Tag Archives: Katie Kate

Your Live Music Bets for the Weekend of January 16 through January 18

Tacocat lead singer Emily Nokes will turn that frown upside down at Chop Suey Sunday. (photo: Tony Kay)

To those of you clamoring for more posts here at ye olde semi-dormant SunBreak, you’re the greatest. Both of you.

Most weekends in this ‘burg are pretty stacked musically, but this one’s especially resplendent with sonic riches, some suffused with significant bittersweetness. Read on.

Friday, January 16 (tonight!)

Garageland Fest  with The Paul Collins Beat, Rich Hands, Acapulco Lips, The Gods Themselves, The Knast, and heaps more  @ LoFi Performance Gallery. 21+. $12 advance/$15 at the door. Doors open at 5 p.m.

Power pop elder statesman Paul Collins never quite made the impact of late ’70s peers like The Knack and Cheap Trick, but that wasn’t for want of  insidious sugary hooks goosed with new wave jumpiness. Collins is onto something pretty awesome of late with Garageland Fest, a touring mini-festival headlined by Collins and his band The Beat that showcases bands native to each tour stop. That means you’ll hear a bunch of great Seattle outfits before Collins takes the stage tonight, including the walloping-great hard-pop stylings of Acapulco Lips, guaranteed post-punk-gone-garage-funk nirvana with SunBreak faves The Gods Themselves, and the tasty fuzztone-seasoned sixties revivalism of The Knast, among others. Expect indie vinyl retailers, an unplugged happy hour, and DJs to give you even more reasons to skip work early, and to stay late.

Katie Kate, Tangerine, Thunderpussy, Peeping Tomboys @ The Vera Project. All ages. $10 advance/$15 at the door. Show at 7 p.m.

Four strong local acts populate this fundraiser for Seattle-based non-profit Skate Like a Girl. Katie Kate‘s dance pop dips into hip-hop and electronica with equal grace, and sunny pop ensemble Tangerine took me by very pleasant surprise at Bumbershoot last Labor Day. Local all-femme supergroup  Thunderpussy stomp out throbbing groove rock with balls as big as any all-dude band,  and Peeping Tomboys sound like a bunch of riot grrrls weaned on tribal post-punk.

Chuck Prophet, The Tripwires @ The Tractor Tavern. 21+. $15 at the door. Show at 9 p.m.

Californian Chuck Prophet played in the underrated but pretty awesome Green on Red back in the 80s. His solo work for the last three decades has seen him de-emphasize his former band’s psychedelic touches in favor of a sturdy roots-rock sound–songs that’d sound ideal in a last-chance bar where Bruce Springsteen and Lou Reed share drinks. Get there early to hear The Tripwires, a terrific local power-pop band that includes alumnus from Screaming Trees, The Minus 5, The Young Fresh Fellows, and the Model Rockets.

Saturday, January 17

The Young Evils, Blood Drugs, Hounds of the Wild Hunt @ The Sunset Tavern. 21+. $8 advance/$10 at the door. Show at 9 p.m.

The Young Evils nearly hit the major label big-time last year, until complications with said major label jerked them around to a pretty lame degree. It’s a long story with a happy ending: The Evils got to keep their recordings from those ill-fated sessions. The initial fruit of those labors, last year’s False Starts EP, made for an addictive and awesome companion piece to their equally awesome 2012 Foreign Spells EP. As is frequently the case, early arrival is a must: Blood Drugs‘ scraping art-metal should translate impressively live, and Hounds of the Wild Hunt remain one of Seattle’s flat-out best live rock ensembles.

Hellbat, Silty Loam, The Heels, Bugs @ Blue Moon Tavern. 21+. $6 at the door. Show at 9 p.m.

Hellbat combines rolling psych organs, a driving punk rhythm section, gleefully unhinged call-and-response vocals, and willfully silly lyrics to happiness-inducing effect. The end result sounds like an art-punk band like X Ray Spex providing the soundtrack as Yoko Ono, Kate Pierson, and Jello Biafra beat the shit out of each other, and if the resulting anarchy isn’t fun as hell onstage, I’ll eat one of the two hats I own.

Grayskul, The Nightcappers, Imaginary Friends, guests @ The High Dive. 21+. $8 advance/$10 at the door. Show at 9 p.m.

The E-40 show at the Showbox Sunday night will surely draw a bigger crowd (and it’s got Nacho Picasso providing what’ll be a hell of a warmup), but local boys Grayskul sport imagination and smarts that deserve an equally sizable turnout. They couple their rhymes with a production style that swaddles addictive beats in a wonderfully glitchy and constantly changing framework. And if they’re not as abundant with the party jams as E-40, Grayskul give your brain a little more to chew on, in a good way.

Sunday, January 18

Another One Bites the Dust with Tacocat, Pony Time, Wimps, Kithkin, Chastity Belt, Universe People, Childbirth, and more @ Chop Suey. 21+. $10 day of show. Show at 4 p.m.

Don’t you love how Seattle squashes its smaller live venues by  lunging at development dollars like a mentally-defective toddler stepping on ducklings to get to a gooey candy bar? If by some stretch of the imagination you answered no, then get thee the hell over to Capitol Hill dive Chop Suey for one of its last gasps as a proper music space. It’s impossible to fault the lineup here–picks to click include Tacocat’s sunny yet snarky pop, Kithkin’s always-unbelievable ocean of rhythm, and Childbirth’s hilariously nasty female-centric punk–and the first 250 discounted admissions sold rapidly. Get ready for a long line–and a probable sell-out well before the nights’ end.

TSB interview: Lena Simon talks to the SunBreak about KAIROS, Pollens, La Luz, Thunderpussy, and much more

New Year’s Eve 2012 at the Crocodile, photo by Tony Kay.

Lena Simon is a wunderkind in the Seattle music scene. She plays several different instruments across five very different bands, including her own project KAIROS. She divides her time between KAIROS,  the weirdly rhythmic pop band Pollens, hip hop artist and Stranger Genius shortlister Katie Kate, surf rockers La Luz, and Thunderpussy (a new, all women, classic rock influenced band). She’s also a classically-trained clarinetist, educated at Cornish College.

KAIROS released its debut EP on Fin Records last month, and it’s a diverse, six-song collection of pop songs, and it’s thoroughly enjoyable. My favorite track is “Dirt & Grit,” a guitar-based pop/rock number that accentuates her musical prowess and songwriting. The EP should be remembered as one of the best local releases of 2013. City Arts wrote, it “is simultaneously pensive and direct, deeply melancholy in emotional timbre but sonically buoyant and instrumentally deft.” The Stranger noted, “The juxtaposition of catchy/brainy and heartfelt/heady can bring to mind the Postal Service at their absolute best, and it’s not difficult to imagine Kairos breaking out in the same way.” (Though both were wrong about Pollens no longer being a going concern: they’re playing Capitol Hill Block Party next month.)

I met up with Lena Simon at a Capitol Hill coffee shop a couple of weeks ago to talk about her balancing her various music projects, choosing the right band, what each project offers her.

First things first, let’s talk about your new KAIROS EP. My understanding is that you played every instrument on this record, is this correct?

Pretty much. It was me and Charlie Smith in the studio for a couple of months. I had made all of these bedroom demos. They were fully realized, just using Abelton Live, and using whatever MIDI drum tracks to get the rhythm and the drum tracks out there. It probably didn’t sound too good, but I went to the studio with these fully-realized songs and showed them to Charlie and he said, “They’re great.” I re-demoed all of them with just a keyboard, or something that wasn’t a guitar, and one vocal line. Those became the scratch tracks for us to begin recording: layering all of the drums first, adding more keyboards, guitars, bass, more vocals. It was all an overdub process. It was great, it was easier to think about things as you go along. It was just the two of us, though!

How do you go about fleshing that sound out that you created yourself, to having a full, live band?

I’m lucky to have really talented people in my live band, all of which are in other bands. They just listen to the record. I’ll give them the guitar part, just straight off the record, or their parts straight off the record and they’ll learn it. Then I’ll say to add their flair to it because I want the live show to be different than the record.

How do you balance with so many different projects you’re in, Pollens, Tomten, La Luz, etc…

It’s hard. I’m not actually in Tomten anymore, but there are still four other bands I’m in. It’s difficult to balance but all of the other bands I’m in, they understand that KAIROS is my thing and I’m really going for it. They respect the time I need to take to do it.

It’s hard to find the time sometimes when I’ll be on the road with La Luz and e-mailing Fin Records, figuring all of the press and PR, booking shows while I’m on the road. I do as much as I can when I’m not here, then when I am here, I really do it.

When I interviewed Hanna (Benn, from Pollens) last year, she said that she thought it was “wonderful” if someone in the group had to miss practice for their own project, and said she wanted to encourage everyone to work on their own projects.

Everyone in Pollens has their own projects that they’re doing. It’s the same thing, I guess, with KAIROS too. That’s how I feel Seattle is in general, where everyone is really supportive of people going off and doing what they want to do.

Lena Simon at Doe Bay Fest 2013, photo by Tony Kay.

Is there something in the process that differs from composing your own songs, verses working out your parts in the other bands you’re in?

I think it’s different every time I write a song. Sometimes it’s lyrics first, sometimes it’s a piece of something I’ve played on a guitar or a piece of a melody, and sometimes it’s both. That’s ideal. Right now, I have a bunch of small pieces that I’ve been collecting. Hopefully it’s one song, maybe it’s five or ten songs. I don’t know yet. When writing for KAIROS, it’s very much a me-time experience, and then when I’m in other bands, they will bring 50% of a song or 75% of a song and ask, “what’s your part?” and you figure out how you fit into that puzzle. With KAIROS I very much feel in charge, or responsible, I guess. (laughs) I don’t want to give that responsibility to my bandmates, just give them their parts and have them add their flair to it.

It’s also difficult to say because the live band came after the record, so when I’m writing the new material, they might have more of an influence. I don’t know yet. I haven’t shown anything to them yet.

Do you have any expectations for your new record?

I try not to have any expectations. I like to be pleasantly surprised, or hopefully not too disappointed. I want to go into it with a pretty level head. So far, it’s been generated some really organic press and I’m hearing nothing but good things. I hope people buy it and like it.

One thing I find so intriguing is that you pretty much play a different instrument in each band.

I have different roles in every band, for sure. In La Luz, I’m pretty much bass and backup vocals. In Pollens, it’s bass and everyone sings. I play several things with Katie Kate: bass guitar, keyboard, and I do some double drums.

I don’t think I knew that she was playing with a live band now, other than having a drummer.

She just started doing that. I’ve been friends with her for a long time because she’s also from Cornish, as well. She made a new record with Charlie Smith, also. When I heard it, and I think Charlie thought the same thing, that she couldn’t just play with just a DJ, she’d need to pump it up to the next level – and I said I want to do that, and she said okay.

And the other band I’m in is called Thunderpussy. It’s a new thing.

Can you talk a bit about that?

Yeah. It’s all girls, four girls. We like to describe it as Led Zeppelin, or Janis Joplin, channeling the classic rock gods, with a little bit of a burlesque feel. It’s four ladies shredding on stage.

Who else is in the band with you?

Molly Sides is the vocalist and lead performer; I’ll just say (laughs). Whitney Petty from The Grizzled Mighty plays guitar.

She’s the drummer for The Grizzled Mighty, right?

Yeah, she’s so excited to be getting to play guitar, and she’s so good at it. And Leah (Julius) plays bass in Cumulus and drums in Sundries. She plays bass in Thunderpussy and I play drums.

We’ve had one show so far, and it was at Zoe Rain’s birthday party and it was insane. I thought it was going to be fun, but it was way more fun than I thought.

I’m always really intrigued by really creative artists who have a bunch of different creative outlets. Do you when you think of a piece of music, where it’ll best be used?

Well, yeah. Back when I was in Tomten, I only wrote one song. I had been part of the writing process for the rest of the songs, but sang lead vocal and composed, that was “So So So.” When I wrote that at home, I knew that it was obviously a Tomten song: the style, the feel I wanted from it. But that’s the only other band I’ve really written for.

I think I go through this, where it’s hard to narrow down what sound I’m going for. Right now, I have a lot of bits and pieces of new songs. I’m not sure what genre they are, or if they even need to fit into a certain genre. Or sometimes there might be something in my head that will transform into what KAIROS currently is, simply by changing a guitar part to a keyboard part. I definitely recognize what you’re saying.

I’m just find it so fascinating talking to someone like yourself because I have a full time job and writing about arts and culture in Seattle is my creative outlet, but you have so many different creative outlets, that it would seem difficult for someone to find a balance with all of those projects you’re working on.

It gets a little confusing sometimes (laughs). When I’m in the room with a band, it’s easier for me to get in my mindset, like Pollens-Land, or La Luz Land, or KAIROS Land, which is when I’m by myself.

Is there something specific you look for when you’re deciding whether or not to join a band?

I’ve been in and out of a lot of different bands, but I tend to pick projects that I have fun with, and also believe in for one reason or another, and get along with the people. La Luz was different because they asked me and I was taking someone’s place. Pollens is just something that I’ve been in since the beginning and I like it so much and believe in it so much that I haven’t left. I guess it’s also what is speaking to me at the moment. Something that is new and exciting, when it’s approaching me, I can say, “Yes, that sounds interesting, I want to be a part of that.” Like Thunderpussy, that is really new and is not really happening right now. It’s straight up classic rock and isn’t kidding anyone, it’s classic rock. I find that interesting, plus I grew up playing drums to Led Zeppelin, and that’s what I get to do in that band. It’s pure fun. Pollens is the more “musicians band”: heady, complicated, rhythmic insanity. That’s always been interesting to me and it feeds the music nerd inside of me. With Katie Kate, I get to play like five things in her band. She’s also the most aggressive band, so I get to throw my drumsticks after a song, or give some attitude, which I don’t get to do in any other band. Each band feeds me in a different way. That’s kind of what I’m looking for.

Your Live Music Bets for the Weekend of August 23 through August 25

After this weekend, you won’t have Absolute Monarchs to kick around anymore. (photo: Tony Kay)

The Dog Days of Summer are officially in place, so get ‘em while they’re hot. And if you’re of the opinion (like me) that the best moments of the soundtrack of your life should be set to live music, this weekend will not disappoint.

Tonight (Friday, August 23):

Pixies Cover Night (feat. members of Midday Veil, Ononos, Kithkin, Tea Cozies, and more) @ Chop Suey. 21+. $10 at the door. Show at 9 p.m.

The Pixies’ brand of mutant pop sports so many jagged edges, it’s easy to forget how many durable, honest-to-God songs they crafted. Tonight at Chop Suey, you should get plenty of reminders. Best of all, none of the bands whose members comprise the evening’s entertainment sound at all like The Pixies, meaning the possibility of hearing some radical reinterpretations of classics like “Monkey Gone to Heaven” and “Where is My Mind?” runs pretty high.

Luke Winslow-King, James Apollo, Annie Ford Band @ Columbia City Theater. 21+. $12 at the door. Show at 8 p.m.

It’s gonna probably be hot and a little humid tonight, and Michigan transplant-turned-New Orleans club vet Luke Winslow-King‘s variety of ambling, bare-bones blues should fit that kind of climate to a T. Winslow-King’s one of those roots musicians who sounds like he stepped from a 1930s Mississippi bar, straight into a time machine that spit him out in 2013 (the warm retro environs of Columbia City Theater should feel exceptionally apropos). That he never seems to be trying too hard to sound like he does adds immeasurably to his easygoing charm.

Men Without Hats, The Scarves, Color, Crooked Veils @ El Corazon. 21+. $18 at the door. Show at 8 p.m.

Synth band Men Without Hats will forever and ever be known as the architects of one obscenely-massive hit, “The Safety Dance,” but they actually cut a couple of pretty good pop albums back in the big ’80’s (Rhythm of Youth and Pop Goes the World) bric-a-brac with ploinky synths and propulsively catchy artificial rhythms. Their most recent record, Love in the Age of War, takes a solid step into the New Wave Wayback Machine, but you’ll be forgiven for biding your time until you’re able to do that scissor-armed spastic dance like Ivan Doroschuk and his dwarf buddy in the video.

Saturday, August 24:

Linda’s Fest, featuring Absolute Monarchs, Constant Lovers, Katie Kate, Tilson XOXO, Big Eyes, and Iska  Dhaaf @ Linda’s Tavern. 21+. Free. Show at 9 p.m.

It’s the fourth year that Linda’s Tavern will be rustling up some choice local talent for a totally free show. This year, the Fest takes place in the parking lot behind Pine Food Market. The buzz set of the night belongs to post-punk/metal titans Absolute Monarchs, playing their (say it ain’t so) last show. But you’ve also got the similary-corrosive and awesome Constant Lovers, dance-music priestess Katie Kate, the soul-hip-hop-and-more polyglot of Tilson XOXO, short-and-sweet sugar buzz punk from Big Eyes, and jumpily-gorgeous echo-chamber pop music from two-man band Iska Dhaaf.

International Pop Overthrow Seattle Day 3, featuring Peter Fedofsky of Curtains for You, Irene and They Go Pop!, Smile Brigade, Lights from Space, and more  @ The Mix. 21+. $10 advance/day of show. Show at 9 p.m.

International Pop Overthrow, a festival dedicated to celebrating pure pop music from all over the globe, landed its Seattle iteration at Georgetown’s The Mix yesterday, and it’ll be parked there tonight and tomorrow as well. Quality acts were/are scattered throughout the three-day fest, but the final night of the Fest includes sets from some of this town’s most choice pure-pop acts. Lights from Space play awesome, toothy power pop that sounds like Fountains of Wayne’s tougher kid brothers, while Smile Brigade‘s 60s-style sunny singalong ditties include a pinch of enchanting psychedelic weirdness. Best of all, Peter Fedofsky, keyboardist/songwriter/singer with Curtains for You, opens up IPO Day 3 at 7:30 with a set of sparkling pocket symphonies that roll Ben Folds, Harry Nilsson, and Pet Sounds-era Beach Boys into one lovely package. Get there early, and stay late.

Sunday, August 25:

Black Nite Crash, Dead Teeth, Yonder @ The Comet Tavern. $7 at the door. Show at 8 p.m.

The fact that Black Nite Crash named themselves after a song by Ride will come as no surprise once you hear ‘em. The Seattle band play their spattering and swirling mix of shoegazer rock and Brian Jonestown Massacre-style psychedelia so sublimely, you’d swear they were a bunch of pasty-faced Brits (that’s a massive compliment). Equal parts danceable and dizzyingly heady, their sound’s infused with just enough urgency to render the familiar ingredients wonderfully fresh.

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).

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Eighteen Individual Eyes at Bumbershoot 2012. thumbnail
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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
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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]

Mad Rad and Katie Kate Work Up a Sweat at City Arts Fest [Photo Gallery]

You’d think it was the weekend or something.

City Arts Fest’s opening evening scattered great music all over town, but if you wanted to work up a booty-shaking sweat Thursday night, Neumos was ground zero.

The club played host to a heady night of beats and hedonism, with Seattle’s crown princes of partying, Mad Rad, serving as ringmasters. Opener Katie Kate proved to be a pleasant surprise, a dance-floor thrush with unpretentious regular-girl giggliness, charismatic onstage presence, and insidiously catchy songs backed by Mad Rad madman Terry Radjaw’s volley of electro-trash melodies.

There’s not a helluva lot to be said about Mad Rad’s live set–ninety minutes of new-wave-informed hip-hop that never let up for a minute–that hasn’t been said already, aside from the fact that seeing this band of adrenaline-and-humor-stoked lunatics tearing it up on the real-life party mountain (AKA Capitol Hill) should be on every Seattle music fan’s bucket list. Thank you, City Arts Fest: My ass needed some serious shaking.

Katie Kate at Neumos.
Katie Kate at Neumos.
Katie Kate at Neumos.
Katie Kate at Neumos.
Mad Rad at Neumos.
Mad Rad at Neumos.
Mad Rad at Neumos.
Mad Rad at Neumos.
Mad Rad at Neumos.
Mad Rad at Neumos.
Mad Rad at Neumos.
Mad Rad at Neumos.

Katie Kate, opening for Mad Rad, at Neumos Thursday night. (photo: Tony Kay)

Katie Kate, with Mad Rad at Neumos for City Arts Fest. (photo by Tony Kay)

Katie Kate, opening for Mad Rad at Neumos Thursday night for City Arts Fest (photo: Tony Kay)

Katie Kate, opening up for Mad Rad, at Neumos. (photo: Tony Kay)

Party zealot Buffalo Madonna of Mad Rad, at Neumos Thursday night (photo: Tony Kay)

Buffalo Madonna works the crowd at Neumos. (photo: Tony Kay)

P Smoov of Mad Rad, at Neumos Thursday night. (photo: Tony Kay)

Buffalo Madonna of Mad Rad, at Neumos Thursday night. (photo: Tony Kay)

Buffalo Madonna refuses to stand still at Neumos Thursday night. (photo: Tony Kay)

Terry Radjaw of Mad Rad prays to the Party Gods at Neumos. (photo: Tony Kay)

Buffalo Madonna of Mad Rad at Neumos. (photo: Tony Kay)

DJ Darwin, Terry Radjaw, and Buffalo Madonna of Mad Rad at Neumos. (photo: Tony Kay)

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