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Archive for the ‘Punk’ Category

Jun

17

Motorik at The Blue Moon Tavern: Free

Posted by Cedric Ross | Permalink | Comments (0)
Categories: Cedric, Music, Punk, Rock

Motorik plays live at the Blue Moon Tavern this Friday 6/20/08 for Free. They’re joined by Holy Name Dropouts and 3-Way Switch. Click here for more details.

Motorik
I’ve seen this band at Skylark, Sunset Tavern and even the Nectar Lounge. It don’t matter where they play cuz they always bring the heat.

Motorik is a term coined by music journalists to describe the 4/4 beat often used by some so-called “Krautrock” bands such as Neu! and Kraftwerk (promoting the official CD release of Neu!’s back-catalogue, Klaus Dinger stated he called it the “Apache beat”).[1] The word “Motorik” means “motor skill” in German. - wikipedia

catch motorik at the blue moon tavern


Jun

10

Emerald City Subterranean DIY

Posted by Rik Wright | Permalink | Comments (5)
Categories: Blog Post, Jazz, Local Artists, Music, Punk, Rik Wright, Rock

When the Seattle music community gets all excited about how the City Noise Ordinance will destroy the local music scene, they are forgetting one thing. The Seattle music scene has a long history of being underground. One could argue that’s what gives the scene it’s passion - the fact that very few outside of its own ranks support, or even acknowledge it.

I’m not saying that club owners and musicians shouldn’t be up in arms about the city trying to regulate and arguably shut down selective night spots. My opinions on such matters are definitely the opposite. It angers me greatly that the state liquor board and city government seem to coordinate to target specific venues. It’s very unfortunate that in a town known for it’s music scene, the city doesn’t support it, or even consider it worthy of the heaps of dollars it spends on supporting the symphony, art gallery, ballet and opera.

To put the icing on the cake, the City Counsel seems to be completely incapable of separating the local live music clubs, which rarely have incidents of violence, from the meat markets that often generate such events. Furthermore, the city regulators seem to be handing out building permits for condos in neighborhoods like Capitol Hill, Fremont and Ballard, where they obviously come in conflict with tax-paying venue owners who have been established in those neighborhoods for fifteen years or more. Can anyone say “gentrification”.

Regardless of all this, it is a false statement to say that these circumstances will kill the Seattle music scene, as many of scene’s advocates have. Seattle music has survived despite such threats for its entire existence. The most heinous of these efforts, the Teen Dance Ordinance, was put into effect with the music community saying that it would crush their ability to generate revenue. Yet today, twenty-three years after it was put into effect and six years after it was repealed, the local scene is still thriving. In fact the ordinance was in place during the grunge years, which many would consider the heyday of Seattle music.

I suggest that the DIY attitude that is predominant in Seattle’s music scene will remain in spite of these obstacles. It’s in our blood, at the core of the hearts of Sub Pop, Barsuk, Broken TimeOrigin, Kill Rock Stars and many, many more. Musicians, promoters, record labels and scenesters will continue to make something from nothing, not just in Seattle but in Olympia, Bellingham and Portland as well.

Every night shows go down in the most unlikely of places… illegal after-hours clubs, coffeehouses, independent art galleries, farmers markets and loft parties. Clubs like the infamous Vogue, Comet Tavern, Blue Moon, Gibson’s and Speakeasy Cafe’ operated for many years without live music. Yet the supportive owners of the venues opened their doors to musicians and promoters in order to keep the scene alive, often making themselves targets for the city government in the process.

Every weekend in Seattle, hundreds of music artists perform in coffeehouses like Hotwire in Shoreline, C&P in West Seattle, El Diablo in Queen Anne and World Cup in the Ravenna neighborhood. Music is not an integral part of these businesses, yet they support the scene anyway. Promoters will continue rent out the stage at the Rendezvous, promote nights at Faire Gallery, Honey Hole, Mars Bar or Mr. Spot’s Chai House, and insert live music into gallery openings and pubs of all shapes and sizes.

We can’t help it. We will not be stifled. No amount of city ordinances, liquor board crack downs and neighborhood complaints will dissuade us. Just a few years ago a complete concert series was held in the cargo space of a dilapidated seventy year-old ferry moored in Lake Union. In fact, I’m sketching the outline for this blog post after watching a friend’s band perform in a bowling alley in South Seattle. Tomorrow night I’m going to see a show in the storage room of brewery. We will not be put down.


May

12

New Seattle Music Blog: Seattle Subsonic

Posted by Shilo Urban | Permalink | Comments (1)
Categories: Classical, Culture, Electronic, Hip-Hop, Jazz, Local Artists, Music, Punk, Rock, Shilo

Hey all you crazy, fevered, music-obsessed Seattleites out there! There’s a new forum for enthusiasts to get a good dose of first-hand Seattle music news from people in the know: SeattleSubsonic, otherwise known as “The Sound From Under the Clouds.” Pretty good, huh?

Local music freak, uh, I mean local music fan Kevin LeDoux, formerly of the Northwest Music Blog, has started a new website with a stellar lineup of writers and featuring all the best in Seattle sound, including recommended shows, venues, and blogs; they also have a calendar of upcoming events and articles about the freshest local acts bubbling up as well as the big tours making the rounds.

So why are we promoting another blog on the CultureMob blog? Shouldn’t we be snarkily trashing SeattleSubsonic with a hipster sneer, straight out of our tight pants and from behind messy purple hair? NAH. We’re not like that. Seattle’s a big little town and the more local music support and artist promotion circulating around, the better. This city is known for music (just ask my generation) and no mayor, no closed venues, no decibel meters can stop that. Seattle’s music enthusiasts can and must work together to foster the creative arena, support the artists out there every day doing their thing, and build the Seattle music scene up from a buzz to a barbaric yawp.

Seattle has heaps of interesting music blogs out there reporting back on various aspects of the local music scene, such as NWTekno, Nada Mucho, LineOut, Three Imaginary Girls, Sound on the Sound, Reverb, Seattle Live Music, and many more, all with the same goal: to get you out there and involved in the amazing music scene, whether you like electronic music, punk rock, jazz, or all of the above.

And besides, CultureMob.com is the only website where you can find events concerning all your entertainment interests; not just music but movies, comedy, theatre, dance, sports, festivals, lectures, and community gatherings. Only on CultureMob can you track your favorite performers and get alerted when they come to Seattle, add a MySpace or Facebook calendar to your profile, email your friends about upcoming events, and post previews, reviews, and comments of artists, events, and venues.

So check out SeattleSubsonic and in the immortal words of one of my good friends and local artist: GET INTO IT! It’s your town, your life, your evening: make it one for the blogs.


Apr

09

Shilo Suggests: Your Seattle Music Weekend

Posted by Shilo Urban | Permalink | Comments (1)
Categories: Culture, Hip-Hop, Local Artists, Music, Punk, Rock, Shilo

THURSDAY:

  • Trinity in Pioneer Square turns 3 years old this weekend and kicks off the big three-day event with a no-cover Thursday night with deejays Darude, Beefer, Noah D. and Pressha spinning along with many others; the fun continues all weekend long.
  • Right around the corner at Contour is the Booty Call Pump Up the Jammies Pajama Jam featuring four hot female deejays (Naha, BFly, Suzi Star, and spinning mad beats in- what else- their PJ’s! Come to get down and then go night-night.
  • Do you like your fun hard-rock style? At Neumo’s The Shackeltons will be thrashing about with The Hands, New Faces and Born Anchors and championing the resurgence of good old-fashioned Americana: Rock and Roll, baby.
  • If you are into hard-core punk (as opposed to sissy-face punk), get to El Corazon for The Dillinger Escape Plan- you will be pummeled raw by the recklessness theses boys spew forth.

FRIDAY:

SATURDAY:

  • Do you like to be the first to know about the hottest, newest sounds? Get to Chainsaw Nouveau at the Oseao Art Gallery, an event by Immersion System presenting the newest genre of electronic music, you guessed it: Chainsaw Nouveau. A little dancing bird told me that Von Dewey spins at 3AM.
  • RJD2 at Chop Suey brings hip-hop into the future with never a genre-limiting border in sight. He’ll spin, sing, play instruments- hell, he might even dance.
  • Had a hard week? Want to really go crazy? Head to The Comet where King Brothers and Shellshag will be promoting rowdy behavior with their punky antics and noiseful, raving distortion. Beer will be spilled.

Apr

09

Beck to Headline Bumbershoot 2008

Posted by Shilo Urban | Permalink | Comments (0)
Categories: Culture, Hip-Hop, Local Artists, Music, Punk, Rock, Shilo

And here is the rest of the lineup so far: Stone Temple Pilots, Lucinda Williams, Neko Case, Ingrid Michaelson, Del Tha Funky Homosapien, Jakob Dylan, !!!, Lee “Scratch” Perry, Saul Williams, Joe Bonamassa, M. Ward, The Walkmen, Asylum St. Spankers, Dan Deacon, MIDIval PunditZ, Blitzen Trapper, Bedouin Soundclash, Tim Finn, Dale Watson, John Vanderslice, Final Fantasy, The Fall of Troy, Orgone, Forro in the Dark, Ryan Bingham, Wreckless Eric & Amy Rigby, Arthur & Yu, Darondo and Nino Moschella, Pacifika…

Many more to be announced soon! Stay tuned.


Apr

01

X at The Showbox (at the Market)

Posted by Cedric Ross | Permalink | Comments (0)
Categories: Cedric, Music, Punk, Rock

I saw the Los Angeles based Punk band X at the Showbox (at the market) last night. It was a great show, I loved it! Boy, times sure have changed since they started in 1977.

video courtesy of bert2099

Here are my top 5 changes at an X show since the 1977
1. 1977 - one out of every four people have eye liner on vs. 2008 - one out of every four people have an iPhone
2. 1977 - if you want to see X you have to go to a show like everyone else vs. 2008 - if you want to see X, you can find them on youtube.com. But you should go see them live you loser!
3. 1977 - guitarist Billy Zoom is a legend vs. 2008 - guitarist Billy Zoom is a legend
4. 1977 - you mostly see 21 year old males with slick black hair in the crowd vs. 2008 - you mostly see 45 year old males with not a lot of hair in the crowd
5. 1977 - John Doe, Exene, D.J. Bonebrake and Billy Zoom are ahead of their time vs. 2008 - John Doe, Exene, D.J. Bonebrake and Billy Zoom are ahead of their time.

Okay, so some things don’t really change!

Find your next Punk Rock event at CultureMob.com