{{Infobox musical artist
| name = Hello, The Future!
| image = Nicole Dieker performing as Hello the Future.jpg
| background = group_or_band
| alias =
| origin = Washington, D.C., United States
| genre = Nerd-folk, singer-songwriter
| years_active = 2010–present
| birth_date = (1981-11-04) November 4, 1981 (age 40)
| associated_acts = The Long Holidays, Adam Sakellarides, Glen Raphael
| label =
| website = hello-the-future
![]() | The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for music. (December 2013) |
Hello, The Future! is a nerd-folk band whose only permanent member is Nicole Dieker. She has been performing as Hello, The Future! since May 2010,[1][2] when she recorded and uploaded one song a week to YouTube for 100 consecutive weeks.[3]
The band has released several albums and often performs at pop culture conventions.[4][5]
Although usually introduced as a solo act ("My name is Nicole, my band is Hello, The Future! and I am the only person in my band"[6]), Hello, The Future sometimes performs and/or records with other performers or even a full backing band; Giant Robot Album was a collaboration with the band The Long Holidays.[7]
In 2011 Dieker organized a charity project called "Mink Car Cover" (based on the They Might Be Giants album Mink Car) in which 19 different artists (including MC Frontalot, Marian Call, Molly Lewis, and The Doubleclicks) recorded covers of the original TMBG tracks to release a new version of the album. In addition to providing project management, Hello, The Future! recorded one of the tracks. The new album was released on September 11, 2011 (the tenth anniversary of the Twin Towers attack) to raise money for the FDNY Foundation; over $5000 in donations were raised from sales.[8][9][10]
In August 2012, Dieker ran a successful kickstarter campaign to support the development of Geek Girl EP and Giant Robot Album.[11][12]
Nicole Dieker studied composition as an undergrad at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio (where she performed with the Miami University Choraliers) and attended graduate school at Illinois State University.[2][13]
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)General | |
---|---|
National libraries |