Tag Archives: Seattle music

Prom Queen Kickstarts her Own Pulp Movie

I’ve been a total sap for Seattle chanteuse Prom Queen since seeing her open up a night of Seattle soul bands two years ago. Her combination of girl-group pop and silky film noir shading has always seemed tailor-made for the evocative soundtrack to some cool movie that never existed, so it’s a welcome non-surprise that she’s making her own cinematic accompaniment.

Prom Queen: Midnight Veil, her forthcoming project, sees the formally-attired siren putting together what she calls ‘a full-length album-film.’ She plans to shoot videos for the twelve songs, interweaving the content into an interconnected series of short films. And with a gallery of tracks that dip into the lush retro-Technicolor sounds of Exotica and psychedelic pop, there should be plenty of fodder for imaginative visual interpretation.

To bankroll the release, she’s put together a Kickstarter fund. It’s just under halfway financed with about two weeks to go, and in addition to the usual incentives (digital download of the Midnight Veil soundtrack, a copy of the DVD of the finished film, etc.), you can net autographed Midnight Veil incense, eyeshadow palates, or a singing telegram depending on the depth of your pockets. Now that’s marketing.

 

SeaTac Airport Brings Seattle Music to the Traveling Masses

SeaTac Baggage Claim will turn to Booty Claim when Fly Moon Royalty play at the airport today. (Photo: Tony Kay)

It’s such a great idea, you may actually want to hang out at the airport for extended stretches of time, especially today.

The Port of Seattle, the Office of Film and Music, Seattle Music Commission, and PlayNetwork have joined to create the Sea-Tac Airport Music Initiative. The goal of the project is to fill the whole of SeaTac Airport with locally-bred music of all genres, and that local color will seep into everything from the informational announcements to the overhead music to the video screens throughout the airport.

As you can probably gather, the overhead music in the terminal won’t be your run-of-the-mill muzak. The Initiative-created web player provides a great indicator of the scope and variety of artists being showcased. Give it a listen: It’s easy to get lost in any of the six channels.  The urban/soul channel offers heaps of Wheedle’s Groove selections alongside the Ray Charles, and even the rock station augments the obvious touchstones (Hendrix, Nirvana, Pearl Jam) with tracks by Pretty Girls Make Graves, Head Like a Kite, and Pedro the Lion (among others). PlayNetwork’s also produced several overhead safety and informational announcements read by everyone from Alice in Chains’ Jerry Cantrell to Sir Mix-a-Lot to Macklemore. And original video content by Light in the Attic Records, KEXP, MTV, the EMP, and others will play on monitors throughout the airport.

Best of all, The Initiative is presenting a free show at the Gina Marie Lindsey Arrivals Hall (that’s the south end of baggage claim, folks) today, replete with a line-up easily the equal of any paid-admission club show this weekend. Recess Monkey open things up at 3 p.m with great skinny-tie pop that happens to be totally family-friendly (they sound like Fountains of Wayne with lyrical contributions from Mr. Rogers). Carrie Clark and the Lonesome Lovers follow up at 4 with their much-cherished-in-this-corner kitchen-sink cabaret Americana . The 5 p.m. set by local electro-soul astronauts Fly Moon Royalty should turn baggage claim into a dance party,  and Dusty 45s should keep up that pace with a wicked-cool swirl of rockabilly and lounge.

If you play your cards right, you can even get serenaded by local musicians on the way to Sea-Tac: ten different acts (including Kris Orlofski, Gabriel Mintz, and Quixote Radio) will be playing live sets on the Sound Transit Light Rail running between downtown and SeaTac. Think about it–you’ll totally be able to give your iPod a rest for the whole commute.

 

 

Musical Diamonds in the Rough: Five Northwest Music Acts to Watch in 2012 (Photo Gallery)

Down North.
Justin Deary of Whalebones.
Shaprece.
Prom Queen.
Sugar Sugar Sugar.

Anthony Briscoe of Down North. (photo by Tony Kay)

Justin Deary of Whalebones. (photo by Tony Kay)

Soul singer Shaprece. (photo by Tony Kay)

Cult Stardom's only one evocative soundtrack away: Prom Queen. (photo by Tony Kay)

Lupe Flores lays down a hot-pants backbeat for Sugar Sugar Sugar (photo by Tony Kay)

Down North. thumbnail
Justin Deary of Whalebones. thumbnail
Shaprece. thumbnail
Prom Queen. thumbnail
Sugar Sugar Sugar. thumbnail

In the last twelve months I’ve seen dozens of Northwest acts play live, and it really feels like this region’s rolling in more great music now than it has since the early 1990s. Seriously.

Dizzying variety seems to be the key to this embarrassment of sonic riches. The national media’s been atwitter about Seattle’s post-Fleet Foxes neo-folk/Americana movement, but there’s an incredible groundswell of soul, punk, hip-hop, and straight-up rock bubbling furtively around here, too. It’s made wandering into Seattle music venues in the last year a truly exciting, rewarding, and unpredictable experience.

With all the great local artists out there, it only felt right to go out on a limb and point out a few lesser-known acts with the potential to forge a major mark in 2012. Truth be told, this list could be ten times larger than it is: I could easily summon up forty or fifty worthy bands/artists here. But the five musical entities below, great as they are,  haven’t yet generated the press they deserve. Whether any of them will capture the kind of attention that’s recently been bestowed upon The Head and the Heart or Allen Stone, I don’t know. From this vantage point, though, they damn well should.

Down North: Down North could be the most unapologetically throw-down funk band in Seattle right now, and yet they’re barely registering a blip on the music-press radar. Anthony Briscoe, Down North’s lead singer, possesses an astonishing, roof-rattling voice–a room-filling sound capable of going from gravelly anguish to nimble falsettos on a hairpin turn–and he commands a stage like nobody’s business. His bandmates, meantime, match his fireworks slug-for-slug: Conrad Real’s muscular jazz-tinged drumming and Brandon Storms’ liquid basswork, in particular, form one of this town’s most fiercely funky rhythm sections.  If their incendiary live shows, several stellar new songs, and a forthcoming music video don’t send this band’s stock way up in the next 11 months, something ain’t right with the world.

Whalebones: Forget (or at least set aside) the Neil Young comparisons this Seattle space-rock trio’s netted from a few local journalists. Whalebones’ self-titled 2011 full-length provided the best interstellar musical hit I received all last year. Lead singer Justin Deary snarls and drawls with the snotty offhanded charisma of a less-unstable Anton Newcombe, and the garage and the galactic converge gloriously in his heady guitar playing. Whalebones have always sounded great live, but Deary’s onstage confidence has grown by leaps and bounds since the first time I saw the band at the West Seattle Summerfest last July: That extra push of personality could well take these guys to some serious heights.

Shaprece: Stage presence? Check. Expressive and distinctive singing? Check. A catalog of truly catchy, mostly self-written songs that combine old-school warmth and the rush of a forward-thinking future without sounding like a slave to either? Check. After being a vocal gun-for-hire for everyone from Blue Sky Black Death to Mad Rad, this talented but heretofore-untouted local singer’s moment in the spotlight is long overdue.

Prom Queen: Seattle musician/comedienne Leeni doesn’t sit still for very long, having dabbled in everything from video-game-fueled dance ditties to some wonderfully winsome pop with her duo, Romeo and Juliet. She’s struck a truly sublime vein, though, as Prom Queen. Accompanying herself on guitar with occasional self-recorded symphonette backdrops, she croons haunting originals and masterfully-retooled covers (Madonna’s “Justify My Love”, Guns ‘N Roses’ “November Rain”) that create their own dusky pocket universe. It’s a sound that straddles the perfect balance between arch theatricality and all of the deeper emotions that swirl beneath such artifice, and it’s captivating enough to connect with anyone who’s ever sat in a lonely bar contemplating the darkness. Cult stardom’s only one evocative soundtrack appearance away.

Sugar Sugar Sugar: This region could use a funny, sexually-charged, larger-than-life rock collective about now, and this Bellingham groove-rock trio looks like they’ve more than got the goods from this corner. Andru Creature’s stuttering David Johanson-gone-horndog vocals, Lupe Flores’ stomping kickdrum, and Justin Verlanic’s gloriously greasy glam guitar are just made for cranking at top volume.

Thirteen: A Lucky Number for the Fremont Abbey Arts Center

The Local Strangers (seen here at Doe Bay Fest 2011) will headline tonight's Fremont Abbey fundraiser. (photo by Tony Kay)

A strong contingent of Seattle musicians have graced the performance stage of the Fremont Abbey Arts Center over the last four years, so it’s no surprise that a small army of them are working to raise funds to keep the non-profit community center/venue alive and thriving.

Those efforts have culminated in Thirteen, a forthcoming CD showcasing all-original contributions from several local singer-songwriters (proceeds from online and physical sales of the recording go directly to the Fremont Abbey Arts Center). Tonight, many of the artists appearing on the CD play a benefit concert at the Abbey to raise further funds: Doors open at 7 p.m.

The $13 day-of-show admission price will include over a dozen acts, and  it should be a solid night of music. There’s a little bit of everything on the bill–dreamy acoustic pop (Pretty Broken Things), lovably sloppy garage rock (Panama Gold), faultlessly-sung  folk (The Local Strangers, whose singer Aubrey Zoli organized the fundraiser), luminous pop songcraft (Matt and Mike Gervais of SunBreak faves Curtains for You), haunting balladry wedded with electronic atmosphere (Friday Mile offshoot Fort Union), and the proverbial more, more, more. Fundraisers seldom come this tuneful.