Tag Archives: jose bold

On Pickwick, Seateeth, and Portishead

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A packed house at the Crocodile for Pickwick. (All photos Peter Majerle.)

It wouldn't be a Pickwick show without "Hacienda" Hands.

The Croc's famed poster wall.

Tip your bartenders.

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Given City Arts Fest, along with the already busy fall music calendar, last weekend brought a wide variety of music and art acts to the stage with varying amounts of time and experience in the business. But that doesn’t mean they all can’t be successful in their own way. Look no further than Pickwick, John Osebold’s Seateeth, and Portishead.

Saturday night Pickwick played a sold-out headlining City Arts Fest slot at the Crocodile. Not bad for a local band celebrating the first anniversary of their debut EP. The six-piece R&B indie popsters kept the crowd at a strong simmer for most of the night before kicking it up a notch for the tambourine rattle and hands in the air during “Hacienda Motel,” of course. Damien Jurado showed up to act as hype man during the encore, and as goes Jurado, so goes the rest of Seattle. Pickwick has had a whirlwind year with no signs of stopping, as they’ll be at work recording their first full-length soon and departing on a national tour currently set for next spring.

Newly-crowned Stranger genius John Osebold, aka Jose Bold, used his two City Arts slots (Thursday and Saturday nights at the Theatre Off Jackson) to premiere his new performance piece Seateeth. The work starts out as a literary reading before transitioning into a nautical tale a la Moby Dick by way of the magical realism of Haruki Murukami, with both influences fairly clear.

As always, it’s hard to take your eyes off John and his glorious man-locks, his writing is both playful and strong, and he does some impressive physical acting, as when he plays a man floating in a water-filled elevator. But surrealism doesn’t excuse inconsistencies in tone, and as is often the case with the “Awesome” crew, some of the humor is a little inside baseball. It’s nice to see Kirk Anderson show up in a small part, but if you’re viewing this piece without knowing the actors, does it make the same impact? You’ve got at least one more chance to see Seateeth, as Osebold will reprise the show Friday, October 28 at SAM Remix.

Meanwhile, Portishead has only made three studio albums (plus one live release) since 1994, and yet somehow they’ve never been bigger–like they’re frozen in time and adulation. Fresh off curating All Tomorrow’s Parties in Asbury Park, the seminal trip-hopping Bristolers are now on their first US tour proper in fourteen years (the occasional one-off don’t count). And Sunday night, they defeated the terrible acoustics of WaMu Theater to put on one amazing show.

Portishead drew from all three albums–“Wandering Star,” “Cowboys,” “Mysterons,” “Machine Gun,” “Glory Box,” “Sour Times,” and “The Rip” all made an appearance in the setlist–as spastic video, both pre-recorded images and live footage of the show, played behind the band. Beth Gibbons was all pointed elbows and hunched shoulders, her strong yet fragile voice her only weapon against her still obvious stagefright. Portishead came to work and didn’t stop till they filled that cavernous arena with crisp drums, theremin-like wails, and scratched vinyl. The video below gives a taste of what it was like. Behold the professionals:

The SunBreak’s Picks for City Arts Fest Saturday

The closing night of City Arts Fest 2011 should pack plenty of unmissable moments in its own right. Enclosed, please find our picks for your Saturday evening.

Mudhoney w/Hot Bodies in Motion, Thee Emergency, Lovesick Empire @ Neumos
Katelyn: Mudhoney, people. MUDHONEY. Plus, Thee Emergency’s reinvented themselves at least twice since I saw them last, so I’m interested to see what the ever-sultry Dita Vox and the gang are up to now. Do wear flannel, and do prepare your eardrums for sonic assault.

Clint: Well, don’t I feel lucky going in for Mudhoney? I’d say that’s been covered quite nicely. Just one more thought: While other legendary Seattle bands/records celebrate 20 years in 2011, Mudhoney nears 25. And still the band’s spontaneous-yet-accomplished rock and Mark Arm’s serpentine, charismatic frontman talents remain unrivaled.

Tea Cozies will rock it up tonight at the Rendezvous.

Seapony w/Tea Cozies, Midday Veil, Witch Gardens @ The Rendezvous
Katelyn: Oh, you’d rather be less ragey, more happy on a Saturday night? Done. Go to the Rendezvous for Seapony and Tea Cozies.

Tony: Seapony’s girl-fronted pop’s just plain tasty and sweet, but my heart belongeth to Tea Cozies. The Ronettes fronting Gang of Four while channelling mid ’60’s Kinks, set to a walloping backbeat? Yep, that about covers it.

Thao with the Get Down Stay Down w/Grand Hallway, Lemolo, Kris Orlowski @ The Crocodile
Tony: The Croc’s wildly varied Saturday bill includes Thao’s winning herky-jerky indie pop, Grand Hallway’s entrancing and airy chamber-rock, Lemolo’s electronic allure, and Kris Orlowski’s burnished, beguilingly-ragged Mark Lanegen-esque pipes.

The Hold Steady w/ Grand Archives @ The Neptune
Josh: The pairing of Grand Archives (sunny American harmonics) and the Hold Steady (optimal bar band with a dash of literary tradition) make a great excuse to check out the Neptune.

Male Bonding w/Unnatural Helpers, Virgin Islands, The Fucking Eagles @ Chop Suey
Tony: The bill I’m most excited for this evening has to be this rock and roll quadruple feature at Chop Suey. British trio Male Bonding give great loud pop–short, catchy songs that sound like Teenage Fanclub after a case of Red Bull. But get there really, really early. The other three local bands on the bill pretty much rule: Unnatural Helpers and Virgin Islands serve up some great, spiky post-punk, and Tacoma collective The Fucking Eagles uphold T-Town’s noble tradition of gloriously git-down-and-dirty garage rock, but laced with some muscular R & B. Be sure to bring an extra pair of socks, as your first pair will be knocked off.

Seateeth: Jose Bold (John Osebold of “Awesome”) @ Theater off Jackson
Seth: I wrote about this earlier this week. I will be there at this very show, and if the Huskies beat Stanford that afternoon, I will be the guy smiling broadly and muttering “Keith Mother-f-ing Price! F-ing A!” at intervals. Sorry.

Capsula w/Whalebones, Stag, Rose Windows @ The Comet Tavern
Tony: When it comes to my sixties revivalists, I like ‘em swirly, swaggering and dirty. South America’s Capsula know how to break out the bad-trip psychedelia, and Seattle’s own Whalebones provide a great excuse to show up early.