September 19, 2012

The Head and the Heart Headlined the Paramount

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The Head and the HeartPhoto: Josh Lovseth
The Head and the Heart

We’ve written about hundreds of tiny bands we felt were great and musicians who we thought deserved a wider audience, but none have felt quite like the ride the Head and the Heart’s taken us on. A sold out Saturday show headlining the Paramount Theater showed the band’s snowballing momentum hasn’t let up, more than two years following the self-release of their debut record among the humble surroundings of Conor Byrne. In that time they’ve played for the President, warmed up for some of the big boys, sold out countless venues with themselves as headliners, graced the Sasquatch mainstage twice, been given the nod by Dave Matthews, and traveled the world. Writing that last sentence out, this course of events sounds made up like some outlandish fantasy more fit for a movie script.

Recently Seattle Weekly Music Editor Chris Kornelis made the case that this success story is an example of how record labels can still “work.” It’s absolutely true that the band wouldn’t have sold 200,000 plus copies or traveled so widely without the expansive distribution and industry connections that Sub Pop can provide. And I do think Sub Pop has been a good place for the band. I don’t agree however that the Head and the Heart joining with Sub Pop “makes the case for the modern record label” as the subtitle puts it. By glossing over the 8000 copies the band sold prior to Sub Pop’s interest, Kornelis misses a key point about why this relationship works: The Head and the Heart are the special case that every label is in search of. Let me explain.

Being an unsigned local band generally means boxes and boxes of unsold CD’s taking up closet space. The Head and the Heart had the opposite problem. In the late months of 2010 they couldn’t keep Sonic Boom and Easy Street stocked with enough CD’s. It remained a top seller for months prior to an agreement with Sub Pop, and as often as not the sad #1 post-it note was uncovered waiting for the next shipment. Following that Conor Byrne show, and then Doe Bay Fest, seemingly any show the band was billed for sold out instantly. This is all to say prior to a label stepping in, this band had real momentum. In this case Sub Pop didn’t need to conjure this band out of thin air or fictionalize a forest horror story to entice people; the record was already recorded, the band already known. In buying this record and the next record they were simply making a smart business decision on selling an already proven product with an independently growing base of grassroots support but no major national presence yet in terms of CD’s on shelves. As far as I’m concerned, with that opportunity for sales as a carrot, any label rep worth their salt should’ve been going to the mat with efforts to court this band.

While Sub Pop certainly deserves much credit for enabling the Head and the Heart’s continued rise and success, this Paramount show reminded me that it’s the band’s own connection with their fans that keeps the momentum going and now selling out rooms of thousands. Though the cachet of Sub Pop’s brand might be able to get the band some cred if they were otherwise unknown, it’s the band’s own commitment to reaching their fans that fills the seats and makes this band worthy of the title “The Headliners.”

I’ve often wondered that the intimacy inherent in the Head and the Heart’s music and mood might be lost in a cavernous room or a wide open festival field. This night proved to me, as did Sasquatch before it, that this worry is unfounded. Anthemic choruses (and a few verses even) make it work. In an unpublished blog entry about the band’s second Sasquatch appearance from last May, I put it like this: “Their upgrade to the mainstage slot ahead of Bon Iver at Sasquatch says much, and the legion of screaming teens who gleefully sang along every word in the lower amphitheater bowl says the rest. Graduating from an open-mic concern into sought after openers for bands like My Morning Jacket, the Shins, Dave Matthews Band and Death Cab For Cutie, this group is now at home on the largest of stages.” Word.

 

Curtains For YouPhoto: Josh Lovseth
Curtains For You
Bryan John ApplebyPhoto: Josh Lovseth
Bryan John Appleby
Bryan John ApplebyPhoto: Josh Lovseth
Bryan John Appleby
The Head and the HeartPhoto: Josh Lovseth
The Head and the Heart
The Head and the HeartPhoto: Josh Lovseth
The Head and the Heart
The Head and the HeartPhoto: Josh Lovseth
The Head and the Heart
The Head and the HeartPhoto: Josh Lovseth
The Head and the Heart
The Head and the HeartPhoto: Josh Lovseth
The Head and the Heart
July 26, 2012

A week of Prime Time Performances

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Short of the Super Bowl or maybe Saturday Night Live, Letterman’s show the Big Kahuna of TV appearances, and earlier this week Allen Stone became the most recent local band to hook that whopper. On the other coast in the midst of a summer bouncing between festivals, a day later The Head and the Heart (a guest on Letterman last year) stopped by Jimmy Fallonto do their thing.

 

 

The Head and the Heart are back in Seattle at the Paramount on Saturday September 15th. This year Allen Stone opens all three nights of Dave Matthews’ annual Labor Day extravaganza at the Gorge August 30th, 31st, and September 1st. After that I imagine he’ll be free to announce his own headlining show in one of the Emerald City’s finer venues, perhaps around late October before he goes international for a few weeks.

May 24, 2012

What’s it like for you in Washington? (A retrospective on the music that brought and kept me here)

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Last week, May 16th, was my one-year anniversary of my move to Seattle. I wanted to write about what my year here has been like (magical, hard, beautiful, terrifying), and I knew I couldn’t tell my whole story like the narcissist in me wants to do- so I am going to focus on a wonderful circular tale. You see, on Friday, I am going back home to Colorado to 1) Assure my parents that I am brushing my teeth and paying my bills, and 2) to go to, dance at, and cover the May 29 The Head and the Heart/The Shins bill at the most stunning venue in Colorado- Red Rocks.

After I booked my flight, I recognized with outstanding clarity how important The Head and the Heart, as a band, has been in the two years since I decided to move, and then did it. And it all goes back to the first show I saw. This mini-retrospective is meant to try to tidily wrap up the cycle of my first year in Seattle. This is silliness, I know, because nothing in life is tidy. But sometimes it’s nice to try to pull out one thread in a tapestry and follow it back, back, back, to where it first entered the loom.

And let’s get this out of the way- I know The Head and the Heart is a band whose rise has been described as “meteoric”. Their album has been in turns praised and panned. Some people love them, some people have tired of them, and some people have a hatred for them that makes me think they may just have general anger issues. Some people don’t even know who they are.

That’s not quite what this little piece is about. I tire of people taking easy swings at bands that have experienced success without the full backing of the intellectual music community. It’s a boring conversation, and hardly anyone says anything new during those self-congratulatory exchanges, or listens to anyone but themselves.

This is about how music found me at the exact right time, with the exact right things to say, and how that has led me down the most winding and verdant path I could have found. I could write a similar piece on how Raffi really helped me through the first grade. He truly did. Or how Pavement got me through my jitters of going away to college.

So. Suck it, Pitchfork. I like Atlas Sound, too, but you won’t find anything about the cleverness of a modal minor scale in here. Just a girl who has a lot of feelings, and a particular love for harmonies sung in seconds and thirds.

I was twenty-two. I was nervous. I was standing outside Moe’s BBQ and Bowling in Denver, Colorado, about to interview a band from this misty magical place I was considering moving- a band whose debut record had spun all that 2010 summer, convincing me of my decision to fly far away from the dusty West. The Head and the Heart were on their first tour outside the Pacific Northwest that November, and I had emailed them tentatively about doing an interview. At that point, I was writing for the Denver Post’s online arts section “Reverb,” but had decided to do this interview for my personal blog. Because that record felt intensely personal.

Moe’s BBQ has a capacity of 250. It’s half bowling alley, half BBQ joint, with a stage jimmied right in the back with room for about 100 of those 250 to not stand directly in front of the employees slinging (delicious) banana pudding. I like to say that Moe’s provides the Essential B’s: Bowling, BBQ, Beer, Bands, Buddies. You really can’t ask for anything else.

The Head and the Heart put on a hell of a show. They always do. I had spent that summer listening to that record, singing (more like yelling) along in my car – the hot, dry wind whipping my voice out the window, my resolve to move somewhere (at that point it was between Portland and Seattle) growing stronger with every “All my friends are talking about leaving, about leaving/ But all my friends are sitting in their graves.”

This record reminds me time and again the absolute truth of my stance on music: if it hits you, means something to you, then don’t let anyone else ascribe another meaning to it for you. It takes strength of character to be loyal to what you love in a time of over opinionated, fast paced, hard-nosed tastemakers. A lot of music criticism has nothing to do with love, or the feelings music brings out of your buried, exhausted heart. Which is backwards to me. One of my favorite poets, Muriel Rukeyser said:

“A work of art is one through which the consciousness of the artist is able to give its emotions to anyone who is prepared to receive them. There is no such thing as bad art.”

And she is a much better writer than anyone I’ve ever read online.

I danced at that first Moe’s show, and when they played “Rivers and Roads” (which was not on the record I had in my car), I had never heard it before. But I was on the precipice of leaving home, my friends, and it sounded like all the things I was just about to write down in my journal, before they turned it into a song first. My high altitude heart was dizzy, and my feet hurt, and I wanted to sprint to the Northwest to see if I could ever feel that way about music that was right in front of me again. I moved up my tentative date to Get the Hell out of Dodge Boulder by three months.

A couple days before I left, I was the official photographer for the Pearl Street Music Festival. Guess who headlined? The Head and the Heart. I crouched side stage holding my camera, and thought of my packed up apartment and the road ahead. They played “Rivers and Roads.” I cried a little behind the safety of the heavy velvet curtain.

Then I moved. And my time here was peppered with shows from Bryan John Appleby, Lemolo, Cataldo, Kelli Schaefer, Drew Grow and the Pastors’ Wives, Pickwick, Hey Marseilles, Damien Jurado… this world of music that made sense to me, felt real, felt as though they maybe had read my diary and written better versions of it. And, you know, good for them- because my handwriting is awful.

This green place, this wild, sleepy, caffeinated place. I don’t know how you enchanted me from so far away, but you did. And you did it by sending me the music that I needed, before I knew I needed it. You’re wily, Pacific Northwest.

In the past year, I have fallen deeply in love with the music here. When Maraqopa was released, “Working Titles” racked up so many plays I think it actually is singlehandedly responsible for pulling me through my first Seattle winter.

“Gone in Love” by Kelli Schaefer can still undo me, no matter how public a place I may be sitting in.

Last summer, my first summer in Seattle, I threw my Hacienda Hands into the air so many times, I can’t listen to Pickwick’s “Hacienda Motel” if I’m driving, because it’s a Pavlovian response at this point.

When I was lucky enough to begin writing for this blog, I met people who heard music the way I did- with the secret ears pressed against the walls of the heart, waiting for the signal to jump and skip a beat. I was allowed to write about the roots that music had planted in me, and I could hardly believe my good fortune.

When I remembered the first time I felt this sort of passion for the music in front of me, I am hurtled back to before I had even set foot in the angular concrete rainforest that is this city. Which is why I find it so fitting to go back to where I first knew I was making the right choice- at a show in my home state, hearing the songs that made me believe there was a home out there I didn’t even know about. But I could feel it.

I’m going back to Colorado to root for the home team, and that feels like the perfect way to celebrate my anniversary of one of the most frightening, best decisions I’ve ever made. I’ll probably dance a little, too. Be glad you’re not going to be there to see that, Seattle. I’ll let you know how it goes.

May 3, 2012

It All Comes Right … or How I Went on Tour for a Week and Stayed a Month

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You see, I was only supposed to be here for a week, five shows to be exact, but somewhere around Louisville (show number three), I realized if I didn’t do everything I could to stay for the whole tour, I’d regret it for the rest of my life. I’d never been on tour before, (unless you count following Phish when I was 19, but that’s a whole other confession) and having already driven halfway across the country, seeing old friends, making new ones, and witnessing a couple local bands I love live out their dreams in a means that exceeded even their wildest — I was full-on hooked.

By the end of my adventure with Drew Grow and the Pastors’ Wives, we had driven 7,000 miles, through 30 states, played 22 shows, visited two countries and the van only broke down once. I watched proudly as the Pastors’ Wives played shows to 3,000 people and as they played shows to six, because the passion they put into the performances never waned. I watched in wonder as The Head and The Heart debuted new songs and played old songs in new ways, and as every city knew every word, even the ones they’d never been to before. I personally saw new places every day but two, and new faces every night, and was astounded to find they knew the songs and stories we know here in the Pacific Northwest. I spotted fans in collegiate Ohio wearing Bryan John Appleby t-shirts, shared a table at a tiny pizza joint in Portland, Maine with a Maldives fan, and met viewers of the Doe Bay Sessions in Athens, Georgia. There wasn’t a day I was there long after I was supposed to be back home in Seattle that I didn’t stand jaw-dropped and wish you all in the 206 could see what I was seeing.

Because I watched what’s happening here in your backyard (whether you like it or not) being embraced from coast-to-coast. I witnessed first hand, a band on the rise being gracious to their fans, great to their openers and so proud of the place they call home. They talked about Seattle like a smitten suitor, and when the bands announced they were from the Pacific Northwest, it was always one of the loudest cheers every night. Maybe there really is something in the water here; maybe we don’t realize how lucky we are to call this place home. Maybe we do and we forget it sometimes. Nothing has reminded me how lucky I am to have been born and raised, and to have settled as an adult in Seattle than to be away from it. Every night at the merch table when someone spotted my Washington State tattoo and wistfully said, “lucky…” I knew that I was in every fiber of my exhausted, elated being. I loved the road, but it is so very nice to be HOME.

April 12, 2012

Postcards From The Road: On Tour With Drew Grow And The Pastors’ Wives – Part III

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Here are two last postcards from my time on the road with Drew Grow and the Pastors’ Wives and The Head and The Heart, there’ll be some more coherent thoughts in this space soon about my time with them. But first, more postcards from another tour … I’m hitting the road again this afternoon with Damien Jurado and my wallet is filled with stamps.


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April 11, 2012

Postcards From The Road: On Tour With Drew Grow And The Pastors’ Wives – Part II

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Another Pastors’ Wives playlist and the addiction we picked up in Canada all in this installation of Postcards from the Road.

If you’d like to see some of my photos from tour, Drew Grow and the Pastors’ Wives kept a photo blog while we were travelling and I took many of them.


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April 10, 2012

Postcards from the Road: On Tour with Drew Grow and the Pastors’ Wives – Part I

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Sitting on the side of a blank postcard gave me a new type of appreciation for our awesome penpals over the years, here’s my first attempts at Postcards from the Road. There’ll be a few more volumes from this adventure and new postcards coming soon … I’m headed out on the road with Damien Jurado this Thursday!

p.s you can click on the text portion of the postcards to enlarge them for easier reading.


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March 2, 2012

“The Greatest Hometown Show of My Career” – Damien Jurado at the Neptune Theater

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Damien Jurado

Damien Jurado ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

The Neptune Theater with its many green-eyed sea gods looming over the great room and ghosts lurking in backstage corners was probably Seattle’s most appropriate setting to introduce Damien Jurado’s most ambitious, and so far widely appreciated release to date, Maraqopa. Though releasing his own cassettes led to a pair of Sub Pop singles in 1995 and ’96 and then a number of LP’s first on Sub Pop and then Secretly Canadian, Jurado has largely remained an unassuming and under-appreciated figure locally. On the other hand he’s also songwriter everyone secretly seems to have a very personal relationship with. Judging by the sold out crowd for this release, Jurado’s largest hometown headlining crowd to date, more than fifteen years of cultivating passionate fans just a few at a time has finally hit a critical mass. Just tabulated first week sales figures for Maraqopa from SC report the best first week sales of his career.

Maraqopa is on no map and there is no marked road to get there. A relentless curiosity fueled by an active imagination leads to places uncharted. Jurado is eccentric, but he is still eloquently human. “To be or not to be” is the question Jurado is posing in so many different ways. Are we a slave to our ego, or are we in pursuit of a beautiful existence? What are we trading away by not always being ourselves and saying what needs to be said? What are the dimensions of everlasting regret? Shades of Situationalism abounds as when he croons “free is all we are” on “Everyone a Star.” Here he’s stating a universal truth that encompasses all of our pasts, present, and future all at once, though for Jurado “free” isn’t the end of the story but rather the beginning. Not itself the desired result, free is the engine through which we explore our higher consciousness and might attain our own version of fulfillment. Free is the unique beauty of unlimited possibility.

I stood above the clouds, to see you on ground, waving me down feel free to lose yourself, I do this all the time, love is a blinding sun we are songs to be sung…

For those who haven’t been keeping up with Jurado, the opening song of both show and Maraqopa may have been a wake up call that he’s no longer just one man, one guitar and some clever found sounds. A long psych jam with Jurado sneaking in words from “Ghost of David” during the long instrumental wax and wane, “Nothing is the News” is emblematic of the broad scope of his current thinking, enabled since Saint Bartlett by producer/engineer/Shins multi-instrumentalist Richard Swift. Saint Bartlett found Jurado enabled, maybe for the first time, and Maraqopa is Jurado involved fully in this new mode of thinking. Going from a very defined and limited palette as a singer-songwriter to basically limitless options with Swift and a full band sound, Jurado is running with it. This means children’s choirs. This means space jams and drawn out distortion. “Joy is letting it go…”

Peppered throughout the record the high harmonies of the innocent sounding Swift family singers are a calming angelic presence that’s missing from Jurado’s previous work. We can all name our favorite sad song by Damien, but what about one that’s uplifting? Maybe it’s not so hard anymore. This night’s choir was made up of the night’s opener Bryan John Appleby, Jessica Dobson of Deep Sea Diver, Jon and Josiah of the Head and the Heart, and Pickwick fro-man Galen Disston. Joining together on Jurado’s Cascadian ode “Working Titles” and leaping to the standard Swift set himself on that recording was four spine-tingling minutes midway through the night that weren’t to be topped.

Marching through the new record’s songs in order, at one point Jurado stopped to reflect on his long road. Some bands lacking in awkward remarks to throw at the crowd will just tell the crowd how great they are. I’ve never seen the normally blunt Jurado blow smoke up his crowd’s ass, but tonight in opposition of any performer’s persona or aloof mask he might wear, smiles were out and Jurado was exuberant. “This is the greatest hometown show of my career” he told the crowd, savoring the words as he said them. “I am so happy.” He certainly has reason to be. After over half a decade of seeing Jurado live, usually to audiences of 50 or less, though recently as many as 300, that a crowd of a thousand people and more disappointed left outside in the rain filled up the Neptune without having heard his latest record was almost beyond comprehension. But that Jurado’s scope has now expanded to a much wider canvas, it feels right that the scale of his crowds should be expanding with him. No longer just “big in Europe” as they say, Damien Jurado is now officially big in Seattle too.

 

Damien Jurado

Damien Jurado ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Damien Jurado

Damien’s All-Star Choir ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Damien Jurado

Damien Jurado ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Gold Leaves

Gold Leaves ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

Bryan John Appleby with Jessica Dobson

Bryan John Appleby with Jessica Dobson ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

February 18, 2012

Damien Jurado Performs “Working Titles” with the Help of a Few Friends

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Damien Jurado with Friends ::: photo by Josh Lovseth

I know I said I wouldn’t be writing about Damien Jurado here now that I’m part of his management team, so I’m not going to review last night’s sold out record release, but I would be remiss not to share this video I shot side-stage of my favorite song from Maraqopa.

Leave me Manhattan, I want the Evergreens …

Joined by friends and younger musicians he has inspired from The Head and The Heart, Pickwick, Deep Sea Diver and Bryan John Appleby, Damien sang this love song to his home state to thunderous applause and hoots and hollers. As he began his set, the seasoned troubadour told the crowd “this is the greatest Seattle show of my career.” But with spine-tingling moments like “Working Titles,” the night felt more like a beginning than a culmination.

 

 

February 17, 2012

Caught a Damien Jurado Cover Last Night, Catching the Real Deal Tonight

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Pickwick

Pickwick at the Neptune Theater ::: Photo by Josh Lovseth

For last night’s very sold out Little Big Show benefiting ArtsCorps, Pickwick was no doubt the main attraction. But in the bigger picture this week has been about the release of Damien Jurado’s 10th LP titled Maraqopa. All this week the Seattle Times Andrew Matson has been premiering four bands who committed a Jurado cover to tape in honor of the occasion and his past efforts, a song a day. And of the four chosen, Pickwick of course went after the deepest cut. With the Mayor in the crowd and the “Godfather” himself watching from sidestage, for the encore’s first two minutes Pickwick ominously covered “I am the Greatest of all Liars” live for the first time, and then let loose on “The Ostrich.” Now that’s what I call an encore.

Take a moment yourself to download all the covers from Matson’s Blog, that also includes covers by Jeremy Enigk, Dolorean’s Al James, and the Head & The Heart’s Jon Russell.

For tonight’s nearly sold out record release show also at the Neptune Theater, Jurado will be premiering his new band, and in the spirit of Maraqopa, we’re likely to hear a similarly more developed take on songs old and new. Probably more new though as Jurado has now shed the shackles of the singer-songwriter and strives for something much, much more ambitious. Whatever he’s doing he continues to sound utterly original while doing it. Be smart and show up early tonight to snag one of the remaining tickets and catch openers Bryan John Appleby and Gold Leaves.