As I'm in the midst of a run of seven shows in two weeks, I'm just going to do a quick summary post of three of the recent ones. I didn't take a lot of notes at any of these anyhow, so it makes sense to group them together.

April began and ended for me with Hotels shows: the first on Saturday April 2 at the High Dive, which I wrote about already; and the last on Friday April 29 at the Sunset Tavern, with Blue Skies for Black Hearts opening and Yuni in Taxco headlining. As I noted when I saw Blue Skies for Black Hearts in January, they're a decent band and their song "Majoring in the Arts" is pretty catchy, but otherwise they just don't do anything for me. And although I really liked Yuni in Taxco when I saw them at that same January show and wanted to hear them again, this time they also just weren't holding my interest—maybe they were just playing a different set of songs, maybe it was an off night, maybe I just was distracted. Hotels, however, never fail to satisfy me, and they played a particularly sharp set that showed them ready to take on all comers at the Billboard Battle of the Bands in Las Vegas later this month. For some reason at this show I took particular note of Brendan Malec's guitar playing—it's really good! Fast-paced and intricate yet precise and clear. Drummer Aaron Voros has also settled in nicely from being "the new guy" not even a year ago, holding his own with the rest of the band. And now I'll be remiss if I don't mention the other two members, so another thing I noted at this show was how well keyboardist Kyle Frankiewich's backing vocals complement bassist and lead vocalist Blake Madden's own singing. (They're not too shabby at playing their instruments, either.) So now it's off to Vegas for Hotels—knock 'em dead, boys.

Next, a brief note about Junip, whom I saw on Monday May 2 at the Triple Door, performing a 40-minute set as part of the KEXP VIP Club concert series. Although I've never picked up any of his albums, I've enjoyed hearing José Gonzalez's music on KEXP, so I was looking forward to hearing him in the context of the band he began with, Junip, before the detour of his solo career. And I was not disappointed: they played a set of beautiful chamber/art rock, with an interesting way of working electronic instruments and devices into their organic sound. I did not go to see their longer show later that night at Neumos, but I would definitely like to see them again.

Finally, on Wednesday May 4, I went to see Zola Jesus at the Crocodile, with Crypts and Naked on the Vague opening. Crypts struck me as howling dark metal noise with a techno beat and bleeps. Apparently, at least according to The Stranger, they're part of the new witch house genre; I think I would've preferred more house, less witch. Tech trouble led to them stopping early, but I can't say I minded. Naked on the Vague played a set of early Cure-style goth rock, led by a rather deep-voiced female singer. Although I liked their music, I didn't care much for her almost monotonous singing style, and in the end I felt their set was a bit bland on the whole. Zola Jesus of course was a whole different story. She came out shrouded in a white sheet and crouched down on the stage with her wireless mic to start singing her first song, gradually rising and removing the sheet to reveal herself wearing a white hooded robe beneath, very priestess-like. Zola Jesus was also deep-voiced, but what an amazingly powerful and expressive voice she had. She was very energetic too, almost always moving about the stage, just occasionally crouching down dramatically and rarely standing at the mic stand. With barely a pause between each piece, her music ranged through grand dramatic songs, dirges, marches, and dances; her encore was a surprisingly dancey synthpop track, a funny contrast to her more serious-sounding songs that still fit in with the rest. Still a young artist just starting out, Zola Jesus will clearly grow into a major figure in modern music.

I didn't take any photos at the Hotels show, partly because the lighting at the Sunset is never any good for my iPhone and partly because I was too busy hanging out with friends and dancing. I have just three photos of Junip at the Triple Door, but as I was right up front they came out rather well. I also have a small set of photos of Naked on the Vague and Zola Jesus; it was hard to get good photos of Zola Jesus because the stage was mostly dark but she had a bright white light shining on her bright white clothing. 
In January, I started making some effort again to take notes on concerts. Well, I at least made sure to jot down band names, but my notes are still pretty sketchy.

I did take good notes for two shows, because I reviewed them for the KEXP Blog. First, I started off the year right on January 6th with a great local lineup at Neumos featuring Beehive, Noddy, CMYK, and Library Science. I wrote briefly about that show here on my blog, and you can read the full review here on the KEXP Blog. Then, on January 20th, I went to the Triple Door to see Asobi Seksu with Anomie Belle opening; again, I have a brief post here on my blog, and the full review here on the KEXP Blog.

I also took decent notes on January 16th, when I was at the Vera Project to see YouTube-video ukelele sensation Julia Nunes. In fact, having just written out a long paragraph about the show, I believe I'll just post it as a separate review tomorrow, when I'm going to be busy and may not have time to write. For the impatient: Julia Nunes is very good, check her out.

I went to see Hotels twice in January. The first time was on January 9th at the Comet Tavern, playing a show with Romance and at least one other band that I might've missed but in any case didn't even get their name down. I don't have any notes from that show; I know I liked Romance the first time I saw them, so I'm sure it was a pretty good show. (Edit: Come to think of it, the other band was probably the Redwood Plan, as I know I saw them do part of a set on a bill including Hotels at the Comet Tavern, and I didn't stay for the whole set only because I got a ride home with a friend.)

Then on January 21st, I went to the High Dive to see Hotels again, this time in between Gabriel Mintz opening and Pillow Army headlining. Gabriel Mintz played with Trent Moorman on drums, and had a kind of southern art rock sound which I thought was pretty cool. I have no notes about Hotels, of course; probably too busy dancing. I'd also seen Pillow Army once before and liked them, but thought they needed some more development; now, having added a bass player and a second guitar/flute/backing vocalist, I felt they had clearly built on the promise they'd shown before and were becoming a band to watch. 

So, full Julia Nunes review to be posted tomorrow, and if I have time I'll do the February concert summary too, as I only have proper notes on one of the three shows I saw. I'll probably roll the March concert summary into that, too, as I have only one other show that month besides the Alabaster one that I already reviewed. Otherwise, February and March will probably be covered on Monday. It'd be nice to catch up on 2010 before the year ends, but I may be too busy this week and also I should be able to get some good standalone reviews, as I did get better about taking notes.
On Wednesday January 20, I went to the Triple Door to see Asobi Seksu on an unusual acoustic tour. I've been a fan of theirs since first hearing and seeing them back in 2006, and I was very curious to hear how they'd adapt their shoegaze/dreampop style to an all-acoustic style. The results were great, and I wrote about it for the KEXP Blog. Opening for Asobi Seksu was local artist Anomie Belle. You can read all about the show here on the KEXP Blog.

My friend John Peltonen, who came along to the show, took a bunch of photos at my request so that I'd have something better for the review than my usual iPhone photos, which generally aren't that good at the Triple Door. (I did take a few, and you can see my photos here on Flickr.) Unfortunately due to some confusion, KEXP sent their own photographer to the show as well, and his are the ones posted on the KEXP Blog. However, John got some great photos of his own, and you should go check them out here in John's Flickr photostream.

Coming up, next Friday February 5 there are three great bands in town: St. Vincent at Neumos, Editors at the Showbox, and Do Make Say Think at Chop Suey. It's a tough choice, and I think I'm going to St. Vincent, but I may end up at Do Make Say Think instead. Then on Saturday February 13, there's a special show at the Crocodile: "Dancing on the Valentine", a benefit for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, featuring several bands including my favorites Hotels doing covers of David Bowie songs. You can be sure if there's Hotels and dancing involved, I'll be there.
Wednesday night I went to the Triple Door to see My Brightest Diamond. I attended this show as a volunteer for KEXP, which sponsored the show, so the standard disclaimer applies: although I am a volunteer for KEXP, the opinions expressed in this view and all other posts on this blog are solely mine and do not represent the official views of KEXP. Opening the show was a band new to me, Clare & the Reasons.

Clare & the Reasons are Clare Muldaur on vocals and guitar (and occasional kazoo) and a string trio (violin, viola, cello) led by Olivier Manchon, who also played a saw, bass guitar, metallophone, recorder, and various sampled percussion, piano, and electronic parts; all of the Reasons also sang backing vocals. They played a wonderfully whimsical and sweet set of "chamber art-pop", for lack of a better term, showing influences from classical, folk, and pop. The songs were in turns happy, wistful, and comical, and always delightful—a good example was "Can Your Car Do That? Well I Don't Think So", which described the rather unfortunate condition of Clare's barely-functioning yet clearly beloved vehicle. There were several funny moments during the set, such as when Clare asked the audience for a typical Seattle insult to use in the song "Better Without You": someone shouted "Go back to California!" and she innocently replied "We're from New York!" She observed after one song, "Olivier, I liked your solo... [the audience's] inner indie rock won't let them clap," whereupon the audience clapped for anything Olivier did in the following song. Clare had a pretty, sweet voice, and the Reasons were all clearly very talented musicians. I was already really enjoying the set when Clare introduced the final song saying, "By the way this song you know and you love, but maybe you don't know you love," and the song turned out to be a cover of "Everybody Wants to Rule the World." That's when I knew I'd fallen in love with the band. Needless to say, I'll be watching out for more from them.

My Brightest Diamond is a project of Shara Worden, a singer and multi-instrumentalist (playing various guitars, a thumb piano, and a sampler/drum machine in this concert); she was backed up by the Reasons for this show. Besides sharing the backing band, My Brightest Diamond also shared with Clare the eclectic musical mix of classical, folk, and pop influences, though My Brightest Diamond was more on the side of rock than pop. The two groups differed in intensity, however: where Clare was whimsical and wistful, My Brightest Diamond was more likely to be haunting and harrowing. There was room for humor in My Brightest Diamond's music and show, such as when Olivier was called upon to do a simple magic trick, and lightness of spirit too, such as the sing-along encore featuring Shara on ukelele and Clare rejoining the Reasons for the a capella backup. Nevertheless, I had an image of My Brightest Diamond as a pretty young woman with a fancy silver knife, with the question whether she will hand the knife to you solemnly or sweetly stab you in the heart. Such a fairy-tale image seems appropriate for an artist who composed a song, "At the Top of the World", inspired by George MacDonald's novel At the Back of the North Wind—a tale Shara summarized before the song, accompanied by sound effects provided by the Reasons. The combination of Shara's strong clear voice, haunting lyrics, and beautiful music made for a powerful concert, and I'm glad that I did not miss this one.

Unfortunately, because I was manning the KEXP promotion table, I was at the back of the theater and did not take any photos of the show, as I knew from past experience that I was too far away to get anything worthwhile. Hopefully next time these bands come around, I'll be up close.



I still have a review to write for last night's Yeasayer and Icy Demons show at Neumos, but I probably won't get to it before seeing Minus the Bear, Annuals, and Helms Alee at the Showbox at the Market tomorrow night. Still on my calendar for December is Hotels, with Tea for Julie headlining, at the Comet Tavern on Sunday Dec 7, and I might go see Tuatara at Neumos on Wednesday Dec 10. December's really busy so that's probably it for the year, but I'm already looking forward to what next year will bring.
Yesterday afternoon I had the good fortune to see Sons and Daughters performing at The Triple Door as part of KEXP's VIP Club concert series. These concerts are recorded live and broadcast later in the same afternoon, and they are only about 45 minutes long with no opening act. The band professed bemusement a few times at finding themselves playing an early afternoon show, saying it felt like a David Lynch film, but they didn't let the weird feeling hold them back, and they delivered a great show.

Sons and Daughters are the quartet of Adele Bethel (vocals, tambourine), Scott Paterson (guitar, vocals), Ailidh Lennon (bass), and David Gow (drums). They played an energetic set of punk-influenced indie rock. Their previous album, The Repulsion Box, featured acoustic guitars and mandolin and had more of a folk-punk sound; judging by the new songs at this show, the band has gone electric on the new album This Gift, taking cues from '80s and '90s Britpop. Naturally their set favored the new album, but they also played a few older songs, including "Dance Me In" from the previous one and "Johnny Cash" from their first album Love the Cup. Although none of the new songs have caught my ear as strongly as "Red Receiver" did when The Repulsion Box came out, hearing them in concert made me feel remiss for not having picked up This Gift yet. The fancy cabaret seating of The Triple Door almost worked against the band, as their music called for some stomping and dancing, not just mild finger-and-toe-tapping. However, the audience still gave back as much enthusiasm as Sons and Daughters offered with their passionate performance. All too soon the concert was over, and I regretted that I had not made arrangements to attend their show at Neumos that night, as it would've been totally worthwhile to see them twice in one day, but still even the short show made me very happy.

This time I was close enough to the stage to get decent photos... but the head of the hat-wearing gentleman seated in the row in front of me intruded in all the photos. Still, I went ahead and uploaded four of the better photos, starting here.

Once again, I will include the disclaimer that although I am a volunteer for KEXP, the opinions expressed in this review (and all others on my blog, for that matter) are solely my own and do not represent the views of KEXP.



May is upon us, and that means the Ladytron show at The Showbox is just a few weeks away on May 24. I haven't done a full calendar review yet, but I imagine it's likely I'll catch something else in May as well - a quick look at the Three Imaginary Girls calendar listings shows Film School playing with Swervedriver at Neumos on the 26th, for example. Also, Peter Murphy's playing at El Corazón on the 30th, but that's the first evening of our game convention Go Play NW, so I won't be able to make that show. I'll take another look through the club calendars soon and see whether there are any other smaller shows I might want to catch.
Last Friday Amy P invited me to go with her, John P, and a couple friends to a show at The Triple Door. They were all going to see Keren Ann, an artist whose name sounded vaguely familiar but I knew nothing about. I was willing enough to go at that point to see this musician that Amy obviously regarded highly, as well as simply to hang out with friends. Then Amy added that the other act was some band they didn't know, called Dean & Britta, and I exclaimed, "Oh, Dean and Britta! Oh yeah!" Although I don't actually know Dean & Britta's work that well, I have a song of theirs and had heard others before on KEXP, as well as having some familiarity with their former band Luna. So off I went to the Triple Door for the second time in a week.

The bands were playing two shows that evening, and we attended the early one. Although the Triple Door's site said that Keren Ann would play first, Dean & Britta took the stage promptly at 7 pm. The group included Dean Wareham (guitar and vocals) and Britta Phillips (bass and vocals) of course, along with Ben Freeman (keyboard, and rhythm guitar for a song) and Anthony LaMarca (drums). Dean & Britta's music ranged from country and American folk to indie rock and dreampop, with generally mellow, slow to mid-tempo songs. At times when Britta sang, I was reminded strongly of Mazzy Star; John and Amy suggested Portishead for comparison as well. Britta's slightly breathy voice paired well with Dean's occasionally rougher croon. I enjoyed their set very much, though for me the highlight was not one of their own songs, but rather their set-closing cover of Serge Gainsbourg's song "Bonnie and Clyde". As I was short on cash, I didn't pick up any CDs, but the show convinced me I need to become more familiar with Dean & Britta.

Keren Ann is a talented musician and singer, who played acoustic and electric guitar, harmonica, and bass during her set. She had two backing musicians (unfortunately I didn't get their names), one on bass, backing vocals, acoustic and electric guitar, and the other on drums. In her first couple songs, she sounded very similar to Dean & Britta, but as she continued she wandered through a variety of related genres: straight-up country ballads, to upbeat rockabilly, to American folk, to blues-rock, and even funk. She also played French cabaret folk-pop, touching on her performing roots in France; for her encore, she played without accompaniment "Jardin d'Hiver", a song she wrote for French musician Henri Salvador, who passed away just two days before at the age of 90. I most enjoyed the last song before the encore, featuring her delicate guitar playing over a funky bass line that drove the song forward, creating a tension that suggested an impending explosion but faded out unresolved in the end. Also notable was the acoustic guitar duet on "Not Going Anywhere". Overall, Keren Ann's whole set was quite good, and I felt abashed for somehow being ignorant of her before. I will have to become more familiar with her music as well.

Edit to add photo links. I was closer to the stage this time than at last week's Mono In VCF show, so I have a few more photos, but they still didn't come out as well as I'd like. I kept four photos of Dean & Britta, starting here, and one photo of Keren Ann.



As I mentioned in my last post, this Thursday Beehive are playing at Neumos, along with Emilia Sosa and Furniture Girls, and I'm going to try to make it. Next up, I should be at Chop Suey on Sunday March 2 to see Balkan Beat Box, and then there's a bunch more shows in March and April that I'm considering. We'll see which ones I make it to...
Last night I went with my friends Tony and Pam to The Triple Door to see Mono In VCF. The band's somewhat awkward name made sense when I learned it references both Phil Spector's "Wall of Sound" production style from the '60s and the Moog synthesizer (VCF standing for "voltage-controlled filter", an important part of analog synthesizers). This show marked the CD release of their debut self-titled album, which first came out in November as a digital download. KEXP had been playing their music for months already, so I've been eagerly awaiting this show for a while. Opening the show was fellow Tacoma band The Elephants.

The Elephants are a quartet on guitar, bass, keyboard, and drums. Lead vocals were shared by the guitarist and the keyboardist. At the start of their set, they sounded like a typical post-grunge rock quartet. But then after a couple songs, they started bringing in a classic 80s New Wave sound on the keyboard, and contrasted it with Britpop-style ringing guitar. The mix of 80s and 90s styles continued, with the band taking obvious cues from the Charlatans UK, the Cure, and Echo & the Bunnymen. Although their sound was heavily derivative, they still brought their own spirit to it, and they played well. I really enjoyed their set, and would've picked up a CD if I'd seen one after the show. I'll be keeping an eye out for them in the future.

Mono In VCF are the quartet of Kim Miller (vocals), Hunter Lea (guitar, synth & organ, vocals), Jordan Luckman (bass guitar), and Jason Falk (drums); when playing live, they are joined by George Reid-Harmon (guitars), Martin Feveyear (keyboards, and also the band's producer), and Scott Clarke (drums & percussion). Their music is perhaps best described as "cinematic cabaret", a style that is at once sweeping and intimate, grand and sophisticated. I felt they had a very European feel, specifically French, while Tony suggested spaghetti Westerns. Perhaps fittingly, Mono In VCF's sound reminded me most of the bands Elysian Fields - an American band also with a strong European cabaret feel - and Hooverphonic - a Belgian band that started out trip-hop and moved toward that same cabaret style. Some of the songs had hints of goth and shoegazer as well, with a little noisy guitar feedback in an instrumental about halfway through the set.

The instrumental was apparently the bonus track of the evening, as Mono In VCF played through their album in order, but the album does not include an instrumental. The band sounded great live, with Miller's powerful vocals commanding everyone's attention. The stage lighting and smoke complemented the music very well, conjuring a moody atmosphere alternately wistful, mysterious, and dreamy. My only disappointment was that the show felt over too soon, and since they had no encore after playing straight through their album, I feared that meant it'd be a long while before they had more music to share. But as the live-only instrumental showed, of course they have more songs than they put on the album, and maybe it won't be so long before we start hearing them. In the meantime, I have their album to learn by heart.

Edit to add: I was too far away from the stage to get any decent photos with my iPhone. I ended up keeping just one photo each of The Elephants and Mono In VCF.



Earlier today (Friday) I received an unexpected invitation to go see Keren Ann and Dean & Britta, who happened to be playing at The Triple Door this evening. I went and enjoyed both bands quite a lot; I hope to get that review written more promptly than I did this one, and post it later this weekend. Next week on Thursday the 21st, Beehive are playing at Neumos, along with Emilia Sosa (who I saw last year in February and March) and Furniture Girls (who I saw just last month). Work might keep me from attending, but I'm going to try to make it.

Looking ahead to March, just today my sister Andrea told me that I should go to Chop Suey on Sunday the 2nd to see Balkan Beat Box; I don't know much about them, but if Andrea's recommending them, then they'll be interesting. On Tuesday March 25, Jens Lekman will be at Neumos; I've enjoyed hearing his breezy pop on KEXP, so I'm thinking I should check him out live. Hmm, Lekman's fellow Swede Jose Gonzalez will be at the Triple Door that weekend, March 29 and 30, and I think he'd be worth checking out too. Closing out March, X are also doing two shows, March 30 and 31, at The Showbox. And looking even further ahead, I'm seeing Sons & Daughters (April 3 @ Neumos), Ghostland Observatory (April 4 & 5 @ Showbox), American Music Club (April 5 @ Triple Door), Meat Beat Manifesto (April 9 @ Neumos), Simian Mobile Disco (April 24 @ Neumos), Joe Jackson (May 4 @ Moore Theatre), and Ladytron (May 24 @ Showbox). Man, that's a lot of great shows coming up. It looks like a busy spring for me.
I didn't end up going to any of the concerts that I thought I might when I was looking at the listings back in January. I missed them through a combination of conflicts and general apathy on my part, though a couple shows - the Dragstrip Riot one and another one not listed - fell through because friends got sick. So at the beginning of this week I checked the listings again, knowing that February was running out, but also not remembering anything promising looking from previous reviews of the listings.

This time however I noticed a show that I didn't recall: Reggie Watts, the hardest working man in Seattle showbiz, was playing at The Triple Door, a downtown club I hadn't been to yet. I've always had the vague impression, just from walking by the place, that it was an upscale club, and I'd passed over some potential shows last summer because they were in the $30 range, which might be why I had overlooked the Reggie Watts show earlier this month. However, this show was $16 - still higher than I usually pay for shows, but not outlandish - and it was by far the best possibility left for the month, so I decided I'd go. I also let John P and his wife Amy know, and they came along with their friend Laura.

The Triple Door turned out to be a very nice dinner theater - tables with couch seats are arranged on tiers leading down to a good-sized stage. The venue is located beneath Wild Ginger Asian Restaurant, and the Triple Door serves a similar menu; it's not quite clear from their website whether both places have the same owners. Reggie put on a show well-suited to the venue, giving a cabaret-style performance of comedy and music.

In the first half, dressed in mock-Baroque-era clothing, Reggie sat at a grand piano and performed a series of "minuets", each given a humorous introduction by a lovely hostess. Before one song, the hostess drew a raffle ticket out of a hat, and brought the "winner", a pretty and obviously pregnant woman, on stage so that Reggie could improvise a song for her. As far as I could tell, the winner was not a plant and at least some of the lyrics were improvised for her, though it's possible it was all planned. Two songs featured interpretive dances, each with a different dancer. The first one, the hostess informed us, answered the age-old question that's troubled philosophy grad students, "What is Time?", and despite the silly introduction it was probably the most serious of the pieces performed. The second one wasn't given any kind of explanation, but the dance rather suggested it was an interpretation of the 90's clubbing scene, and the music was greatly enhanced by Reggie's beatbox stylings on the microphone.

The second half simply featured Reggie with a microphone and sampler. Reggie performed a series of bizarre comic monologues, interspersed with songs that he created by sampling himself making beatbox noises for a rhythm track before going into lyrics or just further vocalizations. I was reminded of Bobby McFerrin (who's done a lot more than just "Don't Worry, Be Happy"), and though I don't believe Reggie has quite the same vocal range he could still make an impressive array of sounds and notes. I have less to say about this half simply because it was much more of a "you had to be there" experience; I can't really relate the amusingly strange stories he told, or describe the music better than, perhaps, "vocal hip-hop jazz". I can only say that Reggie Watts is definitely worth checking out, whether solo or with his group Maktub.