Tag Archives: Eighteen Individual Eyes

Your Live Music Bets for the Weekend of December 20 through the 22nd

Jessica Dobson of Deep Sea Diver. (Photo: Tony Kay)

If you live in downtown Seattle and were hoping for Snowpocalypse 2013 this morning, my condolences as you kick the wimpy, simpering layer of faintly snow-dusted slush off your footwear this morning.

The upside: Getting around shouldn’t be too difficult (depending on where you live, natch), and you’ll be happy to know that an exceptionally-stacked three days of live music awaits. Seriously. You can’t throw a snowball without it landing on a venue hosting a terrific line-up this weekend.

Tonight (Friday, December 20):

Deep Sea Diver, Bryan John Appleby @ Neumos. 21+. $12 Advance/$14 Day of Show. Show at 8 p.m.

Jessica Dobson plays one hell of a guitar–just ask Beck, The Yeah Yeah Yeahs, or The Shins (all of whom have benefitted from her versatile axework as a touring session player). But for my money, Dobson shines brightest playing and singing with drummer/husband Peter Mansen in their band, Deep Sea Diver. DSD’s great 2012 debut History Speaks is all over the map in the best way: Stomping 60’s guitar pop and stuttering post-punk rub shoulders with piano balladry, sometimes in the space of a single song. It’s all unified wonderfully by the interplay between Dobson’s mournful wail of a voice, her pinging/chiming guitars, and Mansen’s inventive and melodic rhythms. Expect a few holiday tunes like the loverly original, “It’s Christmas Time (and I’m Still Alive),” too.

My Goodness, XVIII Eyes, Duke Evers Band @ The Crocodile. 21+. $15 at the door. Show at 8 p.m.

It’s been too long since two-headed Seattle rock monster My Goodness has put out new material, a void they’re rumored to be filling next year. In the meantime, the band’s pulverizing live show tonight (with bassist Mike Klay making it a trio) should more than scratch your primal rock itch. And if you don’t get there early enough to hear goth-math-rock quartet XVIII Eyes (formerly Eighteen Individual Eyes) weave their dark and narcotic magic, it’s resolutely your loss.

Xmas Maximus,  Cathy Sorbo, The Candy Cane Dancers @ Darrell’s Tavern. 21+. $8 at the door. Show at 9 p.m.

Darrell’s in Shoreline has been quietly booking great live shows in the north end for quite a few years, and tonight they bust out what should be the weekend’s most fun live Christmas show. The merry rock and roll elves in Xmas Maximus include local musicians like Gavin Guss, Barbara Trentalange, and members of Jessamine and SUNN O))), all bashing out playful versions of holiday classics (love their spastic punk version of “Sleigh Ride”). Plus you get salty-tongued Seattle comic Cathy Sorbo, and burlesque from The Candy Cane Dancers, all for less than it usually costs to park downtown for two hours on a weekday.

X, The Blasters, The Bad Things @ El Corazon. 21+. $25 Advance, $30 Day of Show. Doors at 7 p.m, show at 8 p.m.

See Saturday, dude.

Saturday, December 21:

11th Annual Benefit for MUSICARES with Eldridge Gravy and the Court Supreme, Aaron Daniel, The Chasers, Jeff Fielder, Robb Benson, and Kim Virant @ The Tractor Tavern. 21+. $10 Advance. Show at 9pm. 

Firstly, there’s no way you can fault the cause. It’s a fundraiser for MUSICARES, an organization that aids struggling musicians who can’t afford medical and dental insurance on their own. Secondly, this tribute show’s dedicated to an entire classic rock album–Pink Floyd’s The Wall–and the evening will showcase some ace local acts that don’t sound very much like Floyd in the first place. Hearing velour soul steamrollers Eldridge Gravy and the Court Supreme, West Seattle stoner-metal demons The Chasers, and a tassel of other great Northwest artists reinterpret Roger Waters’ paean to rock decadence should be pretty amazing.

The Physics, Tangerine, DJ Nick Beeba, guests @ The Crocodile. All Ages. $10 Advance. Show at 9 p.m.

South Seattle hip-hop crew The Physics can always be counted on to deliver a serious party live, and the release of their new full-length, Digital Wildlife, provides a great excuse for ‘em to do so. The record retains Thig’s and Monk’s easy wordplay, with just enough new wrinkles to keep things interesting: There’s as much singing there is rapping, and some pinches of electronic music even work their way into the band’s signature style. Right now, the Prince-in-a-robot’s-body groove of new track “Fix Me” is floating my boat in a major way, but it’s the organic nature of their shows (usually accompanied by a soulful and muscular live band) that make them one of this town’s best hip-hop collectives onstage.

X, The Blasters, Girl Trouble @ El Corazon. 21+. $25 Advance, $30 Day of Show. Doors at 7 p.m, show at 8 p.m.

X caught epic shit in the 1970’s and early ’80’s from some of their peers in the fertile LA punk scene for actually writing, you know, real songs (show-offs!) and employing Doors keyboardist Ray Manzarek (a f@#king hippie!) to produce their early albums. Fortunately for the world, though, X were (and are) amazing on their own terms, influencing a couple of generations of punks, indie rockers, and roots-rock/Americana musicians in a major way. John Doe‘s and Exene Cervenka‘s vocals remain ragged yet gloriously right, and the band’s full original line-up can still kick up a shitstorm when they need to. Roots-rock legends The Blasters co-headline, and (repeat after me), get there early: Two great Northwest bands–goth-cabaret rapscallions The Bad Things and durable Tacoma garage-rock vets Girl Trouble–open up Friday and Saturday, respectively.

Sunday, December 22:

Evan Dando, Chris Brokaw, McDougall @ The Sunset Tavern. 21+. $15 advance. Doors at 8 p.m.

Evan Dando, mercurial singer-songwriter and frontman for beloved ’90s alt-rock band The Lemonheads, has always been a slacker troubadour at heart, capturing little moments of silliness, romance, and melancholy in a way that definitely presages today’s breed of singer/songwriters. He’s also a funny and engaging solo performer prone to sneaking in choice covers alongside his originals. Preceding Dando is another veteran of the Clinton-era underground rock scene, Codeine/Come guitarist/singer Chris Brokaw, and Americana musician McDougall.

Picking the 12 Best Northwest Music Releases of 2012

THEESatistfaction in action. (photo by Tony Kay)
THEESatistfaction in action. (photo by Tony Kay)

So what rocked your socks off this year? For me, there was a lot.

I won’t bother with clucking on about how so many great releases sprang from regional musicians in 2012 that I almost gave up on even compiling a list (even though it’s true). And as far as some far-reaching, all-encompassing summary of the Year in Northwest Music, here goes: A lot of really good two-person bands popped up in town, an exceptional bumper crop of local hip-hop releases surfaced, and a fair amount of bands looked to the sounds of the past (be it way back in the era of the original Girl Groups of the 1950s and ’60’s, or the retro pulse of 1980s new wave) for inspiration, with sterling results.

Enclosed, please find the twelve Northwest releases I listened to the most in the 2012 calendar year–the ones that stirred me most, and to which I’ve continually returned to since their release(s). That means it’s also subjective, informed by what I like and what I’ve been exposed to (much as I heard this year, I didn’t get around to every significant recording by every musician in the Pacific Northwest, for Pete’s Sake). Listen, thank me later, and discuss.

12) Atomic Bride, Dead Air: If you’ve ever wondered what The Cramps and the B-52’s knife-fighting in an alley with Cheap Trick, Dick Dale, and Alice Cooper would sound like, you need to hear Dead Air. Hell, even if you’ve never pondered said scenario you need to hear Dead Air. It’s the best soundtrack for a nonexistent B-movie that I heard in 2012.

11) The Good Sin, The Story of Love X Hate: Not every hip-hop record needs to be stuffed with empty posturing or gaggles of production tricks. Sometimes, all you need is a smart and charismatic MC with a knack for storytelling, some phat beats, and melodies that won’t leave your head. Good Sin delivers refreshingly honest lyrics in a resonant baritone that’s one of the best hip-hop instruments in this town right now. He’s got enough radio-ready tunes to back that voice up, too.

10) Absolute Monarchs, 1: Most new bands plumbing the depths of post-punk music lean towards tweeness, dutifully trotting out jerky rhythms and spiky guitars with precious little substance. Here’s to the Monarchs, then, who turbocharge those elements with undisguised ferocity and jackhammer force. Between his blues-rock growl with My Goodness and his unhinged screaming here, you’d think there were two different Joel Schneiders singing in two great Seattle bands.

9) Tea Cozies, Bang Up EP: Bang Up opens with one of my favorite singles of the year, “Muchos Dracula,” a quintessential slice of Tea Cozies hard-candy buzz pop replete with roller-rink keyboards and stuttering rhythm guitar. The band also deviates from their signature sound to wonderful effect on this EP:  the sweeping psychedelia of “Cosmic Osmo” and the anecdotal melancholy of “Silhouette in a Suitcase” work so famously, you can’t help but ache for a full-length release something fierce.

8) Eighteen Individual Eyes, Unnovae Nights: There’s not much more to say about EIE’s terrific debut that I didn’t say earlier this year–except maybe that Unnovae Nights‘ dark animal passion and jagged power remain undiminished after God knows how many listens.

The Young Evils, Foreign Spells EP: Yeah, there are only four songs. But they’re great pop songs with teeth to compliment the earworm hooks, and they serve as a clarion call for the awesomeness that’s sure to come.

6) Erik Blood, Touch Screens: Blood’s impressive production credits in recent years have obscured his gifts as a musician and songwriter. This dense, swirling concept album about vintage porn–equal parts shoegazer headiness, pulsing electronic danceability, and gothic throb–brings those gifts back into sharp focus.

5) Radiation City, Cool Nightmare EP: I was going to make this year’s list all-Seattle, but then this amazing Portland band forced my hand. Somehow, they toss together cushions of gorgeous harmonies, Beach Boys-style kitchen-sink symphonic bursts, new wave keyboards, bouncy bossanova, and dreamy psychedelia to create catchy, haunting, and utterly indelible songs. If this were a full-length release and not an EP, it’d probably be my favorite Northwest recording all year.

4) Hounds of the Wild Hunt, El Mago: The hooligans formerly known as the Whore Moans have delivered a great rock record, sung with take-it-or-leave-it snarl and delivered with ambition to match its fury. How does a punk band reach for the stars, yet not come off like a bunch of sell-out wimps? This is how.

3) Tomten, Yesterday’s Children:  Tomten leader Brian Noyeswatkins may wear his influences (Village Green-era Kinks, The Zombies, Pulp) on his paisley-print sleeve, but his catchy pop songs and playfully surreal lyrics cast a spell all their own. End result: a record that glitters like Seattle on an unexpected Indian Summer day.

2) Soundgarden, King Animal: Bigger than life, loud as hell, and long overdue, Soundgarden’s newest obliterates the notion that only youngsters can pull off epic, irony-free, truly heavy rock.

1) THEESatisfaction, awE naturalE: Nine months after its initial release, awE naturalE continues to shake my booty, activate my brain, and seduce my ears like nothing else I heard this year. It’s a treasure trove of surprises, packed into a lean 30-minute run time: Smooth Afro-and-female-centric rhymes that make their point without preaching, impossibly luminous singing, and a stripped-down production that nonetheless gains depth and nuance with each listen. Oh, and it grooves like hell. Most critics and fans point to the incomparably cool rubberized funk of “QueenS” as awE naturalE‘s high point–and it’s great–but me, I’m partial to “Deeper,” the most hypnotic and sensual three-plus minutes anyone, anywhere, committed to recorded posterity in 2012.

 

Saturday Night’s Musical Selections at City Arts Fest

It’s the final night of City Arts Fest, and plenty of great musical offerings pepper  the participating local venues.

You know the rest of the drill: Wristbands for the Fest are now sold out, but single tickets for some of the events can still be purchased at the respective venues. As always, zip on over to the City Arts Fest website for purchase details. And get out there, already.

Here’s the most essential stuff among a pretty stellar closing-night line-up.

Sam Miller, Two White Opals, Eighteen Individual Eyes, The Tempers @ The Rendezvous. Show at 8:00pm.

Capitol Hill recording studio CryBaby Studios rolls out its showcase in the cozy environs of the Rendezvous tonight. I don’t know how CryBaby in-house engineer Sam Miller plans to replicate his dense gothic piano pop live, but his darkly gorgeous singing and Broadway-Musical-in-Hell tunes will render early arrival a must. The descent down the gothic romance rabbithole continues with Two White Opals and Eighteen Individual Eyes, two evocative guitar bands that navigate swirly melodies along twisty percussive side trips. Leigh Stone’s plaintive and lush singing receives backing from Ravenna Woods’ rhythmic genius Matt Badger with the former, while Eighteen Individual Eyes scruff up the beauty of Irene Barber’s voice with an art-punk instrumental attack that makes them a lethal live act.

Electro-goth trio The Tempers headline the evening. With their unusual-for-Seattle layout of vocals, synth, and drums and an infamous flair for the theatrical, this sibling-populated outfit should be a singular experience in the flesh. Lead singer Corina Bakker is one of this ‘burg’s most charismatic figures, singing in an over-the-top croon that sounds like Patti Smith affecting Bryan Ferry after an absinthe bender.

Stephanie, Hobosexual, Hounds of the Wild Hunt, “The Rolling Stones” @ Barboza. Show at 6:30pm.

Need an infusion of rock, yet still want to get to bed at a decent hour on a Saturday night? Get the hell over to Barboza, already. Big things are being muttered about for local five-piece Stephanie, who’ve only released one 7-inch so far (they sound like Guided by Voices playing a new-wave dance party).

Occupying the middle of the evening will be two of Seattle’s best live bands: The incredible synergy between singer/guitarist Ben Harwood and drummer Jeff Silva (the two-headed rock machine known as Hobosexual) is a thing of wonder live, and Hounds of the Wild Hunt remain one of the sweatiest, throat-shreddingest, all-or-nothing rock bands in Seattle onstage. Oh, and you get a Stones cover band including members of Whalebones, Truckasauras, and Blood Brothers to close out the night, too.

DeVotchKa with the Seattle Rock Orchestra @ The Moore. Show at 9:15pm.

DeVotchKa‘s been around long enough to have influenced a whole slew of bands with their cinematic sound, equally inspired by Talking Heads, gypsy music, Ennio Morricone, and David Lynch. Whoever thought to wrap the band’s immersive music in the gilded raiments of the wonderful Seattle Rock Orchestra should be canonized (or at least bought free drinks for life).

 

 

The Twenty Best Live Music Shows I Saw at Bumbershoot 2012 [Photo Gallery]

M. Ward at Bumbershoot 2012.
Keane at Bumbershoot 2012.
The Young Evils, Bumbershoot 2012.
Unnatural Helpers at Bumbershoot 2012.
Super Geek League at Bumbershoot 2012.
Passion Pit at Bumbershoot 2012.
Eighteen Individual Eyes at Bumbershoot 2012.
Katie Kate at Bumbershoot 2012.
Prong at Bumbershoot 2012.
JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound at Bumbershoot 2012.
Ana Tijoux, Bumbershoot 2012.
Foxy Shazam at Bumbershoot 2012.
Mudhoney at Bumbershoot 2012.
THEESatisfaction at Bumbershoot 2012.
Don't Talk to the Cops at Bumbershoot 2012.
The Dirtbombs at Bumbershoot 2012.
King Khan and the Shrines at Bumbershoot 2012.
Lee Fields and the Expressions at Bumbershoot 2012.
TacocaT at Bumbershoot 2012.
Reignwolf at Bumbershoot 2012.

M. Ward sings a sad song. (photo by Tony Kay)

Tom Chaplin of Keane keeps a stiff upper lip. (photo by Tony Kay)

Mackenzie Mercer, youngest Young Evil, in action at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Unnatural Helpers: Best band with a singing drummer since Night Ranger. (photo by Tony Kay)

If you've seen one band with mutant eyeballs and butterfly women on stilts, you've seen 'em all: Super Geek League at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Passion Pit: Hot mess gets anthemic at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Irene Barber, four of Eighteen Individual Eyes' eyes. (photo by Tony Kay)

Katie Kate was greaty-great at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Lesser mortals ran like scared children from the onslaught: Tommy Victor of Prong at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

JC Brooks stops the show at the KEXP Lounge. (photo by Tony Kay)

Ana Tijoux rocks it, Chilean style. (photo by Tony Kay)

Foxy Shazam rocks the Exhibition Hall. (photo by Tony Kay)

Mudhoney's Mark Arm, still whippet-thin and dangerous. (photo by Tony Kay)

Stasia of THEESatisfaction rocks her finest roller boogie ensemble at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay).

Don't Talk to the Cops! Unless you're lost or something. (photo by Tony Kay)

Mick Collins of the Dirtbombs does some Bumber-damage. (photo by Tony Kay)

Ever the wallflower: King Khan of the Shrines holds court at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

You will never, ever be this cool: Lee Fields and the Expressions work the Tunein Stage at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Bubbles and punk rock--they go together like, um, bubbles and punk rock: TacocaT at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Reignwolf blasts the roof off the Starbucks Stage at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay).

M. Ward at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Keane at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
The Young Evils, Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Unnatural Helpers at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Super Geek League at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Passion Pit at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Eighteen Individual Eyes at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Katie Kate at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Prong at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
JC Brooks and the Uptown Sound at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Ana Tijoux, Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Foxy Shazam at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Mudhoney at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
THEESatisfaction at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Don't Talk to the Cops at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
The Dirtbombs at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
King Khan and the Shrines at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Lee Fields and the Expressions at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
TacocaT at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Reignwolf at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail

Now that the Bumbershoot tsunami has subsided, it’s time to sift through my photos of some 41 (holy cow!) bands and offer some sort of overview of what I saw and heard.

I enjoyed all of the acts that I caught this weekend on Bumbershoot’s smaller stages, and discovered more than a few pleasant surprises (more on that later this week). But of all of the live music performances I witnessed last weekend, these twenty were the most prominent keepers for me.

Continue reading The Twenty Best Live Music Shows I Saw at Bumbershoot 2012 [Photo Gallery]

Eighteen Individual Eyes Punish You with Kisses

A Kiss that Draws Blood: Irene Barber of Eighteen Individual Eyes. (photo by Tony Kay)

“I’ll make you my beast: I’ll make you my prize.”

When Irene Barber–lead singer of Eighteen Individual Eyes–utters those words on “Octogirl”, the second track from the band’s great debut full-length Unnovae Nights, she delivers them with a siren’s allure. The clarion beauty of her voice provides the darkly-tinctured honey that sweetens the angry passions pulsing within those lyrics, and within the Seattle quartet’s instrumental attack. It’s a hungry kiss, delivered with a sharp bite that draws blood.

That exquisite tension runs restlessly all over Unnovae Nights. Cliff’s-edge romanticism, surreal nightmare imagery, and sucker-punch forcefulness intertwine so unpredictably that when Barber sings, “I like the way you dance/I like the way you twist,” you don’t know whether she’s referring to the seductive movements of a lover, or a body swinging on a noose.

Call EIE’s sound gothic math rock. Jamie Aaron’s guitar shifts between swirling goth textures and choppy post-punk riffing, alternately slow-dancing with and scraping against Barber’s voice. Bassist Samantha Wood and drummer Andy King, meantime, form a  muscular and unpredictable rhythm section (it’s impossible not to love King’s skittering rimwork and Wood’s urgent low end on “Strawberry Cemetery”). And Barber’s a terrific lyricist, deftly balancing the surreal and poetic with a vein of coital directness. The net result reconciles dreamy shoe-gazer swooning with jagged fury so brilliantly, you wonder why more bands haven’t forged a similar path.

Ironically, one of the album’s biggest assets–the visceral work of producer Matt Bayles–occasionally becomes a liability. Bayles knows how to bring punch and rawness to a band’s sound (he’s done similar honors for Cursive and local boys Minus the Bear), but a few of the tracks might’ve benefited from a slightly lighter touch. Fortunately, even when Bayles mixes King’s drumming to almost overbearing heaviness, Aaron’s lush wall of guitar atmospherics and Barber’s soaring voice emerge to save the day.

There’s plenty of competition for the best cut on Unnovae Nights, but right now the one that’s embedded itself in my brain most insistently is “Rosebud Youth.” Aaron’s guitars veer between shrieking noise and ragged beauty; Barber and Aaron belt out their most intoxicating vocal harmonies (they sound like an indie-rock Cocteau Twins here); and King and Wood pound out a rhythm that throbs like an accelerated, love-struck heartbeat. It’s the exhilarating, slightly scary sound of every all-or-nothing crush you’ve ever felt, replete with the faintest taste of blood at the corner of a bitten lip. And it rocks.