[I think this was my first time seeing this band, though I'd heard some songs on KEXP already]
- Kinda beefy hard rock
- Good clear vocals [Irene Barber is seriously a great singer, this isn't giving her credit enough.]
- Some good melodies too
- I think I want them to be better than they actually are; they're not bad, definitely like them, but they're rather middle of the road [That's a harsh comment for me; while I think they never quite gave me whatever I was hoping for, I also think they were better than I was giving them credit, here.]
- Crowd was so quiet between songs, the band remarked on it; but people did seem to be staying and paying attention, so that's a good sign
- Maybe it was just my earplugs, maybe the sound mix, but I couldn't hear the backing vocals at all
- Trent Moorman drumming
- Opened with "Copenhagen", abbreviated, as an intro
- Diva singing and hard-edged rapping—illustrated by split hair, black buzz cut one side, long flowing French-braid blonde on other [Easiest to see in this photo and this photo on Flickr]
- "Body Princess"
- Again with "Aspirations": sweet gentle sung half suddenly breaks into burst of hard-beat fast rap to finish
- Confidence and talent to pull it off
- But not everything is split like that; "Cracks in the Speakers" is straightforward emo
- Cover of "Running up that Hill"
- Her voice isn't as full and rich as Kate Bush's, but whose is? Decent cover, did it justice, and if her voice is a bit thinner it's still good and strong
- Followed with another instrumental
- "Dirty Amazon" [That should be "Bad Amazon"]
- Give her one more album, she'll really make an impact [See, I was saying this nearly a year before I got to hear her next album! And if only it were true, but sadly it did not get the attention it deserved.]
- Finished with new song, sounds great, looking forward to more
- Hard-driving hard grunge
- Really this fits in with AC/DC and other '70s to early '80s metal
- Intense ferocious performance
- Third track "the new one"?
- Packed audience, Seattle still loves Mudhoney
- Some complex bass lines (and drum work) in addition to the at-times intricate guitar work, this isn't just fast and loud
- Half-sung half-shrieked vocals, but not the screaming/croaking of more hardcore styles
- The singing is really the most basic/simple element, and it's where the emotional heft lies
- Funny little moments of band interactions, such as dealing with guitar trouble; music may sound seriously ranty, but they don't take themselves too seriously
- Electro-pop duo
- First song, "oh these guys!"
- Vocals kind of like Lykke Li, is it just the Swedish accent? Little lighter toned, though.
- Mostly electronic, keys/synths/gear, but pair of toms for live drumming too
- Right, know this one too
- Sweet singing, bright keys, but some lurking darkness in synth bass/drums; not just sugary pop
- Sponsored by Trinity Nightclub
- Hall stinks of pot smoke, which it didn't last night
- Seems to be a fuller crowd at 10:30 than last night, but that makes it look like more people standing around instead of dancing
- DJ Mia
- Set the scene with the opening to Star Trek, went into hard pounding techno/house
- Kinda bombastic
- Left early cause of pot smoke