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"Red River"

by Rocky Votolato
This song comes from Rocky Votolato's new record True Devotion. He'll celebrating it's release at Neumos on March 13th

Laura Veirs and the Hall of Flames

At Neumos ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth
Laura Veirs is at the Tractor Tavern March 13th with the Old Believers and Cataldo

The Round 58

March 9th at the Fremont Abbey, Tacoma's Goldfinch play the Round with local potters as the featured artists

June 18, 2008

The Local Beat - Third Week in June

starfucker
Starfucker at the Greenhouse ::: Photo by Josh

Portland band Starfucker gives us a taste of their forthcoming LP. The song, titled “German Love,” is off their first LP set to arrive in September. It’s a winner. |dl it at End Hits|

Dream Lineup: Wilco announce opening dates that include Fleet Foxes. The dates in August (18, 20, 21, 23) are all in the Northwest. |pitchfork|

Good stuff out this week. Team Gina and The Notwist have new ones you should sample, and the Bowerbirds are nationally reissuing their Hymns for a Dark Horse, an album that comes with our highest recommendation.

Oh yeah, and the album with that inescapable song “I Kissed a Girl” by Katy Perry came out. Seriously 107.7fm. You don’t have to play it every hour. Did you know she used to be a Christian singer, albiet with a different name? I refuse to link to her site or give her any tag love. Ugh.

Big acts are announcing their late summer and fall dates. Here are a few future Seattle club dates, post Capitol Hill Block Party that I think are notable (this is my first time really thinking past that weekend):

Conor Oberst @ Neumos on July 30
Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band, Awesome and BOAT @ Neumos July 31
CANCELED! The Faint @ Showbox Aug 2
POSTPONED! Stars @ Showbox Aug 23
Bon Iver @ Neumos Aug 30
Okkervil River @ Showbox Sept 17
CSS @ Showbox Sept 18
Blue Scholars and Hieroglyphics @ Showbox 26 & 27
Raconteurs @ WaMu Theatre on Sept 19
Black Kids @ Neumos on Oct 10
Leo Kottke, Louden Wainwright III @ The Moore Oct 12
Lykke Li @ Neumos on Oct 29

With Bumbershoot happening at it’s end I kinda think August will be a slow month for big acts. And I’m okay with that. Being outside of the club in the hot months is fine by me.

And in not local but still notable news …

Chinese Democracy does exist. And it’s leaking. And people are saying it’s actually good. Oh boy! |Metal Sucks|

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May 28, 2008

Sasquatch Snapshots - Sunday

death cab for cutie

Death Cab For Cutie ::: Photo by Josh

Sunday ended up being my favorite day of the festival. Not unexpectedly, the bands that we hyped did well. And another band who we were thinking and hoping might steal the show did.

We started the day early, making the veteran move by going to the short ticket line and promptly being let through. So we were in before the first act, Seattle band Awesome on the mainstage. The first thing I thought to myself was “Finally! A stage that the entire band will fit on!” They joked R.E.M. were actually the ones opening for them, albeit with a 13 hour interlude.

A local band I’ve been bumping for the past month or so on my iPod and have been ready to see is the Maldives. As we walked up to the Yeti Stage it was obvious we made the right decision in coming up. Vintage sounding folk-rock at its finest. Not long after them Truckasaurus emerged and stirred up the Yeti Stage field with a generous dollop of dance.

J Tillman was the winner of most sets played at Sasquatch this year, clocking in at three, one solo, and two as the new drummer of Fleet Foxes. For his solo set to a lounging crowd in the Yeti field, he told us he realized it was “a tall order” hanging out there instead of being at Blue Scholars, who’s beats occasionally overwhelmed Tillman’s sparse strums. Tillman still managed to deliver a set of his best though, powering through the occasional swell of sound from the mainstage whilst remaining the consummate quiet performer.

As suspected Cold War Kids broke out no less than five new songs, starting the set with “Avalanche” and naming a few other new cuts as “Mexican Dogs” and “Every Man I Fall For”. Perennial favorites “Hospital Beds” and “We Used to Vacation” also made an appearance.

The set of the day though had to be Death Cab’s sunset entrance on the mainstage as they opened for the Cure. Ben Gibbard, garbed all in tight black remarked “I wear black tonight for two reasons. I wear black because of the way I feel on the inside. And I’m wearing black because I’m so effing psyched to see the Cure tonight!” Yes he really said that. They engineered a pretty rockin’ set that included many new numbers, but also a few of the fan favorites like “Sound of Settling” and “I Will Follow You Into the Dark.” No more “405″ kids, sorry. My personal pick of the night though was a pretty rad rendition of “We Laugh Indoors.” These guys have really grown into the arena rock mold. I am genuinely happy for their success.

While Ben might have been super excited for the Cure, I was interested but mostly just indifferent. Indifference seemed to be the word of the day for the Cure too as they simply were bored and boring. They had pristine guitar tone and played the music well. They just seemed uninterested and like they didn’t want to there. And as a result I just wasn’t very moved. The light show was cool I guess. But that was about it. Blue Scholars or M.I.A. should have headlined instead. I heard they both killed it.

the campground - the techno tent

The Campground - The Techno Tent ::: Photo by Josh

awesome

Awesome ::: Photo by Josh

the maldives

The Maldives ::: Photo by Josh

truckasaurus

Truckasaurus ::: Photo by Josh

the gorge

The Gorge ::: Photo by Josh

j tillman

J Tillman ::: Photo by Josh

cold war kids

Cold War Kids ::: Photo by Josh

sera cahoone

Sera Cahoone ::: Photo by Abbey
ben
Death Cab For Cutie ::: Photo by Josh

Flickr: Sasquatch Music Festival at the Gorge, Saturday May 25, 2008

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December 5, 2007

Tis the Season

It’s the holiday season, and you know what that means… Strangercrombie time! That’s right, the fine folks over at the Stranger have put together a horde of items on eBay, which you can bid on to benefit FareStart. Strangercrombie is a special auction, featuring items and events of all kinds that you will find no where else. In the music category one can find auctions for show posters, parties at local venues, bands covering the song of your choice and even a Cat Power autographed acoustic guitar.

The sweetest item in the music section though is probably the “Your Band’s Big Break” item featuring a new guitar, studio time at Electrokitty studio in Seattle, mastering for that recording, styling by VAIN for a photoshoot by a Rolling Stone photographer, a couple dates at the Sunset and the opportunity to have someone at Sub Pop actually listen to your music. The band that gets that one will be lucky dogs.

I’m seriously considering bidding on this item, or event, rather: a night to have local rock photographer Charles Peterson critique what you’ve done and even tutor you at a live show. What a great idea. After looking at his page, I can safely say I want to be Charles Peterson when I grow up. I am also considering bidding on “Awesome” writing a special song. This blog desperately needs a theme song.

On the not music side of things… this. $10000 already? WTF? I don’t understand why he is so popular. At least it’s all for a good cause.

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December 27, 2006

This Weekend in Live Music

What a weekend, huh? Blue Scholars and Common Market are bringing hip hop back in this town. Wild Sweet Orange is Abbey’s new favorite band. Dusty 45’s is a local rockabilly whirlwind always worth seeing. And I still haven’t seen one of my favorite discoveries of this year, Slender Means. I’ll probably be missing that as we’re trying to go to a house party show for a couple of bands that we like on New Years Eve. Choices, choices.

December 29 - Dusty 45’s, West Valley Highway, The Histronaughts - The Tractor Tavern - $10 - 9pm
December 30 - Blue Scholars, Common Market - Neumos - All Ages
December 30 - Jeremy Enigk, Wild Sweet Orange, Pablo, Catfish Haven, The Village Green - Chop Suey - $20 - doors open at 5pm
December 31 - Blue Scholars, Common Market - Neumos - 21+
December 31 - Harvey Danger, Slender Means, Awesome - The Crocodile - $20
December 31 - Jeremy Enigk, Wild Sweet Orange, Walter Meego, The Ettes - Chop Suey - $25

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December 8, 2006

Strangercrombie Auction: There goes my paycheck

As always around this time of year the Stranger writers come together, take some hot pictures of male models and come up with auction items for this year’s Strangercrombie auction to benefit Northwest Harvest, a very worthy non-profit that provides hunger assistance to those in our region. All the bidding starts at $1.99 and is done on EBay. Here are some of the music related items I may or may not be bidding on:

Made-to-order Cover Songs: Have a celebrity (or at least a local celebrity) do a cover song of your choice. Options include Dina Martina, Harvey Danger, BOAT, and Sound on the Sound fav’s “Awesome.”

So You Want to be a Rock Star: Have people from Barsuk and Sub Pop give a listen to your demo and have a poster artist do a poster for an upcoming show.

Queen of KEXP: Get VIP access to KEXP events and some special performances.

I think I will definitely be after this one though. This music blogger’s dream package.

King of Clubs Get yourself on the guest list for a whole goddamn year at Chop Suey (one show per week), the Crocodile Cafe (ditto), Neumo’s (ditto), the Sunset Tavern (ditto), the Showbox (two tickets per month), Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley (two tickets), plus a happy-hour party for 30 of your friends at the Sunset Tavern in Ballard. Add two passes to the Experience Music Project and a copy of Crossroads, the EMP’s 178-page hardcover book celebrating American pop music, and, well, you’re the king (or queen) of clubs. Priceless! Opening bid: $1.99!

The current bid is $676. It’s still worth it though if we think about it hard and attempt to utilize our public educatin math skillz. Just 4 shows per week at an average of $12 bucks a show is $50 x 52 weeks = $2600. Thats not even counting showbox shows or the happy-hour party.

Also included in the auction are a some poster packages, one of which is a Pearl Jam poster package (this means you Becca), and a Bumbershoot VIP ticket set for next year’s festival.

Good Job Stranger for giving the people what they want … now if only I could afford it.

Posted by josh in news, random wonderfulness

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December 2, 2006

Show of the Week Review - Tapes n’ Tapes with The Long Winters and “Awesome”

Tapes n’ Tapes, The Long Winters, “Awesome”
University of Washington HUB Ballroom
November 30, 2006

Cut to Hipster Central but set in an 80’s school auditorium. A college auditorium, in fact, that’s strangely reminiscent of where you had your middle school dances. A sign greets you at the door “No Smoking, No Drinking.” A cursory look around suggests that 95% of all the people in the room are under 21. Many of them look 14. Some of them sound ten. It’s all-ages, so I guess they could be ten. They are all in proper uniform dressed up in their Conor Oberst or Billy Jo impression for the guys or quite curiously for the girls, circa 1980’s style Madonna and Tiffany. It is my verdant hope that leggings are a vestige of the 80’s that remains a vestige, a fashion reanimated only for a single year, a style that is tossed aside once the next season rolls around and everyone realizes again how much the eighties sucked.

We arrived around 8:45 to find “Awesome” in the midst of their set. Having not seen them, but heard good things in the Stranger and on the blogs, this local group had a dashing professional look, every one of them wearing a suit of some kind. Altogether they were looking like a 1940’s swing band. Either that or they were members of the mafia hiding tommy guns under their oversize zoot suits. I prefer the swing band. Despite the unconventional banjo and mandolin, this band had no problem looking and sounding like a high energy rock band. At least four of seven or eight members had duties doing singing of some kind and they all sounded accomplished and practiced.The highlight of their set was when throughout their final song the banjo player (and University of Washington Philosophy Professor) did a david-byrne-ish a la “Stop Making Sense” groovy robot dance. Folding his body down to the stage and then folding it back up, he gyrated wildly to the music, looking like Data doing an interpretive dance after he took some android acid. It was awkward and hilarious all at the same time, as well as a good omen for the success of this night.

The Long Winters were up next. I had been hyping John Roderick as a live act to my friends for some time now; so the expectations were high. Much of my hype surrounded Roderick himself as an avid talker on stage, and someone who likes to interact with his audience. Before even beginning his first song he requested to see if anyone in the front rows had a pick, as he didn’t like the one he brought with him, to which a surprising number of fans were at the ready with picks in hand. Later, he righteously complained with a huge dose of sarcasm that the sets were abnormally short (7/8 songs in the case of the long winters) because of “homeland security.” Despite the set being short, Roderick was not short on talk. Covering all sorts of things, like his short stint at UW (where he didn’t graduate), how EP’s are just an indie band thing now, and how kisses with the bassist Eric would only cost $5. When announcing “Tapes n’ Tapes will be up next” he alluded to their recent rise in popularity by chiding that they were probably out in a “white limo” waiting to come on, and a female fan yelled out, “Doing Coke off a hookers ass!” at which point Roderick slyly repeated into the mic for the entire audience to hear with a deadpan voice, “Yes, doing coke off a hookers ass.” Then retorting to the audience member, “You dirty dirty girl.”

While the audience interaction was great, from the get go their set was one small technical disaster after another. A “comedy of errors” if you will. One of the guitars got a broken string in the middle of the first song. Later on in the middle of two different songs Roderick’s guitar cable got disconnected, once causing him to finish his guitar solo by singing the notes until his guitar was reconnected by active dancer and multi instrumentalist Jonathan who had accidentally disconnected it.  Neither case managed to be a song stopper as the band just powered through with grins from ear to ear over their bad luck.  At one moment as Roderick was talking into his mic and while adjusting it, it fell out of its holder and began to hang from the stand. Roderick deadpanned:”And on this next song, I will sing with my bellybutton.” Each event was taken in stride but with a bit of obvious embarrassment over the circumstances and some goofy smiles.

 The Long Winters

While their set was heinously short they managed to put together material that would all go on a “best of” The Long Winters tape. Old favorites “Blue Diamonds” and “Carparts” accompanied new favorites “Fire Island, AK” and “Pushover”. Without a set list Roderick was accepting requests and ”Honest” was the choice song of the girls in front of us. Roderick played “Pushover” on an acoustic guitar without a strap and mused beforehand that he would be reenacting the days before some smart guy invented the guitar strap. The lack of a strap didn’t hinder his ability to play and it ended up being my favorite song of the night. For a number of the more active songs the audience was treated to the spectacle that was Roderick’s glasses slipping down to the end of his nose and him occasionally whipping his head back to reorient them in their rightful position, only to have them slide down his nose again.  

Tapes n’ Tapes, a Minnesota four-piece who received much acclaim for their 2005 release The Loon, have stepped it up since we last saw them this summer. Then, they were touring with Cold War Kids and Figurines, as opening acts, which certainly didn’t do them any favors. Both CWK and The Figurines have amazing natural stage presence and  they handily showed up Tapes n’ Tapes in the performing department. Going after those guys has go to be a headliner’s worst nightmare. This time though, their entire stage vibe was different. It was coursing with the fun, energy, and confidence they previously lacked. Musically their performance was tighter, every loud to quiet transition was perfect and every band member seemed in sync with their amazing drummer. They played only a few from their album, a few older ones pre album, and I think one or two new ones. Dancing all over the stage, sweating their balls off, with big smiles made this performance instantly likable and very memorable for everyone involved. It was clear that they were having a good time and didn’t want to be anywhere else right at that moment.

 Tapes n' Tapes

For my money, Tapes n’ Tapes drummer Jeremy Hanson was the best drummer I saw all year. While sporting a haircut dangerously close to being a mullet and seeming rather small and un-drummer-looking this guy has mad chops and it’s obvious. His kit isn’t big and he doesn’t act flashy, he just has this aura of controlled ferocity that I haven’t ever seen before. His arms aren’t lazy and just hanging next to him, instead he holds them out in front of him and above the drums, always at the ready. His style seems minimalist, sparse, but very punctuated and strong. Even playing the fast songs he never looks frantic or even close to being anything other than in total control. Occasionally breaking out into jazz solos in the middle of songs this nineteen year old has it all. He could lose the fashion mullet though as far as I’m concerned.

“Awesome” impressed me enough that I bought their album and will be interested in seeing a full set sometime soon. Anyone supporting the cause of the banjo in my book is a band worth supporting. If said banjo player dances like a madman on stage purely for my entertainment and joy, and he delivers, I’ll definitely be coming back for more. The Long Winters were enjoyable despite the various blunders and I will of course be looking forward to a longer set sometime soon. Roderick was funny and interactive as usual although my room-mate thought he was on some very good drugs. To me, it looked to like he might have just been high on life and bizarre circumstance. Tapes n’ Tapes lived up to their “headliner” status on the second time around, impressing a couple of my friends who have an aversion to anything new that comes out, by putting on an energy filled performance that kept the audience engaged.

Related

Flickr Photoset: Awesome, Tapes n’ Tapes, The Long Winters November 30, 2006 at the HUB Ballroom

MySpace: Tapes n’ Tapes
MySpace: The Long Winters
Official: Awesome (Awesome from Austin already has myspace)

Sound on the Sound Album Review: The Long Winters - Putting the Days to Rest

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November 30, 2006

Show of the Week: The Long Winters, Tapes n’ Tapes, “Awesome”

Tonight is our show of the week featuring The Long Winters, Tapes n’ Tapes, and “Awesome.” It’s at the UW HUB (student union) ballroom which I haven’t been to since I was a wee freshman. The Long Winters have the best release of 2006 in SOTS’s humble opinion and they have a live show to match it. Tapes n’ Tapes have one of our favorite releases of 2005 and “Awesome” are local up-and-comers with an energetic live show (so I hear).

Hopefully I can get my new camera figured out and get some sweet pictures for you guys.

On a related note: Damn you fate! Why did you have to choose the Little Ones to play in seattle tonight. I guess I will have to settle for the Live Performance on KEXP at 2pm.

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November 27, 2006

Seattle Live Shows - 11/28-12/3

This week promises to be one of the finest weeks of the year as far as live music goes. Long Winters, The Faint, Cat Power, Tapes n’ Tapes, and the Little Ones all visit our fair city this snowy week. Local boys and one of my favorites Dusty 45’s are at the Tractor for an Animal Rescue Benefit (which means it is obviously a great place to pick up chicks). Something to see everday except, well, today.

Tuesday Nov. 28 - Cat Power - Showbox

Wednesday Nov. 29 - Dusty 45’s - Tractor Tavern

Thursday Nov. 30 - The Long Winters, Tapes n’ Tapes, “Awesome” - HUB Ballroom

Thursday Nov. 30 - The Little Ones, Small Sins - Neumos

Thursday Nov. 30 - Manplus - The Crocodile Cafe

Friday Dec. 1 - Amy Millan, Greg Laswell - the Triple Door

Saturday Dec. 2 - The Faint, Ratatat, DJ Colby B - Showbox

Sunday Dec. 3 - Silversun Pickups, Wolfmother - Moore Theatre - sold out

Next week is also a major week with the Death Cab-Jenny Lewis show, the Deck the Hall Ball with the Shins, Joanna Newsom, and the KEXP Benefit with Cold War Kids and Ted Leo.

Posted by josh in Tour News, news

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October 25, 2006

More Tour News

Ted Leo and his Pharmacists have been added to the Death Cab and Jenny Lewis bill at Key Arena on December 9. This show is going to be sweet.

Tapes n’ Tapes will be headlining a show with The Long Winters and Awesome at the University of Washington HUB ballroom on November 30. Dammit. This show is the same day as the Little Ones show. Choices choices.

Harp-playing Bjork-channeling indie darling Joanna Newsom is headlining a show at the Showbox on December 4. She is definitely a sight to behold, and when I first saw her I never imagined that she would be headlining.

Posted by josh in Tour News, news

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