Tag Archives: Sasquatch Music Festival

“We’re going rogue in 2014”: Catching up with PAPA

Photo: Kelsey Kaufman

This is the third time I’ve talked to and watched PAPA perform in less than year. Darren Weiss is wearing a striped turban and Danny Presant is limping slightly from a pulled ligament in his foot. A college student named Jake has replaced Darren’s older brother on guitar. This isn’t the same PAPA I saw open for Rogue Wave last July, and we both know it.

The band’s debut LP Tender Madness (2013) has weathered the tour circuit, and is now headed back out into the summer festival season. While some of the songs are nearly three years years old, both Darren and Danny agree they still have plenty to share from the record.

As we tour the songs survive little mutations through our interactions with an audience. There are different kinds of life breathed into each set,” says Darren. “Or maybe they liked Tender Madness and were over it, so now we’re about to fuck their shit up all over again.”

PAPA is deep into writing their second album, set to release later this year. During their Sasquatch Sunday night performance on the Yeti stage, the band gave us a taste of some of their new material. It isn’t the PAPA you’d expect, but it’s still the PAPA you adore.

“We’re exploring actually less sounds and more songs,” says Danny. “The sound is more people in a room throwing shit off each other rather than finding sounds that we think are cool.”

On stage, Darren sings, adlibs and shouts so attuned to the music that predicting the next moment is impossible. The chants of “PAPA” mid-set proved that it’s not just me who’s caught on. There’s a reason they call their fans #papaarmy. PAPA pays homage to those kindred spirits and encourages them to proceed with abandon.

It’s an interesting time in music right now. PAPA doesn’t quite fit – nor do they want to. They are somewhere in the middle: not quite indie darlings, not quite mainstream. PAPA is like the bridge between the two trying to wake everyone the hell up.

“As we grow in popularity, I think we continue to be able to put ourselves in a position of not giving a fuck about what people think about us,” says Darren. “We’re focused on being the most interesting, toughest, sexiest versions of ourselves and allow that to speak on our behalf.”

As fairly young artists in the music industry, PAPA has seen (and consciously avoided) the fame game played out by musicians in Kia commercials and in the hands of A&R execs. PAPA is more concerned about evolution – of themselves as artists and of others.

Their most recently released track “I’m Not Sorry” echoes these sentiments. “One of the most important lines to me in that song comes in the bridge, ‘go ahead / call me crazy all you’d like / until you realize / it doesn’t matter if you’re right.’ If insanity is what’s true then that’s so much healthier and better than trying to fit into some bullshit societal position.”

While discussing the current state of music in this country, Darren brings up the song “Rock N Roll Nigger” by Patti Smith. He pauses for a moment, knowing he must be careful with his words.

“The chorus of that song is: ‘outside of society / they’re waitin’ for me / outside of society / that’s where I want to be.’ That’s where I think PAPA exists culturally and that’s where our identity as a band is,” says Darren.

“And even if that makes us less popular but more meaningful to the people who understand what we’re trying to do, that’s infinitely more important to us.”

Danny straightens up on the couch and agrees, “We’re going rogue in 2014.”

A Ryan Bingham Interview from Sasquatch! 2013

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Ryan Bingham (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Ryan Bingham playing the guitar and the harmonica together. (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Ryan Bingham (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

I read somewhere that a cowboy is not only defined by the work he does, but also by the way he carries himself. Ryan Bingham curses, smokes, and drinks whiskey straight from the bottle on stage. There’s nothing fancy about him. But behind his low-slung cowboy hat and blue jeans is a man who feels just as blessed playing for small crowds in Wyoming as he does winning an Oscar.

A golden statue hasn’t jaded Bingham. He still describes his music career as “singing for supper.” Despite his chances to schmooze with Hollywood’s elite, his latest album Tomorrowland is anything but artificial. It’s honest and it’s gritty. On stage, he switches between singing, and playing guitar and the harmonica (sometimes simultaneously) with ease. His Southern roots merge, not collide, perfectly with his love for rock & roll.

Bingham didn’t set out for a career in music; rather, it found him just when he needed it. He sat down with me after his performance on the Sasquatch! Main Stage to talk about growing up in Texas, Jameson, and finding his “Western Shore.”

You’ve been traveling and on the road for a while now – how do you stay inspired?

It’s where all the songs come from at the end of the day. I always feel like I have to get out and travel around and see different things and meet different people and just experience shit. And then you get home…and that’s what you write about.

So you enjoy it?

It’s a love-hate relationship in a way, but at the same time I feel pretty damn lucky to be on the road playing music and riding on a tour bus.

Not many people get to do that.

Yeah, it’s been a long time in the works. Being in Suburbans, vans, blowing out tires and stuff isn’t easy. But at the end of the day I could be digging holes for some asshole screaming at me…. So I feel really lucky to be at the Gorge playing music.

What did you hope to achieve with Tomorrowland? Because it seems like you’re not afraid to tackle issues like family and poverty.

The biggest thing I set out to do with this record was to be a lot of fun to play live. I’ve been playing a lot more electric guitar and it’s lot more fun to play rock & roll and just turn shit up loud. The biggest part of playing music live is letting emotions fly and getting stuff off your chest. My last record was more stripped down and acoustic. So sometimes you can be in the best mood of the day and you get up there and you’re like “Fuck, I gotta play all these slow, sad songs.” I’d rather play more upbeat, electric, rock & roll music.

It seems like you interact with your band really well on stage. How did you all meet?

We just got together over the past year and a half. They’re great musicians, but they’re also a lot of fun. I’m a big fan of going on the road with guys that are a lot of fun to hang out with. You don’t have to be the best guitar player or drummer or bass player in the world, but if you’re a lot of fun to hang out with then that’s what it’s really all about.

What’s your song “Western Shore” about? Is that about your move to L.A.?

“Western Shore” isn’t about the West Coast, actually. It’s about having a safe place growing up. I left home when I was pretty young — probably 16 or 17 years old. The “Western Shore” is some place out there where you could have a life that’s safe, fun, and happy.

Did you always know you’d be on the West Coast?

No…I think about the migration and people settling across the states and moving out west. There was always hope for the future. The other part of the song was about my past. Leaving stuff behind, searching for something new, and meeting a lot of kids out on the street that had grown up with less or nothing at all.

It seems like you’re not afraid to take chances. Moving to L.A., leaving a career in rodeo to pursue music, and also moving to Paris to work at Euro Disney. Do you ever look back and think – I can’t believe I did that?

Those moments were a “Western Shore” as well. It’s just those things in life that you take chances on. There are people in your life that may tell you you’re not supposed to do something or it’s not a good idea. But at the same time they shouldn’t be telling you what to do in the first place. So a lot of it is getting out and living your own life. My Western Shore is out there somewhere. I may not have found it yet, but I will.

It seems like your Western Shore isn’t one place.

Yeah, it’s wherever you want it to be. It’s that place out there where anybody wants to go to find a better place and live happily.

Do you miss anything about Texas? Does it work its way into your music now?

Totally. It’s still my home; it’s what I’m rooted in. And I always look back on it in songs. But at the same time you can’t discount all the places you’ve traveled around to. I always think the cool thing about playing music is all the different places you get to go. But at the same time, to be diverse, open-minded, and vulnerable is a hard thing. A lot of people want to take advantage of who you are. So it’s hard to stay vulnerable and take the punches. But to just stick with it and say, “Fuck you – this is what I really saw. This is what I really experienced so this is what I’m gonna write about.” 

For me it’s like a journal…you come home and think about where you’re from and you start there.

Exactly. That’s also why I come to music festivals like this, to experience different types of music and meet new people.

Me too. That’s what I like about it. I come from a very regional place with very regional music. And traveling around and getting to go to festivals like this and hear so many great bands and meet so many cool people is awesome.  I think a lot of people are so fucking scared of being different.

It seems like in the South it’s not as easy to be different or to step outside of your comfort zone.

It’s fucked. They’re so scared of anything different. It’s hard growing up in that environment and so I really appreciate living my life on a Western Shore where there’s diversity. I love being inspired by it and I love writing about it as well.

What was the vision for your record label, Axster Bingham Records? What was your reason for starting it?

The biggest reason was the industry. We were signed to Lost Highway Records and did three records with them. But they called us up one day and they were like, “We’re not going to do anything else.” My wife and I were already doing the management stuff anyways and they basically said, “We think you guys could do this stuff on your own.” So we had a decision, either we sign to another label or start our own.

We’ve always been a touring band. We’ve always made our living playing shows and singing for our supper. It wasn’t about record sales or radio play. So we were like fuck it, let’s just try.

So it wasn’t a huge jump?

Nah – it was very natural. With social media and stuff like that, there’s only two things you need to do: Let people know when you have new music and let them know when you’re playing.

Wow! I didn’t know the music business was so easy! (/sarcasm)

(Laughs) Well, if you want people in Seattle to hear your music then you drive up to fucking Seattle and go play a show. You don’t need to go on American Idol to get people to hear you.

It takes a certain type of person to be on the road all the time.

It’s something I’m really thankful that I started when I was young and that’s been engrained in me. I never, ever thought I’d ever record a record or be signed to a record label. I played for three or four years in shithole bars and coffee shops or people’s backyards, parties, Bar mitzvahs, quinceañeras, etc. I’d make $50 to $100 in tips and that’s more than what I made digging holes for some asshole that was yelling at me all day. So I was like, this is the life.

It probably didn’t hurt that you could have a few beers too? (Laughs)

Free food, free beers. Anything else after that was a dream come true.

So when you won the Oscar — which so many artists dream of achieving — did you ever think, Hey, I can take a break now? Or did it propel you forward?

No, I didn’t feel like I could take a break. It was a very surreal experience. It definitely exposed my songs to a lot of people that had never heard of me before. But it was like a big party that lasted for 3 to 4 months and then it all settled down. What do I do now? It picked right back up as where we had left off . Some people come to shows and the only song they may have heard was the song from the movie. And sometimes they are appalled by the other music we play.

You can’t please everyone.

You do the best with what you have and you say what’s on your mind. And you play the kind of music you’re inspired by. You can’t cater to other people.

Okay, so last question – I have to know what your favorite type of whiskey is.

Whiskey? It’s gotta be Jameson.

Really? I was expecting something more fancy than that!

I know it’s very basic but it’s like –  hey, it’s not that expensive and it’s easy for bars to give us every night. I don’t like to be snooty and be like, “I’m a whiskey connoisseur.” I’m lucky if I get a shot of Crown Royale.

A Youngblood Hawke Interview from Sasquatch! 2013

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Youngblood Hawke (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Sam Martin (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Alice Katz (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Simon Katz (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Nik Hughes (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Sam Martin (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Tasso Smith (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Sam Martin (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

A 9-5 gig isn’t an option for these guys. Despite an unfortunate string of bad luck, Youngblood Hawke never put their dreams of music stardom aside. They are (admittedly) a little insane, but their talent and passion for each other on and off the stage is undeniable. They are the family that you wish you could be born into. Now, Youngblood Hawke’s debut album Wake Up has achieved what some might call overnight success (though you know better).

The band is cautiously optimistic, but you’d be mistaken to mark them off as a one-hit wonder. Dig a little deeper, and you’ll find that Youngblood Hawke is more than just California sunshine and “road trip music.” They have what it takes to go the distance, which is each other.

The entire band sat down with me after their Sunday performance on the Sasquatch! Main Stage to talk about swimming with sharks, recording in a sweaty studio apartment, and the only medicine they need: music.

Wake Up was recorded over a long period of time (even though it was only released last month), so what was the recording process like? Why did you guys really take your time with this record?

Simon (Katz): Well, we recorded the whole record in my second bedroom in L.A.

Sam (Martin): It’s like this tiny little room with no air conditioning.

Simon: We recorded it over about two years, and it was our way of getting out all the stuff that we were going through at the time. We were going though divorces, being broke, and all sorts of really dark stuff. We took that and put everything we had into our lyrics and our verses. We tied everything together to be a positive, hopeful message because that’s who we were at the time and that’s who we are now.

It seems like a pretty upbeat album. Did you guys set out to do that?

Simon: No, that’s just what happened. If you’re in a really dark place and write a really dark album, you’re just going to stay in that place. It was almost like our pill, our way of getting everything out. Our therapy. And it’s been perceived as this really upbeat record, but if you read the lyrics, it’s not that at all. It’s dark. We have a positive spin on things because were a hopeful group of people. And we knew if we kept working on things, and really dug deep, we would make some progression.

So that brings me to the song “Dreams” — what’s the story behind that? Because it seems upbeat, but it also talks about having to “hold on.”

Simon: Yeah, that’s actually a really dark story.

Sam: That’s actually about a family friend who had a really tortured life and made some really terrible decisions because that’s just how his brain was trained since childhood. He ended up having to flee the country and I bumped into him.

Simon: He actually stopped by in L.A. just before he was fleeing the country.

Sam: And he showed up and both of his hands were completely broken. He was a family friend who had the biggest heart and was just tortured by child abuse and saw the world in a really negative way. I got to hang out with him a couple hours before he left and “Dreams” is about our reaction to seeing that.

Last time I checked, the “We Come Running” video had over 1.8 million hits on YouTube. What was the concept behind that? Were you all game to jump into a tank with sharks?

Simon: (Laughs) It actually wasn’t a tank! It was in the ocean. Well, the song was written when we were going through a lot. We didn’t intend for it to be an anthem for ourselves but that’s just what it ended up being. The song is really about pushing through any fears or boundaries. And we were all kind of in a weird place at the time.

Sam: It’s very daunting to start a band from scratch.

Simon: Sam and I had been in a band before that had success, and we lost it.

Sam: You know, there are moments when you look around and are like “Are we fucking crazy to do this again?” Because the last band took like eight years to get off the boat and then it crashed in like a year.

The success has been really fast for you guys.

Simon: Kind of. It seems that way. But for us it feels really natural because we’ve all been paying our dues. And we’ve all been doing this for a long time and also just working on this record for two years. It’s something that we finally put out to the world and it’s been received in a lot of ways that we had hoped for. It definitely feels like the right timing for us.

So why swim with sharks then?

Simon: Since the song is about pushing through your fears we wanted to take it into a literal sense. What’s a literal fear that we have? Let’s push through something crazy togther.

I could not do that.

Simon: Yeah, so we decided to go swimming with tiger sharks in the Bahamas, which is the second most deadly shark in the world after the great white. And we’re also tied to conservation efforts that are very important to us, such as Sea Shepherd.

So we went out to this protected area of the Bahamas called Tiger Beach. You know, we’re from L.A. where there’s like Hollywood “shark attacks” all the time, but that’s just the way they’re perceived. We went in the water and we’re basically down there for about an hour and a half while the sharks were circling us. It was absolutely one of the scariest, craziest, most life-changing things we’d ever done.

Sam: It was borderline stupid. (Laughs) But we wanted to show the public that they are not bloodthirsty animals.

Simon: They came right up to us, right up to our face.

Sam: And they are really intelligent. Once they realize that you’re not food or predators, they just hang out.

(Side note: Simon also showed me a picture on his iPhone of a 14-foot tiger shark in front of the band in the Bahamas. For real. This wasn’t any CGI shit.)

Sam — you were really good at singing underwater. I was really impressed. Did you practice that?

Sam: (Laughs) We shot that in a pool, but basically, they shot it from under the water and you try to do as much as you can.

What’s next for you guys? I saw you’re going on tour in the UK soon.

Simon: We never stop recording. We’re still writing songs and after this we’re playing a bunch of festivals throughout the summer. And we’ll be in the UK in July and then Australia in August for something really special that we can’t announce yet…. We also have a new video coming out for “Say Say” soon.

I read in an interview that Sam said, “the most important part of being in a band is the relationships.” What makes your guys’ relationship so special?

Simon: Well, the last band dissolved and basically failed due to relationships. When we decided, “Okay, we’re actually going to try and start a new band again” we thought, Who are our favorite people in the world? Who are those most talented people we know that are like family to us?

Sam: Who could we be around for long periods of time?

Simon: So we sent the demos out to all the other members of the band and they luckily said yes and quit whatever they were doing at the time. They dropped everything to join this crazy idea. I mean, we hang out with each other even when we’re not on tour. We’re all really good friends and we’re really close. We’ve all known each other for a really long time and played with each other in various projects.

You know, it’s like a rollercoaster ride, being in a band. During the low times, you really have to have people that you can depend on. And that’s what we have here.

A Bear Mountain Interview from Sasquatch! 2013

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Ian Bevis (left) and Kyle Statham of Bear Mountain (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Kyle Statham (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Ian Bevis (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Ian Bevis (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Kenji Rodriguez (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Greg Bevis (Photo: Kelsey Kaufman)

Before we begin, let’s get a few things straight about Bear Mountain. Kyle Statham (vocals, bass and guitarist) had never been to Sasquatch or the Gorge before. Frontman Ian Bevis is a Dave Matthews fan. And Bear Mountain’s debut album XO was just released last summer. Ian and Kyle — who finish each other sentences — understand that the music industry is no cakewalk. (One of the Sasquatch! press folks came up to me the next day and asked, “Who were those guys you were interviewing yesterday? They did a ton of interviews, and I just wanted to reach over and give them a pat on the back.”)

Oh yeah, they also played in the same SXSW showcase as Ra Ra Riot and Cold War Kids. So exactly who are these Canadians?

Ian Bevis and Kyle Statham sat down with me after their Saturday Sasquatch! performance on the Honda Bigfoot Stage to talk about SXSW, touring with Bloc Party, and Jack Kerouac.

So where does the name Bear Mountain come from?

Ian: As I was uploading music to MySpace one day – back when MySpace was cool – I needed a name for the song I was uploading. At the time, I was reading Jack Kerouac’s book Dharma Bums. And really, that was it. I was also really into snowboarding at the time.

How did you guys all meet? Where does the Bear Mountain story begin?

Kyle: It begins a long time ago. Well, Ian and Greg are twin brothers. But we all went to high school together – I was a bit older, separated by a few years – so we kind of hooked up at university. We played in this punk band and we all kind of did some other things here and there. But it wasn’t really until a couple years ago back in Vancouver where Ian was like, “Hey, check out some of the stuff I’m doing.” I didn’t even know Ian could sing at the time. And he played me some of the beats he made and I heard his voice and I was like “Holy shit, this is great!” I was really into it and knew I wanted to get involved in it.

How do you feel about in being in a band with your twin brother? Was it natural?

Ian: We’ve always played music together. Sometimes it’s hard for us to play music together but on another level it’s so good, too. We’re pretty different creatively a lot of the time, but we’re also both really creative. Like Greg (Bevis) says, we both have the same goal but very different ways of getting to it.

What’s that goal?

Ian: Make amazing music, the best music, for as long as we can.

What are you guys listening to right now? I saw Disclosure on your blog…

Ian & Kyle: Yes!

Ian: We saw them at SXSW and their live show was so good. We saw the set and were like, “Oh okay, there’s a few things we gotta change.”

Kyle: That kick drop is sooo nice. Beautiful kick. They nailed it. It’s so round and beautiful. So we totally redid our kick drop live. It was inspired by them.

The visual component of your guys live shows is really important – who does that?

Ian: Yeah, Kenji (Rodriguez) does it. He’s the fourth member of the band. He does all the visuals.

So did you pick him out for that?

Kyle: He found us! He had seen us play like a year before, and he was like, “Oh — I definitely want to do something with these guys sometime.” And Ian actually worked with his wife. He just came up to us and was like “This is what we can do.” And he just described these huge ideas. And as soon as he joined the band, we were like, “Okay, now we’re a band.”

Ian: He’s actually triggering the visuals live.

Kyle: Each show is totally different. And were expanding on hooking it up to all of our instruments. Everything is constantly changing; the visuals are changing as the show goes on.

Bear Mountain got a lot of positive attention at SXSW – could you tell me more about that experience?

Ian: It was our first time. And we had the Hype Hotel our first night, and it was a big show. At the time, it was our biggest show we had ever played. Before it was just clubs and stuff. So we played the show and it went really well and we were like, “Okay – we can do this. We know we’re a band that can play these kind of shows.” This is what we had hoped. And then we saw that Billboard had written something up and that was really dope for us. And as soon as we saw it we were like…

Ian & Kyle (in unison):Whaaaaat? Billboard?!

Kyle: It was awesome.

XO came out last summer – so when did you guys find out about Sasquatch? Was it a total shock?

Ian: Yeah, it was a total shock. We found out a couple months ago.

Kyle: We had no idea that was going to happen. 

Ian: We’re opening for Bloc Party this tour. And we just got a text message that was like, “Wanna go on tour with Bloc Party?” And we were all like…

Ian & Kyle  (in unison): “Uhhhh, yeah! DUH. Obviously.”

Ian: And then we found out soon after that we would be doing Sasquatch.

So Ian – I read somewhere that you had been to Sasquatch like 11 times? I didn’t even know it’s been around that long!

Ian: Was that on the Internet?

Kyle: (Laughs) Okay, tell the real story Ian.

Ian: Okay, okay – so I used to love Dave Matthews Band.

Oh, god.

Ian: It’s okay, though – they are really good. I love them. (Laughs) My friends and I used to come here every year. I came like four years in a row and went to all three nights.

What’s next for you guys? Are you recording already? 

Kyle:  We’re working on a new album right now, and yeah, touring. We just re-released our EP with a new single about a week ago.

Ian: Yeah, just a bunch of shows through this summer and we kind of are always working on the record, even on the road.

Kyle: We’re constantly working. As hard, and as much, as we can.

A Sea Wolf Interview from Sasquatch! 2013

Sea Wolf (Photo: Sasquatch! Festival)

Sea Wolf (Photo: Sasquatch! Festival)

It’s not easy to lure Sasquatch-ers out of their campsites and away from their day drinking in the late afternoon. Besides, does anyone really show up for the opening acts on the first day? But last Friday, Sea Wolf, led by Los Angeles-based musician Alex Brown Church, assembled a multitude. People didn’t run to his show — they slowly, almost trance-like, walked towards the soon-to-be packed Honda Bigfoot Stage. And that’s just how Church likes it.

Church is smart. You can tell he puts a lot of thought into every move he makes, only devoting his time to projects he can fully immerse himself in. (He also had to explain to me what “traipsing” meant.) He and I shared a laugh about Kanye West’s new album name — “Yeezus? Really? Wow, that’s so Kanye. But I still like him” — and also talked about his plan for a hip-hop album – yes, you heard it here first. (He wasn’t serious, but hey, a girl can dream.)

How do you stay inspired when you’re on the road? Where do you find inspiration?

I’m not doing any writing right now, so there’s no outlet for that inspiration other than playing shows. I definitely read, listen to music, and just traveling and seeing new places is really inspiring.

How did you meet everyone in the band?

Sea Wolf is kind of my project. I started it a while ago now — I think officially it was in 2004 — but I was in another band and it took several years for me to do Sea Wolf full time. So probably like 2006 was when I started doing it full time and that’s when it really started to become something. At first, I just had friends come in and play with me. All my friends are musicians and they were all in other bands so it was like a rotating cast of people because they would go on tour.

And then it came time for Sea Wolf to go on tour, and I was like, “Well, I gotta get some people who can commit.” So it just started out as friends-of-friends and over the years that’s how it’s always worked. Lisa (Fendelander) and Joey (Ficken) started playing with me right after the first record came out. The other guys are relatively new; they just started like last summer.

So I was reading your Under the Radar article about mixtapes — and you said something about “hip hop being one of the primary reasons you became a musician.” So did you listen to it a ton growing up? Do you still?

I don’t listen to it as much as I used to. I like Kanye West and some of those big guys, but I sort of gravitated away from it.

How did it make you want to become a musician though?

Well, my best friend from like 6th grade through high school, his brother was a dj in Los Angeles and we grew up together in the Bay Area. So my friend’s brother used to spin hip hop records and we got all the coolest stuff. And my friend — his whole family is musical, like his dad and all of his uncles are jazz musicians — he really educated me in hip hop. Music was a really big thing for both of us. He ended up producing hip hop records and I started playing bass in high school. But it wasn’t until college that I really tried to pick up the guitar and learn how to play songs.

That leads me to my next question… I know you want to NYU Film School and your video for “Old Friend” is coming out soon – can you tell me anything about it?

Well, director Jeff Gardner had me traipsing around in southern California. That’s all I can really tell you right now, he’s working on it and he’s a busy guy, so hopefully it will be out soon.

So are videos important to you — are you really involved in the process?

I would like to be more involved in the process than I am, but it’s hard for me to devote that much energy to it because I think if I did want to do a video, I’d want to do it right. And it would take me a lot of time to do it, which is time I don’t have right now. So I try to work with people that I trust.

I read “Old World Romance” was recorded at your home – is that true? How was that process?

I have a studio where I used to live — which is like an artist live-work studio. So now it’s my work space where the band rehearses, and also where I write songs and record.

So how was this recording process different than previous albums?

The first record being the difference that I actually lived there at the time and I didn’t know what I was doing. (Laughs) The second record I actually recorded at a studio with a band. The first record was kind of done over a long period of time with friends coming in here and there — whoever was available. So the new album was done similarly to the first album… it was recorded over a long period of time in my home studio.

So where do you see Sea Wolf progressing over the next few years? What’s your vision for the band?

I want to keep putting out records and keep moving forward. We’ll probably go to Europe later in the year. I think before the next official Sea Wolf record, I might do do a crowdfunded sort of experimental, stripped-down record.

So can we expect a hip hop album?…Maaaybe?

(Laughs) Yeah, it’s gonna be a hip hop album. Just me and a drum machine. That’s it. That’s an idea.

Sasquatch 2012 Line-Up Announced at Neptune Launch Party (Photo Gallery)

Sasquatch!
Luke Burbank, at the Sasquatch 2012 Launch Party.
Matthew Caws of Nada Surf.
Matthew Caws of Nada Surf.
Nada Surf's Matthew Caws.
The Physics at the Neptune.
The Physics at the Neptune.
The Physics at the Neptune.
The Physics.
The Physics.
Junip.
Junip.
Junip.
Junip.

(photo by Tony Kay)

Luke Burbank cuts up at the Sasquatch 2012 Launch Party. (photo by Tony Kay)

Nada Surf's Matthew Caws, at the Sasquatch 2012 Launch Party. (photo by Tony Kay)

Matthew Caws of Nada Surf. (photo by Tony Kay)

Nada Surf's Matthew Caws, live and solo at the Neptune February 2. (photo by Tony Kay)

The Physics get the crowd activated at the Neptune. (photo by Tony Kay)

The Physics at the Neptune. (photo by Tony Kay)

The Physics, rhyming about how they heart beer, at the Sasquatch 2012 Launch Party. (photo by Tony Kay)

The Physics, rocking the Sasquatch Launch Party crowd. (photo by Tony Kay)

Call-and-response with The Physics at the Neptune. (photo by Tony Kay)

Jose Gonzalez of Junip, live at the Neptune. (photo by Tony Kay)

Junip. (photo by Tony Kay)

Junip at the Neptune. (photo by Tony Kay)

Junip at the Neptune. (photo by Tony Kay)

Sasquatch! thumbnail
Luke Burbank, at the Sasquatch 2012 Launch Party. thumbnail
Matthew Caws of Nada Surf. thumbnail
Matthew Caws of Nada Surf. thumbnail
Nada Surf's Matthew Caws. thumbnail
The Physics at the Neptune. thumbnail
The Physics at the Neptune. thumbnail
The Physics at the Neptune. thumbnail
The Physics. thumbnail
The Physics. thumbnail
Junip. thumbnail
Junip. thumbnail
Junip. thumbnail
Junip. thumbnail

After weeks of fevered anticipation, rumors, and speculation, the final line-up for the 2012 Sasquatch Festival was revealed in an appropriately festive Launch Party at the Neptune Theatre last night. Tickets go on sale next Saturday, February 11, at 10 a.m., with a two-day Live Nation pre-sale taking place the previous Wednesday, February 8. Go to sasquatchfestival.com/tickets for more info, and you best be quick on the draw: It’s sure to sell out.

The final line-up for the epic Memorial Day Festival’s tenth go-round in as many years upholds Sasquatch’s usual heady mix of indie rock, hip hop, folk, electronica, and soul. There’s pretty much something for everyone among the army of acts overrunning the Gorge for Sasquatch, and the crowd packing the Neptune burst into spontaneous applause as the final roster unspooled.

The Launch Party, hosted by Too Beautiful to Live’s Luke Burbank, preceded the grand unveiling with a pretty stellar evening of live music. Matthew Caws of Nada Surf opened up the party with a solo acoustic set heavily weighed by selections from his band’s newest full-length, The Stars are Indifferent to Astronomy. The solo turn was his second of three live shows yesterday: Nada Surf played a gig at the Triple Door that afternoon, and the band zipped over to Ballard to play a sold-out Tractor Tavern show immediately after Caws left the Neptune stage. The Launch Party crowd was gifted a stripped-down, emotional set that framed Astonomy’s pop jewels in a sparsely-gorgeous backdrop, and Caws frequently brought to mind a less-caustic, more winsomely romantic Alex Chilton at several points (that’s a big compliment, incidentally).

Seattle hip hop crew The Physics followed up with the evening’s most party-centric stretch. The band’s crowd-stoking energy belied an almost mellow melodic and lyrical flow, aided immeasurably by swaths of funky guitar, lush backing vocals, and an assemblage of beats that favored subtly-flowing grooves over throw-down rhythms. Their sound should make for great hip-shaking and head-bobbing at Sasquatch (The Physics, as it turns out, will be playing the festival this year).

Closing act Junip come off as the shyest bunch of guys ever to step onto a rock stage, but the Swedish quintet sounded superlative in a live setting. Divorced from the detached sheen of their studio recordings, their blend of dreamy vocalizing, chiming guitars, warm analog synths, and insistent (real) drums and percussion wove a seriously hypnotic and oddly sensuous spell. It was so immersive, even the drunken blonde who bum-rushed the stage mid-set didn’t harsh the collective mellow.

So, yeah, the Launch Party live show sorta ruled, but the big pay-off remained the final announcement of the Sasquatch 2012 line-up. Below, please find the complete(-ish) roster of acts gracing the 2012 Sasquatch stage.

Music Acts:

Jack White
Beck
Bon Iver
Pretty Lights
The Shins
Tenacious D
Beirut
Girl Talk
The Roots
The Head and the Heart
Portlandia
Feist
Silversun Pickups
Metric
Explosions in the Sky
The Joy Formidable
Mogwai
Nero (DJ)
M. Ward
John Reilly and Friends
Childish Gambino
St. Vincent
The Civil Wars
Jamey Johnson
Little Dragon
Tune-Yards
Wild Flag
Blind Pilot
Wolfgang Gartner
Beats Antique
Apparat
Imelda May
The Sheepdogs
The Walkmen
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
Mark Lanegan Band
Spiritualized
Blitzen Trapper
The Cave Singers
Shabazz Palaces
Fun.
Grouplove
Tycho
SBTRKT
STRFKR
Ted Leo and the Pharmacists
Deer Tick
Alabama Shakes
Imelda May
Dum Dum Girls
The Helio Sequence
Kurt Vile
Cloud Cult
Ben Howard
Here We Go Magic
Zola Jesus
The War on Drugs
Shearwater
Cass McCombs
Active Child
Trampled by Turtles
Charles Bradley and his Extraordinaires
Araabmuzik
Starslinger
L.A. Riots
Com Truise
We are Augustines
Unknown Mortal Orchestra
I Break Horses
Walk the Moon
Dry the River
Allen Stone
Pickwick
Hey Marseilles
Gary Clark Jr.
Purity Ring
Yellow Ostrich
Nobody Beats the Drum
Electric Guest
Coeur de Pirate
Lord Huron
Sallie Ford and the Sound Outside
Beat Connection
The Sheepdogs
Hey Rosetta!
Said the Whale
Howlin Rain
Gardens and Villa
Felix Cartal
Awesome Tapes from Africa
Craft Spells
Vintage Trouble
Poor Moon
Black Whales
Gold Leaves
Greylag
THEESatisfaction
Dyme Def
Fresh Espresso
The Physics
Sol
Metal Chocolates
Grynch
Spac3man
Don’t Talk to the Cops
Scribes
Fatal Lucciauno
Fly Moon Royalty
Katie Kate

Comedy Acts:

Nick Kroll
John Mullaney
Todd Barry
Beardyman
Rob Delaney
Pete Holmes
Howard Kremer
and the proverbial more, more, more…