Photos and Review: Fran Healy @ Triple Door

Fran Healy
Triple Door, Seattle
Wednesday 18 August

It’s a Wednesday evening, and HH and I have just been seated at Seattle’s Triple Door.  The venue is in the middle of downtown Seattle, and with its courteous staff, luxurious seating and glowing candles, feels almost like a spa resort compared to the usual amped-up, smacked-in-the-head, beer-spilt-on-shoes experience provided by most alt. music venues.  It’s nice to sit down, but the flipside, of course, is that even if your high school guitar hero happens to be playing, showing excessive excitement will be frowned upon – this is the place for a nice night out, not a hipster moshpit.  I couldn’t help feeling more than a little decadent when our waiter asked if we would like to order any drinks.  I settled on a mainstage, and HH opted for a mango daiquiri.  Brought to us by a waiter I refered to as Dave Grohl for the rest of the night, the daiquiri was the consistency and taste of slightly soft sorbet, while my cocktail was so potent it left my husband wincing from across the table.  Wuss.

It is not usual for an act to start on time, and even less so for there to be no support act.  Despite the lack of filler, it was still an unbearable wait, so HH and I played “Fran’s Outfit Bingo” to pass the time after answering the question “I wonder if I can get wireless internet in here?”.  He puts his money on converse, and “a stupid hat”, while I’m willing to bet on a vest, stripey shirt, blazer, turnup jeans, and that he’ll shamelessly plug his mailing list.  We didn’t do very well, but all was forgotten in the excitement of Fran emerging on stage – I’d been a Travis fan since my teens, but had never managed to see them live until last year.

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The sad sack of britpop’s tail-end delivers two hours of witty banter, chronicling the rise of the band from art-school obscurity to TOTP regulars.  Despite the reputation, Healy had the audience in hysterics for most of the evening, with his self-depricating wit making him completely relatable. Scottish band Travis played Showbox at the Market last year, but tonight sees Healy on the US leg of his first solo tour, with a deadpan “let’s keep this just between us” in reference to his absent band members.

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The setlist spanned over two hours and covered material from the entire six-album Travis discography, as well as some choice offerings from Healy’s upcoming solo album, Wreckorder.  Healy collaborated with a number of musicians for the release, including Andy Dunlop, Neko Case, and Paul McCartney.  Fran may have grown up since his first record, but still has his moments of hero worship like the rest of us, with more stories to tell that will surely become the stuff of legend.  After asking McCartney to play bass on ‘Fly in the Ointment’, he convinced his family to become vegetarians in favour of a material thank-you gift, saying “He’s probably still opening stuff from the 60s”.  McCartney’s response?  “He was stunned…like thinking ‘this guy’s mental!'”.  A few days later, Healy opened a FedEx package to discover three Linda McCartney cookbooks, topped with a post-it note reading “Hope this is enough to get you started – Love, Paul” – which now takes pride of place on the family’s fridge door – not bad for a guy whose first band was called Glass Onion.

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Gone were the amps and electric guitars that were prominent in Healy’s last show here – instead the audience was treated to an acoustic set with just Healy’s guitar and a piano (“Forgive my banana fingers”), in some cases forgoing even the microphone.  The new material is promising, with ‘Sing Me To Sleep’ (feat. Neko Case) proving lovely to listen to, despite Healy’s claims that “you can’t tell the difference between the man and the lady”.  Another favourite is ‘Rocking Chair’, a ballad of dementia inspired by British newsreader John Suchet dealing with his wife Bonnie’s slide into Alzheimer’s disease.  Healy’s music still sounds full and heartfelt minus all the trappings, no matter what his wry disclaimer may be.

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Setlist:
20
Writing To Reach You
More Than Us
Anything
Sing Me To Sleep
Side
My Eyes
Rocking Chair
In The Morning
As It Comes
Indefinitely
Buttercups

Encore:
Re-Offender
Blue Flashing Light
Turn
Flowers in the Window

You can view more photos from the night here.  Wreckorder is released October 5th and can be pre-ordered here.

By Nicky Andrews

Photos and Review: KISW Pain in the Grass 2010

I had the gracious opportunity to shoot this year’s Pain in the Grass festival put on by 99.9 KISW. In the past, I have shot for their sister station 107.7 The End, but never for KISW. I didn’t know what I was going to expect going into this so I was a bit nervous and expecting the worse to happen.

First off, traffic was bad getting into Auburn and trying to get through parking was even worse. Due to that, I had missed the first three bands that played (Post Modern Heroes, My Darkest Day and the 15th reincarnation of Drowning Pool) Plus a mix up with my photo pass made it even more difficult to get down to the VIP area.

After that was all cleared up, I made it in time to shoot the last 5 acts of the festival which included; Godsmack, Sevendust, Black Label Society, Puddle of Mudd and Shinedown. I will say this, I’m not a big fan of Metal, but this had to be the best festival I have shot this year! The fans were off the hook and the bands were very gracious for their attendance, something I haven’t seen at any of the festivals I have covered. Out of the bands that blew me away live that title has to go to none other than Godsmack. The light show and stage antics of frontman Sully Erna had the crowd going nuts the entire time. A close second has to be a tie between Sevendust and Shinedown.

Needless to say, I had a lot of fun at Pain in the Grass and I can’t wait to shoot another KISW event again as they were not only gracious, but all the staff was fun to be around.

On a sad note, I am bummed to hear Endfest will not be held this year. I had my hopes high to shoot this, and being the 20th anniversary of 107.7 The End is coming up, this was the event I had hoped to shoot… Maybe next year?

To see more photos including backstage and interview shots, Click here to view my Flickr gallery.

By: Xander Deccio

Sevendust

Puddle of Mudd

KISW Rock Girls

Black Label Society

Shinedown

Crowd Shots

Godsmack


Photos: Barcelona & Ivan & Alyosha @ the Triple Door

Two Seattle bands, Barcelona and Ivan & Alyosha played the Triple Door recently in a show I would have attended if BBS hadn’t hosted a show at the Comet the same evening. Fortunately photographer Jason Tang was there and captured some gorgeous shots of both bands. Ivan & Alyosha plays the Triple again on September 10th.

2010.08.20: Barcelona @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

2010.08.20: Barcelona @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

2010.08.20: Barcelona @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

2010.08.20: Barcelona @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

2010.08.20: Barcelona @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA
Barcelona

2010.08.20: Ivan & Alyosha @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

2010.08.20: Ivan & Alyosha @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

2010.08.20: Ivan & Alyosha @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

2010.08.20: Ivan & Alyosha @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

2010.08.20: Ivan & Alyosha @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

2010.08.20: Ivan & Alyosha @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

2010.08.20: Ivan & Alyosha @ The Triple Door, Seattle, WA

More of Jason’s photos can be seen here.

Photos & Show Review: Margaret Cho with John Roberts – The Cho Dependent Tour @ Paramount

Margaret Cho Marquee @ Paramount - Seattle, by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.comThe Cho Dependent Tour features the ribald, risqué, and downright raunchy live comedy of 41 yo, Korean-American comic, Margaret Cho. By the way, Cho – could easily pass for a girl in her twenties – as you see in the photos – she looks great! I think laughter keeps you young.

Colorful tattoos on display with a quite pretty dress and killer silver shoes, Cho hit the Paramount last night, seemingly dropping every punch line to an admiring audience. Now, her comedy is not for the faint of heart, nor anyone that has an easily (or even moderately) offendable bone in their body. In fact, if you can be offended at all, well, you should probably find an alternate form of entertainment from this show. Because it’s bleeping hilarious, and all the unmentionables are, well mentioned – whether it be sexual acts, preferences, her assurance that she must be but one life from being reincarnated as the ultimate life form – a gay man.

Yep, Margaret Cho is a no holds barred roaringly long, hard, rough ride of my belly hurts laughter – because yeah, I am down with things being funny, because being offended simply takes too much energy! And laughing about all the quirks about sex, life, love, family, and friends is so much more fun!

The funniest stories, well, again, probably I can’t quote here – but, just imagine – a couple tunes scattered Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com into the comedy, one of which recalls/ode to, her once unrequited love (of 17 yrs) of former writer (from her ’90s series), that when she looked him up on her 40th birthday, found is now serving time for murder of his wife…the punchline – “good thing we didn’t hook up!” It’s that ability to turn the morbid to comedic genius that makes Cho brilliant on stage.

She in turn does this again, though less morbidly – when recalling the “heroic” craziness from the recent Jet Blue flight attendant freak-out, and emergency chute escape – yes, Cho is able to turn pure WTF newsy moments, into laughter. Stories of Porta-Potties, medical marijuana lollipops, closed vaginas, senior citizen strip clubs – and more – barely give a hint to the 1.5 hours of raunchy comedy you get at a Cho Dependent Tour stop. She is just f-in hilarious, and she brings along her fave gay comic, John Roberts to warm up the crowd.

Photos from the night:

Margaret Cho –
Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

John Roberts –
John Roberts opening for Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

John Roberts opening for Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com

John Roberts opening for Margaret Cho - by Elisa Sherman | photosbyelisa.com