December 9, 2011

Favorite Photos of 2011: The Doe Bay Sessions

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Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

We hope you can join us this Sunday for a special screening and fundraiser for The Doe Bay Sessions. Hopefully by then, words have stopped failing me to describe the adventure we’ve had making the series and how with the help of strangers who’ve become family, we’ve had a chance to make a rough-draft-dream into a reality better than anything we ever imagined. That’s all been thanks to the awesome team we work with, the great bands who’ve given us their time, their trust and their talent and all of you for tuning in and sharing the Sessions.

To celebrate on Sunday, we’ll be debuting new Sessions from Pickwick and two other 2011 Doe Bay Session artists, three special guests will take the stage and behind the bar will be the beloved Two Bar shaking their signature margaritas. We hope you can join us. It really wouldn’t be the same without you.

The Doe Bay Sessions Screening Sunday December 11th Doors at 7:30 / Films Start at 8pm Suggested Donation of $5

Pickwick watching a Shoot ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

Champagne Champagne ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

John Vanderslice ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

That’s a Wrap ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

October 25, 2011

The Doe Bay Sessions: Frank Fairfield

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Frank Fairfield and band with Kyle Zantos ::: Polaroid courtesy of Dylan Priest

Amongst a field of indie kids and folk bands Doe Bay’s ground’s, Frank Fairfield was an old schoolhouse, full of knowledge and looking and sounding every bit the part of a by-gone era. Though Fairfield’s not a local, his on-stage educational talks on the fiddle to 2am busking station jam sessions made him just as much a vibrant contributor to the collaborative and musical mood of the festival as the veterans and locals.

Still not fully awake Friday morning as we wandered in search of a coffee cart we stumbled into Fairfield and band warming up next to the mainstage field where fellow banjo wiz Kyle Zantos had gravitated to the situation and managed to sneak in a lead here and there. This is how I always imagined a more free form folk festival might flow, people plopping down where-ever they may be or meet to jam and live the music. Little did we expect that moment would be reprised for our camera the next day on our sun-kissed forest location playfully named “the Hobbit Hill.”

 

 

Sound on the Sound wasn’t the only set of folks filming at the fourth edition of Doe Bay Fest. A group of documentarians wandered about catching the spirit of the festival for a presentation they are calling “Welcome to Doe Bay.” November 11th Frank Fairfield will headline Columbia City Theater for a party to help fund a Kickstarter goal set by the crew to finish this documentary with quality.

October 12, 2011

The Doe Bay Sessions: Bryan John Appleby

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Bryan John Appleby ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

 

 

It may seem counter-intuitive with the gigantic leaps some local bands have made since Doe Bay 2010, but I would say that no one has grown more or transitioned better than Bryan John Appleby. Yes, The Head and The Heart have gone from opening at Columbia City Theater to opening at Key Arena. Yes, Pickwick has gone from playing to 30 people to playing to over a thousand at the Mural. These are amazing milestones and signs of growth and success, but the changes Appleby has made over the last year have taken him from a bashful solo performer, so unsure of his songs that he had to be all but forced by friends to sing and release them, to the confident leader of a multi-faceted, multi-talented band. While other bands have become bigger over the course of the last year, Appleby has just become.

Nowhere has this transformation been more obvious than at Doe Bay, where Appleby fully embraced the openness and opportunity to expand and explore. It was Appleby and crew who spent a late night jamming as Pearl and Thomas from Champagne Champagne free-styled over them. It was Appleby who first jumped on stage to sing along with friends in Campfire OK, Kelli Schaefer, Pickwick and The Head and The Heart. And it was Appleby who decided to add an extra element to his already beautifully composed songs for our Doe Bay Session, asking Sam Anderson from Hey Marseilles, Kay Kay and His Weathered Underground, Cataldo (and many others) to join on cello.

Watching Appleby lead and perform without a shred of self-consciousness, seeing on stage and while sitting on this mossy log, an artist in control of his craft and a musician having the time of his life, was watching a different man than I’d first seen a year prior. Doe Bay was Appleby’s coming out party, an exclamation that he’s not just an up-and-comer, but one of the Northwest’s most gifted and promising performers. Everywhere you looked, someone was wearing a Bryan John Appleby t-shirt, someone had the Fire On the Vine vinyl tucked under their arm and someone was standing in line to buy more. Appleby bears the mantle that Jurado and Bazan have carried for decades and as you’ll see below, he bears it beautifully.

 

 

Bryan John Appleby plays City Arts Fest on Friday October 21st at The Rendezvous with other Sound on the Sound favorites Sons of Warren Oates, Smokey Brights and Joseph Giant.

September 13, 2011

The Doe Bay Sessions: Damien Jurado

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Damien Jurado Doe Bay Session ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

 

 

We’ve had lots of artists reconfigure their electric songs to fit an acoustic session, but never a song written specifically for a shoot. Enter Damien Jurado, who penned a song just for his Doe Bay Session, hand-written lyrics freshly inked on a folded up piece of paper read by flickering candlelight.

We were taken aback when Jurado said he’d written the song that day at Doe Bay, but we shouldn’t have been. Despite a decades-spanning career, Jurado is in the midst of a prolific phase, writing new songs almost daily, often in 20 minute spurts of creativity. The second song he sang for us, “Notes of the Season” was written this summer, while he waited for his wife Sarah in the car as she ran errands. After the grocery store, they returned home and he recorded it in a home studio he’d just set up that day.

Jurado is inspired these days. By his surroundings, by his day-to-day life and watching his son grow, by the books he’s reading, by the records he’s listening to and by the new generation of local songwriters he has inspired. Once a regular fixture at Conor Byrne Open Mic, sitting and watching each act intently, Jurado was often seen walking up to star-struck performers congratulating them on a new song in great detail. Jurado would comment on specific lyrics, bridges, notes, the mood … as if he’d listened to it on repeat all day, not at a crowded bar. Jurado is a careful, joyful listener.

At Doe Bay, Jurado walked the grounds, always clad in his corduroy jacket despite the summer temperatures, and served as an elder statesmen to the young bands playing the Festival. He stayed up through the full-moon and meteor shower nights talking with young artists about music and careers, as well as wormholes and aliens. But as much as he gives to these young musicians, artists starting out on their own careers who grew up listening to Jurado, amazed to see the man they admired in their audience or singing along, Jurado also gets something in return. He gets inspiration. He gets to write songs in 20 minutes. He gets to hear how those songs molded lives and careers, how they’ve inspired. He’s made friends and life long fans. He’s stepped in, fully, to his role of the quintessential living local songwriter and with every life he touches through words of wisdom or sad songs sung, he is ever more that person and that icon.

We are honored he took the time to sing for us and to write a song for this session. Standing down the trail, watching him pick along in the candlelight on our porch, his voice barely audible, quivering like a whisper through the trees, Josh and I looked at each other in inspired amazement. Ty glanced back from the camera with the same wide-eyed look. This is really happening. A Damien Jurado song is being born, right before our very eyes. And now, yours.

June 1, 2011

Doe Bay Fest Line-Up & New Doe Bay Sessions Debut Tomorrow!

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During a week chock full of festival announcements, it should come as no surprise the one we’re most excited about is Doe Bay Fest. The line-up for the sold out show will be announced tomorrow at Columbia City Theater in an event that is free to all festival ticket-holders who are older than 21.

As part of the evening’s festivities Sound on the Sound will be DJing some of our favorite 45s and Doe Bay Fest performers in the Bourbon Bar starting at 7pm and we’ll be debuting some brand new Doe Bay Sessions during the announcement party. We’ve been holding on to some of our favorite Sessions to share with you all and we can’t wait for you to see them!

For those of you not attending Doe Bay Fest, we’ll be sharing the new Doe Bay Sessions here on Sound on the Sound Friday and in the coming weeks and you’ll still hear about the full Doe Bay line-up here first tomorrow night! For those of you lucky ticket holders, be sure to get there early tomorrow and not just for our deilghtful DJing … space is limited to 300 ticket holders. And don’t forget to bring your photo ID, not just because it’s 21+, but to prove you were one of the lucky few who got tickets.

November 10, 2010

A Doe Bay Session Wrap Up & Sincere Thank Yous

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The Doe Bay Sessions Team ::: portrait by Hilary Harris

 

Another Tuesday has passed with no new video, which means I’m sitting here missing The Doe Bay Sessions and reflecting in wonder that they happened at all.

For the folks involved with the technical side Doe Bay Sessions, they have another nickname: the serendipity sessions. Everything that could possibly go wrong did, but so did everything that could go right. Despite months of planning, the only thing that made the Doe Bay Sessions go as beautifully as they did was the kindness of strangers, phenomenal timing and two very talented men behind the scenes: videographer Tyler Kalberg and sound guy Chris Proff. While mine and Josh’s work with the sessions was all but done in August (other than sharing them with you) both Tyler and Chris spent hours upon hours the past couple months, editing, mixing and perfecting the videos and their sound. It is only due to their hard work and talents that the videos turned out as wonderfully as they did. If you enjoyed the videos, these are the people you should offer your gratitude to.

But it took more than Josh, Tyler, Chris and me to make the sessions happen. It took the support and approval of the folks who run the Doe Bay Resort and the Doe Bay Festival. No one has been bigger fans or supporters of the sessions than Joe Brotherton, Kevin Sur and Chad Clibborn both before, during and after the filming. And then of course, there was the serendipity and the hefty dose of Doe Bay magic that made the videos possible. When our brand new generator broke before our first session, the head of the Doe Bay grounds not only lent us his infinitely quieter generator for the entire weekend, but he delivered it to our distant campsite with a smile. The next day, when our “mobile” 80 plus pound soundboard died, a stranger who happened to be walking down the trail as we lamented our terrible luck, turned around and offered his mobile recording system for the entire weekend to total strangers. Not only did this allow the project to continue, it gave us more flexibility where we could record sessions. What could’ve been terrible, turned out to be totally for the better. From day one, though we’d never done anything of the sort before, everyone who came in contact with the project believed it could be done, put their whole heart into it and did everything in their power to make sure it happened. It would not be overstating to say, its the kind of thing that restores your faith in humanity.

And of course there was the bands who took the time to hike down the trails and share themselves and their songs with us. We could not have dreamed of a more talented (or pleasant) group of musicians to work with. Our sincerest thanks goes out to:

The Maldives Drew Grow and the Pastors’ Wives Kelli Schaefer The Head and The Heart Hey Marseilles Fences Ravenna Woods Curtains for You Tomo Nakayama Black Whales

Last and certainly not least, thanks to all of you for stopping by the site every Tuesday to check out the new videos, for sharing them with your friends and for all the kind words.

Stay tuned for two new video series coming soon from Sound on the Sound and the whole Doe Bay filming crew. And we’ll be back next summer with even more Doe Bay Sessions!

October 26, 2010

The Doe Bay Sessions: Black Whales

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Black Whales on the rocks ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Alex of the Black Whales, with only himself to mind, was able to take the idea of doing sessions in the unconventional setting of Doe Bay and run with it. He was the one to roll with the idea of going mobile and really do something with it. We took it all the way down to the furthest beach overlooking the bay where Alex graciously sweated it out on the hot rocks in the midday sun while his band on the hill above hugged cold tallboys. Then, more by his suggestion than ours he was ready to do a song while walking down the trail. With our final Doe Bay Session presented to you below as proof, both instances were glorious cases of seizing the moment and setting the bar for next year’s batch of sessions. This is what we were thinking of when we cooked this idea up:

 

Methinks Shangri La isn’t just mentioned by happenstance in the final song.

 

Black Whales headline Sound on the Sound Presents at the Columbia City Theater next Friday November 5th for their “Ragged Bones” 7″ release party. Vancouver’s Dan Mangan and Portland’s Jared Mees and the Grown Children round out this Northwest coast bill.

August 19, 2010

The Doe Bay Sessions

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The Head and The Heart Sunset Session ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

As you will soon read here on Sound on the Sound, Doe Bay 2010 was one of the most magical experiences of our lives. (Narrowly edging out last years’ Doe Bay Fest for “best weekend ever.”) Not only were we surrounded by friends, family and incredible local music in one of the most idyllic and jaw-droppingly beautiful places you’ll ever see, we also spent the weekend working on an exciting project we’ve spent much of 2010 organizing: The Doe Bay Sessions.

The initial idea was to rent a yurt during the Doe Bay Festival and record acoustic sets with a couple of our favorite bands who were playing. We pitched the idea to the fine folks who organize and who own Doe Bay and from day one to the last day of shooting, they all bent over backwards to make sure the project could happen. What started as a typical DIY Sound on the Sound project turned into a professional video shoot inspired by the work of Vincent Moon and Yours Truly, complete with videographer Tyler Kalberg on the camera and sound guy extraordinaire Chris Proff manning our “mobile” sound set up. What we thought would be a couple yurt bound sessions, turned into 10 different video shoots all over Doe Bay with some of the best bands in Seattle.

For those of us who were a part of it and those of you who stumbled on to our sessions while hiking the trails or following the sound of the songs, The Doe Bay Sessions felt like a festival within the festival. Over the next 10 weeks we will be releasing videos featuring a candlelit session from Fences, The Head and the Heart (and the Doe Bay All-Stars) singing down the sun, Ravenna Woods using trees for percussion, a mid-trail serenade from Drew Grow and the Pastors’ Wives, The Maldives on a mossy knoll, picnic table perching with Hey Marseilles and many more.

We are so excited to share these videos with you and to usher in a new chapter of Sound on the Sound content. For now, we wanted to share a few stills from the sessions, as well as offer our sincerest thanks to Tyler, Chris, the bands, Doe Bay staff and maintenance crew, Artist Home, Bob from The Ballard Mine and the Doe Bay magic that made these sessions not just possible, but also so much more than we would have ever dared imagine.

Check back here on August 24th to see whose session we’ll share first!

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Fences Candle Lit Session ::: by Tyler Kalberg

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The Maldives on “Hobbit Hill” ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

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Chris Proff ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

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Ravenna Woods Session ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

See more photos from The Doe Bay Sessions on our Flickr