We here at The SunBreak like to live A Life of Pro-Tips. To that end, here are some tips and tricks for how to best get around the festival, new and improved for 2012!
Shawn: My tips from last year are still mostly valid. Nothing besides SIFF is going on in the NW Rooms this year though, since KEXP is supposed to have started the process of moving their studio space over there. Another big change is that the Visual Arts are now in Fisher Pavilion. This is where the poster show Flatstock typically had been [Ed: This year it’s at the Armory.]
Josh: As a general tip, the Bumbershoot phone app is ready for downloading. It still doesn’t know about sharing your schedule with friends (or, even better, tracking your friends on the Seattle Center grounds) or figuring out which acts are the most popular among app users, but it’s a start and will still help you on time and aware of the schedule when your newsprint version gets horribly smudged.
Josh: The KEXP Music Lounge, where they broadcast from an undisclosed location on the Seattle Center campus, is always a nice escape from the teeming crowds. Unfortunately, this year’s sessions are already full, but you can still buy your way in with a Platinum Pass, which also gets you all sorts of other crowd- and sobriety-defying perks.
Also worth noting: sunlight-averse Bumbershooters may prefer this year’s (separately-ticketed) AfterDark programming by the Decibel Festival, which brings electronic music fans into the Exhibition Hall dungeon into the wee hours.
Audrey: There’s also the Free Yr Radio lineup, with mostly Bumber-acts (but a few local extras!) here for another year at the festival. Which means you can end up with potentially three ways to see a Bumber-buzz band: their stage set, KEXP set, and the Free Yr Radio set. It’s almost an overwhelming number of scheduling options.
MvB: One Reel is putting free water tents all around the grounds, so just bring a refillable water bottle (or two) and save on buying anything at all.
Audrey: Yes, FREE WATER is a pro-tip. Don’t be a chump!
Shawn: They don’t check bags at the main gates, so bring in as much water as you like. I don’t think they even care if it is in view when you walk in. However, the mainstage and most of the indoor venues DO check bags and DON’T allow outside water, so keep that in mind.
If you are hungry/thirsty, sneak out to QFC or Met Market for a reasonably priced sandwich and drink. Or plan ahead and grab stuff before you head into Seattle Center.
Audrey: On campus, your best non-food court bet is POP, especially if you take advantage of happy hour. My biggest Bumber Pro-Tip is MONORAIL to get you to and from Seattle Center in two minutes flat. Labor Day is the only time all year I take that accursed mode of transportation, so I’m glad it’s running late this weekend (till 11:30 p.m.).
Josh: If you insist on taking the bus, you’ll probably have more luck getting a seat if you pick it up in Queen Anne instead of downstream on Denny.
Tony: One interesting (and unpredictable) sidebar thrown into the mix is the extensive work that’s been done on Mercer Street. I’m curious as to what kind of impact all of the re-routing will have on Bumber-traffic in general, and Bumbershoot attendance in particular. Whatever the case, leaving even earlier than usual will be a must for anyone who’s driving or busing in from outside of downtown proper.
Audrey: That’s one more reason why the monorail is my ultimate Bumbershoot Pro Tip! Easy in and easy out!
Katelyn: Stay hydrated, don’t eat pot brownies made by strangers, and know where the nearest restroom is at all times.
Josh: If you’re not rolling through the festival with shiny gold or platinum passes around your neck and care deeply about the comedy lineup, be sure to show up early to get a Comedy Pass. The main stage, now in Key Arena though, doesn’t require a special token as all shows are first-come (up to 90 minutes ahead), first-served.
Dana: The comedy shows are a great way to escape the constant crush of people at the music venues and on the grounds. You get to sit on a comfy chair in an air-conditioned room and laugh your ass off! Be sure to arrive early, as there is always a long line.
MvB: Best bathrooms? I think there are some that end up less “used.” If you get my drift. Generally, those in specific venues, rather than the ones on the main floor of the Center House. There be monsters.
Shawn: Also, the bathrooms in the NW Rooms are usually the least used of the ones you don’t have to wait in a long comedy line to get to.
MvB: Avoid any path lined with food if you’re in a hurry, because you will either wear yourself out playing Red Rover with multiple food lines or end up with a plate of yakisoba on your shirt.
Josh: You’ll want to get a hundred posters at Flatstock; time your purchases so you’re not hauling your merch around all day and starting accidental tube fights during particularly boisterous sets on the Fountain Lawn.
MvB: It’s still summer, so don’t forget some kind of hat and SPF159. If you forget, it would be worth running across the street to Met Market or QFC. You may want to consider buying extra sunscreen and selling it at a huge markup to people turning lobster.
Josh: On the Be Prepared front, get ready for your phone’s battery to fade. Keep a printout of the schedule handy and pick a meeting time and place to find your friends when you inevitably get split up over funnel cakes vs. elephant ears or Skrillex vs. anything other than Skrillex.
Where did the summer go? Every year, it seems that July and August fly by until here we are, on the cusp of Labor Day Weekend. So no judgment if you haven’t gotten around to planning your Bumbershoot experience just yet. Don’t worry–The SunBreak hivemind is here to help!
Tony gets the ball rolling: I won’t even pretend. Despite the awesomeness of Bumbershoot’s overall art and performance schedule, it’s the music lineup that’s got me most stoked. True dyed-in-the-wool showbiz legends are a dying breed, so the fact that world-class crooner icon Tony Bennett and rockabilly pioneer Wanda Jackson both grace Bumbershoot this year should be cause for celebration.
Dana: I plan to close out Sunday night with Wanda Jackson & The Dusty 45’s. She’s the Queen of Rockabilly, still rocking it at age 74…’nuff said. The Dusty 45’s are a local group known for kickass rockabilly and lighting their brass instruments on fire. I was that weird kid in the late ’90s who was obsessed with rockabilly instead of boy bands, so this will be a great opportunity for me to bond with my inner teenager.
Audrey: Speaking of legends, American hero John Waters is a non-negotiable Bumbershoot must-see for your Saturday night.
Dana: Sunday afternoon brings Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings and their Motown and blues for the 21st century. I fell in love with Sharon Jones’ voice when I heard her cover of “This Land is Your Land.” Anyone who can turn a song that I used to sing in elementary school into something I’d play at a dance party is awesome in my book. (If anyone here knows how to blues dance, please come and dance with me!) Then it’s off to the Harmonica House Party. Because everyone needs to experience a harmonica jam at least once in their lifetime.
Tony: In sharp contrast, years of bad luck have deflected me from being able to enjoy the mad genius of Don’t Talk to the Cops in a live setting, an oversight I intend to correct this weekend.
Audrey: You might want to try your Don’t Talk to the Cops luck at the Free Yr Radio stage on the Fountain Lawn. Their tent often serves as a good way to see local bands in a venue likely smaller than where they’re playing festival proper.
Tony: Everyone’s been over the moon about Reignwolf‘s volcanic live show, and I’m excited to see the guy in action.
Shawn: I am only going on Monday, but I am looking forward to Reignwolf in a performance bigger than the Easy Street show I saw him at last time. Also Foxy Shazam!
Audrey: I want to make sure to catch the smooth Swedish Europop of Niki and the Dove and the mellow, sweeping French guitar grooves of M83. I wish Ken Jennings hosting trivia didn’t fall so late on the last night of Bumbershoot. Won’t somebody think of the olds?
Margaret: Skerik’s Bandalabra features a friend of mine on bass, so I’ll be checking them out (and if you miss them at Bumbershoot, they’ll be playing a couple of shows in Seattle in late September and October).
Dana: I’ve been following The Young Evils from afar for the last couple of years, so Sunday is the perfect opportunity for me to follow them a little more closely. They get a lot of airplay on KEXP, and their songs & energy always catch my ear. “Get Over It” is the perfect driving in the Seattle sunshine with the windows rolled down song.
Audrey: The Young Evils are also playing the Free Yr Radio stage later that day, to allow you to stalk them even further. Just sayin’, friend.
Tony: The Dirtbombs smear everything from garage-rock to vintage soul to old-school new wave with a fistful of Motor City elbow grease and a performance artist’s sense of adventure. And there’s an influx of reunited bands from the 1980s and ’90s that have reputedly been bringing it live. Jane’s Addiction probably represent the most high-profile of those acts, but I’m way more interested in catching up with ska-punk polyglots Fishbone, New York sultans of heaviness Prong, and The Vaselines‘ winsome yet scruffy pop. I could go on…
Audrey: Like The Promise Ring touring together again! Emotacular! It’s a Bumbershoot miracle.
Dana: On Sunday at noon, I’m planning to hit the Seattle Symphony presents Symphony Untuxed. In past years, I always bemoaned the lack of classical music at Bumbershoot. How could the self-proclaimed catch-all arts festival ignore the musical genre I love the most, especially given Seattle’s vibrant classical music scene? That’s why I was excited to hear about SSO’s partnership with Bumbershoot for last year’s festival. It looks like 2011’s performance was a success, so Symphony Untuxed has returned for a second year, in which members of the Seattle Symphony will perform a variety of solo and chamber works.
Margaret: I’m interested in the Modernist Cuisine experience–it’s one thing to see it done on Top Chef, and another thing to see/smell/hear it done in person. Who knows, maybe afterward I’ll buy the 5-volume, $600 tome.
Dana: I’ve always loved the comedy at Bumbershoot. I definitely want to catch Fred Armisen, but I may try to see some of the other comedy shows, like Gabe and Jenny.
Margaret: I’ll be hoping to be one of Paul F. Tompkins’ (fake) friends at his show featuring Jen Kirkman and Kumail Nanjiani (who I know from college, if you insist on full disclosure).
Audrey: All of those comedy acts are on my list too. Expect to see Doug Benson wandering stoned around the Seattle Center grounds, as per usual.
Margaret: How can I forget M. Ward? I’m sad that his show conflicts with The Jayhawks, but given the choice, I’d still go with M. I haven’t seen him live in years, so I look forward to the experience. And then I might be done…I’m old and I live in West Seattle now, so it’s going to take me a few days to get home. I kid, I kid! It’ll take a week.
Audrey: Bumbershoot earned a Like this for this year’s experience. The weather was perfect, the mood was laid-back, and, I don’t care if it hurts the bottom line, but I appreciated a not-too-crowded festival. Although with One Reel buying bargain basement and local acts, maybe they ended up making good money after all.
Seth: Thumbs up for the new format of many quality acts over a few headliners. Every stage I passed had something interesting, every show I attended was good. Honestly, the biggest issue was that there were so many good shows I didn’t know what to pick. Overall, very pleased with One Reel’s management of the festival. Maybe I set a low bar, but if garbage gets picked up, the restrooms are clean, and the band shows up, I’m happy. You’re paying $45 for a full day of entertainment–don’t expect a luxury experience.
Tony‘s overarching observations: I didn’t miss the perceived lack of Big Names: Hell, I didn’t catch one Key Arena Bumbershoot headliner. That paucity of superstar acts might’ve cut into the attendance on Saturday, which felt sparsely-peopled. That was probably bad news for Bumbershoot, but it was nice to navigate Seattle Center without being asscheek-to-asscheek with other Bumbershooters for one day, at least. (Sunday and Monday lived up to the Fest’s customary sardine-can-packedness.)
The quality of music that peopled Bumbershoot 2011 was, I thought, aces—the most consistent I’ve experienced in ages. If attendance for musical acts falls short of expectations, I might almost blame that consistency. No empty-headed pop acts du jour? No faceless cover bands grinding out bland reggae/jazz/classic rock covers? That notion, in and of itself, is a pretty nervy one. I’ll tip my hat to One Reel for taking the aesthetic—if not necessarily financial—high road.
Josh: Replacing Memorial Stadium with Key Arena on the sunniest Bumbershoot of all time was unfortunate timing, but it did open the doors for nostalgia: with two hometown bands, the Lonely Forest and Macklemore setting themselves up for a “Who wore it better?” of classic Sonics jerseys. For both bands, it seemed like getting the chance to wearing that shirt in that place validated a whole lot of long hours of hard fame-climbing work.
Although they were “only” the opening act for the mid-festival headliner, this really felt like the festival of Macklemore. I knew that he was popular, but the swarms of kids lining up and snaking throughout the festival grounds two hours before doors to Key Arena opened blew away my expectations of his fanbase. It was the only time I saw the venue anywhere near capacity and the crush at the front row barricade was the most intense of the weekend. With so many bands making their names little by little all over the place via the internet, his seemingly locally-powered tidal wave ride seems almost like a throwback. His sentimental hiphop probably won’t find its way into my own personal iPod heavy rotation playlist, but his ability to attract and enthrall a crowd was probably the most impressive and astonishing discovery of the festival.
Katelyn‘s highlight the first: “Who’s that, crooning over there?” I wondered aloud, emerging from the press room yesterday morning, licking the remains of a stale Krispy Kreme from my fingers. Turns out Lemolo was doing an extra mini-set at the Toyota tent, and turns out Lemolo is as good as I was promised. (Watch this and then tell me you’re not enthralled.) Lemolo confirmed my initial impressions later at the EMP. I’ll be listening again, next time around fewer people, the better to be able to fully feel all those feelings. That mini-set gave me confidence that my day would be full of happy finds, which is the attitude you need in order to survive any music festival.
Audrey: Yes, I saw the Lemolo at EMP, and those ladies know exactly what they’re doing.
Josh: Their quiet delight at having a “sold out” crowd at EMP’s Level 3 hearing the songs written, recorded, and practiced in their bedrooms was certainly charming.
Katelyn‘s highlight the second: I watched a father demonstrate to his son with special needs the best ways to cheer on Head Like A Kite. (Mighta teared up a little bit.) Best practices for cheering on HLAK include lots of pointing in the air, dancing, and clapping, if you need a refresher. HLAK is entertaining and groovy as hell–even better with Tilson (formerly of The Saturday Knights) on the mic, and better yet with Asy from Smoosh and Tilson both guesting on stage. I need an album. So do you, and so does that dad, just for being a good person who’s contributing to beauty and love in this world. Someone get on that.
Josh: I was dubious about the festival moving a stage from Broad Street (make way for glass sculptures?) to the Fountain Lawn, but I think that it ended up working really well. Compacting the festival sprawl made band browsing and general music discovery a lot easier and the scheduling worked so that there wasn’t too much in the way of sound bleed from other stages. (Except for Movin 92.5. I have no idea why they were allowed to set up camp next to a stage blasting incongruous music into the walkways while indie bands are playing.)
MvB: A trio of young Dublin novelists took over the Leo K. Theatre: Chris Binchy read from Five Days Apart, Kevin Holohan from The Brother’s Lot, and Claire Kilroy from an unpublished piece that left you with an urge to bash in a keg of Guinness with your head and drink deep. Taken together, it was a snapshot of modern Ireland: Holohan’s satiric take on the Church’s pedophilia scandal, Binchy’s unsettled, Emerald-Tiger love triangle, and Kilroy’s aching hangover haunted by memories of excess. Binchy was feuding with mics and other objects; describing his novel’s nervous narrator, he leaned on the podium–which, on wheels, skittered away, and his arms flailed and then wrapped themselves around himself for protection.
Audrey: With the reduced number of “must-see” music acts, I managed to catch W’Him W’Him, Marya Sea Kaminski, and a lot of comedy. For the most part, the comedy podcasts feel like performances more for the comedians than for the audience, but that doesn’t mean it’s not funny all the same. My favorite bit from the weekend was Eugene Mirman, of course. He can read me the phone book funny.
There was an interesting (and telling) Seattle moment at the Anthony Jeselnik set, when the notorious-for-his-roasts wiseass made a couple cracks about an audience member who wasn’t feeling his style of comedy. I’m sure Jeselnik feels validated by walkouts at his offensive humor (jokes about rape, abortion, murder, the Holocaust, and whatnot), but this was just a cheap shot simply to be cruel, and it bummed me out when the target was amongst the first of his walkouts. Way to harsh my buzz, brah.
MvB: You expect Bumbershoot to deliver the musical goods–I was thrilled to see the Bagley Wright packed full for the world premiere of Spectrum Dance Theater’s Euclidean Spaces and the Trey McIntire Project’s Americana-tinged suite of works. Byrd’s was “pure dance” he told everyone–“No politics. Maybe we’ve had too much of politics,” he said, to applause. McIntire, who has the wingspan of an NBA player, is both modern and intensely vernacular, a fusion which reminded me distantly of Aaron Copland’s reinvention of American music. I thought I heard Seattle Symphony’s new music director, Ludovic Morlot, tell an SRO Bagley Wright that this was the Symphony’s first appearance at Bumbershoot. He brought along a chamber-sized group of players, not the whole orchestra. Except for a merlot/Morlot joke, it was as casual as can be.
Tony: The Jim Jones Revue pounded out fuzzed-up caveman rockabilly-cum-garage rock, and put on what just may be the most scorching live rock show I have ever seen in my life. I also fell hard for YACHT’s hyper spin on old-school new wave: lead singers Jona Bechtolt and Claire Evans play like anime versions of pop music frontpeople, they’re so energized.
MvB: Maybe I just wanted to shake my groove thing? Who knew? Trombone Shorty, Charles Bradley, Little Dragon, YACHT and their glee-inducing teen dance party onstage, these were a few of my favorite things–all actually unknown to me before I ventured onto Bumbershoot grounds, which strikes me as good festival-ing. It was less hectic than some years (Saturday afternoon was downright slow), and I found myself listening to full sets more, rather than catching the first three songs and moving on.
Tony: Australian power-pop geniuses You am I likewise put on a stunner of a live performance, with lead singer Tim Rogers straddling the perfect line between arena-rock-god posturing and self-deprecating wit. The guy’s also an engaging raconteur—stay tuned for my interview with him, posting later this week.
Katelyn‘s highlight the third: Walking into the Key to the strains of Big Boi’s “The Way You Move” rendition. Highlight the fourth: Walking out of the Key after ten minutes of Big Boi’s lackluster Outkast medley.
Tony: In a Bumbershoot crowded with solid-to-great hip-hop, Champagne Champagne brought the most bang for the live buck, working the crowd with ragged and unflagging energy. And you’ll probably hear this sentiment parroted ad nauseum from every wag in attendance, but Charles Bradley’s sandpaper rasp and hard-won delivery provided the most transcendental hour of Bumbershoot for me. He’s James Brown, Bobby Womack, and Al Green; all rolled into one humble, nuanced, amazing 62-year-old package.
Seth: Charles Bradley, “The Screaming Eagle of Soul,” was all anyone could talk about Monday, both before his set and after. During–well, let’s let the two teenagers on shrooms sum up how everyone was feeling. One grabbed the other by the face, and intoned importantly: “Dude! This is happening…RIGHT…NOW.”
Katelyn‘s highlight the fifth: Feeling safe to leave Bumbershoot early with the knowledge that Truckasaurus will be playing the Decibel Festival later this month (and that Twitter would shortly be blowing up with so many Hall & Oates updates that I wouldn’t even know I’d missed the show).
Seth: Some among the Hall & Oates crowd got restless when, instead of just churning through their hits, they played several less notable songs, and then did a seven-minute jam version of “Sarah Smile.” For “Private Eyes,” we had to wait until the second encore–but ending with that clap-friendly song was a nice touch.
Josh: What I learned about Hall & Oates was that I don’t know that many Hall & Oates songs. And that I didn’t know that they were such a jam band. And that poor Oates had lost his signature mustache. At one point, he joking guilted some kids in the front row to take off their fake tribute Oatestaches.
Seth: Would just like to commend the three people I saw Monday wearing walking foot casts. That’s some serious dedication.
Josh: On the topic of injuries, the sight of an “absolutely no skateboarding” signs all around a brand new skate park were almost more conceptually interesting than the temporary art installation displacing the skateboarders.
I eased into Bumbershoot yesterday with what I would term a laid-back day for an arts festival. There wasn’t too much I absolutely had to see, I wasn’t rushed, and there were moments in the day where I was not interested in a single act currently performing. And yet, I saw and did a lot for the first day of the fest. (Be sure to follow my Bumber-twatting @thesunbreak.)
I got to the Bumbergrounds a little after 1, just in time to see some of Kris Orlowski’s set in the EMP 3rd floor stage with the Passenger String Quartet. I’ve seen Orlowski before and he had a haircut for the occasion, while the quartet fleshed out some of the singer-songwriter’s catalogue. Stopped by a couple minutes of a summer party with Champagne Champagne on the Fisher Green lawn. Even a little bit of Astronautalis is too much Astronautalis, but unfortunately there was nothing else going on at 3:30 p.m. I caught the opening of Nortec Collective Presents: Bostich & Fussible, because I can only handle so much Mexi horns, but I made a point to see Väsen, because I had never even heard of a nyckelharpa, let alone seen one in the flesh.
I made sure to see Pickwick at the Free Yr Radio stage, and good thing, as their EMP show was full. The Free Yr Radio stage might soon hit the echelon of Pro-Tip, if only because it’s nice and shady, not too crowded, and an easy way to see up-and-comers play about three songs. Get yr taste with Toyota. They paid me to say that. (They did not.)
Ok, where were we? I got to the Center House Theatre early for Marya Sea Kaminski’s work-in-progress Bonnie and the Robberie, an excerpt from the upcoming Riddled, her love letter to Bonnie and Clyde, which will be at the Hugo House next year. (If you want to see a full free reading of the entire work, hie thee to Cornish Studio One next week.)
And then for a bite of comedy with the Bang Bang Podcast, which was an excuse for Paul F. Tompkins, Anthony Jeselnik, and Scott Aukerman to make each other laugh. After tearing through a gyro, I saw a little bit of bescarfed Swedish sprite Little Dragon and a tromboner band leader in Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue, who gave a Seattle shout-out with a Nirvana cover (“In Bloom”).
The Sky Church at EMP was pretty empty, except for this cute kid spazzing out and doing flips to Lawnchair Generals. I stuck around the EMP for the atmospheric folk pop of Meklit Hadero. Born in Ethiopia, raised in San Francisco, Hadero has that multi-culti jazzy world feel while still being strong and breathy, occasionally in the vein of Thao Nguyen. Hadero is an expressive singer who obviously feels the music, but she’s still able to let all her accomplished accompanists–on drums, trumpet, and upright bass–shine.
And then of course, time to close the night out with a couple moments in the presence of Mavis Staples. When I got there, Mavis was taking a break while her band did a few instrumental numbers, but then she was back up and at ’em for “I’ll Take You There.” I headed home, not interested in staying for Bumbershoot After Dark, aka Exhibition Hall Basement Rave. Ready for Day 2?
We here at The SunBreak like to live A Life of Pro-Tips. To that end, here are some tips and tricks for how to best get around the festival.
Josh: As a general tip, the Bumbershoot iphone app is ready for downloading. It still doesn’t know about sharing your schedule with friends (or, even better, tracking your friends on the Seattle Center grounds) or figuring out which acts are the most popular among app users, but it’s a start and will still help you on time and aware of the schedule when your newsprint version gets horribly smudged.
The KEXP Music Lounge, where they broadcast from an undisclosed location on the Seattle Center campus, is always a nice escape from the teeming crowds. Unfortunately, this year’s sessions are already sold out, but you can still buy your way in with a Platinum Pass, which also gets you all sorts of other crowd- and sobriety-defying perks.
Also worth noting: sunlight-averse Bumbershooters may prefer this year’s (separately-ticketed) AfterDark programming by the Decibel Festival, which brings electronic music fans into the Exhibition Hall dungeon until 4 a.m.
Audrey: There’s also the Free Yr Radio lineup, with mostly Bumber-acts (but a few local extras!) doing yet another performance at the festival. Which means you actually have three chances to see Pickwick: their stage set, KEXP set, and the Free Yr Radio set. It’s almost an overwhelming number of scheduling options.
MvB: One Reel is putting free water tents all around the grounds, so just bring a refillable water bottle (or two) and save on buying anything at all.
Audrey: Yes, FREE WATER is a pro-tip. Don’t be a chump!
Shawn: They don’t check bags at the main gates, so bring in as much water as you like. I don’t think they even care if it is in view when you walk in. However, the mainstage and most of the indoor venues DO check bags and DON’T allow outside water, so keep that in mind.
If you are hungry/thirsty, sneak out to QFC or Met Market for a reasonably priced sandwich and drink. Or plan ahead and grab stuff before you head into Seattle Center.
Audrey: My biggest Bumber Pro-Tip is MONORAIL to get you to and from Seattle Center in under five minutes. Labor Day is the only time all year I take that accursed mode of transportation, so I’m glad it’s running late this weekend (till 11:30 p.m.).
Josh:If you insist on taking the bus, you’ll probably have more luck getting a seat if you pick it up in Queen Anne instead of downstream on Denny.
Katelyn: Stay hydrated, don’t eat pot brownies made by strangers, and know where the nearest restroom is at all times.
Josh: If you’re not rolling through the festival with shiny gold or platinum passes around your neck and care deeply about the comedy lineup, be sure to show up early to get a Comedy Pass. The main stage, now in Key Arena though, doesn’t require a special token as all shows are first-come (up to 90 minutes ahead), first-served.
MvB: Best bathrooms? I think there are some that end up less “used.” If you get my drift. Generally, those in specific venues, rather than the ones on the main floor of the Center House. There be monsters.
Shawn:Also, the bathrooms in the NW Rooms are usually the least used of the ones you don’t have to wait in a long comedy line to get to.
MvB: Avoid any path lined with food if you’re in a hurry, because you will either wear yourself out playing Red Rover with multiple food lines or end up with a plate of yakisoba on your shirt.
Josh: You’ll want to get a hundred posters at Flatstock; time your purchases so you’re not hauling your merch around all day and starting accidental tube fights during particularly boisterous sets on the Fountain Lawn.
MvB: It’s going to be hot this year, so don’t forget some kind of hat and SPF159. If you forget, it would be worth running across the street to Met Market or QFC. You may want to consider buying extra sunscreen and selling it at a huge markup to people turning lobster.
Josh: On the Be Prepared front, get ready for your phone’s battery to fade. Keep a printout of the schedule handy and pick a meeting time and place to find your friends when you inevitably get split up over funnel cakes vs. elephant ears or Hall & Oates vs. Truckasaurus.
You’ve already seen The SunBreak’s Saturday Bumberpicks. Now it’s time to turn our focus to the Labor Day festival’s second day:
Josh’s pick, as An Old who goes to a couple shows per month instead of a few shows per week and therefore needs to see a whole crop of local bands that have been garnering high praise: The Lonely Forest (1:30 p.m., Key Arena). Tough call between Thee Oh Sees (Fountain Lawn) and Broken Social Scene (Key Arena) during the 3-4:15 p.m. timeblock. Decide based on your immediate preferences for sun vs. cool dads.
Audrey: I pick Broken Social Scene, even in Key Arena. I will also likely catch some Tennis (5 p.m.), Warpaint (6:45 p.m.), and Toro y Moi (8:30 p.m.), all at the Fountain Lawn Stage. I’ve heard good things about AgesandAges, so that means a trip to EMP Level 3 stage (4:30 p.m.), especially since I’ve not seen Kaylee Cole since a Musicquarium happy hour set many moons ago (6 p.m.), and I’ve been meaning to catch the blue-eyed soul of Allen Stone (7:30 p.m.). And I’ll definitely hit up the Decibel stage at EMP Sky Church for the melodic twins in School of Seven Bells (8 p.m.) and Lusine’s deep techno (9 p.m.).
But there’s a bigger task at hand. I still need to strategize on how to best catch all the comedy I’d like to see during three days of Bumbershoot: Hari Kondabolu and Eugene Mirman of course, maybe the autotuned tracks of the Gregory Brothers, Deon Cole (aka the black guy on Conan), Paul F. Tompkins, and Doug Benson for the umpteenth time.
Tony: Screw the Neil Young comparisons: Whalebones do Brian Jonetown-style psych-rock better than damn near anyone in town right now (1:30 p.m., Fountain Lawn Stage). And count on a debauched, nonstop party with Seattle’s favorite bacchanalians, Mad Rad (2:15 p.m., Fisher Green Stage). The Jim Jones Revue, meantime, crack skulls with Jerry Lee Lewis and The Sonics, and it hurts damn good (4 p.m., Starbucks Stage).
I’m curious to see if the Butthole Surfers can still summon the lysergic trainwreck energy of their 1990’s prime in these recessionary times (7:30 p.m., Fisher Green Stage). And I’ve gotta hear The Kills. Alison Mosshart’s voice could pretty much peel wallpaper–and the paper on my walls could use peeling about now (9:15 p.m., Fisher Green Stage).
Shawn also wants to see The Kills and Butthole Surfers, along with–in backwards Bumber-order–Anti-Flag (6:30 p.m., Exhibition Hall), Atari Teenage Riot (4:45 p.m., Exhibition Hall), and NoMeansNo (2:45 p.m., Exhibition Hall).
MvB: Did we already mention “Bumber by Number“? That’s the art exhibit featuring local artists trying their hand at paint-by-number, curated by Marlow Harris and JoDavid (all day, Seattle Center Pavilion). Early on, there’s Kristin Hersh not just singing but speaking: Paradoxical Undressing is her solo spoken word and musical performance. Get to know teen Hersh, wrestling with issues of mental illness, creativity, teenage pregnancy, and the pressures of sudden fame (12:15 p.m., Bagley Wright Theatre). You can catch Hersh again with film composer Nathan Larson and hip hop chronicler Nelson George at “From Music to Literature” (3:30 p.m., the Leo K. Theatre at Bagley Wright).
To cool off from predicted 80-degree temps, duck into the audience favorites of SIFF 2011’s short films (4:30 p.m., SIFF Cinema). Hear about X:144’s experience of the Egyptian revolution this past January at “Why Censorship? Why Revolution? Why Now?” (5:15 p.m., Leo K.).
Puppet This brings you Manos: The Hands of Felt, the story of fertilizer salesman-turned-director Harold P. Warren and his run-in with an evil cult. It’s a musical! (6:45 p.m., Center House Theatre). If you feel like YouTube didn’t give you the full impact, Dan Savage and Terry Miller are presenting It Gets Better live and in person (7 p.m., Leo K.).