Tag Archives: Fred Cole

A Few of My Favorite Rock Photos from 2012 (Photo Gallery)

Philana.
Strong Killings.
Don't Talk to the Cops, man.
Kithkin.
Hounds of the Wild Hunt.
Fred Cole, Pierced Arrows.
Foxy Shazam, Bumbershoot 2012.
Glenn or Glennda, Funhouse.
Hobosexual.
Eldridge Gravy.
Blitzen Trapper.
The Dirtbombs.
Super Geek League.
Brokaw.
John Cale.
Phantogram.
Hounds.
Curtains for You.
Oberhofer.
Reignwolf.

Seattle soul songstress Philana burned up the Nectar for her Spring CD release party. (photo by Tony Kay)

Call them The Sonics, with a spike of new wave: Strong Killings at Columbia City Theater August 3. (photo by Tony Kay)

djblesOne and Emecks of Don't Talk to the Cops, not talking to the cops at Bumbershoot. (photo by Tony Kay)

Ian McCutcheon of Kithkin gets rhythmic at Doe Bay Fest, August 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Hounds of the Wild Hunt's Ryan Devlin, getting all Hard-Day's-Night at Columbia City Theater, August 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Portland rock godpapa Fred Cole, pulling out all the stops with his band Pierced Arrows, West Seattle Summerfest July 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Foxy Shazam's Eric Sean Nally, grooving on the colors, Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Skull-faced drag queen sees the Funhouse out: Glenn or Glennda, Halloween 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Ben Harwood of Hobosexual, Columbia City Theater, August 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Eldridge Gravy getting busy with his Court Supreme, April 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Blitzen Trapper's Eric Menteer, Doe Bay Fest, August 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Mick Collins of The Dirtbombs, being badass at Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Super Geek League: Shirley Bassey in Hell, on one lulu of an acid trip, Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Brokaw trash the Funhouse on the venue's second-to-last night on Earth. (photo by Tony Kay)

I never get tired of looking at John Cale's face: Showbox, December 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Photogenic Phantogram, Capitol Hill Block Party 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Johnny of Hounds of the Wild Hunt makes his guitar not-so-gently weep: Sunset Tavern, August 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Matt Gervais of Curtains for You, Neumo's February 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

New York power pop kids Oberhofer are all right: Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Reignwolf, carefully choreographing his shit-eating grin, Bumbershoot 2012. (photo by Tony Kay)

Philana. thumbnail
Strong Killings. thumbnail
Don't Talk to the Cops, man. thumbnail
Kithkin. thumbnail
Hounds of the Wild Hunt. thumbnail
Fred Cole, Pierced Arrows. thumbnail
Foxy Shazam, Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
Glenn or Glennda, Funhouse. thumbnail
Hobosexual. thumbnail
Eldridge Gravy. thumbnail
Blitzen Trapper. thumbnail
The Dirtbombs. thumbnail
Super Geek League. thumbnail
Brokaw. thumbnail
John Cale. thumbnail
Phantogram. thumbnail
Hounds. thumbnail
Curtains for You. thumbnail
Oberhofer. thumbnail
Reignwolf. thumbnail

One of the great things about year-end retrospectives is that they give you a great excuse to bust out all those odds and sods that may not have found a proper home during the preceding 11-plus months.

I’ve only been shooting rock shows for about three years now, but a combination of dynamic subjects, an innate knowledge of my very low-budget camera setup’s strengths and weaknesses, and dumb luck enabled me to snag a few good rock shots in 2012. Some of the photos ended up here at the SunBreak, or elsewhere. But there were plenty of leftovers. And they were pretty good leftovers.

Some of them came from shows I never got a chance to write about. Others sprang from a surplus of shots that I really liked, from shows I’d already covered. But I sorta fell in love with all of the enclosed pics, for all sorts of reasons–whether they captured the subject’s personality, sported colors and composition that grabbed my eye,  or just conveyed the energy of the moment despite/because of their imperfections.

Needless to say, this isn’t some grand, overarching year-end summary of live music in Seattle. It’s just a lot of musical lightning captured in a bottle. Happy Holidays, everyone.

Five Unmissable Acts at the West Seattle Summerfest This Weekend

Star Anna, ready to bring it to Summerfest. (photo by Tony Kay)

West Seattle Summerfest celebrates its thirtieth anniversary this weekend, and in addition to providing an economical way to have fun on a summer weekend, it’s grown into a great (free) showcase for original local music.

There’s a ton of really solid local tuneage to be had at the free festival’s 2012 edition (in the interest of completeness and pimpery, you can get a detailed line-up listing here), but if you’re in a pinch, the following acts look to be the most un-missable highlights of a strong weekend line-up.

Branden Daniel and the Chics: I’m a total sap for compact, bare-bones garage rock, and that’s what Branden Daniel and the Chics deliver. There’s just enough of the familiar (think Sonics-cum-British Invasion) in their sound, combined with a hint of snotty danger in Daniel’s separated-from-Mark-Arm-at-birth singing. Little Steven Van Zandt featured the Chics’ “Missionary” on his Underground Garage satellite radio show recently, and whatever else you might think of the doo-ragged Springsteen guitarist/ erstwhile Sopranos wiseguy, the guy’s got taste in tunes. (Friday, 2:00pm, California Stage)

Star Anna: In a music scene where low-key indie ensembles are the rule, Star Anna commands a stage with the confidence and presence of, well, a star. Fortunately, that charisma possesses a strong backbone of genuine goods. Between her world-class pipes and songwriting that perfectly walks the tightrope of epic rock and introspection, there’s a reason The Posies and Pearl Jam’s Mike McCready have jammed onstage and/or on record with her. (Friday, 8:15pm, California Stage)

Alcohol Funnycar: Last Summerfest roused much joy around the Northwest Music Nerd campfire with the Fastbacks’ reunion, and this year fest organizers once again stroke that demographic’s pleasure nodes with the reunion of Alcohol Funnycar. AF cut their sound from the same flannel-shirt stripe as Husker Du or The Replacements, and their rep as an unparalleled live act has held fast for the last decade-plus. This is only their second live gig in the last sixteen years, and with as volatile as these reunions can be sometimes (ahem, Fastbacks), you best get it while it’s hot. (Saturday, 8:45pm, California Stage)

Pierced Arrows: Portland institutions Fred and Toody Cole have been rocking together for three decades, most famously as two-thirds of Dead Moon but most recently as the center of this similarly-inclined trio. They’ve got enough energy to blow the roof off the sucka…and they’re grandparents, for God’s sake. Do not miss. (Saturday, 10:00pm, California Stage)

Hobosexual: Do we really need another two-guy rock band in town? If these guys are an indicator, the answer is Hells, yes. Singer/guitarist Ben Harwood carves out his own identity with a stoner-rock-fueled mastery of big rock riffs, and drummer Jeff Silva bashes his kit like a caveman. Oh, and they’ve put out action figures of themselves (take that, Jack White), so a stop at their merch table could be almost as fun as their set. Almost. (Sunday, 3:45pm, California Stage)