Frondo Ediacar
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
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
- Early years - contributed to A Field Guide to Edible Theropods at the age of seven after surviving five weeks alone in the upper Cretaceous. He would later write about this experience in the song "Warm Blood Rules".
- 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, theropods or no theropods.")
- Collaborations with Feral Butler and Neon Diatom
- 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".
- Accusations of genetically engineering dinosaur-musicians in violation of musician's union contract, and subsequent retirement from the musician-paleontology business
- Recent work
TO_DO - elaborate
Discography
TO_DO - discography
Film and video
TO_DO - film and video
In the News
Fiction cross-reference
- Cretaceous Office Supplies
- Crimes against mathematical constants
- Gnomon algorithm
- Gnomon Chronicles
- Neptune Slaughter
- The Gnomon Chronicles Game
Nonfiction cross-reference
- [REDACTED] - model for Frondo Ediacar