Photos: SuicideGirls – Blackheart Burlesque @ The Crocodile

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The lovely women of the Suicide Girls are proud to challenge conventions of beauty. The ladies of SG performed the Blackheart Burlesque in Seattle last night to a boisterous, sold out crowd at the Crocodile. The Suicide Girls have a massive following who enjoy getting to know these sexy women through the online community at Suicide Girls.

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The fans watched the talented pin-ups recreate popular movie themes like Star Wars and A Clockwork Orange. The show is good and the women genuinely seem to enjoy performing for their fans. The heavily-tattooed and scantily clad pin-ups know their fan base. They worked the audience with crowd-involved acts that had the fans cheering with equal enthusiasm.

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Suicide Girls

Photographer: John Rudolph

Show Preview – Suicide Girls: Blackheart Burlesque @ the Crocodile, Fri. 4/22

Suicide Girls brings their popular show, Blackheart Burlesque, to the Crocodile tomorrow night, Friday April 22nd. The event, which we are always happy to cover on Back Beat Seattle, features an amazing group of women, including ladies from the entire United States, plus international beauties from Brazil, France and beyond. Talented and creative, the artists perform to Star Wars (yes, those Storm Troopers!!!), A Clockwork Orange. . . and other sexy themes. Because burlesque rules, I heartily recommend this event. Shows are selling out; see if you can grab some tickets over at the Crocodile’s event page. Also, please 18+. And enjoy!

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Photos: The T Sisters @ Tractor Tavern

Erika, Rachel and Chloe Tietjen – collectively known as The T Sisters – played at the Tractor Tavern last week while on tour with The Show Ponies. As always, the Oakland-based siblings put on a great show with terrific harmonies and guitar, drum and bass accompaniment. So good to have them back in Seattle!

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(L-R) Rachel, Chloe and Erika Tietjen

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Show Preview & Interview: Fat White Family @ Barboza – Fri. 4/22

Show Preview & Interview: Fat White Family @ Barboza, Friday April 22nd
~Dagmar

Fat White Family returns to Chop Suey this Friday, April 22nd. A lot has happened in Fat White Family’s world since their 2014 debut Seattle show. The band was forced out of their home above a pub, Queen’s Head, in Brixton, London; they toured constantly; and they released album two, Songs for Our Mothers in 2016. Three years earlier they debuted with Champagne Holocaust, which had some righteous songs on it, such as “Cream Of The Young,” “Is It Raining In Your Mouth?” and “Without Consent.” In a twist of that curse of the debut album so often being the best a band releases, album two, Songs for Our Mothers, is mostly greater. Fat White Family’s music has a slinky, sexy grooviness to it; however, the lyrics, when you can make any out, deal with the strange. They deal with the ordinariness of the strange too: “Goodbye Goebels” imagines the last moments of Hitler in his bunker. But it’s a love song.

Fat White Family has two brothers in it: singer Lias Saoudi and organ/keyboard player Nathan Saoudi. The entire sextet caught the eye of musician and producer Sean Lennon, who ended up producing the brilliant “Satisfied,” at South by Southwest in 2015. The also brilliant “Whitest Boy on the Beach,” a frightening “Duce,” and the just weird and wonderful “Love is the Crack” and “We Must Learn To Rise” would be spooky fun performed live. Warning: Fat White Family shows are known for their wildness (singer Lias Saoudi strips naked with some well-documented frequency).

Fat White Family’s organ/key player Nathan Saoudi and I talked a few weeks ago to prepare for what should be a memorable show.

Are you on tour at the moment?

Nathan Saoudi: I just came over to LA. We have three weeks before the tour, and my brothers’ missus lives in LA. I don’t have any place to stay in London. It’s a rip-off over there. We played a big show a couple of weeks ago and I had to scrounge around for a fucking couch to sleep on. It’s bollocks over there. It’s the most expensive city in the world.

You need to move over here.

NS: Maybe. Maybe Kabul. Or Damascus. Go on Jihad [he kids].

What’s your favorite Fat White Family video?

NS: “Touch the Leather.” Apart from the cameraman, that cost us about £3.42. We went in there with raging hangovers, and put down the ideas very basically, and then just went on with it. It took about an hour.

That’s awesome. It’s just one-take? And who’s in the background?

NS: Yeah. That’s my ass.

Are you on a skateboard?

NS: You know those things that amplifiers are put in? At the bottom’s there’s wheels. I think it was one of them. They [other band members] were just sitting there laughing.

I love that song. What do you think makes it a fan favorite?

NS: It’s an abstract lyric. It’s got a lot of blues shade, followed by a red shade. There were two versions of it; live and electric. The one on the video is the more electric version.

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Fat White Family – photo by Steve Gullick

How did you choose a song for your appearance on David Letterman?

NS: I think our decision was the wrong decision. I think we should have done “Touch The Leather.” It’s the one that most people get. It was kind of strange because our guitarist wasn’t there. It was over and done with so quick. [They played “Is It Raining In Your Mouth?”.

Given the way you attack keyboards, how many have you broken?

NS: About 60. I don’t even know how to play them, so I end up breaking them out of frustration. I started about four years ago. I should spend more time learning, but I’m a lazy piece of shit.

You learn as you go.

NS: Or you can ignore it as you go.

In the video for the “Whitest Boy On The Beach,” the entire band shaved their heads. Was that traumatic?

NS: No, I was waiting. I was waiting, like two months to shave my head. I wanted to shave my head, but then the idea for the video came about. It’s cathartic.

Are any topics off limits in a Fat White Family song?

NS: I don’t think any stone should be left unturned. Everything should be discussed. Whenever you don’t talk about things, you harbor some kind of pain or resentment. It’s all right to talk about everything. I’m not saying bigotry, but discussing things. Open things up a bit.

Your family moved around frequently, Northern Ireland. . . England. . . when you were a child. Where do you consider yourself coming from?

NS: Depending on the situation I’m in, I kind of change it. I’m not dedicated to one place; I’m not patriotic. It just makes things easier. But then you’ve gotta say where your parents come from. I’m glad I’m not a purebred though.

Your dad moved Algeria to the United Kingdom. Do you visit Algeria?

NS: The last time I went was eight years ago. I’m planning to go at the end of the year. You cleanse yourself. There’s no booze. There’s no distraction. I love the place. You go the Internet café, and the letters that are rubbed off they keyboard are S-E-X. They need release. The only problem is the way women are treated.

Your brother posted a pair of your dirty underwear for sale on eBay. How weird did that feel?

NS: Yeah I don’t get why anybody would want to buy that. I don’t think anyone did buy it. It’s probably someone in LA who goes around celebrities’ houses to see if he can sell them on ebay. They do that in Japan, don’t they? They have vending machines with girls’ knickers. What pleasure in life would you get from that?

Which Fat White Family album do you prefer?

NS: I’d say the second. Musically it’s got more depth to it. I like some of the first one, but it’s a bit more garagey. After you go around touring playing the same set of songs, you want to play new material. It’s refreshing to play new stuff you’re gonna be fond of.

I read that Sean Lennon let you use some the Beatles’ equipment he has in his studio.

NS: He did. His studio’s surreal. He’s very down to earth. Considering his background, he could have been a self-indulgent piece of shit, but he’s not.

Where did you film “Cream Of The Young”‘s video?

NS: You know the room in the video for “Touch the Leather?” It was above that room, the room we used to practice in. I slept in that pub for two years.

You recently toured with Black Lips and Palma Violets?

NS: That was an NME tour (Palma Violets). The Black Lips was a European tour. That’s the one that ended with my brother getting pneumonia, coughing up blood. Black Lips are a lot better than Palma Violets.

You played in Paris at La Cigale on November 13th, 2015. What was your experience of that night?

NS: They told us to stop playing about 3/4s of the way in to our set. The President, Hollande, was aching to bomb Syria. Of course that shit is gonna happen.

In Paris, all the ethnic minorities are in a circle around the center of town. In town, it’s dominated by white people. It’s visibly racist. So if it’s gonna happen, it’s going to happen there. They’re one of the more racist countries in Europe. They’ve got a real divide between the North African, Middle Eastern Muslim Community. . . and the rest of them. They’re not integrated. In London, you’re walking down a road, and it’ll be like an estate or something, all different types of people live in that estate. Then you cross the road, and they’re posh houses, living side by side. France is a lot more divided. That kind of shit brewing up in that part of the world doesn’t shock me. It’s a reaction. Lots of people in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan lost whole families. Imagine the pain. How would you get rid of it? You got nothing. All the people you most love in the world are dead. You’re probably going to seek revenge. People are broken hearted. If they weren’t totally devastated, and if all the people around them weren’t getting murdered – by the west – they wouldn’t have any reason to turn to an extreme end. I’m surprised it doesn’t happen more often. If someone killed my family, I’d find the people who did it. You’d turn into a psychopath.

Note: Friday’s show is an early one. Doors are at 7:00 PM.

Show Review & Photos: Paul McCartney @ KeyArena

Paul McCartney @ KeyArena, 4/17/16
Show Review & Photos by Dagmar

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Paul McCartney @ KeyArena in Seattle, April 2016

Paul McCartney played a stunning sold-out show at KeyArena on Sunday evening, in a performance I’d easily run out of positive superlatives to describe. With a band (Rusty Anderson, Brian Ray, Abe Laboriel, Jr. and Paul “Wix” Wickens) he’s had together longer than either the Beatles or Wings, McCartney took all the fans on a perfectly-placed memory freeway. The show, three hours in total, spotlighted the various incarnations of McCartney’s music. You wanted Beatles’ music? You got it with many songs from “Eleanor Rigby” to “We Can Work It Out.” Something more recent? There was that, too: try “FourFiveSeconds.” Some Wings? That was represented by “Let Me Roll It” and “Band on the Run,” among others. McCartney even went back to a pre-Beatles song by the Quarrymen, “In Spite of All the Danger.” In a cool arrangement, songs off the majority of Beatles’ albums featured in the set list.

The dashing – and dancing – McCartney took the time to talk with the audience, and commented on several songs’ creation. “Here Today,” which McCartney wrote about John Lennon, urged us to tell loved ones we love them, while “Blackbird” came about from observations on the American Civil Rights Movement. The show began with “A Hard Day’s Night,” a brand new introduction to the McCartney live show, and surprised also with Rubber Soul‘s “You Won’t See Me” and Revolver‘s exquisite “Eleanor Rigby.” Pyrotechnics seem to be another instrument in the best James Bond theme tune ever, McCartney’s “Live and Let Die.” Strategically placed explosions went off around the stage, amplifying the sense of danger in that song. For “Fool on the Hill” McCartney played a a psychedelic dream piano. He rocked on “Helter Skelter” with Nirvana’s Krist Novoselic, plus showed appreciation of, respectively, fellow Beatles Lennon and George Harrison with “Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!” and “Something.” Right after “Helter Skelter,” the encore dominated with the conclusion of the Beatles’ Abbey Road: “Golden Slumbers,” “Carry That Weight” and “The End.”

I was honored to cover McCartney’s show. As in his 2013 Seattle show, the shared experience carried throughout the venue. Really, anyone who can catch a McCartney show is very lucky. Also, I cannot think of any other musician who’s had, bestowed upon, his own coat of arms. And when I say coat of arms, I don’t mean a family coat of arms, I mean it’s for him only. Most other knights don’t even have one, and that’s appropriately distinctive.

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Set List:

A Hard Day’s Night
Save Us
Can’t Buy Me Love
Letting Go
Temporary Secretary
Let Me Roll It
I’ve Got a Feeling
My Valentine
Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five
Here, There and Everywhere
Maybe I’m Amazed
We Can Work It Out
In Spite of All the Danger
You Won’t See Me
Love Me Do
And I Love Her
Blackbird
Here Today
Queenie Eye
Fool on the Hill
Lady Madonna
FourFiveSeconds
Eleanor Rigby
Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!
Something
Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da
Band on the Run
Back in the U.S.S.R.
Let It Be
Live and Let Die
Hey Jude

Encore:

Yesterday
Hi, Hi, Hi
Birthday
Helter Skelter
Golden Slumbers
Carry That Weight
The End