Photos: Tori Amos & Thomas Dybdahl @ the Paramount Theater

Tori Amos & Thoms Dybdhal @ the Paramount Theater, 12/13
Review by Chris Senn – Photos by Kirk Stauffer

Tori Amos came to the Paramount ready to perform on Wednesday night bringing some excellent musicians along with her. Touring in support of her new classical rock album, Night of the Hunters, she was more than ably backed by the amazing Apollon Musagete String Quartet. The opener, Norwegian singer-songwriter Thomas Dybdahl, made the most of his short set.


Tori Amos

Dybdahl is a singer-songwriter in the vein of Nick Drake, Jeff Buckley and Damien Rice. His songs are extremely expressive and he possesses an impressive vocal range. Most of his songs, such as “Party Like It’s 1929” are darkly humorous. Other highlights of the set included “Cecilia” and “A Lovestory.” Dybdahl’s vocals and guitar filled the Paramount as best they could. He is a true performer, connected with the audience well and even invited audience questions for a brief Q&A after the first song. I hope to see Dybdahl back in Seattle soon.


Thomas Dybdahl

Tori Amos’ set started slowly when one violinist from the string quartet started to play. One by one the other three joined in. It sounded like a storm was on the horizon, the waves of sound were crashing down. Tori took the stage and broke right into “Shattering Sea,” the first track off the new album. The material from Night of the Hunters was excellent. It was amazing to have the Apollon Musagete String Quartet backing Tori on these songs as they did on the album.

As great as the new songs were the real excitement for most in the crowd was when Tori reached into her back catalog and performed some of her most beloved fan favorites, deep cuts and covers. Early in the set she delivered a powerful, abbreviated take on Simon and Garfunkel’s “Scarborough Fair.” The short and bouncy favorite “Mr. Zebra” also made an early appearance.


Tori Amos


Thomas Dybdahl

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Photos: Stuart McLean and the Vinyl Cafe @ the Paramount

The Canadian program Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean hit the road recently with a stop in Seattle on December 13th. McLean is an accomplished author, radio broadcaster, comedian and was also a journalism professor – quite the resume. You can hear his show on many channels, and here’s where you can go to hear him in the States. Photographer Matthew Lamb caught the Seattle date, and brought some very cool and festive shots.

Photos: The Doobie Brothers @ Tulalip Resort Casino

Huge, huge thank you to photographer John Rudolph for contributing these wonderful photos of The Doobie Brothers‘ appearance at Tulalip Resort Casino in July. See, I received these photos in July, and through a major mistake on my part I didn’t find the email until just now. There, I admitted it. The Doobie Brothers released an album of new material, World Gone Crazy, last year.


The Doobie Brothers – photos by John Rudolph

Show Review & Photos: Noah and the Whale @ the Neptune

Noah and the Whale @ the Neptune, 11/17
Show Review & photos by Abby Williamson

Noah and the Whale brought me out to the Neptune for the second time in a week, and I am happy to say that I made it there on time. Several obstacles stood in my way, but I wasn’t about to miss this band after only seeing a short bit of their set at the Sasquatch Festival back in May.

I missed the opener, Nikki Lane, sad to say, as I walked in right when her last song was starting.

But Noah and the Whale did not disappoint. The crowd was young, but not too young to have known the band’s first album back in 2008. And I know that’s not that long ago, but with how many bands exist in this world, 2008 is light years away. And I am old.

The impeccably dressed band presented the show in three sections, however we were never actually told what the first section was.

“This next section is the romantic section,” lead singer Charlie Fink announced, before breaking into such songs as “Give a Little Love” and “Our Window.” Except in the middle of the section, Fink had to confess, “You know, I just realized that all of these songs are miserable, but calling it the romantic section was an easier sell, I think.” Then like a good novel, the band broke into the more lighthearted “dance” section as Fink called it, with songs like “Five Years Time” and “Tonight’s the Kind of Night” off their new album The Last Night on Earth, which is tremendously upbeat.

While the new songs are quite different and considerably more synthesizer-heavy, it’s a much happier way to end a show, especially when Fink let loose and took off his blazer and rolled up his sleeves. Another new song with a lot of heart was “L.I.F.E.G.O.E.S.O.N.” which is actually spelled out in the song. Normally I’m against the whole spelling things in songs, but this was incredibly charming.

For the encore, I was nothing short of moved. My favourite Noah and the Whale song is “First Days of Spring,” which is the most heartbreaking song I can think of at this very moment, and their live performance of it gave me goosebumps. After coming off a series of upbeat toe-tappers, to have a finale of the tension-filled ballad like “First Days of Spring,” it was perfect. Tom Hobden is a master of the fiddle, and paired with Fink’s understated delivery, the fiddle in this song made it so much more beautiful than it was on record because of the lovely acoustics of the Neptune Theater.

No wonder Jimi Hendrix played there.


Noah and the Whale

Show Review & Photos: Tony Bennett @ the Paramount

Photos & Show Review: Tony Bennett (with Antonia Bennett) @ The Paramount, Seattle WA, 12/17/11
by Marianne Spellman

Let us begin with a short introductory tale, paraphrased. . .

Once upon a time, there were two men, meeting for the first time in New York City’s Greenwich Village. The first was a young man, aged 23, who longed for a professional career in music, past his current work as a singing waiter in a few Italian restaurants in his Queens neighborhood. The second man was exactly double the first man’s age, and was one of the most beloved and successful performers of all time. The second man listened to the first man sing, and judged him talented enough to earn a spot on his upcoming tour, an incredible opportunity. What followed was a conversation that went somewhat like this:

Second Man: So, kid. . . what’s your name? Whaddya go by?

First Man: Joe Bari.

Second Man: Joe Bari? Aw, no, that’s no good, too fake. Let’s think of something better. What’s your real name? What do we have to work with here?

First Man: Anthony Dominick Benedetto.

Second Man: Whoa! OK, that’s a mouthful. Hmm. . . but why not stick with something close? How about. . . Tony Bennett? Yeah?

First Man: Tony. . .Bennett!

And that is the true story of how Leslie Townes Hope – you might know him better by his stage name of Bob Hope – renamed young Benedetto, took him on the road with him, and within two years, Tony Bennett had his first #1 record, “Because of You.”

It would have been utterly unimaginable to either man then that over 60 years past their meeting, Tony Bennett would be standing onstage at Seattle’s beautiful Paramount Theater, still singing with the same instantly-recognizable voice to a thrilled capacity crowd. I almost hate to mention that Bennett is now 85 years old, because of the assumptions that come with judging anyone who has reached advanced years. Bennett is not “great for his age;” he is great on any measure for any age: pitch, power, presentation, all 100% on. In that he makes whatever difficulties age may have brought to him seem nonexistent for the time he spends onstage entertaining people, he is all the more a remarkable person.


Tony Bennett

Indeed, there was no slacking from Tony the entire evening. His Paramount performance delivered song after song after song, a wonderful range of material from American jazz, show, and classic pop standards (“The Way You Look Tonight,” “The Best Is Yet To Come,” “Maybe This Time, “I Got Rhythm”) to “the 1st pop-country crossover hit,” Hank Williams’ “Cold, Cold Heart,” to some Christmas cheer (“White Christmas”). There were so many songs I honestly lost count, but no doubt some of the biggest cheers of the night went to Bennett’s signature song, “I Left My Heart in San Francisco,” first released in 1962.

Backed by a quartet of stellar sidemen (Gary Sargent on hollow-body electric guitar, Marshall Wood on stand-up bass, Lee Musiker on grand piano, and “Count Basie’s favorite drummer,” Harold Jones), Bennett’s warm and gracious manner further endeared him to the crowd. He very often just stood and beamed at the audience, shaking his head slightly in some disbelief at the boisterous cheers and claps and several standing ovations that enthusiastically came his way. “We love you, Tony!” called out one woman, to more claps and cheers, and Bennett acknowledged her with a nod, an even-bigger smile, and a “Thank you!”


Tony Bennett

Without a doubt, the highlight of the night for me (and, I think, surely many others) came near the end of the night. Bennett had been speaking of how lovely the theater was, how “they don’t make ‘em like this anymore,” and encouraged us all to support the Paramount. He continued, “If it’s OK with my soundman, I’d like to show you how special this building is, what it was designed for.” Bennett then waved at the soundboard at the back of the hall and requested that all the microphones and the PA system be shut off. Sargent quietly stepped up with his guitar alongside Bennett, who then gifted the hall with a textbook demonstration of both fine acoustical design and amazing vocal talent as he sang “Fly Me To The Moon,” with no amplification whatsoever. “Wow. . .wow. . .” I heard one woman speak to herself, and others in the crowd gasped as Bennett took the song’s soaring melody and delivered it beautifully, even to the very back rows of the upper balcony.

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