February 7, 2012

24 More Unmissable Records from the Pacific Northwest in 2011

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helmsaleeweatherhead

 

 

Remember when we said we’d share our list of 25 other unmissable records the first week of January? Whoops. Thing is, the first month of this new year, we were still listening to and falling in (and out) of love with records from 2011. Discovering albums we should’ve shared months ago and finding out what sounded good in summer, didn’t survive snowmageddon. We added and whittled and debated and listened and when it comes down to these 24 albums, all released in 2011 by bands from the Pacific Northwest, we loved.

Here’s what you won’t find on here: records we wrote about in 2010 (The Head and The Heart, Beat Connection, Joseph Giant, Baltic Cousins), just okay releases from bands we’ve loved before, collections of 7’’s made into best of EPs, EPs in general and plenty of records that you loved with your whole heart and we just, didn’t. But, after hundreds and hundreds of hours of listening and seeing these bands live, slightly fewer spent talking about the albums amongst ourselves, we’re confident these are 24 records you’d be remiss to miss from 2011.

Here’s what you will find on here: bands from Seattle, Portland, Vancouver and Boise. Psychedelic symphonies. Menacing metal. Four-Eyed Soul. Modern R&B. Party Punk. Folk confessionals. Hip shaking hip hop. These albums are self-released, funded by fans and put out by labels big and small. They are debuts and albums that defied sophomore slumps and career defining work. Albums that have been loudly lauded and others who’ve been mostly ignored. Its a sample of what makes being a music lover in the Pacific Northwest right now so exciting, there’s a little something for everyone and we hope you find something you love too.

 

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AgesandAgesAll Right You Restless (Knitting Factory)

Agesandages fills up a room. With no fewer than seven people adding harmony to the airtight, country-funk rock that spins off Alright You Restless, the debut record enthralled me with the desperate joy that permeates its entirety. Playing with the bog of loneliness and defeat, and inviting the world into that dark fold to find comfort in each other, it’s music that offers salve in stomps and hope in runaway choruses. (Kathleen)

Allen StoneS/T (Self-Released)

“I’m sick and tired of soul music looking so clean and proper! Cause my soul… my soul… my soul is just a little big greasy!” This is how Allen Stone introduces himself to the crowd from the stage. Obviously steeped in tradition but not married to its dictates, Stone’s four-eyed soul is unrepentant in both its influences and its willingness to disregard them entirely. Repping the Northwest he’s more than likely on stage in a flannel or Sonics jersey instead of any Detroit mandated button-up uniform like most of his current peers. This un-buttoned attitude extends to the dynamic mixture of straight R&B ballads and kinetic pop and funk on display in this record. If nothing else, just like the live show, Allen Stone represents Stone being unapologetically himself. (Excerpted from Josh’s full October review.)

 

 

 

Case Studies – The World Is Just a Void to Fill the Space (Sacred Bones Records)

It’s plausible to say that every music fan in Seattle cried a tiny tear when Jessie Lortz and Kimberly Morrison decided to end their tenure as The Dutchess and The Duke a few years back. Yet, if any and all knew that Lortz would take the new found freedom and put an album as poetic and gorgeous as Case Studies’ The World Is Just a Void to Fill the Space, I wonder, how sad would we all of been?

I discovered Case Studies during a two week period where I was living out of a hotel room in Dubuque, Iowa. My girlfriend was in the midst of a two-week intensive dog-training course and I’d signed out to drive out there and then “focus on my writing” for two weeks in a thrifty Day’s Inn a few blocks from the Mississippi River. To say the least, the smell of old cigarettes and scratchy linens inspired nothing in me and I found myself grabbing my keys and drifting through the Midwest in a chrome-green Honda Element. The Midwest is a strange, lonely place for a city dweller, and with no destination in mind I’d pick a spot on the map an aimlessly cruise towards it. It was on one of these roads with the green blur of farmlands speeding by in the background, the thin snake of the Mississippi my only landmark, that I not only discovered Case Studies but fell wildly in love with it.

It starts with “You Folded Up My Blanket Like We Were Already Lovers,” a deceptively upbeat story about love in a car, on the stairs, in a garden. The road will numb you, and my musical selections weren’t cracking the shell, but “You Folded Up My Blanket…” with it’s beautifully simple lyrics slipped in and I played it on repeat, memorizing every word like a smitten teenager. From there “My Silver Hand” squeezed in to the gap, Lortz’s deep, whiskey-soaked voice rising above the simple violin and guitar, the words full of heartbreak and the need for redemption just peppering my emotional core. Somewhere between Dubuque and Hazel Green, Wisconsin, I fell wholeheartedly in love with the album as a whole. I pulled over the car and sat and stared out in to an endless stretch of green and felt lonely and a bit sad and completely won over by everything Lortz was crooning, every simple beat that stretched out from the door behind me. (Noah)

Cave SingersNo Witch (Jagjaguwar)

I’ve never quite been able to put my finger on why or how, but every moment on No Witch seems suffused with joy. Maybe it’s the way Derek Fudesco’s guitar notes dance like afternoon sunlight on the living room wall, or maybe it’s the honest, folksy feel of the foot-stomping energy. Whatever the case, No Witch has become my go-to cheerup album, my foolproof impetus for dancing around the kitchen with gleeful abandon. It’s not that there’s no darkness – “My mind wakes me up every night sir, see devils in my backyard,” Quirk sings on “Black Leaf,” but the bleak and the bright are bundled up together in little boxes of hope. Weather moves in dark patterns, but as Quirk espouses in “All Land Crabs and Divinity Ghosts,” “It’s too big of a world to give up now.” (Brittney)

 

 

 

Constant LoversTrue Romance (self-released)

When Macklemore said “My city’s filthy,” this wasn’t quite what he meant, but as its cover art indicates, True Romance listeners are in for a low-down dirty ride. This album is a tribute to sybarite pleasures of all kinds, from the warm burn of whiskey in your stomach to the red memory of teeth marks on skin, from the hip-thrust of the drums to the thrust of, well, other things. Conveniently, it’s also the perfect soundtrack for the unbridled enjoyment of these recreations. (Brittney)

Dan ManganOh Fortune (Arts & Crafts)

I recently turned thirty. Not long after, I found myself looking back on the 20s version of me and thinking, “What an ass.” 28-year-old Mangan (who, incidentally, is incredibly polite and charming) seems to be going through a similar process a couple of years early, and has done us all the favor of turning it into a delightful album. With endearing honesty and trademark wit, Mangan crafts carefully textured odes and confessionals that reward with every listen. (Brittney)

 

 

See the rest of our 24 unmissable records from 2011 after the jump (more…)

January 3, 2012

Abbey’s Favorites of 2011

by

no-time-for-dreaming

 

 

I’ve already shared my favorite songs with you and told you a little bit about my personal MVP, but here are a few more of my favorite things from 2011.

My Favorite Albums of 2011:

1. Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues 2. Zoe Muth and The Lost High Rollers – Starlight Hotel

3. Charles Bradley – No Time for Dreaming

4. Dolorean – The Unfazed

5. Bryan John Appleby – Fire on the Vine

6. Gardens & Villa – s/t

7. Other Lives – Tamer Animals

8. Radiation City – The Hands That Take You

9. Alabama Shakes – s/t EP

10 (tie). Quiet Life – Big Green

10 (tie). Gem Club – Breakers

My Favorite Musical Moments of 2011

1. Mavis Staples Singing “The Weight,” “You Are Not Alone” and “Freedom Highway” back-to-back-to-back at Bumbershoot

 

Mavis Staples at Bumbershoot ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

2. Kelli Schaefer and Her Mom Singing “Gone in Love” at Cathedrals II

 

Kelli Schaefer and Mom ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

3. Being Front Row for Charles Bradley at the Aladdin Theater During MFNW

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Charles Bradley ::: iphone photo by Abbey Simmons

4. Pickwick Performing (and performing with Pickwick) at our 5th Anniversary Show

5. Slack Fest (all of it)

 

Whalebones at Slack Fest ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

My Favorite Videos of 2011:

 

 

 

 

My Favorite Thing I Forgot to Include on the Appropriate Best of List: New Carissa’s Wierd

 

 

These new Carissa’s Wierd and the subsequent 7” out on Hardly Art this year, definitely should have been on both my favorite songs and favorite EPs / 7” / cassette of the year list, but absolutely slipped my mind. This is not acceptable.

My Favorite Thing Sound on the Sound did in 2011: Written Here with Bryan John Appleby

December 14, 2011

Abbey’s Favorite (Almost Entirely Local) Songs of 2011

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Kelli Schaefer ::: photo by Dylan Priest

 

 

Having fallen deep down a used-vinyl sized hole this year, I managed to completely miss most of the national blog buzz bands and mp3s making the press release copy&paste rounds of 2011, those things that so often fill end of the year lists. But considering the immense output from our little corner of the country, I don’t feel I suffered or starved for new songs to keep me company. These are the forty songs from 2011 that were my soundtrack and that I played on repeat. I’m not bold enough to say they are the best songs of 2011, but they are my favorites.

While this list is not enumerated, my very favorite song of the year, Kelli Schaefer’s heart-aching-to-the-point-of-breaking “Gone in Love,” is at the top with some other absolute favorites. “Gone in Love” is a song that has not lost its emotional wallop despite hundreds of listens and many live performances over the last 12 months. And every time I see Kelli sing it, I can’t stop my chin from quivering. “Gone in Love” isn’t just one of my favorite songs of 2011, it is one of my favorite songs.

That’s hardly true for every song on this list. Every year has its one-hit wonder and I have no shame in saying I played the hell out of 2011′s. Whether its a song that stays with you for decades or a song you only blast until the end of the year, I hope you might discover a new favorite of your own by taking a listen to some of mine.

 

 

“Gone in Love” – Kelli Schaefer “Before the Night is Gone” – Zoe Muth and Her Lost High Rollers “Montezuma” – Fleet Foxes “Letters” – Lemolo “I’m Not Leaving” – Big Sur

“I Found You” – Alabama Shakes “I’m Losing Myself” – Robin Pecknold / Edward Droste | download “Father’s Clothes” – Grand Hallway “Leaves, Trees, Forest” > “Rows of Houses” – Dan Mangan “Boys” – Bryan John Appleby

“The Round” (From the Basement) – Pickwick “Park” – Radiation City “Twins” – Gem Club | download “Mute” – Joshua Morrison “My Silver Hand” – Case Studies | download

The rest of my favorite (almost completely local) songs of 2011 (more…)

September 29, 2011

My Most Played: September 2011

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As for the first two tunes, my niece is due any day now, in fact she was due on Tuesday and in the weeks leading to her arrival, I’ve listened to these songs so many times BMI is going to start charging me. Tom Petty was right, the waiting IS the hardest part.

Tom Petty – “The Waiting” Justin Townes Earle – “Can’t Hardly Wait” Kelli Schaefer’s Doe Bay Session Been Here All My Days Girls – Father, Son, Holy Ghost Gem Club – Breakers Dan Mangan – “Leaves, Tree, Forest” Canon Bros – “Out of Here” Robin Bacior – Rest Our Wings Numero Group Eccentric Soul: The Deep City Label Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues Quiet Life – San Luis Opisbo Damien Jurado – “The Loneliest Place I’ve Ever Been is In Your Arms” Champagne Champagne’s Doe Bay Session Richard Swift – “Lady Luck” S – I’m Not As Good As You Avians Alight – s/t Apricot & the Beginners Sera Cahoone’s Doe Bay Session

The Lonliest Place I’ve Ever Been (Is In Your Arms) by saintbartlett

July 27, 2011

Dolorean, Quiet Life and Joseph Giant at The Tractor [photos]

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Dolorean ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

A couple weeks ago at a sparsely populated Tractor, I saw one of my favorite line-ups of the year: Joseph Giant, Quiet Life and Dolorean. Most of you missed it, but all three artists are playing local shows soon and I wanted to make sure you didn’t miss their next.

Dolorean: August 19th at Mississippi Studios in Portland and here in Seattle on August 27th with Pearly Gate Music and Ghosts I’ve Met at Columbia City Theater.

Quiet Life: Playing Pickathon next weekend and a slew of Portland dates including August 21st for a free show at Doug Fir and a MFNW show on September 10th at Bunk Bar with The Moondoggies and on September 11th with Dolorean at Romtoms.

Joseph Giant: September 1st with Gold Leaves and Kevin Murphy at The Crocodile. Reverb Fest October 8th and City Arts Fest October 21st with The Sons of Warren Oates, Smokey Brights and Bryan John Appleby.

Joseph Giant ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Quiet Life ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Quiet Life ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Dolorean ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

July 13, 2011

Road Trip to Portland! Music Fest Northwest Unveils Its Full Schedule

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Drew Grow and the Pastors Wives ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Sure, Music Fest Northwest (MFNW) starts just a day after Bumbershoot ends, right about the time I think “thank god music festival season is done until March.” But with a schedule like this, MFNW is totally worth extending the festival season and making the road-trip south to Portland. I’ve bolded some of the sets I’m most excited about, though I’m tempted to just bold the whole thing … MFNW has out done itself this year. See you in the front row and in line at Pine State Biscuits come September 7th?

Wednesday, September 7 9:00pm — 9:40pm – The Heligoats at Bunk Bar 10:00pm — 10:40pm – Kelly Blair Bauman at Bunk Bar 10:00pm — 11:15pm – The Kills Crystal Ballroom 11:00pm — 11:40pm – Sean Flinn & The Royal We at Bunk Bar 12:00am — 1:00am – Crooked Fingers at Bunk Bar

Thursday, September 8 6:00pm — 7:00pm – The Joy Formidable at Nike Sportswear Stage at Wonder Ballroom 7:30pm — 8:45pm – Brand New at Nike Sportswear Stage at Wonder Ballroom 8:00pm — 8:40pm – Monarques at Whole Foods Market Stage at the Aladdin Theater 8:00pm — 8:40pm – Breakfast Mountain at Branx 8:00pm — 8:40pm – Viva Voce at Crystal Ballroom 8:00pm — 8:40pm – Mnemonic Sounds at Hawthorne Theatre 9:00pm — 10:00pm – Dennis Coffey at Whole Foods Market Stage at the Aladdin Theater 9:00pm — 9:40pm – Suuns at Branx 9:00pm — 9:40pm – Greylag at Bunk Bar 9:00pm — 10:00pm – Sebadoh at Crystal Ballroom 9:00pm — 9:40pm – Nether Regions at Heineken Stage at Dante’s 9:00pm — 9:40pm – Brainstorm at Hyundai Stage at Doug Fir 9:00pm — 9:40pm – Dirty Mittens at Hawthorne Theatre 9:00pm — 9:40pm – Sun Angle at Holocene 9:00pm — 9:40pm – Ume at at Mississippi Studios 9:00pm — 9:40pm – Dirty Ghosts at Roseland Theater 10:00pm — 10:40pm – Talkdemonic at Branx 10:00pm — 10:40pm – Thousands at Bunk Bar 10:00pm — 10:40pm – Witch Mountain at Heineken Stage at Dante’s 10:00pm — 10:40pm – Purity Ring at Hyundai Stage at Doug Fir 10:00pm — 10:40pm – Unknown Mortal Orchestra at Hawthorne Theatre 10:00pm — 10:40pm – Blouse at Holocene 10:00pm — 10:40pm – The Needful Longings at Mississippi Studios 10:00pm — 10:40pm – Thrones at Roseland Theater 10:30pm — 11:30pm – Charles Bradley at Whole Foods Market Stage at the Aladdin Theater 10:30pm — 11:45pm – Archers Of Loaf at Crystal Ballroom 11:00pm — 12:00am – Handsome Furs at Branx 11:00pm — 11:40pm – Dolorean at Bunk Bar 11:00pm — 11:40pm – Black Cobra at Heineken Stage at Dante’s 11:00pm — 11:40pm – White Arrows at Hyundai Stage at Doug Fir 11:00pm — 12:00am – Little Dragon at Hawthorne Theatre 11:00pm — 11:40pm – Twin Sister at Holocene 11:00pm — 11:40pm – Richmond Fontaine at Mississippi Studios 11:00pm — 12:15am – Butthole Surfers at Roseland Theater 12:00am — 1:00am – Damien Jurado at Bunk Bar 12:00am — 1:00am – Kylesa at Heineken Stage at Dante’s 12:00am — 1:00am – Phantogram at Hyundai Stage at Doug Fir 12:00am — 1:00am – EMA at Holocene 12:00am — 1:00am – You Am I at Mississippi Studios

See Friday, Saturday and Sunday’s Schedule (more…)

June 4, 2011

The Moondoggies at Sasquatch

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The Moondoggies ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Following in the funky footsteps of Wheedle’s Groove isn’t an enviable task, but a newly expanded Moondoggies line-up stepped up to the challenge Sunday afternoon at Sasquatch. Taking the stage as a six-piece after an all-night drive from Montana, the central harmonies of Kevin, Carl and Caleb were joined by Jon Pontrello on tambourine/guitar, Micah Simler on bass and Jeremy Bruno on lap steel. Simler is recognizable to local music fans as the bassist of SHIM and The Golden Blondes, while Bruno is being borrowed for shows from former Moondoggies’ tourmates Quiet Life.

It wasn’t just the line-up that was different, the band played three brand new songs amidst old favorites like “Black Shoe” and “What Took So Long” that the mid-afternoon crowd happily sang along to. The expanded line-up and two of the new songs highlight a more robust Moondoggies, a return to the driving hooks and harmonies of Don’t Be A Stranger. “Don’t Ask Why” is a boogie blues rocker, where Caleb Quick’s masterful work on keys overtakes Murphy’s throaty twang, culminating in a jangly jam of keys, guitar, lap steel and drums that even The Dead could be proud of. Sasquatch set ender, “Do You Love Me?” was so new it seemed all but the skeleton of a pop song. The tune took the Moondoggies out of their three-part-harmony sweet-spot and featured Dahlen, Murphy and Quick singing the same plaintive howl of “Do You Love Me?” in crisp solo rounds. It was one of the few moments where the newness hurt more than helped, ending the set on a tentative note rather than with an exclamation point proclaiming the promise shown in these new explorations.

Your next chance to see The Moondoggies locally is June 15th at Westlake Park as part of the “Out to Lunch” summer concert series and it’s free.

The Moondoggies ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

The Moondoggies ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

The Moondoggies ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

May 2, 2011

My Most Played: April 2011

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Fleet Foxes- Helplessness Blues Quiet LifeBig Green Grand HallwayWinter Creatures Stephen Nielsen – Four Songs Gold Leaves Curtains For You – “What Good Am I To You Now?” Mavis Staples with Jeff Tweedy – “You Are Not Alone” Zoe Muth and The Lost High Rollers – Starlight Hotel My GoodnessMy Goodness Damien JuradoLive From Landlocked Jerry Garcia – Garcia (Side A) Sister Rosetta Tharpe – “Up Above My Head” (and every YouTube video I could find) Le Sang Song - Le Sang Song Nirvana – Hormoaning Posse Neil Young and Crazy Horse – Everyone Knows This is Nowhere WhalebonesWhalebones Pickwick – Myths Vol I, II & III The Rain Don’t Fall On Me – Country Blues (1927-1952) Joseph GiantJoseph Giant

 

Cave Country/No Surprise (double video) from Quiet Life on Vimeo.

February 14, 2011

Postcards from the Road: The Moondoggies in Massachusetts

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The Moondoggies were great pen pals last summer, so we were excited when they agreed to write again from what turned out to be a very snowy winter tour with Quiet Life. (If you click on the images, they’ll enlarge for your reading/viewing pleasure.)



January 5, 2011

Quiet Life – “Big Green” [video]

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For two big towns, Seattle and Portland often feel incredibly small and tangled together. Take the tangled trail of connections stemming from this brand new video by Portland’s Quiet Life.

The video was directed and filmed by The Maldives’ Ryan McMackin, inspired by the idea of building a life sized terrarium. (And it looks like they succeeded beautifully.) To further the six-degrees-of-no-separation, Quiet Life is just about to hit the road for a month long tour with The Moondoggies. The Moondoggies who just today released recordings from their Christmas show at The Showbox with The Maldives, featuring video director Ryan McMackin on drums and fronting a boisterous rendition of “Feliz Navidad.” (Not to mention a brand new, beautiful Moondoggies tune “Butte Montana.”)

While Seattle won’t be getting a date with Quiet Life and The Moondoggies, Portland will be treated to the band’s record release show February 12th at Doug Fir. They’ll be joined on stage by Widower, who will be playing Sound on the Sound’s first show of 2011 at Columbia City Theater this Friday. Both shows are worth a “road trip” South. Like we said, they’re awfully small towns for two big cities, but when it results in line-ups, videos, tours and music like Quiet Life, The Moondoggies, The Maldives and Widower are making … we couldn’t be more grateful for the tangled mess.