Photos: Jade Jackson @ Tractor Tavern

Country singer-songwriter Jade Jackson opened at the Tractor Tavern in support of her debut album, Gilded. She’s on the road with Corey Smith and the show at the Tractor was the second stop of the tour. Jade and her three-member band – Jake Vukovich (bass), Andrew Redel (guitar), Tyler Miller (drums) – played a 45-minute set drawing primarily from material off the new album. Earlier this year, Rolling Stone featured her in their 10 New Country Artists You Need to Know column. Jade and the guys took a few minutes after their set for photos below the lights on Ballard Ave.


Jade Jackson

Show Review: Emily Haines @ Nordstrom Recital Hall

Emily Haines & The Soft Skeleton
December 8, Nordstrom Recital Hall
By Jessica Price

They say that a sea change of growth happens for most humans every 7 or so years. We last heard from Emily Haines & The Soft Skeleton just about 10 years ago with the release of the gorgeous sleeper hit Knives Don’t Have Your Back. The hushed yet powerful album hit home deeply for many who came of age listening to the bands that made Emily famous – Metric and Broken Social Scene – when they themselves were at an age where life was changing: relationships or marriages collapsing, loved ones lost. Emily herself lost her father, and the album conveyed a sharp sense of the dual feelings of shock and sadness that an unexpected collapse can bring.

Since that time, Emily kept busy with multiple Metric releases and tours as well as briefly reuniting with Toronto mega-band Broken Social Scene. Last fall news circulated that ten years on, Emily Haines was following up her debut with a second release called Choir of The Mind. Not only that, she was hitting the road backed with The Soft Skeleton and playing intimate halls for a short trek before the holidays, landing at Benaroya’s Nordstrom Recital Hall December 8.


Emily Haines

The first half of the show began as a semi-theatrical, one-woman autobiographical enactment of a day in the life of Emily’s mind. The title Choir of the Mind came into sharper focus as Emily strode onstage, emptying her suitcase and laying on an impromptu “bed” made of a sheet draped over an instrument case. Pre-recorded interior conversations and self-criticisms in Emily’s voice played as she woke, brushed her teeth, and steeled herself against her harsh inner dialogue in time to realize she was on tour.

Taking her place at the piano, she delivered an absolutely breathtaking suite of songs both old and new including “Wounded,” “Crowd Surf Off A Cliff,” “Nihilist Abyss” and “Our Hell,” a song which many suspected they’d never hear performed again. Each keystroke resonated beautifully with the Recital Hall’s pristine acoustics and Emily’s vocals shifted easily from a whisper to a crystalline call. The mood was respectfully restrained as the audience processed the personal themes of the show’s first half. Then the singer turned to address the audience and broke the spell, graciously acknowledging everyone for being there and sharing some fleeting magical moments of song with her. It was unlike any stage banter I’d seen before – unhurried, unrehearsed, trying to articulate as best she could the wider themes of Choir of The Mind and the “musical fossils” she calls songs. She acknowledged how many times over the years people had expressed what Knives Don’t Have Your Back meant to them, perhaps divorced from the meaning it had when she wrote it and all the subsequent times and places she’d performed those songs since. In hindsight, what may have sounded sad became a beautiful imprint of the shared experiences of many: Emily’s voice and the song a momentary vessel of feeling.

And this is the essence of Emily Haines’ solo work. Fragile, powerful, fleeting, fossilized.The second half of the set returned to a more traditional form, the band (including members of Metric and Broken Social Scene) playing off each other so comfortably it was apparent they’d been at it since they were all bright, shiny indie kids. “The Maid Needs A Maid,” “Statuette,” “Minefield of Memory,” “Legend of the Wild Horse” and “Doctor Blind” were high points, closing with “Fatal Gift” and an incredible bare bones encore of “Strangle All Romance” and “Choir of the Mind” (taken from Savitri, a poem by Sri Aurobindo from which Emily’s mother chose her middle name). It was an astonishing night with an astonishingly talented performer and woman that I would happily wait to meet once every decade, only to see what experiences we’d shared in our time apart, growing up.
-J.Price

Other Emily Haines Back Beat Seattle Coverage:

Metric @ Deck the Hall Ball 2012
Metric @ Sasquatch 2012
Metric @ Deck the Hall Ball 2009
Metric @ Bumbershoot 2009
Metric @ the Showbox

Photos: The Pixies with The Orwells

The Pixies & the Orwells @ The Paramount, 12/3/2017
Photos by: John Rudolph

The music review cliché’ is to say that the Pixies ROCKED the stage or to say that they GRABBED the stage and never looked back. Those comments would be a total understatement. The Pixies played 33 songs – including the encore – without wasting time on simple banter with the audience. Nobody does that. For the diehard Pixies fans, you saw the them perform at their best, with no compromises at the Paramount on December 3rd. They truly know their fans, and they put on one hell of a great show.

In 2016 the Pixies released Head Carrier. Whether or not you are a Pixies fan, go to Pixies Music and check it out.


Pixies


The Orwells

Pixies Setlist:
Gouge Away
Wave of Mutilation
Classic Masher
Monkey Gone to Heaven
Um Chagga Lagga
Something Against You
Isla de Encanta
Caribou
Magdalena 318
Cactus
Subbacultcha
All the Saints
Ana
Mr. Grieves
Nimrod’s Son
Motorway to Roswell
Might as Well Be Gone
Head Carrier
I Bleed
Crackity Jones
Broken Face
Bel Esprit
River Euphrates
All I Think About Now
Debaser
Velouria
Snakes
Silver Snail
Where Is My Mind?
Wave of Mutilation
Winterlong
Hey
Vamos

Previous Back Beat Seattle Coverage of the Pixies:

Show Review & Photos: The Pixies @ the Paramount
Photos: Pixies @ the Paramount

Previous Back Beat Seattle of the Orwells:

The Orwells @ Neumos, 2014

Photos: The Used @ Showbox SoDo

The Used @ Showbox SoDo, 11/29/17
Photos by Charitie Myers


The Used‘s Bert McCracken

Details: The Used is really still celebrating their 15th anniversary, even though that event passed in 2016. Keeping the party going in Seattle on November 29th, the band finished its fall month-long tour by performing a setlist including approximately four songs off newest album, The Canyon. While fans got to hear those tracks, naturally the Used played from their catalog, which now features The Canyon (their first without founding member, guitarist Quinn Allman). And sure, the Used probably doesn’t care all that much what writers say about them, but it must be satisfying to see the release appearing to be the band’s best reviewed. Bert McCracken, the Utah rock band’s lead singer said, about The Canyon‘s beginnings:

I’ve learned as an artist that a great idea is such a gift. If I don’t stop whatever it is I’m doing, even if while driving, if I don’t pull over at that moment, then maybe I didn’t deserve the idea to begin with. I learned to respect and worship the ideas in that way, that they are and will always be something sacred. Stopping in that moment was a brand new approach for us during this process.

If you’re not already acquainted with the Used, now’s a great time to get into them. To begin with, how many bands can say they have such a well-read singer as McCracken, who can quote from George Orwell and is massively up on his current events? We approve. And Europe gets to approve in February, when the group tours the Continent and the UK.


The Used

Previous Back Beat Coverage of the Used:

Show Review & Photos: The Used @ Showbox SoDo
Photos: Taking Back Sunday & the Used @ Showbox SoDo

Photos: Olivia O’Brien @ Showbox at the Market

California native singer-songwriter Olivia O’Brien opened for Jack & Jack at Showbox at the Market. The stop in Seattle was near the end of their six-week tour. O’Brien’s recently released debut EP, It’s Not That Deep, has already delivered three singles: “Empty,” “RIP,” and “No Love.”


Olivia O’Brien