Seattle Weekly: Your new record, 2012, which K Records issues this week, sounds very much like a companion to last…
Terrence Malick’s North American paradise is visited by fallible colonists. Nature child Pocahontas somehow redeems them all.
This nonprofit tea bar lives up to its name. Its atmosphere is more relaxed than you’re likely to find at…
Armando, “Trance Dance” (Trax; originally released 1993). iTunes Hieroglyphic Being, “Je Suis Musique” (Spectral Sounds). iTunes L’Usine, “Breed” (Designed Disorder)….
How Mudhoney survived 10 years in the major-label wilderness and a shifting lineup to produce their best album yet. Getting down in the basement with rock’s clown princes.
Alison Krauss, Jimmy Sturr, and Smoosh.
THURSDAY VISUAL ARTS ENDURANCE There’s a strange sense of the right hand not knowing what the left is doing this…
The monorail campaign just keeps getting fatter. With one month to go before the November election, Rise Above It All…
The daily newspapers probably wouldn’t agree, but from this utterly unbiased observer’s perspective, it looks like we’re having a City…
JUDAS PRIEST Unleashed in the East (Columbia/Legacy) Seen through the rear view, metal gods still godly. More prescient bands such…
Rostropovich thinks aloud; Sheppard wears his heart on his sleeve.
London DJ Jumpin’ Jack Frost discusses life on Planet V.
People, Politics, and Media
Kevin Phillips, Timothy Egan, Dale Peck, and Andy Greenwald.
SUN – FESTIVAL Pike Place Market just wouldn’t be Pike Place Market without all those folk singers/jugglers/flea circuses jamming the…
Also: Ani DiFranco, Smoke and Smoke, Rough Trade Shops: Indiepop 1, and Marianne Faithfull.
Psychedelic rockers and ambitious women take over Seattle’s clubs.
Week one: Our critics report from the trenches.
Two drummer-led bands enlarge Earshot’s jazz kit.
Send listings two weeks in advance to visualarts@seattleweekly.com. Lectures and Events Architecture Tour: Free to Be Fremont Some would say…
