduate
(Horris Records/Nettwerk Records, 2006)
- 21 Concepts (But a Hit Ain't One)
(Horris Records, 2007)
- The Digital Gangster LP
(with YTCracker) (Horris Records/Nerdy South Records, 2008)
- The Green Christmas EP
(Horris Records/Oglio, 2008)
- This Gigantic Robot Kills
(Horris Records/Oglio, 2009)
- Single and Famous
(with K.Flay) (Horris Records, 2009)
Singles
- "iGeneration" (Horris Records, 2005)
- "Signing Emo" (Horris Records, 2005)
- "Hot Topic Is Not Punk Rock", (Horris Records, 2006)
- "Download This Song" (Horris Records, 2006) #29 Australia
- "Ahab" (Horris Records, 2006)
- "Hipster Girl" (Horris Records, 2006)
- "White Kids Aren't Hyphy", (Horris Records, 2007)
- "Guitar Hero Hero (Beating Guitar Hero Doesn't Make You Slash)", (Horris Records/Oglio, 2009)
Compilations
- "Geeked Out" from Greetings from Nor-Cal, 2006
- "Gary" from A Santa Cause 2, 2006
- "Gopher Guts" from The Simple Life 2, 2007
- "The Lint Song" from For the Kids Too, 2007
Remixes/Collaborations
- Ubernators featuring MC Lars - "Do the Joker", 2005
- Test Icicles - "Circle Square Triangle (MC Lars Remix)", 2005
- The Scribes featuring MC Lars - "Two Minutes of Hate", 2007
- Smilex featuring MC Lars - "Dead Horses", 2007
- My Awesome Compilation - "Put Up a Fight (MC Lars Remix)", 2008
- Wheatus featuring MC Lars - "Change The World (Black Precedent)", 2008
- funky49 featuring MC Lars - "Adoption", 2008
- J-Byn featuring MC Lars & Jesus Disciple - "The Case for Christ", 2009
- Uh Oh! Explosion featuring MC Lars - "Party Retarted", 2009
DVDs
- "This DVD Is Not Punk Rock" (Horris Films, 2007)
Books
- 27th Street: A Book of Cartoons by MC Lars
(Horris Books, 2006)
- Bukowski in Love: A Book of Poems by MC Lars
(Horris Books, 2007)
Videography
- Hey That's Me
(2003) (Steve Dawson, director)
- iGeneration
(2004) (Stewart Hendler, director)
- Signing Emo
(2004) (Kurt St. Thomas, director)
- Download This Song
(2005) (Frank Borin, director)
- Ahab
(2006) (Sean Donnelly, director)
- If I Had a Time Machine, That Would Be Fresh
(2006) (Richard Barham, director)
- Hipster Girl
(2007) (Tommy Avallone, co-director)
- Scientology=WTF?
(2007) (Richard Barham, director)
- White Kids Aren't Hyphy
(2008) (Tim Thompson and Odin Wadleigh, co-directors)
- I Want My Guns N' Roses
(2008) (Richard Barham, director)
- Manifest Destiny
(with YTCracker) (2008) (Irina Slutsky, director)
- I'm Dreaming of a Green Christmas
(2008) (Richard Barham, director)
- MC Lars's Facebook Friend Count > Your Facebook Friend Count
(with Dr. Popular) (2008) (Tim Thompson and Odin Wadleigh, co-directors)
- Guitar Hero Hero (Beating Guitar Hero Doesn't Make You Slash)
(2009) (Sean Donnelly, director)
References
- PRLog
- Independent Music Awards - 8th Annual IMA Judges
- Spotlight Artist: MC Lars
- Spotlight Artist: MC Lars
- Good Morning Tresidder Union
- 27th Street
- MC Lars: This Gigantic Robot Kills