June 21, 2012

Sasquatch: A Few Thoughts…

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Sasquatch ::: all photos by Josh Lovseth

 

Well, it has been weeks since I have logged into wordpress for this website. I haven’t felt inspired or motivated to do much of anything, let alone string together snarky comments about a festival that you paid too much to be at apparently had no trash cans after 1pm. Learn to throw your trash away, you savages! Sometimes life happens. Be kind to your neighbors.

Sasquatch. What can I say? Sometimes I wish a pack of “real” Sasquatches would crash the festival gates and devour roughly 68% percent of the audience. Especially if they are wearing a Native American head-dress or have the acronym “YOLO” printed across their back. Let’s go to the video tape. These thoughts and musings are in no particular order of importance.

1) Did you ever wonder what it’s like to be in REM’s “Everybody Hurts” video during the traffic scene? You know what I’m talking about. The point of the video when everyone gets out of their cars (as if they’re under some enchanted spell) and begins to wander up the open road we call “life.” Luckily for many of you, the desire to know what it feels like to be Micheal Stipe in that legendary nineties video is no more. The first question you asked your friends when you saw them in the festival gates was not, “Hey! How are you doing!?!?” It was “How long did you wait!? What the…..” I didn’t even try to get in on Friday night. I set-up shop in my Saturn while it was parked in Ellensberg and I proceeded to drink alone in an empty motel parking lot. That’s what artists writers bloggers people with no future do.

 

Pickwick

2) Pickwick, whether it’s your “thing” or not, is better than your band. They are also better than all the bands you listen to. They played on Saturday at noon on the Main Stage this year. If Sasquatch is smart enough to ask them back next year, I expect them to play almost a third of Sun’s rotation daily rotation later than they did this year. Do the math and we’re talking about a slot at 7 or 8pm (on a different stage than the Main Stage).

3) The visual highlight of my day on Saturday was Charles Bradley pretending to fly like a raptor while he was performing. Other than that, his sexual overtures and pelvic thrusts almost turned this 29-year-old heterosexual African-American male into a homosexual retrophile, who craves dark chocolate that can croon to me as I’m eating it. This is a big deal. I don’t even like chocolate all that much (Ironically, vanilla ice cream is my jam…).

4) Craft Spells put out one of my favorite records last year. Make no mistake about it, I also have been known to dabble heavily in The Cure’s discography. I don’t want to start any conspiracies or anything, but sometimes there isn’t a huge difference between the two aforementioned bands and for some reason this didn’t strike me until Memorial Day weekend. Hmmm….With that being said, I genuinely enjoyed Craft Spells set. Their performance can basically be summed up as this:

“Craft Spells started an umbrella jellyfish dance party in all their faux “Fascination Street” glory. It was “Just Like Heaven” as crusts punks, who looked liked they ended up at Sasquatch by way of Burning Man, crowd surfed without losing a single band patch off their cut-off jean jackets. Grown men put their arms around each other and drank Kokanee. All was right with the world.”

 

Fatal Lucciano

5) Most enthusiastic performances of the weekend went to anyone who is signed to Sportn’ Life records. Fatal Lucciuano, Fly Moon Royalty, Spac3man, you name the artist and they were killing it. Lucciuano brought as many audience members on-stage as the party patrol imaginary fire marshall would allow. Spac3man decided that standing up on-stage wasn’t for him, so he got into the crowd and decided to throw some ‘bows like any man of the proletariat would do and continued to perform at a high level. Fly Moon Royalty decided to utilize dancers that were wearing a wardrobe straight out of the ultimate Eighties movie “Heavenly Bodies“ (you need to see this motion picture). There was no dance-a-thon to save a local gym from a corporate takeover like the aforementioned flick. However, Fly Moon Royalty performed like their was no tomorrow. Because my movements were limited for a brief moment due to some delicious blackberry pie, I didn’t get to groove to “Into the Woods” as much as I normally would have. Whenever I see Fly Moon Royalty, that is usually the song that jumpstarts my heart the most. On this particular day another song stole the show. During “Roxy” Adra Boo delivered the line “If you don’t like me, tough titty..” in such a way that you would have a tough time convincing me that it wasn’t the most impressionable line of the long weekend.   (Writer’s note: Dyme Def, Fresh Espresso, Grynch and Don’t Talk To The Cops were also tremendous. Basically any act that I caught on the Maine Stage was good.)

6) Dry The River are good. If you saw them at Crocodile in April when they played with Bowerbirds (another solid act) then you already know this. I was concerned that their sound might be ruined by the outside settings/ atmosphere of Sasquatch but I was merely another paranoid blogger wrong. Keep as close as an eye as you can on this band (seeing as they’re from Great Britain, it won’t be the easiest thing to do).

 

The War on Drugs

7) As far as my favorite set of the weekend is concerned, it’s a toss up between The War on Drugs and AraabMuzik. Two artists that are on opposite ends of the musical spectrum. The War on Drugs sounded so pleasant on Sunday afternoon that I began to hum “Afternoon Delight” (Yes, the Anchorman version) under my breath. It was something about the way there was just the right amount of a breeze to create a delay so perfect every guitar pedal-maker around the globe would shake an angry fist at mother nature. AraabMuzik was ebullient to say the least. I scavenged dictionary.com for another word but nothing else seemed to fit. The tent was thrown into an uncontrollable frenzy. Every bass synth beat sounded like petawatt blast being generated from the center of the Earth. My favorite Sasquatch goers, The Where’s Waldo Crew, were all losing their minds to the sounds with an amoebic-like cohesion. Never have red and white stripes been so breathtakingly beautiful.

8 ) I enjoy the sense of humor offered by Todd Barry. I am familiar with his work (I already knew some of the material) and at Sasquatch he some funny quips. Jokes about IBM computers, being a server in the service industry, becoming a millionaire as a comic. However, he was so chaffed about the noise coming from the Maine Stage (It was Spac3man at the time and it was somewhat justified…BUT COME ON MAN! IT’S A FESTIVAL. LIGHTEN UP!), that he could not and would not let it go. Maybe it was a part of his rhythm as a comic, but every couple of minutes he would revert to old faithful. It was basically advertising for Spac3man. Eventually I left the Banana Shack and went and watched a spectacle that Barry could only hear.

9) Beirut inspired the best crowd group dancing that I saw all weekend. It seemed like a hundred people were waltzing in perfect time with one another. If you would have transformed the venue and the attire of the participants, it would have made for an excellent time period specific dance sequence. On the topic of individual dancing, some guy was committing unspeakable acts of tempo and downbeat debauchery during Sallie Ford and the Sound Outside. I wish I could describe what was happening to you. Better yet, I wish I could post his movements in .gif form so everyone could gather around the illuminated screen and have a good chuckle. Never forget that Portland knows the “secret of the ooze.”

 

Don’t Talk to the Cops

10) “Favorite Song of the Weekend” goes to Don’t Talk To The Cops “Big Ass Head.” The lyrics had my sides aching from too much laughter.

11)  The Sheepdogs < Stillwater

12) Fresh Espresso what the hell was up with all the flour tortillas being thrown around near the front of the stage? has a new album out (Bossalona - prior to their Sasquatch performance this was not true). From what I’ve heard so far, the songs are excellent (especially the title track).

13) The Nelson Twins > Grouplove. In fact, if you have pubic hair and you listen to Grouplove, not only am I revoking your adulthood card, I am asking that the Official Panel of Humanity throw a gear in your evolutionary process and start burying you alive immediately.

 

Jack White

14)  Two artists that I don’t normally enjoy blew the barnyard doors off of the place: Jack White and Bon Iver.

15) Gary Clark Jr. is a master of all things pick-slide and pick-scrape related. He might be the greatest of all-time. Don’t dispute this.

16) I know this is a festival that appears to the masses, but I think it would be nice to book less (for lack of a better word) “wussy” bands. I’m not saying the festival should be turned into Best Friends Day or Hellfest (although that would make it my favorite festival in the northwest). I’m not attacking anyone’s masculinity or implying that some musical performers are too sensitive personally or artistically. I’m just saying that when Walk The Moon cover Fleet Foxes, I’m convinced a jaded teenage boy with a guitar and a dream dies of cancer instantly. Even if he wasn’t diagnosed prior, he’ll just drop dead on the spot. We can’t let this go on. We need to protect the youth of tomorrow from the youth of today.

17) Music is a fascinating thing. The reasons people listen to it, what they actually hear in comparison to someone else, how it makes them feel etc. I could go in-depth on this but I think I’ll save that for an individualized blog post at a different point in time.

18) The final memory I have from Sasquatch 2012 was watching a boy wearing a unicorn horn prude slow-dancing with a girl wearing a Holden Caufield hat during Beck’s “Lost Cause.” Right then and there I forced myself to leave because I couldn’t have ended my weekend any other way.

19) Stay weird Sasquatch. Sometimes the bright colors are your only saving grace.

 

Sasquatch 2012

June 15, 2012

Saturday at Sasquatch

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Pickwick - Hacienda Hands on the Mainstage

Hacienda Hands on the Mainstage ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Saturday’s Sasquatch was marked by both the bigger names and the up-and-comers in our schedule really showing up for the crowd.

Pickwick –> Charles Bradley and the Menahan Street Band on the Sasquatch Mainstage

Pickwick’s selection to open the Saturday mainstage put the band on their biggest stage yet, and they proved their booking wise with one of the more fiery performances I’ve seen from them and with it the biggest showing of Hacienda Hands yet. The “Screaming Eagle of Soul” Charles Bradley and his Menahan Street Band followed them up and with a combination of expert hip shaking and robot moves that never fails to bring a smile. With such a strong showing by both bands my only lament is that this pairing wasn’t on later in the so they could be in front of more people.

Alabama Shakes

This actually from Alabama five-piece is the latest band find a tidal wave of early interest thanks to the magnifying effect ye ole Internet, and yet they actually have the chops to be deserving of those roving eyes and ears. A southern Soul band the likes of which recent generations haven’t seen, lead singer Brittany Howard sings intuitively and full throated over a locked in guitar groove. By contrast to the buttoned up and tightly rehearsed soul of yesteryear putting spit and shine on life with harmonies and a horn section, the Shakes garage gospel is naturally funky and rough, not just “rock” but a true helping of vintage “rock and roll” to stir up the adults as much as the kids.

Shins –> Jack White

The newest iteration of the Shins has James Mercer surrounding himself with a group of ringers to bring life to the latest batch of songs and breathe some into plenty of old ones. The differences caught me off guard at first, but I mostly dug the rhythm changes Mercer thew our way. Jack White’s surrounded himself with his own set of ringers, and too be sure, they are also unfuckwithable. It’s an ultra-competent gospel leaning blues band that White has probably always wanted to assemble as a backing, one where the band stands out as much as the frontman. And as we all know, that is really saying something.

 

Pickwick

Pickwick ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Pickwick

Pickwick at Sasqatch ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Charles Bradley

Charles Bradley ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Charles Bradley dance circle

A Charles Bradley dance circle ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Charles Bradley & His Extraordinaires

The Screaming Eagle of Soul ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Blitzen Trapper

Blitzen Trapper ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Craft Spells

Craft Spells ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Fatal Lucciauno

Fatal Lucciauno ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Fatal Lucciauno

Fatal Lucciauno gets into the crowd::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Alabama Shakes

Alabama Shakes ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Kurt Vile and the Violators

Kurt Vile and the Violaters ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Dry the River

Dry the River ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

The Shins - Richard Swift

The Shins – Richard Swift ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Shins Crowdsurfer

Shins Crowdsurfer ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

The Shins - James Mercer and a Sasquatch

The Shins – James Mercer and a Sasquatch ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Jack White

Jack White ::: 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 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….

July 21, 2011

Craft Spells “After the Moment”

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What Beach Fossils and Beat Connection has done for me for the past few years, Craft Spells is doing for me this year: they are the sound of summer. As if Morissey let loose and hopped on stage with a bunch of new wave Caribbeans, Justin Paul Vallesteros built a place where electric guitars evoke steel drums and a sun-baked saunter is the speed of life. Lately I’ve been spinning the debut full length Idle Labor with the fervor of a shaman in search of a storm, though of course in my case I’m trying to summon the sun. Today, again, the weather definitely ain’t cutting it, so again I’m turning to Craft Spells in the hopes that we can summon up some happy climes for this weekend’s Capitol Hill Block Party. Right now on that count Google is leaning positively

Tomorrow, Friday July 22nd, Craft Spells plays Block Party’s Vera Stage at 7pm. Single day tickets for Capitol Block Party are still available.

Craft Spells are also at Bumbershoot, on Saturday September 3rd, 1.30pm on the Fountain Lawn Stage.

July 20, 2011

Choose Your Own Adventure: Capitol Hill Block Party — Friday

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THEESatisfaction ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Plebian Paradise is back.

Everyone’s least favorite music festival is back and possibly better than ever! Keeping with a tradition that dates back hundreds of centuries to exactly this time last summer, the preview for Capitol Hill Block Party will be written in the style of everyone’s favorite book series. In reality, there exists an almost incalculable amount of possibilities that could happen once you enter the festival gates on Friday afternoon (get off of work early). However, I am from the future. I have already seen your festival going experience unfold days in advance and now I am going to share it with the entire world six other people. Read about it now in blog form and perhaps you can alter your fate (maybe you don’t want to do that because my writing is stellar and you want my words to be your life). Enjoy? (all complaints can be sent to phil@soundonthesound.com)

You leave work early on Friday afternoon even though your dictator of a boss gave you an eyebrow raise that indicated you might want to reconsider your decision. “In the future you’ll pay for this in blood,” you hear your boss mutter under their breath as you walk out the door. As the sunlight hits your eyes upon your escape, you finally realize that freedom is not free after all (How many ounces of blood will your bloodsucking boss take from your veins? Time will tell).

You arrive at the festival gates at a quarter-til-five, leaving you only a few minutes to make a decision on how to start your weekend. Your options are BOAT at the Vera Stage and….well, that’s it. Festival planners have given the native Seattle band the ultimate monopoly on everyone’s favorite drinking start time. You missed BOAT’S Daytrotter Session and haven’t seen the band since their album release show at the Tractor. Your inner nerd is screaming with glee because you’re about to be reunited with a band who truly understands you.

Read the rest of your Friday Block Party adventure (more…)

March 8, 2011

The Daily Choice: Craft Spells – You Should Close The Door

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Word just arrived (somewhere in the haze of last week) that Craft Spells would be touring with perennial Daily Choice favorites, Beach Fossils.  And it makes sense.  I’ve mentioned time and time again that Beach Fossils, especially there newer, less coastal sounding jams, sound like unused tracks from a John Hughes blockbuster.  Yet where Beach Fossils are the punchy, get-up-and-go soundtrack to an early act montage, Craft Spells are the pensive background to the final heartfelt hand-squeeze, the slow fade to credits.  All of the 80s favorite indie influences are kicking around in here, but Craft Spells manage to float above the weight of inspiration.

There album Idle Labor, out on Captured Tracks, helps to crowd the shockingly stuffed March 29th release date.

Craft Spells – You Should Close The Door