Show Review: Mirah & Jherek Bischoff @ the Neptune

Mirah & Jherek Bischoff @ the Neptune, June 8th
Review by Nick Nihil

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Mira & Jherek Bischoff

Jherek Bischoff’s lack of the enigmatic is what makes him so fascinating. Cartoonishly gangly and coiffed, his sincerity assures he is not a mere construct of irony. So is it with his art that he has keenly drawn the finest of lines between high-minded new music and broad accessibility. His orchestral works from his forthcoming album, Cistern, live in the post-minimalist realm of floridly expressive, repetitive phrases, while harking back to pre-classical motifs. The title piece’s crescendo invokes Górecki’s Symphony No. 3, sticking around for only 4 or 5 minutes; “Wolf,” with its pummel drones and discord, invites the idea of fear, while keeping it at a safe distance. Bischoff is genuine and imaginative enough at crafting series of 4-minute chamber pieces that don’t give the listener apprehensions that come with producing longer works. More often than not, they exist as beautifully orchestrated, fully-formed ideas.

With Mirah, Bischoff’s an equally brilliant arranger and interpreter as he is a producer of his own material. Having worked extensively on her most recent (and best) album, Changing Light, his dramatic yet modern sensibilities truly bring her already arresting blend of cerebral, metaphor-rich story telling an emotional candor. They’re both a bit quirky, but neither is ever postured. As a vocalist, I’ve heard few singers and songwriters who have her skill at wringing melodic invention out of wordy passages (usually one suffers in the other’s presence). At the same time, she displays an equal comfort in her more ‘songwriterly’ introspective numbers such as “Gold Rush” and “Radiomind,” as well as her Euro-cabaret Latin-flavored dance numbers (she has some moves, too). And many props to the sound engineer who was able to keep her voice and lyrics clear over the widely dynamic chamber ensemble.

Show Review & Photos: The 1975 @ WaMu Theater

The 1975 @ WaMu Theater – April 28, 2016
Show Review & Photos by Dagmar

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Matthew Healy of the 1975

The 1975 lovingly joins my British Bands Seen Live in 2016 list. Last year’s list included Rixton, Kaiser Chiefs and the Wombats, meaning, by the way, that 2015 was an excellent year for visits to Seattle by many of my favorites. Should you follow my tastes, you’ll know the 1975 is one of my most-adored bands. I’ve seen and covered every Seattle date, except for their first here, in 2013. Dammit, I didn’t know about them until later! Catching them four times though? Fantastic.

I like it when you sleep, for you are so beautiful yet so unaware of it, the 1975’s follow-up to their first album, The 1975, continues the band’s excellence in combining experimental sounds with beautiful pop. The 1975’s album two hammered America, grabbing a number 1 spot on Billboard, while The 1975 announced the group’s arrival with a number 28 spot on that chart. Unusual and, probably unexpected, for a British band to have achieved this. What lead to these accomplishments? People were smart, and recognized the awesome songs. Also, singer Matthew Healy has a sexy voice separating him from many other chart toppers, and he gets to do some extra gorgeous vocal work in slower songs such as “Fallingforyou,” “Somebody Else,” “Paris” and “A Change of Heart.”

While fans might have thought the night’s setlist would be entirely filled by songs from the 1975’s two albums, there was a surprising number of tracks off the group’s four EPs. Those surprises included “HNSCC,” with goose bump-inducing guitar work by Adam Hann. They also included “Me” and “Fallingforyou,” which might have been totally unfamiliar to the audience if they don’t have the deluxe version of The 1975, where they appear as bonus tracks, or the EPs themselves. Yet they were received enormously well, confirming my suspicion that this group is instantly likable, and has fans who dig deep into the 1975’s discography. The more well-known songs, “Chocolate,” “Sex,” “Heart Out,” “Girls,” “Sex,” “The Sound” and “Love Me” made major earthquakes among the audience.

I’m simply in awe of this band. They’re all that’s great in contemporary music, and they’re touring all over the world this summer. That’s something for music fans to appreciate.

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The 1975

More Photos of the 1975 @ WaMu Theater

Setlist:

The 1975 (I like it when you sleep, for you are so beautiful yet so unaware of it )
Love Me (I like it when you sleep, for you are so beautiful yet so unaware of it)
Heart Out (The 1975)
Settle Down (The 1975)
So Far (It’s Alright) (The 1975 bonus track/IV EP)
The City (The 1975/IV EP/Facedown EP)
You (/The 1975 bonus track/IV EP/Sex EP)
HNSCC (The 1975 bonus track/Music for Cars EP)
Menswear (The 1975)
A Change of Heart (I like it when you sleep, for you are so beautiful yet so unaware of it)
She’s American (I like it when you sleep, for you are so beautiful yet so unaware of it)
Me (The 1975 bonus track, IV EP)
Fallingforyou (The 1975 bonus track/IV EP)
Somebody Else (I like it when you sleep, for you are so beautiful yet so unaware of it)
The Sound (I like it when you sleep, for you are so beautiful yet so unaware of it)
Robbers (The 1975)
Girls (The 1975)

Encore:

Medicine (Drive – Film)
Chocolate (The 1975/IV EP/Music for Cars EP)
Sex (The 1975/IV EP/Sex EP)

Video: MØ’s “Final Song”

Artist:
Song/Video: “Final Song”
Why You Want to Listen/Watch: MØ, the Danish singer-songwriter you’ve surely heard on Major Lazer’s “Lean On,” even if you don’t follow electronic music, follows up her 2014 release with new songs “Kamikaze” and “Final Song.” While the video for “Kamikaze” had MØ in an urban environment, “Final Song” places her in a wild desert. Tomas Whitmore, who’s directed videos for Dillon Francis, directed MØ’s latest. MØ will appear at Capitol Hill Block Party on July 22nd.
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Show Review & Photos: The Used @ Showbox SoDo

The Used @ Showbox SoDo, 4/5/16
Show Review & Photos by Monica Martinez

Growing up as a screamo-loving angsty teen, I never really thought about what songs meant. I just knew that screaming them at the top of my lungs made me feel better. A decade later, it was soothing to hear the Used’s singer Bert McCracken open up and tell the stories and feelings behind each word. This music healed me in my youth. It was all healing again in my 20s, as I was surrounded by similar people singing along. McCracken asked everyone to put an arm around person next to them. He told everyone to sing along and if they didn’t know the words, make them up. All different kinds of people were there, who, at some point hurting – or evenly currently hurt – had turned to the Used for help. People of all ages. All styles. Singing along. McCracken also told us the Used has a new album out: “Go steal it, especially from Walmart.” A band for 15 years, they’re still having so much fun.

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The Used