Katastrophe (rapper)

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Rocco Kayiatos
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Katastrophe
Katastrophe at Grog Shop, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, 2011
Katastrophe at Grog Shop, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, 2011
Background information
Born (1979-10-02) October 2, 1979 (age 44)
GenresHip hop
Occupation(s)Rapper, record producer
Years active1997–2014
LabelsKnox
Cherchez La Femme
Sugartruck
Websiteroccokayiatos.com

Rocco Kayiatos, known professionally as Katastrophe and in some later releases as Rocco Katastrophe, is an American rapper.[1][2][3][4]

Based in the

poetry slams in 1997. After winning the 1998 Youth Speaks poetry slam, he went on tour with Sister Spit's Rambling Road Show tour.[5]
As a teenager, Kayiatos had poems on four compilation CDs.

He is widely credited as the first openly transgender singer in the hip-hop genre and he often incorporates his identity as a trans man into his work.

Music career

In 2001, he recorded with Mark Schaffer the title song, Candyass, to the feature film Sugar High Glitter City, directed by Shar Rednour (who broached the project to Katastrophe on a Sister Spit tour) and Jackie Strano; the soundtrack was nominated for an

AVN Award but lost to Snoop Dogg.[6]
Katastrophe and Schaffer then formed hip-hop group The End of the World along with Ricky Lee; Schaffer subsequently began performing solo as Schaffer the Darklord.[6]

Katastrophe started making

hip hop culture to discuss larger issues of community, space, privilege, sex, and self-worth.[8]

He was named Producer of the Year by Outmusic Awards for his debut album Let's Fuck, Then Talk About My Problems on the Sugartruck Recordings label, released in 2004.[6][9] In 2005, Kayiatos toured nationally with the Tranny Roadshow, a first of its kind, all transgender, touring variety show.[10][11] Kayiatos released a second album entitled Fault, Lies and Faultlines on the Cherchez La Femme label in 2005,[12] and a third full-length release, The Worst Amazing, was released in October 2009 on 307 Knox Records. In 2008 he wrote, produced, directed, and starred in a multimedia show, HomeMade SuperHero. He also performs with Jenna Riot as the music act Ice Cream Socialites.[13]

He is featured in the documentary films Poetic License, Pick Up the Mic, Enough Man, and Riot Acts.[14][15][16] He was described as one of the most accomplished rappers in the

homo hop documentary Pick Up the Mic.[17]
His video for the song "The Life" was on
biopic entitled The State of Katastrophe. He has toured in the U.S. and Europe.[18]

Publishing career

In October 2009, he and Amos Mac founded Original Plumbing, the first magazine by and for trans men.[19]

Post-musical Career

Kayiatos has held leadership positions at

Chief Content Officer at FOLX Health, and co-creator and director of Camp Lost Boys, a sleep away summer camp "exclusively for adult men of trans experience."[20]

Discography

Albums

  • 2004: Let's Fuck, Then Talk About My Problems (Sugartruck Recordings)
  • 2005: Fault, Lies and Faultlines (Cherchez La Femme label)
  • 2009: The Worst Amazing (307 Knox Records)
  • 2012: Second Hand Emotion (307 Knox Records)

Videography

References

  1. ^ Marech, Rona, "Heavy-handed but tender-hearted, transgender hip-hopper Katastrophe is a rebel with a cause", San Francisco Chronicle, February 25, 2005, accessed November 6, 2009
  2. ^ Ganahi, Jane, "Michelle Tea mines her colorful past for a graphic memoir. And we mean graphic", San Francisco Chronicle, August 25, 2004, accessed November 6, 2009
  3. ^ Marech, Rona, "Throw out your pronouns -- 'he' and 'she' are meaningless terms in the Bay Area's flourishing transgender performance scene", San Francisco Chronicle, December 29, 2003, accessed November 7, 2009
  4. ^ Schwartz, Abby, "Queer on the mic Is rap music the final frontier for GLBT artists?", Gay and Lesbian Times, Issue 881, November 11, 2004, accessed November 9, 2009
  5. ^ Anderson-Minshall, Jacob (December 22, 2005), "Man Enough to Take on Rap", San Francisco Bay Times, retrieved November 11, 2009
  6. ^ a b c Swan, Rachel (2005-02-16), "Trans-Cendent: Katastrophe joins up with Deep Dickollective, The Godfathers of Gay Hip-Hop", East Bay Express, retrieved 2009-11-25
  7. Daily Nebraskan, archived from the original
    on January 21, 2013, retrieved November 11, 2009
  8. Pop Matters
    , March 18, 2004, accessed November 7, 2009
  9. ^ "OMA Nominees". Outmusic. 2005. Retrieved 2009-11-25.
  10. ^ "Richmond IMC: tranny roadshow pulling into richmond". richmond.indymedia.org. Retrieved 2022-05-12.
  11. ^ Tunks, Jane. "The Tranny Pack". SF Weekly. Archived from the original on 2021-09-28. Retrieved 2022-05-12.
  12. The Advocate
    , November 8, 2005
  13. ^ Del Mar, Pollo (July 17, 2008), "Pollo Hates Missing Out on the Fun", San Francisco Bay Times, retrieved November 11, 2009
  14. ^ Martinfield, Seán, "Frameline 32" Archived 2009-01-19 at the Wayback Machine, San Francisco Sentinel, June 27, 2009, accessed November 7, 2009
  15. After Ellen Archived July 22, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
    , October 18, 2006, accessed November 7, 2009
  16. ^ "The Actor Slash Model Film Project", accessed August 12, 2010
  17. ^ Butcher, Terrence (June 23, 2009), "Pic up the Mic: The Evolution of Homohop", Pop Matters
  18. ^ Barreto, Mac (2004-11-23), Katastrophe: Hip Hop Against the Grain, Wiretap, retrieved 2009-11-07
  19. Time Out New York
    , October 22–28, 2009, accessed April 29, 2015
  20. ^ "Rocco Kayiatos". Rocco Kayiatos. Retrieved 2022-06-14.

External links