Archive for April, 2009

weekend agenda: win tickets for an evening with hardly art

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the pica beats, via hardly art

Over the past two years, Sub Pop spin-off Hardly Art has assembled an impressive roster of mostly local, generally quietish, a bit folk-inspired, sincere, fuzzy, and crushworthy bands. On Saturday, a couple of them — the Dutchess and the Duke and the Pica Beats — will be playing at Neumo’s. Both have formed relatively recently and have gathered much-deserved buzz for their overwhelming charm

We have a pair of tickets for one of you to warm up to them first-hand. Send an e-mail to seattle.metblogs@gmail.com with “PicaBeats” in the subject line and your real name in the text and we’ll pick a winner tonight. Those providing fun facts about ampersands may receive priority.

// The Dutchess and the Duke, Pica Beats, the Drug Purse. $12, 8pm. [neumos]

Weekend Film Agenda April 3

Italian film director Federico Fellini first read the works of psychiatrist Carl Jung in 1961, under the influence of Ernst Bernhard, a well-known Jungian analyst. Fellini was so blown away by Jung’s ideas on the role of archtypes and the human unconcious that he immediately started incorporating them into his movies along with such techniques as non-linear timelines, surrealism, and psychedelia. Fellini is recognized today as one of the most signficant directors of his time, one whose influence upon the filmmakers who followed him is still considered highly potent even in these days when major studios wouldn’t dream of funding a movie half as avante garde as his best known works. One of these movies is playing this weekend at NWFF: Satyricon, set in ancient Rome is loosely–very loosely–based on the surviving fragments of an epic poem some believe the be the world’s first novel and is an acid trip of disordered time, vivid and often overwhelming symbolic imagery, and a story that sometimes makes sense. Also at NWFF is another Italian director’s film from 1969–Luchino Visconti’s The Damned, a striking and shocking account of the rise of facism in 1930s Germany told through a series of stimulating set pieces.

Max Solomon is 24 years and 364 days old when the horrible truth strikes him: he’s never going to be the great writer he’s always imagined himself to be. Bored with listening to his equally undistinguished friends prattle on about the things they’re going to do and be “someday”, he impulsively walks out of the diner where they’ve been hanging out, crosses the street and robs a bank. His boldness inspires his friend Tommy to get a job and his friend Dave to worry a lot. Directed by Monty Miranda and starring the script’s writer, Spencer Berger, in the lead role, Skills Like These is a quirky, offbeat comedy that slows down a bit after the initial excitement of its opening scenes but remains genial in a low-key way largely due to the likeability of its ensemble cast. This SXSW winner opens Friday at SIFF.

Winged Migration, the amazingly appealing film about birds flying, is this weekend’s Film4Families feature. I say “amazingly appealing” because the first time I heard about it, I found myself wondering outloud just how interesting a full-length feature about avian flight could possibly be, but once I saw it, I was hooked. Very young children might have a hard time sitting still for it and sensitive kids might be a bit upset by a short hunting scene, but most kids (and grown ups) will be enthralled by the stunning cinematography and the palpable sense of wonder that comes from watching the freedom of flight. As an added bonus, the movie is followed by a visit from D1, a Peregrine Falcon from the Woodland Park Zoo.

These days the “X” rating is a meaningless marketing tool for the porn industry where everything‘s got that designation but back in 1974 Italian film director Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Arabian Nights X-rating was significant. Even by today’s much looser standards, this is a not a film for the young; in fact, Grand Illusion isn’t admitting anyone under of the age of 17 to their screening of Pasolini’s adaptation of three erotic tales from the legendary and ancient One Thousand and One Nights. (Yes, Virginia, they had sexy stories way back then, too.)

If you somehow missed In Bruges when it was in theaters last year, you’re not alone: the black comedy about a pair of hit men (played by Colin Farrell and Brenden Gleeson) sent to Belgium to cool off from the heat in London got a lot of critical praise but not a lot of wide distribution. If you’d like to see it, you’re in luck this weekend as it is the midnight film at The Egyptian Friday and Saturday.

“Bad” on a multiple of levels, Predator may be the only action movie of the 1980s starring two musclebound men who would eventually become governors of large states in the USA. Since it stars current California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and co-stars former Minnesota governor Jesse Ventura in a story that involves the CIA, the US Army and a Guatamalan guerilla army, it could be tempting to see Predator as an elaborate political tale, but it’s really just a fun, fast-paced sci fi action flick, ideal for watching over pizza and beer at Central Cinema.

Readings, signings, and other events vaguely literary for Friday, April 3, 2009

my-abandonment11:00 AM – Herb Leonhard: St Patrick and the Three Brave Mice
Barnes & Noble, University Village
Illustration Demonstration
[LINK]

7:00 PM – William Dietrich: The Dakota Cipher
UW Bookstore, U-District
Third in a historical mystery series. Ethan Gage sets out to find Thor’s Hammer and/or a tribe of Caucasion native Americans.
[LINK]

7:30 PM – Peter Rock: My Abandonment
Elliott Bay Book Co.
The Portland author reads and signs his strange and uncomfortable, yet very beautiful, fifth novel.
[LINK]

thursday agenda: mirah, rock pix

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Mirah photo by Liz Haley, courtesy K records.
  • It’s first Thursday; so there’s an art walk in Pioneer Square. While you’re meandering from gallery to loft to workspace, drop into the Gibson Guitar Showroom where Blush Photo is showing off favorite shots of candid moments from Seattle’s music world and See Me River will be providing free musical entertainment. [flickr]
  • As mentioned previously [mb] Mirah begins her fall tour behind her new album (a)spera (a quivery collection, made in collaboration with fellow Portlanders and K-Records regulars) tonight at the Vera Project. $15 [ticketweb]

Free Tip of the Day

What’s more fun than rain, snow on April Fool’s Day and wind? I know, Alpacapalooza!!! This weekend you can drive to Puyallup (not free) and step into the land of alpacas. Everywhere you look tall, short, baby, old, furry, skinned and perty alpacas will be. I believe there will be contests, a la the dog show, but I go just to pet and buy the yarn.

Alpacapalooza is free for all.

bumbershoot celebrates its thirty-ninth birthday by kissing a girl

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Thinking about Labor Day in April is kind of depressing. Here you are, wet and looking forward to the arrival of Spring and not the waning days of Summer. Yet this is what Bumbershoot asks of you with their sneak peek at the schedule for their 39th annual festival at Seattle Center:

Sheryl Crow / Modest Mouse / Katy Perry / Michael Franti & Spearhead / De La Soul / Raphael Saadiq / Isobel Campbell & Mark Lanegan / The Long Winters / Sly & Robbie & the Taxi Gang / World Party / MSTRKRFT / Roy Ayers / Common Market / UH HUH HER / Dave Alvin and The Guilty Women / Eric Hutchinson / No Age / Matt & Kim / Dead Confederate / The Cave Singers / Swollen Members / Vieux Farka Touré / Lenka / Gang Gang Dance / Todd Snider / Holy F**k / DJ Spooky / Iglu & Hartly / Low vs Diamond / Sera Cahoone / Eleni Mandell / Carrie Rodriguez / The Honey Brothers / Natalie Portman’s Shaved Head / Extra Golden / Cordero / Forgive Durden / Hey Marseilles / Adrian Xavier, and many more to be announced.

As usual, the some of the headliners are confusing (who, again is Michael Franti and how is it that he and Spearhead show up at every festival every year?) and the undercards are compelling mix of national and local. But hey! Modest Mouse on the mainstage! And a stadium full of teens singing along to songs about dreams of flirtation with heteroflexibility!

Of course, music is only half the story and the rest of the arts — literary, dramatic, dance, film, and food — program is looking good with installations from DJ Spooky, posters from Moscow, comedians to draw long lines, and Tom Douglas curating a literary series.

Three day passes are selling for $80, which still looks like a bargain. Get them now and read more about the lineup at bumbershoot.org.

Ducks invade campus

Duck on campus

The April-cember weather has convinced fowl invaders to settle parts of the UW campus previously reserved for pedestrians, such as flooded pathways.

Readings, signings, and other events vaguely literary for Thursday, April 2, 2009

6:30 PM – Lisa Lutz: Revenge of the Spellmans
SPL Ballard Branch
The Edgar nominated author of very funny mysteries visits Seattle to sign the third novel in her Spellmans series. This is Lutz’s third appearance in two days.
[LINK]
the-long-fall
7:00 PM – Walter Mosley: The Long Fall
NAAM, $7
The incredibly prolific author joins the NW African-American Museum, Elliott Bay Books, and the Central District Forum for Art & Ideas to read and sign the first of a brand new series. In The Long Fall, Mosely introduces NYC PI Leonid McGill.
[LINK]

7:00 PM – Wendy Parciak: Requiem for Locusts
Fremont Place Books
A community struggles to understand and help a mentally challenged young woman.
[LINK]

7:00 PM – Hill Poems: Release Party
Richard Hugo House, Cabaret
“A reading and release party for the collection, “Hill Poems,” featuring work by local poets, including Chris Dusterhoff, Erin Foran, Amanda S. Halm, Heidi Heimarck, Brian McGuigan, Michael Ricciardi, Alexandra Rossetter, Mercedes Sanchez and Monica Schley. All poems are about or related to Capitol Hill.” Or, as Poets West puts it: “Poetry Collection about Capitol Hill’s degradation into a yuppie hell and the conversion of apartments to condos and the effect on the community. Edited by Steve Barker and published by Jacob Brooke Press.”
[LINK]

7:00 PM – Stacey Levine & James D. Newman: Who’s On First? Reading Series
Arundel Books
Arundel’s 1st Thursday reading series:

Stacey Levine’s 1993 collection of short tales, MY HORSE AND OTHER STORIES- her first book publication- was awarded the PEN-West award for fiction. She is celebrating the release of her newest book THE GIRL WITH BROWN FUR.

James D. Newman is a Seattle writer who has hosted and read at hundreds of spoken word events on the West Coast including Art’s Edge, Bumbershoot and the Seattle Poetry Festival. He makes a half-hearted attempt at avoiding movements and labels.

flotsametrics
7:30 PM – Curtis Ebbesmeyer: Flotsametrics and the Floating World: How One Man’s Obsession with Runaway Sneakers and Rubber Ducks Revolutionized Ocean Science
Town Hall Seattle, Great Hall, $5
The Seattle oceanographer revolutionized the science of chaotic ocean currents by tracking trash. Brilliant!
[LINK]

7:30 PM – Jeffrey Masson: The Face on Your Plate: The Truth About Food
Town Hall Seattle, Downstairs, $5
The evangelical vegan and animal welfare activist will explain how only veganism will save us. Or something.
[LINK]

in other blogs : ignoring the sitka & spruce rumors since 1998

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photo by zeebleoop [flickr] via our group pool [#].
  • I leave town for a weekend and a Rancho Bravo takes over the old KFC indoor taco-truck style!? [capitolhillseattle]
  • That, and the rumors of Pony’s resurgence in an abandoned floral shop might just be true. [captothehill]
  • Twee your heart out with Tullycraft and BOAT and free hairstyles on Saturday at the Croc. [vain]
  • Speaking of twee: cops on trikes with sirens? Just say no. [seattlest]
  • You’ll get your chance to vote for the bag fee (and against the nefarious scheming of the out of state chemical lobby) this August. [seattlecourant]
  • On the occasion of a Real World casting call in Pioneer Square, flashback to the Seattle season that marked the beginning of the show’s end. [bigblog, with a bonus link to the biggest trainwreck of them all towleroad]
  • Three billion people have taken a trip on Metro. Many have even paid for the privilege. [seattletransitblog]
  • Edith Macefield tattoos are springing up faster than condos. [blackbird]

Free Tip of the Day

Go! Hurry! Quick! Free! Porn! At! White! Castle!

For today only, White Castle in Capitol Hill (the adult erotica store), is letting everyone rent one “movie” for FREE!

You’re welcome.

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