February 7, 2012

24 More Unmissable Records from the Pacific Northwest in 2011

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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…)

December 16, 2011

Our Favorite Local EPs, 45s & Cassettes of 2011

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2011 wasn’t just a great year for local full-lengths, awesome releases abounded in all formats: EPs, 7”s and yes, even cassettes. In fact, Phil’s favorite local release of all of 2011 was Mercy Ties and Grenades split 12”.

Here are 15 of our favorite local EPs, 7”s and cassettes of the past year and our favorite nationally released EP with links to listen or look at each of them:

Mercy Ties / Grenades 12”

Wheedle’s Groove: Seattle’s Finest In Funk & Soul 1965–1979 Limited Edition 45s Box Set

PickwickMyths

Night BeatsH-Bomb

Joshua MorrisonBuilder

Richard SwiftWalt Wolfman

Richard Swift “Whitman” by DOJAGSC

10 More of our Favorite Local EPs, 7”s, Cassettes & Our Favorite National EP of 2011 (more…)

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 14, 2011

Postcards from the Road: Shenandoah Davis

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With 13 weeks on the road ahead of them, we can’t wait to see what postcards Shenandoah Davis and her band send us … especially considering how adorable number one was.

You can click on the images to make them larger for easy reading.

Omaha Readers, I’m sure there are a few of you, don’t miss Shenandoah tonight. She’s playing at the Side Door Lounge.

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August 2, 2011

My Most Played: July 2011

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Dolorean ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Dolorean – The Unfazed (yes, again) Gardens & Villas/t Bryan John Appleby – Fire on the Vine Dillard & Clark – Through The Morning, Through The Night Richard Swift – “Broken Finger BluesStrong Killingss/t Shenandoah Davis – The Company We Keep Case StudiesThe World is Just a Shape to Fill the Night Radiation CityThe Hands That Take You Wild OnesYou’re A Winner EP PDX Pop Now! 2011 Comp Charles Bradley – “Stay Away” (Nirvana cover) Jesse Sykes and the Sweet Hereafter – Marble Son Fly Moon Royalty – s/t Lemolo – “Letters” Pickwick – “Window Sill”

July 29, 2011

Shenandoah Davis – The Company We Keep

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Shenandoah Davis is intimidatingly talented.

Classicaly trained with a background in opera, but gifted in a way that evokes more nature than nurture, Shenandoah’s skill is the kind that intimidates not just music writers, but fellow musicians. I will never forget seeing Shenandoah perform at the first BARE event at the Fremont Abbey. Shenandoah opened the show, standing there with perfect poise, hands clasped in front of her as if she were about to sing an aria at The Met. She performed a traditional Greek song; the room fell silent and enraptured, jaws dropped. Around me, musicians scheduled to perform a cappella that evening and already nervous, began wiping sweat off their brows. As the aria ended and Shenandoah’s bow was met with thunderous applause, a musician sitting in front of me summed it up, “Well, the rest of us are fucked.”

Luckily for the other artists performing at The Fremont Abbey tonight, they won’t have the unenviable task of following Shenandoah. Tonight is her show, the celebration of her lovely full-length, the Kick-Starter funded The Company We Keep. When listening to the record one word rises above all else: accomplished. Shenandoah isn’t just a gifted vocalist, but pianist, song-writer and composer. The Company We Keep is achingly lovely in every way: the words, the instrumentation, the emotion held in her falsetto trill enough to make you reach for a handkerchief. The complexity of instrumentation and Shenandoah’s voice, makes the words themselves seem like a supporting role to a listener, but if you peel through the layers of strings, wind instruments and operatic vocals, there is poetry.

But The Company We Keep isn’t just an intellectual exercise, and one of Shenandoah’s truest talents is her restraint. She could compose songs like bebop jazz solos, an exercise solely in skill, to see who can play the most complicated notes the fastest, but she doesn’t. As accomplished as The Company We Keep is, it is also accessible. These are still songs that will get stuck in your head, that you’ll find your toe tapping along to. These are still songs you’ll want to sing along to, but unless you also happen to be a brilliant opera singer, you should probably just listen. These aren’t participatory songs, as so much of what’s happening in local music is. These are more sit back in your chair and prepare to be wowed, as you would a symphony.

She’s one of a kind, Shenandoah. The Company We Keep puts both what elevates Shenandoah above us all, a rare talent, and what makes her just like us, the characters that inhabit all our lives and how our hearts open and break because of them, on display. And it’s a beautiful sight to behold.

Shenandoah Davis celebrates the release of The Company We Keep tonight at The Fremont Abbey with Paleo and Led to the Sea opening. Tickets are $12 at the door, but get there early to get them. The show starts at 8pm sharp and the doors are at 7pm.

And if you live outside Seattle, you’re in luck. Shenandoah is about to embark on an extensive national tour this August.

July 22, 2011

So You’re Not Going to Capitol Hill Block Party …

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Luckily there are still plenty of other musical choices we’d recommend off Pike Street this weekend.

Friday, July 22nd:

Portugal The Man – Easy Street Queen Anne In-Store (6pm, FREE) Big Sur, The Smokey Brights, Stephen Nielsen – The High Dive Kelli Schaefer, Shenandoah Davis and Paper Bird – The Warehouse, Tacoma M. Bison, Eternal Faire, Boxcar Rebellion – The Sunset PDX Pop Now! – Jared Mees and the Grown Children, Weinland, And And And – Refuge, Portland (FREE)

Saturday, July 23rd:

Elk and Boar – Columbia City Theater The Torn ACLS, River Giant – Skylark Cafe Vicci Martinez – The Triple Door PDX Pop Now! – Nurses, Loch Lomond, Wild Ones and more – Refuge, Portland (FREE)

Sunday, July 24th:

Jeremy Messersmith, The Thoughts – High Dive Ben Fisher and Dylan Pratt of Moya (FREE) – Columbia City Theater Tit Pig (FREE) – Comet Tavern Katy Lin & The Moonlight Riders; Gregory Paul, Gibson Cima, & Annie Ford Mercury; Shannon Stephens – Tractor Tavern PDX Pop Now! – Kelli Schaefer, Radiation City and more – Refuge, Portland (FREE)

Have a great weekend whether you’re catching shows on the Hill or somewhere else!

July 1, 2011

My Most Played: June 2011

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Wheedle’s Groove ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Dolorean – The Unfazed Wheedle’s Groove – Seattle’s Finest in Funk & Soul 1965-75 Moya – Demo Shimmering Stars – “I’m Gonna Try” Nurses – “Fever Dream” The Round Podcast Gold Leaves – The Ornament Shenandoah Davis – The Company We Keep Cotton Jones – Tall Hours in the Glowstream Stephen Nielsen – “Kick You Out” Other Lives – Tamer Animals

May 6, 2011

Shenandoah Davis & The Seattle Rock Orchestra Live at The Triple Door

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Shenandoah Davis at CHBP 2010 ::: photo by Abbey Simmons

Who doesn’t wish they could relive their favorite concerts over and over again? Thanks to the release of Shenandoah Davis’ stunning set with the Seattle Rock Orchestra at the Triple Door, I can. While I have always been impressed by SRO’s faithful reinterpretations of contemporary and canonical classics: OK Computer, Funeral, Pet Sounds, Bowie, and their next show, the songs of Queen; it has been their shows backing local bands original compositions that have been my favorite. Their set with Grand Hallway switched me from like to love with the band having seen them reach their truly grand orchestral potential.

Seattle Rock Orchestra’s evening with Kaylee Cole and Shenandoah Davis at the Triple Door on April 2nd was a year in the making and with Scott Teske’s carefully crafted orchestration and the gifted bows and horns of SRO, Davis and Cole’s songs were fully realized in a way few artists will ever get to experience. And Davis rose to the challenge, sounding more operatic vocally and more accomplished on piano than ever, which if you’ve seen Shenandoah perform before, is saying something indeed.

To see two local song-writers treated with the same pain-staking reverence and thunderous applause as names like Bowie, Wilson, Yorke and Mercury is one of my favorite local music memories. Not of 2011, but period. It’s this kind of collaboration, that extends beyond SRO to Matt and Mike Gervais of Curtains for You who joined Davis on stage for a number of songs and to Cole, who joined her for a duet performing a song by Nick Jaina, a Portland singer-songwriter, that makes what’s happening in Seattle right now so special.

Take a listen for yourself, the album is also available for digital purchase via Bandcamp.

April 1, 2011

Voices, Keys, and an Orchestra of Strings at the Triple Door this Saturday

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I’m all about musicians going big with their music and I can’t think of any bigger way to go than with an orchestra at your back. Such grand gestures are usually reserved for likes of the biggest boys and girls, the Gaga’s, Kanye’s and the Black Eyed Peas whether or not they actually add anything to already fastidiously-produced performances other than to say, “I’m so big and important, look at my entourage that consists of snappily-dressed french horn players!” This Saturday’s double bill at the Triple Door featuring the Seattle Rock Orchestra backing the original songs of local key-tingler’s Kaylee Cole and Shenandoah Davis is not that at all.

Kaylee Cole is no stranger to collaborating with the black-tie-while-at-work-types, having in just the past year worked with both the Portland Cello Project and the SRO on many a show, maybe the most notable being an epic Sasquatch performance of Arcade Fire Songs with SRO where the Head and the Heart’s Josiah Johnson played Win to her Regine. We giggled as we watched confused, ecstatic festival goers running towards the stage screaming “Is the Arcade Fire playing?” Normally hearing Cole all alone at the piano, or with just a drummer, randomly catching the PCP do an impromptu backing at the Doe Bay Fest Cafe patio stage seeing her is a pleasant surprise. With far from a quiet delivery and songs that could just as easily be labeled “compositions” without irony, Cole’s work is naturally fitted for this type of event and well augmented by such an expansive treatment.

Grand Hallway’s Shenandoah Davis until recently has also been rolling solo, but as she’s been working out her latest batch of her own songs, she’s been retaining the services of a string section of her own whom last week she brought to Columbia City Theater to sit in on the Round. Shenandoah’s jaunty, sweetly birdish vocals are as equally complex and catchy compositions to Cole’s, and the ease with which she delivers her piano arrangements speaks volumes of accomplishment that are all but made for such a grand backing.

The pre-sale tickets have already sold-out, but there will be a few day of tickets available at the door tomorrow. We highly recommend you get there early and get one.

One last nudge if you need it …. a brand new video of Kaylee performing a new song “Love Somebody” filmed by Christian Sorensen Hansen:

Love Somebody from Christian Sorensen Hansen on Vimeo.