Photos & Preview: Shame @ Chop Suey; Shame Returns to the Crocodile, Wed. 10/10

Photos & Preview: Shame @ Chop Suey – 2/20/18; Shame Returns to the Crocodile, Wed. 10/10
~Dagmar


Shame‘s Charlie Steen

Shame being in Seattle twice this year? Really awesome. Nearly just eight months following their first Seattle date, the British punk quintet returns to play the Crocodile on Wednesday October 10th. Shame is one of the truly exciting live bands out there at the moment, and their 2018 debut, Songs of Praise, also just happens to be one of my favorites of the year. I’m not alone; I have not seen one bad review of the album. Playing on a larger stage than earlier this year, the band can get even wilder tomorrow night.


Shame

Event Review & Photos: Wiener Dog Races @ Emerald Downs

Event Review & Photos: Wiener Dog Races @ Emerald Downs, 7/8/18
By Lisa Hagen Glynn


Wiener Dog Races @ Emerald Downs

Ears were flopping as dachshund athletes and “wiener wannabes” took to the track at Emerald Downs on July 8th.

The popular annual Wiener Dog and Wannabe Races feature multiple heats down a 50-yard stretch, followed by a riveting final race. Competitors run torpedo-like toward their family members at the finish line, at least in principle. In practice, the journey is often detoured by treat seeking, mutual sniffing, and wrong-way dashes. But when motivated, wiener dogs are surprisingly quick and decidedly earnest.

Both 2017 defending champions returned to win again this year. The Wiener Dog pack was led by Booker, a sleek and (relatively) long-legged chocolate dapple. After trial runs in the dog parks of San Francisco and nine consecutive dachshund-race victories, Booker will be retiring this year, said trainer Jaclyn Tucker of Seattle. The Wiener Wannabes category — small dogs other than purebred dachshunds — was won by Murphy, a smooth-coated tan dog trained by Marisa Clark of Seattle.

The champions and their families gathered in the “Wiener’s Circle” afterward to receive a gift certificate and a tall trophy topped with a dog figurine. The canine athletes celebrated with treats, snuggles, and naps.

Dachshund celebrity Anderson Pooper, who uses a rear cart decorated with disco-ball wheels, was an audience favorite. She finished strong with a slow-and-steady approach, bypassing some faster-starting hounds who sped off in the wrong direction. Pooper is trained by Brenda Sizer of Mountlake Terrace.

Horse races alternated with the Wiener Dog and Wannabe races. The Auburn Valley Humane Society was on site with adoptable dogs.


Wiener Dog Races @ Emerald Downs

Cool Cover: Jackie Greene’s The Modern Lives, Vol. 2 & Crazy Comes Easy

Cool Cover: Jackie Greene‘s “Crazy Comes Easy.”
Details: Americana singer-songwriter gets a cover illustration for The Modern Lives, Vol. 2 and the album’s first single, “Crazy Comes Easy” from artist Angie Pickman. You can get some of your own art from Pickman, whose work has appeared in places from Martha Stewart Living to Faction Magazine, over on her Etsy page.

Photos: Gary Numan @ the Neptune; Numan Returns Tues. Oct. 2 @ the Neptune

Gary Numan @ the Neptune – 11/22/17; Numan Returns Tues., Oct. 2 @ the Neptune
~Dagmar


Gary Numan

Gary Numan comes back to Seattle on Tuesday, October 2nd. I am super excited to see him again at the Neptune as it was a great venue for him last November. The stunning performer – he’s held icon status since he first became a popular musician, sometimes it just happens that way – plays a tough electronic genre. Industrial perhaps? Or, at times, synth perhaps? I don’t know where I would specifically but the genre, but it’s a fantastic, strong mix. Even versions of his older material get roughed up in a great way. In 2017, in an awesome moment, we got to hear his daughter sing beautifully live on “My Name Is Ruin,” a track from Savage (Songs from a Broken World). I don’t think sublime is too big of a description for all things Gary Numan.


Gary Numan and Persia Numan


Gary Numan

As always, the Neptune has a handy place for you to get tickets in advance.