Show Preview: Tina Dico @ the Triple Door, Sun. 5/29

It’s not very often you get to see Danish singer-songwriters in the States, although we tend to embrace Nordic artists warmly in Seattle particularly. That’s because Seattle just has awesome taste. With that in mind, I recommend Dane Tina Dico‘s appearance on Sunday, May 29th at the Triple Door.

Dico, a prolific songwriter (she’s released ten albums – several reaching number 1 in Denmark – and 4 EPs!!), has incredible depth and emotion in her vocals and work. I’ve yet to see her perform live, but the online videos of her live performances are gorgeous. She writes songs of appreciation, and beautifully, she’ll be joined at the Triple Door show by her husband, fellow musician Helgi Jónsson. Jónsson has played trombone with Sigur Rós – pretty damn cool. Dico also has a songbook of some of her songs, an inspired idea! And, because I love the idea so much, here’s the link to her teaching “Room With A View.”

tinadico
Tina Dico


~ Dagmar

For tickets & more details, check out the Triple Door’s event page.

Phoebe Bridgers @ Showbox at the Market

With all the great music coming through Seattle, it’s not very often that I make a point of covering the same performer twice in five months. But it was hard to pass up Phoebe Bridgers when she opened for the Violent Femmes last week at the Showbox at the Market. Accompanied by Harrison Whitford (bass) and Marshall Vore (drums), Bridgers played songs off her Killer EP (produced by Ryan Adams) plus several covers. Someone accurately described her as Elliott Smith meets Gillian Welch.

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_1

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_2

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_3

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_4

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_5

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_6

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_7

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_8

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_9

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_10

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_11

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_12

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_13

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_14

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_15

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_16

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_17

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_18

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_19

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_20

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_21

PhoebeBridgers_ShowboxMrkt_22
Phoebe Bridgers

Show Preview: Sasquatch Day 1 – Friday, 5/27, w/Oh Wonder, Andra Day, Marcus Marr & Disclosure

Festival-loving people: Sasquatch begins this Friday, May 27th. It’s time to start planning. And keep up to date by following the event on Twitter and Facebook, and, to prepare for day one, I suggest as many of these bands as you can fit in:

Oh Wonder
5:50-6:50
Sasquatch Stage

ohwonder
Oh Wonder

Why You Want to See Them: In January, Londoners Oh Wonder were supposed to headline the Crocodile, but the show was moved to a larger venue, the Neptune. Good thing they’re returning to the area. The duo of Josephine Vander Gucht and Anthony West recorded and mixed their self-titled debut in their very own home studio; they also self-produced. And Vander Gucht has one of the most unusual voices I have ever heard.


~

Andra Day
7:15-8:15
Sasquatch Stage

andraday
Andra Day

Why You Want to See Her: Grammy nominated for her 2016 album, Cheers to the Fall, Andra Day recorded that album with Raphael Saadiq and Adrian Gurvitz as producers. Day is currently based in San Diego, and did a cool cover of Eminem’s “Lose Yourself” a few years ago.


~

Marcus Marr
7:15-8:15
El Chupacabra Stage

marcusmarr
Marcus Marr – photo by Mozpics

Why You Want to See Him: Brixton, London’s Marcus Marr is on the DFA label, one he shares with YACHT and Shit Robot, among others. Last year, the electronic artist released an awesome video for his song “Brown Sauce.” Love.


~

Disclosure
11:00 PM-12:30 AM
Sasquatch Stage

disclosure2016
Disclosure

Why You Want to See Them: They barely need any introduction. This English duo hit the music scene hard in 2013 with “Latch” and “White Noise,” featuring Sam Smith and AlunaGeorge, respectively. A couple years later, they gave us additional great songs such as “Omen,” on album two, Caracal. Additionally, Caracal‘s album cover is one of 2015’s very best.


~

Check out Friday’s full schedule here.

Show Preview: Moderat @ the Showbox, Tues. 5/24

Show Preview: Moderat @ the Showbox, Tuesday May 24th
~Dagmar

Electronic trio Moderat headline the Showbox this Tuesday, May 24th. The German band, including two members of that same country’s Modeselektor, and Sascha Ring (Apparat), has a brand new 2016 release for us. III (appropriately named as it’s the band’s third full-length), just trips the fuck out. There are chiller songs, and there are songs with heavier beats. Sometimes all in one song. There’s no sticking to one electronic sub genre, and essentially Moderat is working within a similar mindset of their prior albums. That’s all to the good. Going back, anyone who can create a song such as 2013’s “Milk,” deserves attention from music fans, especially major electronic music fans.

Moderat_Flavien_Prioreau
Moderat – photo by Flavien Prioreau

All event details are right here.

Album Review: Swans’ The Glowing Man

Album Review: SwansThe Glowing Man
~Nick Nihil

It’s both amazing and not too surprising at this point that a band as visionary, talented, and experienced as Swans can continue to evolve and deepen their uniquely monolithic attack. They’re certainly not the only band identified by heavy, droning dirges that find meditative peace within force and volume, but they’re the most compelling, versatile, and purposeful. I know how giddily I gushed about their last record, To Be Kind, calling it perhaps the finest record they ever made, which is particularly impressive considering their record before that, The Seer, could well have made that claim. Apparently their default setting is to make the best, most ‘Swans’ record ever with each new release. Geez guys, are you too cool to make something ‘meh’ once in a while? My reviews are getting redundant.

swansglowingman
SwansThe Glowing Man

This record finds them dialing back the frequency of their ground-shaking crescendos, but not the power, developing the kinds of ethereal textures reminiscent of their early ‘90s work (reminiscent, but not repeating) and taking some surprising stylistic left turns. The melancholic prayer of an opener, “Cloud of Forgetting,” shuffles in a way that recalls The Doors if they were playing a funeral until Gira’s ever-expanding vocal expression guides the music into its inevitable climactic hammer about 10 minutes in. Even still, the heaviness is still subdued just a tad, never quite blowing its way through the sonic mist. Subtlety is an increasingly sharpened edge.

And then comes “Cloud of Unknowing.” Okkyung Lee’s several-minute cello improvisation that runs with layers of guitars and rolling drums brings an arresting new depth of mood and texture to the band’s sound, and when the drums finally hit a little more than 7 minutes in (the track clocks at over 25 minutes), all thought and capacity for eloquence left me and all I could say was “duuuude. . .” “Cloud of Unknowing” is paralyzing. I want to write pages about this song but I’m still too lost for words. Following is “The World Looks Red/The World Looks Black,” which almost sounds like their take on Miles Davis circa “In a Silent Way”/”Bitches Brew,” until the bass punches you in the gut about 7:30 minutes in and the pace becomes much tenser. And wait – they’re swinging. It sounds like a cross between Nina Simone’s “Sinner Man” and classic French noir scores.

After the trio of gorgeously intense meditative stunners, “People Like Us” adds a little levity (levity being a very relative term within a Swans record), a taste of swampy-psychedelia that almost resembles a straightforward song, even clocking in at under 5 minutes! “Frankie M” spends its first 11 minutes building their most beautiful crescendo of choral vocals and ambience before dropping into a thumping tribute to a close friend of Gira’s who clearly suffers from drug problems. At first the lyrics seem a bit too un-poetic and the melody seems a little forced and childish before the unsettling, almost mocking “bum bum bum” hook ties it all together. Then it the takes on another unexpected life, moving into a straight-ahead, even dancey feel. It works so well because it seems like Swans never actually do that sort of thing.

“When WIll I Return?” turns the lead vocals over to Jennifer Gira and she sings both beautifully and courageously of her traumatic past. The detailed and highly disturbing imagery that begin the song ultimately give way to the defiant refrain of “I’m alive.” And let me for a moment give a shout out to Jennifer’s tremendous work throughout the record. Those who really missed the element Jarboe brought to the band before they disbanded should be more than satiated. The title track is the record’s full-blown rager, the only track they really take to the full bore apocalyptic sonic catharsis so present on their last two records. It’s the longest on an album of long tracks at almost 29 minutes, but it hits with a particular focus and, once the faster pace kicks in about halfway through, addictive catchiness, weaving a call and response between Gira’s bellowing “Joseph is me and you are a liar!!!” and “I am the g-g-g-g-glowing man” and frightening blasts of voice, piano, and guitar.

The record closes with the aptly titled “Finally Peace,” a fitting cap for what Gira announced would be the final Swans album with the current lineup. This and the previous two albums have acted on an almost singular goal of achieving a sense of spiritual ecstasy and enlightenment through heavy, repetitive music, a collection of evolving incantatory drones and crescendos, from the conceptual grandiosity of The Seer, the relentless ferocity of To Be Kind, and the gentler but no less grand or powerful, dare I say, prettiness of The Glowing Man. “Finally Peace” sounds like the most genuinely uplifting song in their catalogue, and it lands remarkably, because after 35 years of flagellation and immersion into the darkest and most troubling aspects of the psyche, it really feels earned, like genuine transcendence is possible. Like an honest-to-goodness real breakthrough has happened. Still, there is a hanging unease, a lack of resolution, ending with a parenthetical question mark (and how, in life, could that not be truer, that a breakthrough is not a finality as much as the beginning of the next trial, on and on until you die). Gira’s mission statement for the record, he said, was love. Of course the record is still dark, still heavy, still punishing at times (Hey! It’s a Swans record! That’s why we love them), but this is also the record that has allowed the most light since Love of Life. The peace, love, and resolution expressed through this brilliant and beautiful new Swans record feels of a genuinely lasting nature.

The Glowing Man will be released on June 17, 2016.