With its fourth anniversary, Jumbalaya proves Seattle’s longest-running musical melting pot.
Last week, you were either a This American Life person or a Salman Rushdie person, and there really was no…
The pirates are coming! The Federal Communications Commission’s recent decision to license noncommercial low-power FM or “pirate” radio stations heralds…
Send listings two weeks in advance to visualarts@seattleweekly.com Lectures and Events Architecture Tour: Art Deco A walking tour of Seattle’s…
Local band The Lashes hits it big at Austin music fest. Plus: News from Northwest Chamber Orchestra and PONCHO.
SATURDAY VISUAL ARTS FRAUD A fabulous gala party kicks off ConWorks’ fall multidisciplinary series, this time trading on the theme…
Send listings two weeks in advance to visualarts@seattleweekly.com. Lectures and Events Artist Lecture: Kristin Tollefson The Bainbridge Island native talks…
THE HOLIDAY BIG BROADCAST Take a trip back in time with a mix of radio vignettes and television-inspired material in…
DUMB READERS Just read some of your Best of Seattle [July 26] and was disappointed to see that DV8 held…
Seattle Weekly Music Awards winners.
From chamber music to jamming with Jerry Garcia, Seattle transplant Buell Neidlinger has done it all.
GILBERTO GIL, Music from the film Me You Them (Atlantic) A common curse among superstars, it seems, is the compulsion…
Luke Vibert is a man of many guises, but his eclectic style remains the same.
DAREDEVIL Opens Fri., Feb. 14 at Meridian and others The only guy having any fun in this hokey, ploddingly literal-minded…
One year. 273 songs. 22 hours of 2004’s best music.
Few spots in town get as cozy and convivial as the back room at the Owl ‘n’ Thistle, where the…
Nestled amid art galleries and upscale boutiques in downtown Kirkland, Cactus is a gem. The restaurant specializes in authentic Southwestern…
Mercifully, there’s been very little this season in the way of millennial retrospectives (“Top sports moments of the past thousand…
King County Council prepares to crack down on keggers, wood chippers, and backyard band practices.
¡Cubanismo! carries old-time Afro-Cuban rhythms to a modern audience.
