Supreme Beings of Leisure find delight in the details.
The Science Fiction Museum frames the past and present of glitzy and gritty futures.
No one’s contacted me, so I assume I’m not yet being considered for the Nobel Peace Prize. This happens to…
Ludacris’ Chicken-N-Beer goes flat out of the can.
Wed Live Music Asteroid Café Kevin McCarthy Duo at 10 p.m. NC 3601 Fremont Ave. N., 547-2514. Café Bella Vanya…
Also: Daylight Basement, Silver Jews, Good for What Ails You: Music of the Medicine Shows 1926–1937, Stevie Wonder, and Lightning Bolt.
A hundred years of ballet history in one PNB program.
Also: Spirits of Life: Haitian Voodoo and Isolée.
I remember the day when I didn’t have to be so grown up and serious about music. The first record…
Send listings two weeks in advance to visualarts@seattleweekly.com. Last Chance Atelier 31 Rebecca Raven’s 2- and 3-dimensional paintings inspired by…
Wire is still relevant—and underground—after all these years.
Why the scourge of the Internet might be unstoppable.
Lectures and Events ARTIST LECTURE: ALFREDO ARREGUIN The Mexican-born Seattle painter talks about his work, which combines the visionary and…
How a nightclub overcame fierce competition and adapted to the gentrification of its neighborhood to thrive for 10 years—and counting.
Spiritualized sense something floating around.
Guy-bash outrage
SUBARACHNOID SPACE, ALIEN CRIME SYNDICATE, and VELVET TINMINE
On the new documentary Neil Young: Heart of Gold.
How much is “Louie Louie” worth? The Kingsmen are about to find out.
Rhett Miller of the Old 97’s celebrates the little thrills in his Carver-esque songs.
