Photos: Watershed 2019 @ The Gorge Amphitheatre – Day 1

The Watershed Country Music Festival returned to The Gorge Amphitheatre with ten artists performing on the Main and Next From Nashville stages on Day 1. The outdoor venue seats over 27,000 and is consistently rated one of the most beautiful in the country. Lots of sun, music, and activities in a stunning setting high above the Columbia River. The photos are shown in reverse chronological order – from the headliners in the evening on each stage, to the openers in the early afternoon.
CHRIS YOUNG
AUSTIN JENCKES
KIP MOORE
JAMES BARKER BAND
MICHAEL RAY
DILLON CARMICHAEL
MITCHELL TENPENNY
TRAVIS DENNING
DANIELLE BRADBERY
INGRID ANDRESS

Photos: Chase Atlantic & Lauren Sanderson @ the Neptune

Chase Atlantic & Lauren Sanderson @ the Neptune, 7/3/19
~Photos by Casey Brevig

Chase Atlantic – photo by Casey Brevig

Australian trio Chase Atlantic – that is, singer Mitchel Cave, guitarist/saxophonist Clinton Cave (they’re brothers) and guitarist/singer Christian Anthony – headlined the Neptune on July 3rd. Fans especially got to celebrate new music from the band, probably hearing some tracks off this year’s PHASES, live for the first time. That’s always cool. Singer-songwriter Lauren Sanderson opened.

Chase Atlantic -photos by Casey Brevig
Lauren Sanderson – photos by Casey Brevig

Show Review & Photos: The Wiggles @ the Paramount

The Wiggles‘ Party Time Tour! @ the Paramount – 7/27/19
~ Show Review & Photos by Josh Daniels

The Wiggles – photo by Josh Daniels

I’m a dad of a 3-year-old whose 2nd birthday party was Wiggles-themed, so you can rest assured that I was anxiously sitting at my desk, mouse hovering over the Ticketmaster link in the sweaty seconds before sales for the group’s first US tour of her lifetime went live. Months later, here we were: her in her yellow bow-and-tutu combo and me lugging my camera gear, both of us almost equally excited to finally witness the spectacle of these international superstars live and in-person.

Hailing from Australia, the current iteration of this world-renowned children’s music group is in its 6th year performing together, but I would believe you if you told me they’d been doing it since they were children (that’s actually a spin-off series, but I digress). Through what had to be a grueling 90-minutes of acrobatics, singing, instrument swapping, costume donning and child entertaining, Anthony, Lachy, Simon and Emma Wiggle never seemed to break a sweat through their blue, purple, red and yellow outfits (respectively).

The Wiggles crossed the Pacific to kick off the Party Time Tour! at the Paramount Theatre in downtown Seattle on Saturday, July 27th in support of their newest release of the same name. Their 17th album together, Party Time! is an excellent compilation of new tracks and fresh, Wiggly takes on some classics. It’s all of the regular high-energy stuff we’ve come to expect from the group, with a fun familiarity that promises to keep the kids engaged as well.

While we weren’t sure what to expect from their traveling performance, my family has been exposed to many a live recording of the group, as those videos made up a significant chunk of their first big series together Ready, Steady Wiggle!, which is nearly all of the Wiggly content we were able to get our hands on, aside from a couple more recent (and dare I say, Avant Garde) releases: Wiggle Town and Carnival of the Animals.

Turns out, they are nearly identical.

The Wiggles – all photos by Josh Daniels

In a lot of ways, seeing the Wiggles live is similar to watching Taylor Swift or any other pop megastar on an arena tour. You immediately get the impression that every single second of the performance is perfectly scripted and choreographed, and that the well-oiled machines that these artists have become are just running on auto-pilot, cruising through their massive sets with the muscle memory of a professional that has already put on a hundred shows this year.

Where the experience differs from artists like Swift is when, surprisingly, each member of The Wiggles let their polished façade slip, if just for a second, to make a quick joke, play a lighthearted prank on one another, or be caught up in the emotion of a sentimental letter from a fan as they read it onstage.

When Anthony asks Lachy to do a “Seattle accent” right in the middle of a skit, it’s immediately clear the purple wiggle did not see that request coming, his uncontrollable giggles growing with each failed attempt at masking his thick Aussie accent. Another time, Simon employs a favorite Wiggle game, “Simon Says”, to request the Paramount staff raise house lights so the group can see the fans that dressed up in costume for the show. Unprepared, the staff takes a bit longer than expected, which kicked off a reoccurring bit between them and the Red Wiggle that brought laughs from kids and parents alike. And of course, there was the lovely middle section where the other three Wiggles not so subtly lamented Emma’s popularity with the fans during a segment where they brought up gifts and signs from the crowd to show off on-stage.

These human moments introduced a level of intimacy to the performance that eased one of my bigger concerns about the show, that it would essentially be just a live-action Xerox of the content that most of the parents in the room have likely seen and heard on repeat for years now. Yes, their robust setlist covered dozens and dozens of their hits, and they made sure to include all the important Wiggle skits (“Wake Up, Lachy!”) and characters (Wags the Dog, Dorothy the Dinosaur, and newcomer Shirley Shawn the Unicorn), but the joy that radiated from the group throughout the entire 90-minutes meshed so well with the skill and polish we’ve come to expect from these consummate professionals, that I would have believed that this was their single Stateside performance and it was curated just for this audience.

But nope. Seattle was just the first date on this massive tour, and they’ll be pulling out all the stops to give additional costume-changing, cardio-heavy, multi-instrumental performances across North America before heading home to pick up right where they left off,. If this performance was any indication, I believe every child in every one of those shows will be treated to the same polished-yet-personal production that my daughter got.

The Wiggles – all photos by Josh Daniels

Cool Cover: Reggae Gold 2019

Artist: Various Artists
Cover: Reggae Gold 2019
Details: This compilation album includes music from Nicki Minaj, Estelle and French Montana, among others. But on the outside, it features photographic beauty. From the hair to the outfits, this cover got my attention. I also love that green eyeshadow.

Show Preview: Mayday Parade @ Showbox SoDo, Wed. 7/31

Show Preview: Mayday Parade @ Showbox SoDo, Wed. 7/31
~Dagmar

Mayday Parade and State Champs are co-headlining a number of shows (plus Sad Summer Fest) this summer. On Wednesday, July 31st, Showbox SoDo gets the Floridian rock band Mayday Parade as headliners.

Mayday Parade

Usually I don’t want to quote too much directly from a band press release, but this is too great. So here’s how singer Derek Sanders discussed the name of Mayday Parade’s sixth album, Sunnyland, which got:

its title from an abandoned hospital where the band members used to sneak in to explore as teenagers. “The hospital shut down sometime in the mid-’80s but then it just stayed there for decades,”. . . “It was a super-creepy place—it was overgrown with vines, and still had some of the hospital beds and IV stands—but we have all these good memories of hanging out there when we were younger.” 

These are the kinds of things I enjoy finding out about bands. Seriously. I’d think about doing an ongoing feature on here asking bands about creepy moments in life. Could Mayday Parade be a band after my own heart?

And I always appreciate a band that pleases fans no more frequently than every two years. It’s enough time to get to know the albums really well, and then familiarize yourself with new work. Big bonus: This one of those rare bands whose albums have all got strong reviews. That’s hard work. Maybe that is the most supernatural thing about Mayday Parade?

This show is all ages. Tickets and more information available right here.