Then go here and take a crack at "Secret Agent." You have until July 7.
Tony Allen was the rhythm doctor behind Fela Kuti's vastly influential Africa '70 bands. When anyone uses the term "afrobeat," you should think of Tony Allen.
Their August 22 show at Re-bar has sold out. Uh... gee. We're going to see if we can convince them to come up for two nights. Stay tuned.

It didn't make this week's Up & Coming listings, but tomorrow Neumos celebrates its five year anniversary, a not insignificant milestone for a locally owned club/venue, with a FREE show featuring the Helio Sequence, Grand Hallway, and Palmer Electric Co. (Doors are at 8pm, it's 21+, and you can pick up your free tickets at Moe Bar.) Asked how they've managed to keep the club in business for five years, co-owner Steven Severin says, "No more than two shots a night (most nights anyways). Gotta get up in the A.M. and make shit happen." Asked what plans they have for the next five years: "Sleep. Ha ha. World domination...at least 10th and Pike domination." Congrats, guys.
Cleaning crews have found a dead body in a tent at this year's Bonnaroo Festival:
Coffee County authorities say a cleaning crew found the body of a white man in his 20s in a tent on Tuesday. Authorities said the man was last seen alive about 3 p.m. Monday.Sheriff Steve Graves says there were no signs of trauma to the body. Police are trying to determine his identity. They think he may have been from Alabama.
(via The Daily Swarm)
I never thought I would post a Keyboard Cat video on a blog. But this should really become the final Keyboard Cat video. It involves Keyboard Cat, Helen Hunt, Hall and Oates, and someone who I think might be the late, lamented Adrienne Shelley, and it is totally epic for YouTube.
(Via Videogum.)
Hey Old Man in Vegan Shoes: Mike Dirnt designs an animal-product free shoe.
Touch and Go... to Another Label: Quasi signs to Kill Rock Stars.
Delay Denied (Again): The Chris Brown trial will go on as scheduled. Again.
The Least Exciting Feud Ever: Mariah Carey takes a swing at Eminem via her new record.
Miss World Returns: Courtney confirms her next record will be a Hole record.
Bad News/Good News: As Polyvinyl downsizes, they're putting everything on sale.
The Stranger is bringing Slog superstars Garfunkel and Oates to Seattle for one night only. G&O will be performing live—songs, stories, and with special guests—at Re-bar on Saturday August 22. Their Seattle show will be Garfunkel & Oates second ever outside of LA. (They're appearing at the Toronto Comedy Festival in July.) Order your tickets to Garfunkel and Oates—just $10!—by clicking here.
A party on a Russian ship in the middle of the ocean, a solar eclipse, and Boredoms: Sounds like a blast, just take it easy on the hallucinogens, lest you never come back from this one.
Organizers of Tokara The Sun & Moon Festival have booked a Russian ferry and hired the Boredoms, along with New York’s Gang Gang Dance and Japan’s Goma, to play a show during the next Saros 136 eclipse, which will take place July 22. The spectacle is subtitled, “The Lucy in the Sky With Diamond Ring Tour.”
July’s eclipse will be extraordinarily long — the totality of the eclipse, the point at which the moon is fully obscuring the sun, will reach 6 minutes, 39 seconds. According to NASA, the umbra of the eclipse will cut a path straight across China and the South Pacific, with the best viewpoint off the southern coast of Japan, at 24.2 degrees N, 144.1 degrees E, when the sun is 86 degrees overhead.
The Shook Ones released their new album, The Unquotable A.M.H., this week, and AP currently has a full-stream of the record here, if you wanted to try before you buy.
The cover of Mos Def's new album...
...is taken from a film, Killer of Sheep, made by the greatest black American director in the history of cinema, Charles Burnett. Killer of Sheep was completed in the mid 70s; in the early 90s, Burnett completed To Sleep With Anger, the greatest of all black American films. Mos Def's album also has a track that features the singer of my moment, Georgia Anne Muldrow. Her art is to raise singing to the condition of wind.
Mukilteo audio company Rane is hosting a night at War Room (722 E Pike St) Fri. June 26 titled Scratch Live Appreciation. It will run from 7 pm-9 pm and is free. There will be giveaways and an appearance by elite turntablist DJ Shortkut (Invisible Skratch Piklz, Beat Junkies, Triple Threat DJs).
Rane tech support guru Chad Simer describes Scratch Live as "a digital DJing software that allows you to mix MP3s with vinyl and also allows for video mixing."
More info after the cut.

So last night brought PJ Harvey and John Parish (plus band) to the Moore, as part of a tour in support of their recent collaborative album A Woman A Man Walked By. Sticking to the theme, Harvey and Parish restricted their set list to tracks from their two album-length collaborations, both of which find Harvey indulging her dramatic side (I call it "Countess Beefheart") over alternately moody and gritty songscapes by producer/musician/friend Parish.
The results, both live and on record, are intelligent, high-drama rock that has the whiff of an art project. This was particularly acute at last night's show, which felt more like a recital than a rock show. Songs were perfectly executed and starkly staged, the whole band clad in black suits, with Harvey barefoot in a short black dress. "Get your guitar!" someone yelled during a pause between songs. "Guitar will be handled tonight by Mr. John Parish," replied Harvey with a smile.
The encore brought a Parish solo track, a perfectly fine number than raised expectations of a retaliatory solo-PJ composition. (Trying to think of what PJ track would fit best with the band and show-in-progress, I settled upon "Hook.") But it was not to be. The final song of the night was another Harvey-Parish song, followed by a long and lusty standing ovation and The End.
I'll happily attend any recital PJ Harvey deigns to give. But I'll trample people I love to see her full-on, solo-setlist shows. (Her 1995 show at the Moore remains the most amazing rock show I've ever seen, and her 1993 show at Under the Rail—featuring Pablo Honey-era Radiohead as opening act—is in the top ten.)
UPDATE: I cannot argue with a ticket stub. (See comment #7.) The opening band for PJ's '93 Seattle show was an unimpressive Moonshake, not an unimpressive early Radiohead. PJ's awesomeness remains uncontested.
Music critic Christopher R. Weingarten on why folks like he and I won't have jobs this time next year (please hold your applause for the comments):
(via Idolator)
First ANTI- signs the Field, now they nab Brazilian psych-prog legends Os Mutantes, proving it to be one of the most unpredictable and diverse labels extant. Mutantes plan to release Haih on Sept. 8, their first collection of new material since 1974's Tudo Foi Feito Pelo Sol.
Mutantes' Seattle show in 2006 was fantastic, against the odds of typical reunion gigs. It'll be very interesting to see if they can still capture that uniquely charming, exploratory spirit in their music after all these decades. Collabs with fellow Tropicálistas Jorge Ben and Tom Zé raise our expectatoins for this release.
Leader Sergio Dias observed:
Living the conception and birth of this album, as an individual, was the most intense experience, for it was as if time has ceased to exist, and I was bouncing from life to life, decades through decades, revisiting myself as a 16 year old boy playing guitar and feeling so free and, as any teenager, indestructible.
More info here.
The song below is instant, eternal happiness.

Fleet Foxes drummer and accomplished troubadour in his own right J. Tillman has premiered a new song over at pitchfork today. It's called "Earthly Bodies" and its from his forthcoming album, Year in the Kingdom, out September 22nd on Western Vinyl. I haven't heard the track yet, because I haven't registered for pfork's new mp3 player, but you should try to give it a listen and let us know what you think in the comments. Here's the track listing for the new album:
Year In The Kingdom
Crosswinds
Earthly Bodies
Howling Light
Though I Have Wronged You
Age Of Man
There Is No Good In Me
Marked In The Valley
Light Of The Living
In Up & Coming tonight:
The B-52s(Woodland Park Zoo) With their beehive hairdos, retro lingo, and Hullabaloo dances, the B-52s were a nostalgia act from the beginning—which makes their transition to actual nostalgia act both poignant and meaningless. Helping: the band's surprisingly high-quality recent output, with last year's Funplex a fun and filthy addition to their oeuvre. At tonight's zoo show, expect a smattering of Funplex tracks alongside every single B-52s song you know and love. (They like to have fun even more than you do, and the eternal thrills of their greatest hits are still not lost on them.) DAVID SCHMADER
The Germs, Poison Idea, Krum Bums, the Bloodclots(Neumos) Look, don't even sweat it that the Germs have replaced Darby Crash with a 31-year-old Hollywood actor named Shane West who starred in that reverent, dull movie about Darby Crash last year. Never mind the children dressed like 1977 and the creaky old geezers like Jello Biafra and Fat Mike who are whining that that's disrespectful, that's inauthentic. Darby Crash was the opposite of authenticity—he was a Ziggy Stardust fan, a fabulist and epic liar who burned up his life trying to turn it into myth. So some buffed and blow-dried Hollywood type with nice skin and well-tended teeth wants to step into the shoes Jan Paul Beahm willfully vacated almost 30 years ago? I'm not so sure Darby Crash would've disapproved. BRENDAN KILEY
For more concert listings and shows, search our online music calendar!