Atlanta, GA
A memoir from Atlanta music and comedy icon Darryl Rhoades tracks the city's rock history
Courtesy of Darryl Rhoades
Darryl Rhoades has been a fixture of the Atlanta music and comedy scene since the 1970s. Born in 1950, Rhoades grew up in Forest Park. He came of age during Atlanta’s hippie movement that was centered around Piedmont Park and frequented the city’s first rock clubs that sprang up in that area.
In 1975, he formed Darryl Rhoades and the Hahavishnu Orchestra (the name was a spoof on the groundbreaking jazz group Mahavishnu Orchestra), a 12-piece band that toured nationally and incorporated often outrageous performance art with songs that were infused with comedic satire. Kurt Loder, of Rolling Stone and MTV fame, wrote at the time that Rhoades was “one of the most savagely gifted writer/performers in the country today.”
Rhoades later formed the band Men From Glad, a prominent Atlanta group in the 1980s. In 1988, he shifted to stand-up comedy. While he still releases music, stand-up has become his primary focus.
He recently published a memoir, The Road To Almost: The Lean Years . . . 1950-2024 that is infused with stories about the early rock scene in Atlanta, his often wild stage antics, and his keen sense of humor. Rhoades recently spoke with us about the book.

I wrote the book after being reminded by a few lifelong friends that the lifestyle many of us lived earlier no longer exists. There are no teen clubs, fewer clubs promoting original and diverse music, and concerts are less accessible with growing ticket prices to make up for lost income from streaming music.
Bruce was correct about losing “characters,” but it’s bigger than that. The birth of influencers, devices that promote closeness from a distance, and the sense that copying is more sought out than originality makes the world smaller. I also wrote the book because I don’t want someone making up or changing the stories when I can no longer speak.
You were coming of age and getting into music during the “Hippie era” in Atlanta, when kids congregated around 10th Street and 14th Street and the city’s first rock clubs were opening. How do you describe that scene to people who didn’t experience it firsthand?
The vibe was very chill on one end, with the music and introduction to new sounds and smells—my first fog machine experience, which smelled like a Mercedes-Benz with a leaky gasket, happened while playing at the Catacombs—and being around like-minded people.
I was raised in Forest Park and except for a few friends, I felt pretty isolated. It wasn’t uncommon for a construction worker to throw bottles at me from their truck because of my hair. Being around others with a passion for music and seemingly open-mindedness was a new world for me.
It was also when I was introduced to how dangerous it could be to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. The police were always looking for a reason to search you and hoping to get a response that would prompt them to throw you in the backseat in handcuffs. I never did drugs but walked into two different situations where friends were being busted for drugs, and I was met at the door by the cops in both situations. Since I didn’t have drugs on me, I was let go, but I’m not sure everyone was treated that way.
I met a lot of wonderful people while working at the Catacombs; sadly, many are no longer around. Hearing Ellen McIllwayne was mind-altering as a songwriter, singer, and one of the best slide players I ever heard. So many people, such as Joe South and Ray Whitley (both songwriters enshrined in the Georgia Music Hall of Fame), were my mentors. I don’t hear any ghosts when I stand on the corner of 14th and Peachtree these days; the traffic has drowned them out.
Courtesy of Darryl Rhoades
When the Sex Pistols made its infamous North American debut in 1978 in Atlanta at the Great Southeast Music Hall, you sat in with the opening act, Cruise-O-Matic. What was that craziness like?
I was asked to sit in at the end of their set and perform a song that I’d performed many times with the Hahavishnu Orchestra, “Boot In Your Face,” which was more of a take-off on The Ramones but still had the capability to piss off punk fans, specifically Sex Pistols fans. We knew there’d be pushback, actually, we hoped there’d be pushback, and the target was hit.
Yes, it was a circus. I sat in the dressing room with those guys, and they looked nervous except for Sid Vicious. He just looked like he was circling another galaxy. When Cruise-O-Matic hit the stage, they experienced some resistance. Pistol’s fans probably weren’t dialed into “I’m a Girl Watcher” or “Secret Agent Man.”
When I was introduced, I was wearing a baseball jersey with “Kill Me” spray painted on my chest. I stuck a huge safety pin made out of a clothes hanger in my mouth, and had an incredibly large safety pin made from welded metal strapped around my waist to appear as if it was running through my stomach. I was the recipient of several tomatoes and enough eggs to make a small omelet. The Pistols were warned not to spit on anyone, but I picked up the slack since I wasn’t.
Courtesy of Darryl Rhoades
Your music career was marked by your band, the legendary and notorious Hahavishnu Orchestra. It was part comedy, part performance art, part music. How do you reflect back on that band?
It was an era that produced [Frank] Zappa, The Bonzo Dog Band, The Tubes, and a few other bands that appealed to my taste. I wrote then as I do now, whatever hits my groove. I started writing simple, funny songs like “Leprosy Queen,” “The Song is Boring,” and “Suicide” that were so over the top that hearing them made an impact which snowballed.
When I started hanging out with [legendary New York City songwriter] Doc Pomus, he was encouraging and got every angle of what we were doing. Martin Mull was a fan, but he viewed us as competition. I don’t mean that as a criticism; he was one of my heroes. He told me he was humiliated when he had to follow us, and I understood what he meant. He came out solo, sitting on a couch playing guitar, and performed smartly crafted songs after our over-the-top, circus-like performance with costumes, dancers, backup singers in drag and a very tight band playing all styles of music.

The segment we did as a takeoff of the Johnny Carson show was easily my favorite. Jan played the part of a self-absorbed famous singer and performed the “I Am Woman” Helen Reddy parody that I wrote during the Hahavishnu Orchestra period. I wore a lime green leisure suit, a wig that looked like road kill, and a Mr. T starter kit around my neck. Jan was as sweet and funny as advertised. She was in several of my WTBS appearances and always excellent. But this one episode will always hit the groove for me.

Being on the road with 14 people is like herding cats. Maintaining a large band on a national tour with several vehicles was challenging, but adding in the difficulties of doing so under a less-than-friendly budget made it almost impossible.
After disbanding the Men From Glad in 1988, I entered some comedy competitions and quickly started getting work and a steady paycheck. It satisfied my need to be on stage, and I love being alone most of the time while I’m traveling. The downside is missing the camaraderie on stage and the bantering you feed off of with good friends.
My comedy is a little different than most of those I’ve worked with. I go from straight standup to music, spoken work, and singing a capella. Sometimes I’ll work the crowds for a good bit, but rarely work blue and never do politics. I’d probably anger a lot of people if I went that direction mainly because I see what I see and hear what I hear. I still enjoy stand-up but try to only work venues I enjoy. I’m not chasing anything; I got stuff to do everyday no matter where I am.
If you could go back and give one piece of advice to your 21-year-old self, what would it be?
I don’t have a long list. I did everything I wanted at the time and what I haven’t done yet is on my list for things to do. I surrounded myself with great friends, broke a few hearts, and had mine broken a few times, so I’d say we’re even.
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Atlanta, GA
Seahawks Travel To Atlanta And Alabama For A Civil Rights Learning Tour
“I am at this point where I can’t imagine not going,” Wilkins-Mickey said. “Every year I learn something new. Of course they add different experiences everything we go, so it really does feel different every time, but I want to learn. I want to continue to learn. This is our culture, it’s our history and I would like to continue to understand why we are where we are today. And I think the only way to do that is to understand our past. Every time I go, I just feel so inspired. It gives me purpose to do the work that I do.”
The trip starts with a flight from Seattle to Atlanta where the group has their first glimpse of what to expect for the rest of their week. The group was given a tour of an area of downtown Atlanta called “Sweet Auburn Ave.” which was once a booming community and neighborhood, filled with businesses, that was systemically dismantled by a highway that was built through the neighborhood. Businesses and families were forced to leave.
Keenan Allen Ladd, one of three educators on the tour said, “I really just appreciated the educators in those moments, because they take you through the whole story of the major moments that happened in the Civil Rights Movement.”
The rest of that first day was spent at the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park, his birth home and other sites in Atlanta before making the drive to the neighboring state of Alabama to visit Anniston, where the Freedom Riders boarded a bus at the Greyhound station and which was attacked by a group of white supremacist,
The group spent the remainder of their trip in different cities in Alabama, including Birmingham, Montgomery and Selma.
While in Montgomery, the group visited the Montgomery riverfront, a location where enslaved people were brought off of boats and taken to the city’s downtown area to be auctioned off.
Leann Coates, Seahawks premium service representative, described the experience as shocking.
“It’s very powerful to be standing there at the riverfront, and know that not long ago, people were brought on ships and sold. That street is still called commerce street. Things have not changed in the way you think they have changed.”
While the group was in Montgomery, one of the locations they visited was the Legacy Museum, a museum that immerses visitors in the history of Black Americans from the Transatlantic slave trade all the way through to present day and mass incarceration.
And while the actual tour of the South was just five days, the journey doesn’t stop there. Ladd said he immediately returned to his classroom and thought about ways to get his students involved and educated on the topics he learned about on the tour. Allen Ladd said he utilized the one thing he knows all of his students use, social media, specifically Tik Tok and Instagram reels, to help the students learn information in a natural way.
“When I got back, I actually had them all take out their phones and go on Tik Tok and look up the Institute for Common Power, just so they could see that experience first-hand. We did that for like two days. By the third day, a lot of their algorithm’s changes and they were able to get real life information that they weren’t getting before.”
He added, “This tour furthers my want, urge and that yearning to make sure I’m standing up for everyone who doesn’t have the opportunity to utilize their voice, to just amplify voices. There’s a lot of people that we’ve learned on this trip, this Truth and Purpose, to utilize your voice for the voice of others. And that’s something that I’m going to do… I’m in a unique position as an educator. I have the opportunity to guide or facilitate youth, and I have an opportunity to open the eyes of our youth and I have something that is precious… I want to make sure they have the correct information. I don’t want to steer them in a particular direction, but I definitely want to put the correct information in front of them, so they can understand what this country looked like previously, to give them a vision of what they believe this country should look like moving forward in the future.”
A lot of the participants come away from the trip feeling a sense of community, empowered and are more enlightened about the history of Black Americans than they were before.
Learn more about the Truth and Purpose tour and the organization, the Institute for Common Power, that spearheads this trip here.
Atlanta, GA
Fallen tree damages cars, blocks I-285 WB in Fulton County
ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) — I-285 WB was blocked in Fulton County on Thursday morning as crews cleaned up a fallen tree.
Video of the scene showed the tree and leaf litter sprawled across several lanes. Crews were using chainsaws to clean up the mess.
Several vehicles at the scene appear to be damaged, but it’s unknown if anyone was hurt. Atlanta News First has reached out to the fire department for more information.
As of 9 a.m., the road had partially reopened.
This is a developing story. Check back with Atlanta News First as we learn more.
Copyright 2026 WANF. All rights reserved.
Atlanta, GA
Grading The Atlanta Hawks Selection of North Carolina C Henri Veesaar At Pick No. 52
When the Hawks were picking at No. 23 last night, one of the players that was on the board and thought to be in consideration was North Carolina center Henri Veesaar. Veesaar was one of the top centers at the point in the draft and would have been a totally reasonable pick for Atlanta at No. 23. However, Atlanta selected Saint John’s big man Zuby Ejiofor, and Veesaar slipped out of the first round altogether.
Veesaar continued to take an unexpected tumble in this year’s draft and was facing a lot of criticism about his decision to leave college for the NBA, spurning lots of NIL money in the process and falling farther than anyone thought.
His fall ended at No. 52, however, when the Atlanta Hawks traded up from No. 57 to select him. Veesaar becomes the third draft pick for the Hawks in this year’s draft, joining a class that includes Houston PG Kingston Flemings and the aforementioned Ejiorfor.
Now that the Hawks have another big man on their roster, how does he fit and what kind of grade should Atlanta get for selecting him
First thoughts on Veesaar
There was some criticism about the Hawks taking Ejiofor last night, not because of his skillset necessarily, but because he was another undersized big.
Veesaar stands at 6’11, 227 LBS and he is going to give the Hawks size on the interior, strong rebounding, and can stretch the floor as a big, which is a skill that the Hawks value.
After transferring to North Carolina from Arizona, Veesaar proceeded to have the best season of his college career. He started 31 games for the Tar Heels and averaged 17.0 PPG, 8.7 RPG, and 2.1 APG while shooting 62% from the floor and 43% from three. Veesaar had decent volume as a three point shooter as well averaging three attempts per game.
There is a lot to like about how he is going to translate to the NBA level. There is one big concern with Veesaar and it is his defense.
If there is one on-court reason Veesaar slipped this far in the draft, it is because he is quite a poor defender. He lacks quickness and lateral movement as a rim protector, does not operate well in space, and is going to be targeted heavily at the next level. For him to become a viable big in the NBA, even if just a backup, Veesaar is going to have to become a much better defender.
Still, his skillset on offense is a huge plus this late in the draft.
The Hawks are going to have some decisions to make with their roster and there is no guarantee that Veesaar is going to make it on a guaranteed contract. I think this is a wonderful pick though by the Hawks, as he fills a huge need and was the best player available by far.
The Atlanta front office continues to preach best player available and this selection is further proof of that.
Grade: A-
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