September 20, 2011

My Five Thoughts on Bumbershoot

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Starfucker Crowd ::: photo by Christopher Nelson for Bumbershoot

Or something like that.

During the Bumbershoot’s of yesteryear I tried my best to bear witness to local acts playing on bigger stages to eager festival crowds. I enjoy watching music lovers appreciate the creations of people who live in their community are total strangers that walk, eat, sleep and breathe amongst ordinary people like you and I. You didn’t think you’d see your bus boy on the EMP Stage when he was making your dishes disappear as swiftly as possible the other day, did you? You didn’t think the girl who put the flower design in your coffee would be at Bumbershoot doing the same thing crooning into a microphone and making everyone fall in love with her all over again.

Or maybe you did, baristas get stalked.

That’s enough talk about what all single men who enjoy women and coffee do men in tin foil hats do. Let’s talk about Bumbershoot and acts that (for the most part) aren’t native to Seattle.

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Wiz Khalifa ::: photo by Morgan Keuler for Bumbershoot

Wiz Khalifa

Nobody beats The Wiz, right? My fingers must have typed out that hash tag on twitter a half dozen times because Wiz’s set reminded me of an ill-fated record store back on the east coast my hands were holding on to nothing else but my cell phone. My hands were on technology. My mind was somewhere else. My eyes were watching others live their youth as reckless as it’s supposed to be lived.

Why in god’s name would you rush the stage for a b-grade mainstream hip-hop artist like Wiz Khalifa? Why not? You’re young and that’s what young people do. RAGE. Nevermind that the music had not even started yet, you wanted to get close enough to count all of his tattoos. You wanted to show-up Bumbershoot security personnel, who were probably hating their life and everyone else at that juncture in the evening. If you get dragged down by your pony tail or your over-sized DC Shoes t-shirt and banned from the festival for the rest of the weekend, so be it. You’re a minor, a minor threat.

Oddly enough, that’s precisely how I’d describe Wiz Khalifa’s performance. Perhaps I’m being a bit critical but there was nothing “major” about it. At worst, the occasional mob of teenage girls screaming at Wiz whenever he slightly lifted up his wife beater to reveal *gasp* scales, he’s a fucking lizard skin reminded you that this might be your first teenage heart-throb concert. You know what they say, it’s better late than never. At best, Khalifa’s music was the perfect soundtrack for smoking herb and have an exuberant time.

I hope Mr. Khalifa does not feel that I am “outing” him and his love of marijuana. If anything ever happens to his ability to smoke more than copious amounts of cheeba, I fear that his mental state, record sales and concert attendance will simultaneously plummet like our domestic stock market on the infamous “Black Friday.” Can you imagine?

“What up NYC?!? It’s your boy, Wiz Khalifa (Taylor Gang bitch!) and I’m here to talk to you about smoking that good salvia and practicing abstinence going to the library.”

[Everyone in the audience leaves with the exception of a few people who happen to be smoking salvia and reading Thoreau.]

While I might be able to poke fun at this particular performance by Wiz Khalifa in an anything-but-intimate venue, one thing is for certain, the man appreciates his fans and he stays true to himself. On more than a few occasions he took time from his set to thank the fans and all those who appreciated his music. Sometimes it’s hard to hear genuine appreciation over the banshee work of adolescents and a sound-system that can be heard from aliens making their way through our atmosphere. Khalifa’s appreciation of his audience is important because mutual admiration can be taken for granted in a society that is often at one throat of one another. It goes without saying that the proletariat are always putting the emphasis on seeing musicians as affable, highly evolved versions of apes:

“So and so is such a nice person. That’s what brings me out tonight, I came to show my support…”

As soon as that complete thought parts your lips it becomes a lie. That’s not a valid reason why anyone should ever go to a concert. If that’s why you go to shows these days, you might want to get someone else to guide you through “Logic Reconfiguration 101″ at a local Big University. You won’t get credit for passing the course, but everyday life will begin to make more sense.

As expected, Wiz Khalifa made sure I had a good time before I left Bumbershoot for the day. After all, that is the only reason why I leave my bedroom (no good times are happening there these days, although it is the headquarters to a few promising fantasy football teams) to go anywhere. During “In the Cut” I imagined the 15-year-old version of me smoking weed amongst all my fictional peers on the floor close to the stage. It was at that moment, in both fiction and reality, that all was right with the world.

Read the rest of Phil’s Bumbershoot highlights (more…)

September 16, 2011

The Best of Bumbershoot: Thee Oh Sees

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Thee Oh Sees ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

In trying to appeal to the widest possible audience, Bumbershoot is still hosting acts that aren’t necessarily for THE mass market. The reverb-thick spazz-pop of John Dwyer’s Bay-Area five-piece is more rhythmic than melodic. Dwyer’s quarter-understandable rant-singing isn’t exactly drawing anyone in. But this, to be sure, is Rock & Roll. This music has pace! Licking and gnawing at his guitar between verses and hacking away at his strings, onstage Dwyer is unleashing some carnal energy. Suited to sound good and loud on a basement or tavern PA they had no trouble on a bigger stage with louder speakers. They seemed to be having fun with the change of elbow room, and I certainly didn’t mind not getting beer spilled all over me. Last time they swung through the Funhouse they didn’t have any merch, so this time around I got an ugly black t-shirt. All in all, a successful evening hour for everyone involved.

Thee Oh Sees will be back in Seattle on November 29th at The Crocodile.


Thee Oh Sees ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Thee Oh Sees ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Thee Oh Sees ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

September 16, 2011

The Best of Bumbershoot: Mavis Staples

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Mavis Staples ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

The best acts I saw at Bumbershoot 2011, Mavis Staples and Charles Bradley had combined, nearly 100 years of singing between them. While it was all fine and good to see young bands, people just starting their careers, play to the largest crowds of their lives, they paled in comparison to seeing a powerhouse like Mavis, with 55 years of performing professionally step on stage and do her thing. I mean, of course they did. It’s the difference between seeing an All-Star Game and a AAA game, and Mavis was the MVP.

The lawn was packed at the Mural Amphitheater stage for Mavis’ headlining set. The crowd spanned all ages, though largely middle-aged, children of the ’50s and ’60s who came of age with Mavis singing songs about the civil rights movement, bringing down the house at The Last Waltz and disco dancing to “I’ll Take You There.” The smiles were abundant, as were the cries of “I love you Mavis,” to which Mavis always responded, with the biggest grin of them all, “I love you more.” Mavis took Seattle to church and if worship was ever anything like I witnessed that night, I would most certainly be devout.

It was impossible to not stand in awe of Mavis. Not only because of the rich rasp of her voice, a voice that will go down as one of the greatest ever recorded, but because of her presence. Despite wearing a demure beaded black outfit appropriate for church or the mother of the bride, Staples was brassy and sassy on stage, pretending to punch out her guitarist, flipping shit to her older sister and back-up singer Yvonne and flirting cheekily with the rest of the band. There were no nerves or insecurities or an “aww geez, aww shucks” about the size of the crowd, yet she was never blasé about it either. This is the type of crowd Mavis plays to nightly and she seemed grateful, gracious and self-assured she’d earned every single fan there.

I stood side-stage mouth slightly agape at what I was witnessing. A legend. A lifetime of songs and meaning crammed into a 45 minute set. The triple header of “The Weight” into “You Are Not Alone” and “Freedom Highway,” is easily one of the most powerful, palpable musical moments of my life. As Mavis spun yarns about each song, calling each member of The Band out by name, “on night’s like this, we give thanks to friends.” Speaking warmly of Jeff Tweedy from Wilco who wrote the Grammy-winning “You Are Not Alone” and telling the crowd that “Freedom Highway” was written about “the march, the big march from Selma to Montgomery.” It was as if you were witnessing history, taught and told in song before your very eyes, by a lady who lived it fully. She called out her “dear friend Bob Dylan” and talked shit about Obama’s detractors in “My Country.” She held court, like the queen that she is.

After even the best shows I’ve seen, I can see how it would be easy to pick apart, to see how someone else could have disliked it. But not so with Mavis’ Bumbershoot set. If you didn’t love it, you simply weren’t lucky enough to be there.

Mavis Staples ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Mavis Staples ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Mavis Staples ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Mavis Staples ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Mavis Staples ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

September 14, 2011

The Best of Bumbershoot: Pickwick x 3

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Pickwick on EMP Level 3 ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

The classic vision of Bumbershoot is as a lumbering giant of a festival with something for everyone, a hodgepodge hippie amalgam that highlights performers of all kinds while still managing to attract the biggest touring headliners of the day from all genre’s. 2011′s vision of Bumbershoot was paired down in terms of dishing out for some of the larger headliners of the moment, but the quality of booking didn’t let down as this years staff drew more heavily from the Northwest’s own pool of musical talent. Though this year’s roomier pathways reflected the lack of the guaranteed draw that the emphasis on the biggest of bands have brought in previous years, in taking chances on booking younger notable local bands as they’ve done this year they’re stepping into a role they can really make a difference in: cultivating that community with opportunity. Bumbershoot is the ultimate opportunity to be exposed to a new and varied audience for any band, and especially for local bands for who this would likely be their biggest show of the year. They would be the ones to work hardest for that time in the limelight to convert who they can.

After a particularly busy August, Pickwick might’ve claimed the titled “Hardest working band at Bumbershoot.” The three appearances spread out over two days were a microcosm of their past year (or really, 7 months). From the a capella performances they did earlier in the year for BARE at the Fremont Abbey and for compadre Kory Kruckenburg Appreciation Night at the Conor Byrne, to bigger performances as the spring and summer went on resulting in a Seattle Center Mural set for No Depression’s showcase and a Mainstage Doe Bay Fest appearance, to now the full recognition and embrace of KEXP, the band is riding a fan driven momentum Bumbershoot seemed to be timed just right to expand on.

Remember now, just a year ago this band didn’t sound like they do currently. Revamped and upbeat, they’ve just a few 7-inch’s under their belt and yet to actually headline the Tractor, Neumos or any other major venue in town with the new configuration. So I was genuinely surprised to see them make this years’ lineup. Though this band was obviously onto something, lead singer Galen Disston has been spending the year growing into the vocal demands of his new persona. You don’t become a soul singer overnight you know? On the other hand, even in spring when all these booking decisions were being made, being in the same room you could sense the excitement around what these six guys were doing. Throughout August and leading into Bumbershoot we saw Disston’s voice hasn’t taken long to develop into the lead vocal Sam Cooke inspires.

The Vera Project/Free Yr Radio stage performance early on featured the band doing acoustic/a capella versions of three songs, alternate versions that will have full recorded treatment as a part of Sound on the Sound’s Doe Bay Sessions. These versions put focus on the harmony backbone that so many of their songs feature, and with guitarist Michael’s slide guitar (a nod to the Pickwick of old) bringing a different flavor, they come out sounding a deep-south doo-wop group, as much influenced by dark alleys as sidewalk sunshine. A bouncy spin on some downtrodden stuff is just one of the conundrums this band poses. That it’s so upbeat that you don’t even care what the lyrics say is another. That my favorite song is a dance number about a violent prostitute has set me to thinking once or twice. Slowed down and bare bones, it’s impossible not to focus on these lyrics.

EMP’s upper Level 3 stage served as this year’s smaller, locally focused stage and Pickwick’s rep preceding them, they handily packed the multi-level room leaving hundreds of disappointed souls in line outside. Those who did make it early and into the AC-blessed upper-reaches of the EMP belly found a band dealing equally in Star Wars references and foot-pushers. The open invitation to bring shakers was most gloriously met by a 3-footer in the front row dressed up in a pink fairy outfit and double-fisting for all she was worth. KEXP’s live radio performance Sunday afternoon was just as full and felt the strongest appearance of the weekend for the band. The seated crowd didn’t remain motionless for long, and if it was a broadcast, the band was still just as much playing for the clapping and dancing folks in that room as for those over-the-air. So, no surprise, per usual, but by no fault of her own this time, Quilty 3000′s radio show wins the weekend. And Pickwick was finally starting to believe they really knew how to make Seattle get down.

Whether by fate or luck or sheer determination Pickwick landed at Bumbershoot at just the right time to make the most of it. Much like for Macklemore at Key Arena, Bumbershoot set a big stage for Pickwick, and in doing so gave the fans what they wanted too. In providing this place for local bands to succeed in big ways, the festival can become something that means that much more to the arts community it’s attempting to foster. It can be the de facto annual laymans barometer if you will, where all in one place can get a measure of the musical identity of our neck of the woods. And set side by side with international touring acts of all kinds even, it would be an more accurate barometer than you might find at any other pop music festival or purely local festival. Because people still do think of Seattle that way. We think of where we live as having an international musical cultural identity. That’s why bands still move here. For Seattle to have the scene it imagines itself to boast, one that others should be interested in, shouldn’t it be genuinely interested in itself too and supportive of what its own scene is doing. I can’t think of a better place to make sure the Northwest knows about itself than Bumbershoot. I have to think Macklemore and Pickwick would agree.

 

Pickwick

Pickwick in the Free Yr Radio Tent ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Pickwick on EMP Level 3 – “These are the Records you are looking for” ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Pickwick on EMP Level 3 ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Pickwick on EMP Level 3 ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Quilty 3000 introduces Pickwick in the KEXP Music Lounge ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Pickwick in the KEXP Music Lounge ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

September 7, 2011

Bumbershooting: Day Two (In Photos)

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Mad Rad ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

We were down a (wo)man Sunday so our photos are limited, but here are a few of our favorite snaps from the day. You can see the rest of them on our Flickr.

 

Mad Rad ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

 

Thee Oh Sees ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

 

Thee Oh Sees ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

 

Allen Stone ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

September 7, 2011

Bumbershooting: Day One (In Photos)

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Champagne Champagne ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

We know we’re a little late in sharing our photos, but we’ve had the plague and day jobs … and so much good stuff to wrap our minds around from just Day One of Bumbershoot. You can see all our Day One Bumbershots on our Flickr and we’ll have more detailed reviews coming very soon about the best of Bumbershoot.

 

Shabazz Palaces in the KEXP Music Lounge ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

 

Campfire OK ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

 

Campfire OK ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

 

Caleb Klauder Country Band ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

 

Dancing to Caleb Klauder Country Band ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

To see more photos of Day One of Bumbershoot (more…)

September 5, 2011

Bumbershooting: It’s A Lifestyle, Baby (Part Three)

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Phantogram ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

We’re into the final stretch

Fly Moon Royalty (12:45pm Fisher Green Stage) – Fly Moon Royalty took a 12-gauge shotgun, place  it to the side of my left temple and pulled the trigger when they played the Yoga Studio at Doe Bay Music Festival a couple of weeks ago. There were so many good sets (some planned, some impromptu) that took place over the course of that long beautiful weekend, but it is my opinion that Fly Moon Royalty played the best one. I was losing my mind to some of those pop hooks and off-beat key patterns. I fully suspect this band will take off over the next calendar year. Get to know them now so you can maximize those scenester points amongst your friends. Curtains For You (1:30pm Level Three Stage) -The only band playing Bumbershoot this year that was compared to “wearing a suit with argyle socks” (I’m not even kidding, check the festival website). “Classic harmony-laden pop” may never go out of style but it can be boring as shit. Curtains For You craft together unique compositions for people that tend to “shoe-fly-don’t bother me” pop music. This town is full of harmonies, most are not worth paying attention to, Curtains For You deserve your consideration.

Big Boi (3pm Mainstage) – Daddy Fat Sax, it’s an honor to have you here. Although, I’d be a much happier campier if the “Gemini” to your “Aquarius” were here as well.

Lemolo (4:30pm on Level Three Stage) – Oh deep sigh as I drink my morning coffee, flutter my girlish eyelashes and lookout my bedroom window on a Monday morning that happens to be a national holiday. I love like am “in-like” with this band. You see their videos on this website all the time. I want to lavish Lemolo with compliment upon compliment but I’m working on a tight deadline (Jersey Shore is also on in the background, destroying my brain cells and my vocabulary simultaneously).

Ravenna Woods (7:3opm Level Three Stage) – If a doom metal band used Downy to get those tough stains out, they’d be Ravenna Woods.

Fitz and the Tantrums (7:45pm Main Stage) – If you can dance, you should be here. If you can’t dance, get the fuck out you should be here. “Moneygrabber” is the single of the millennium. In fact, I heard from a reliable news source that this will be the official anthem of the 2012 Presidential Election.

Phantogram (8:30pm Fountain Lawn Stage) – Don’t ever confuse Phantogram with Phospherescent, they are vastly different. In case you are wondering, I prefer Phantogram.

Hall and Oates (9:15pm Main Stage) – Also known as “The Most Anticipated Set of Bumbershoot 2011.”

September 2, 2011

Bumbershooting: It’s A Lifestyle, Baby. (Part one)

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::: Beat Connection photo by Josh Lovseth

My how these tired eyes and slow hands have missed your casual indifference page views. Do you know how long it takes for time to elapse during a month long absence in the blogging world? Science says roughly thirty days but who in 2011 actually believes in science? Nobody raise their hands. Did you know my home state of Virginia can have earthquakes? Just another obvious example that Gaia is unhappy with Kratos in control and we’re all doomed. Your public transportation infused morning commute may be hindered by volcanic ash. Mt. St. Helen’s is long overdue and Mt. Rainier might follow suit out of unbridled jealousy. Never underestimate a large rock’s appetite for destruction.

Just in case these inevitable events don’t actually happen (sacrifice the thing you love most on a make-shift altar dedicated to Gaia or billions of people will die) and you somehow wander through the gates of Bumbershoot, let me send some warped advice in your general direction.

Musical acts on certain stages on certain days at certain times will be awaiting payment from paypal account your buzzed affection. I don’t mean to be a bully but free will is merely a mirage-like gift that you exercise poorly. Let me tell what you should be doing. Pretend I’m granting you blogospheric salvation Pretend I’m someone who works for NPR. In the name of Gaia, I command thee:

Saturday (Hopefully you aren’t too hungover and smoked-out from Young “Trapper of the Year — Four Times In A Row” Jeezy at the Showbox Market.)

Craft Spells (1:30pm at the Fountain Lawn Stage) – Fountain Lawn Stage? Terrible name. Craft Spells? Awesome band. Let’s hope the two offset one another. “After the Moment” is one of those songs that would inspire a dead hipster to rise from the grave and zombie dance their way to Value Village in order to buy the freshest secondhand gear from 1981. You’re alive (as of this moment) but you’ll probably do the same thing over the long weekend (especially if you only have a Saturday pass, plenty of time to shop!). I’ll also say that Craft Spells are getting absolutely jobbed on this time slot. Social marketing trolls Puppet-masters of entertainment Bumbershoot is following Block Party’s lead by giving feel-good dance bands daytime slots. I passively but angrily glance in your general direction Bumbershoot. My Twitter timeline might be a tad on the snarky side this weekend. Champagne Champagne (2:15pm on the Fisher Green Stage) -I used to be extremely comme ci comme ca on whether or not I was genuinely into this group in the past. Then I saw them at Doe Bay (Sadly, not their performance on the Main Stage. Sandwich nap.) and found what seems to be a long-lasting appreciation of this hip-hop duo. Sorry gentle readers, for the most part I still have my East Coast nose stuck up in the air as it relates to beat-makers and rhyme-sayers. I’m slowly adapting to your brand of hip-hop.

Red Fang (2:45pm at Exhibition Hall) – Finally some rock and roll is injected into your being. Last year Baroness was hands down the best act at Bumbershoot. Will Red Fang be able to keep pace with their hard rocking brethren? Go to Exhibition Hall way too fucking early, what the hell? at 2:45 to find out. If you’re watching the video for “Prehistoric Dog” right now, drinking and larping are not good for your health (when done simultaneously). If you do one or the other, you’ll do just fine. However, if you mix these social habits, someone’s inner Lancelot will surface and all hell will break loose. Trust me, I’ve been there (I keep a sword in my trunk for such occassions, I’m not even kidding). By the way, Red Fang will be playing a secret show on Sunday night but I’m not going to tell you where, maybe you should ask around? (I’d spill the beans but I’m not sure if I’m allowed to say. Actually, I take that back. It is because I’m too cool for school.) Shabazz Palaces (5:45pm Fisher Green Stage) – I’ll be honest, I’m probably the only music writer black person black music writer (What? Where?) in Seattle that does not own a copy of Black Up. I should probably do something about that. I like Shabazz Palaces because they create moments of irony when their audiences are predominantly white. Insert laughter here. I also like Shabazz Palaces because they are one-part secret society and one-part Sly and the Family Stone (this is not a musical comparison — they want to take you higher). Beat Connection (6pm EMP Sky Church) – Um, I tried to half-heartedly ignore this duo (I can’t like the things you like! I’m counter-culture!) for the longest time. However, when I saw them at Block Party, I actually left during their set so I could grab some of the grape flavored kool-aid that ya’ll motherfucking music writer’s this entire town has been guzzling. Let me tell you, it tastes delicious! Pickwick (6pm EMP Level 3 Stage) -You already know what the deal is. Selling out private KEXP sessions in one minute flat. Someone call the fire department, these boys are burning up! Everyone wants a piece of the Pickwick action.  Small children, transients, wholesome families, belltown beauties, introverted hipsters, bookworm snobs, Barack Obama and those who attend monster truck rallies are just a few examples of the transcendant populations this group is able to reach. After all, “They [Pickwick] sound like Marvin Gaye,” and “He [Galen] sings like Stevie Wonder.” Read those quotes. Realize that they are not mine erroneous and naively misguided. Go buy a gun. Let your weak attempts at critically thinking about something you like guide you into the afterlife. If there’s only one victim, is it a crime? Pickwick, the passion you stir, the fun you create, are you ready for what is about to come? Fame? Perhaps just a million more bizarre, contradicting, insane, unnecessary comparisons to “Motown” music await you in the near future. I’ll light a candle and say a prayer for you (to Gaia!).

Little Dragon (Fisher Green Stage 7:30pm) – What do I know about Little Dragon? Besides the fact that many of my friends have given me their seal of approval — I know nothing. Festivals are for expanding your mind (musically you hippie, not chemically). More often than not, my favorite acts at big festivals are the ones I’d never heard of prior. I have a sneaking suspicion that Little Dragon will land comfortably in my top 5 sets of Bumbershoot.

Minus the Bear (Fisher Green Stage 9:15pm) – I have not seen one of Seattle’s favorite “house bands” (I only say this because when I first moved here it seemed that they played every weekend.) in a very longtime. Admittedly I am no longer enamored with Minus the Bear like I was when their first album came out. With that being said, a Minus the Bear that is stuck in a formulaic rut is still better than 95% of the “rock” bands that this city has to offer.

The Sunday (part two) rundown will be coming to an internet near you very soon….

September 2, 2011

Five Things You Can’t Miss At Bumbershoot: Charles Bradley (#1)

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Who: Charles Bradley What: A soul legend in the making When: Monday September 5th at 5:45pm at the Fisher Green Lawn Why: Bradley’s debut full-length at 62 stands with the canon of classic soul. He’s never been to Seattle before and who knows when he’ll be back again.

Part of me just wants to put SEQUINED JUMPSUIT. Just like that, in all-caps and leave it at that. But that does Charles Bradley no justice and reminds me that which we joke about is often that which we feel the strongest for.

Though it’s true, the act I’m most excited to see at Bumbershoot, hands down, no questions asked, will very likely be in a sequined jumpsuit and it’s not Head Like a Kite. It’s Charles Bradley

At age 62, while most professions you’d be nearing retirement and in the music industry you’d usually be long gone unless you were of that rare “legend” status, Bradley is just getting his start, releasing his debut full length last year and with it already entering into legend status. No Time for Dreaming evokes the canon of classic soul: the sharp lens of Marvin Gaye’s social commentary, the sweet, sad, sexiness of relationships that Al Green sang of, the fiery stage performances, dance moves and jumpsuits of James Brown, the backing horns of Stax.

His original songs, like “The World Is Going Up (In Flames)” and “Why Is It So Hard,” sound like Classics, with a capital C. Not just because they could easily be of another era, a gem found in the used bins, but because they so ably speak to the life we’re living today, to the struggles we still face. Charles Bradley sings anthems whether they’re about how fucked up life is in America or making up your misbehavior’s to your lady. Bradley is a gifted story-teller in words and with his notes, each second of song is filled, if not over-flowing with, emotion. Bradley’s voice breaks and cracks, unable to bear the weight of what he is expressing, emotions he’s waited decades and decades to share.

A friend in San Francisco who caught Bradley at the Independent this Tuesday for the first time described it best, “The man sings like he’s just been set free.” And perhaps, at 62, long after most had written him off, a man who grew up on the streets and is now travelling the world singing his songs to sold out crowds, perhaps, that’s exactly what happened to Charles Bradley.

Here’s All of My Bumbershoot Unmissables:

#5 Red Fang #4 Flatstock #3 Mavis Staples #2 Sharon Van Etten Three Local Bands You Can’t Miss for All Three Days of Bumbershoot

September 1, 2011

Three Unmissable Local Sets, For All Three Days of Bumbershoot

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Bumbershoot Crowd ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

When I was working on my “Five Things You Can’t Miss at Bumbershoot” posts, I noticed something strange. Save Red Fang, not a single band I recommend was local to the Pacific Northwest. And that’s not because there aren’t some great local bands playing this years Bumbershoot, there are scads of them. The Fest did a solid job booking Seattle and Portland bands I want to see from hip hop to heavy, from beats to banjos. But, for the most part they’re all bands I’ve seen before and all bands you can see again as soon as the Bumbershoot blackout dates pass. Which means while I’m not anticipating them quite as much as my Top 5 acts, you better believe I’ll be there in the front row for lots of local acts. Here’s three Pacific Northwest bands for all three days of the festival, you shouldn’t miss.

 

Champagne Champagne ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

Saturday

Champagne Champagne (2:15 on the Fisher Green)

Red Fang (2:45 in the Exhibition Hall)

Pickwick (6:00 at EMP Level Three)

Probably don’t want to miss either: Craft Spells (1:30 on the Fountain Lawn)

 

The Lonely Forest ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

Sunday

The Lonely Forest (1:30 on the Mainstage)

Kaylee Cole (6:00 at EMP Level 3)

Macklemore and Ryan Lewis (8:00 on the Mainstage)

Probably don’t want to miss either: Allen Stone (7:30 on the EMP Level 3)

 

Lemolo ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

Monday

Fly Moon Royalty (12:45 on the Fisher Green)

Lemolo (4:30 at EMP Level 3)

Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside (9:00 at EMP Level 3)

Probably don’t want to miss either: My Goodness (2:00 in the Exhibition Hall)