Friday, June 26, 2009

Michael Jackson: A Remembrance

Posted by David Schmader on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 7:24 PM

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From the intro:

How do you memorialize a one-of-a-kind musical genius who went crazy, morphed his race and gender, slept with kids, was repeatedly acquitted of child-molestation charges, and then died, alone and $400 million in debt? You’ll find our answers to this question in the collection of pieces below. (Much like the man’s life, it gets fucked up toward the end.)

Michael Jackson: A Remembrance, including:

*Growing Up with Michael Jackson (Who Never Grew Up) by Dave Segal

*The Kiddie-Pleasing Linguistic Inventions of the King of Pop by Eli Sanders

*How Michael Jackson Touched Me as a Child by Megan Seling

*Michael Jackson: Dying in Slow Motion by David Schmader

*No, Really: Michael Jackson Was Crazier Than Anyone Else Has Ever Dreamed of Being by Lindy West

*Michael Jackson, Mon Amour by Kid X, Age 12

*Posthumous Ruminations of One Pissed Angel by Farrah Fawcett

*RIP, Kate Jackson by Adrian Ryan

Find the full line-up here.

This Week in the Music Section

Posted by Chris Govella on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 5:05 PM

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Sean Nelson on indie rock and sexuality in the 1990s:

Songs About Fucking is an amazing album that I heard in an extraordinarily high percentage of the houses and apartments I visited between 1990 and 1996. But who could concentrate on losing themselves in a passionate embrace while Big Black was shearing skulls? Do you really want "Bad Penny" to come on during an intimate moment? Or how about Sebadoh, a band I worshipped, whose unstintingly detailed relationship dissections (the same relationship, dissected from every conceivable angle) and masturbation confessions trade off with spastic-screaming noise songs? It would be like using tears for lubricant. Who then? Slint? Smog? Tortoise? Palace? Silver Jews? Beat Happening? Daniel Johnston? I would be lying if I said I didn't take them on test drives.

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Larry Mizell Jr interviews Thee Satisfaction:

Thee Satisfaction will only see their profile rise with the release of Snow Motion, an EP inspired by the Great Seattle Blizzard of 2008. Recorded while the duo were living in a broke-down palace dubbed "the Madhouse" on 23rd Avenue and Madison Street (where the rats in the walls and ceiling kept them awake), the EP reflects a time when they lost friends to gun violence, suffered death in the family, struggled with money issues, and drove each other crazy with cabin fever. In a significant step up from the rough sketches of Weird, Motion carves crop circles—the duo's natural chemistry is through the roof and beyond. Irons packs more than her share of thoughtfully ill rhymes, and her bouncing, loping, space-boogie productions redshift the duo's black-upliftment sci-fi visions into heretofore unknown territories.

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Eric Grandy demystifies Major Lazer:

Diplo and Switch are clearly no strangers to this music or its makers—they're professionals who make their living in record shops and recording studios—but it's safe to say they're counting on an audience whose knowledge of dub and dancehall might not necessarily extend any further than what they've sampled in their previous productions or occasionally mixed into their DJ sets. So Guns is more of a casual survey, a vacation to Jamaica, than it is an academic guided tour. This isn't a Soul Jazz anthology we're talking about here; it's a Saturday-morning cartoon. It's dancehall for dummies, but it's not (all) dumb.

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Kelly O talks with Seth Bogart of Hunx and His Punx:

Some might recognize Seth Bogart as the keyboard player and singer from the hamburger-loving electro-pop band Gravy Train!!!!. Now he's also the mustachioed, leather-jacket-wearing lead singer of bubblegummy, homorrific garage band Hunx and His Punx. I don't think I've ever heard a band quite like them. The best way I can think to describe them is if someone put equal parts Ramones, John Waters, and the Ronettes in a blender with some ice and made hot-pink frozen daiquiris to serve at one of those big gay pool parties where everyone looks like early-'80s-era Freddie Mercury in a bathing suit. Hunx and His Punx have released singles on San Francisco label True Panther (think Ty Segall), Atlanta's Rob's House (think Demon's Claws, Black Lips, Golden Triangle), and Jay Reatard's Shattered Records. I predict their weird trashy combo of '60s girl-group styling and catchy lo-fi punk is going to seriously take them places, especially if Bogart keeps taking his clothes off every chance he gets.

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Dave Segal chats about middle eastern music with Sir Richard Bishop:

A tribute of sorts to Egyptian guitarist Omar Khorshid, Araby finds Bishop at his most structured; it also includes some of the most sensuously propulsive rhythms to appear on one of his records. His famous fiery fluidity is put into the service of traditionals, covers, and originals that tap into Arab music's predilection for florid melodies that exude a profound yearning. Traces of these elements, of course, surfaced in some of SCG's finest work, but Araby is Bishop's most explicit nod to his Arab heritage (he's half Lebanese).

Another notable Bishop aesthetic departure, Elektronika Demonika, was created on synths and shortwave radios. It conjures a much darker, even horrific, mood than his other works, which usually radiate a kind of clarity and enlightenment. That being said, some of Bishop's songs attain such a frenzied tempo—especially those on Improvika—that they inspire thoughts and imagery of a demonic nature. It brings to mind the question of whether Bishop tries to generate more light than darkness through his art.

Up & Coming details extraordinary shows and concerts for this week, like Saturday's show with Bachelorette:

(Triple Door) Bachelorette is the stage name of New Zealand musician Annabel Alpers. At the core of Bachelorette's songs on the new album, My Electric Family, is Alpers's alternately glassy and evaporating singing voice. Surrounding her singing are lush layers of traditional live instrumentation, expansive audio effects (delay and reverb up to the heavens), and tasteful electronic flourishes. The lyrics can get wincingly wonky, as on utopian electro-pop number "Technology Boy," but the arrangements—such as that song's stuttering vocals reminiscent of Morr Music softies Lali Puna—are consistently captivating. Bill Callahan is the dour tenor behind the much-loved, long-running solo project Smog. Recording under his own name for his past two albums, Woke on a Whaleheart and Sometimes I Wish We Were an Eagle, Callahan continues to churn out the terse and brutal and just sometimes bright-around-the-corners folk songs, always sung in that coldly commanding voice of his. ERIC GRANDY

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Larry previews the upcoming concert with Neema in My Philosophy:

Yo, you remember MTV Unplugged? The Nirvana one I know back to front from severe '90s radio overexposure, and, sure, we all remember that Jay-Z one with the Most Incrediblest Roots Crew (as seen on television) as his band. But what about, like, Arrested Development? Or the Yo! Unplugged set with the LL Cool J performance where he rocks the crazy acoustic funk-rock "Mama Said Knock You Out" in the weird Paddington Bear hat with the fat urinal-cake chunk of Speed Stick under his pits? Then leads an inspiring "leave that crack alone" chant? Classic.

Okay, random. Not really, though—my man Neema is doing a special unplugged set at Nectar on Thursday, June 25, with supporting superstars Spaceman and Mad Rad. What's up, Neema: Why go acoustic? "I really wanted to do something different," he told me. "I feel like I've been doing the same kind of show for the last few years, and I wanted to switch it up. Truth be told, I want something a little more grown-up." .

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Data Breaker reviews Joy Von Spain's sound:

No doubt Von Spain would make a riveting instructor, but in the meantime, she also occupies an integral position in the city's noise-music underground as half of 100Pieces with Murder, while also collaborating with various sonic brutes around town, most associated with Backwards Records. It's kind of like if Ruth White were moonlighting in Wolf Eyes.

While writing compositions of great subtlety and unconventional beauty, Von Spain also shapes extreme frequencies into experimental noise pieces that show formidable thought regarding dynamics. Her tracks' textures tend to shudder off the staves and agitate your senses with sadistic but not unpleasant astringency. Compared to most in the genre, there's much more richness of detail and expansiveness of tone palette. Von Spain succinctly describes her creative method as "Substance. Ritual. Catharsis. Repeat."

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Fucking in the Streets praises the new record by Throw Me the Statue:

Creaturesque will be the band's second album—following their much-loved (at least by The Stranger) debut, Moonbeams, which was self-released on bandleader Scott Reitherman's Baskerville Hill label in 2007 and rereleased by Secretly Canadian in 2008—and it is not entirely without the problems that stereotypically plague sophomore releases. Where Moonbeams surprised at several corners, Creaturesque feels comfortably familiar; some of the old album's endearingly rough, homemade edges have been traded for objectively better production (courtesy of Phil Ek); and so on.

But! The best, most lovable things about the band remain: Reitherman's odd knack for cramming unwieldy words and phrases into totally charming pop songs where they should really have no business, the band's simply catchy melodies and flattering arrangements, that chorus-sweetening glockenspiel.

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Michaelangelo Matos uncovers the latest and greatest in It's a Hit:

"The Girl and the Robot"
by Röyksopp ft. Robyn
(Astralwerks)

I've never been totally convinced about Robyn's merits, even when I liked her work ("With Every Heartbeat" especially), but boy does she sell this one. What an opening line: "I go mental every time you leave for work." I'll try not to take that literally. And when she gets to "I'm in love with a robot," she sounds like her wires are crossing. Röyksopp had been threatening to drown in irrelevance, so something this shameless is a marked improvement.

Casey Catherwood spotlights a new all-ages venue in Underage:

Steve Smith started the Seattle Drum School in a run-down building in North Seattle with a simple goal of providing a place for young people to learn to play the drums. As the demand for a more diverse curriculum increased, so did Smith's school. Now it's opening a supplementary all-ages venue, the Slab, in its Georgetown location (1010 S Bailey St, 763-9700), making SDS an even stronger asset for a community in need of resources for young musicians. Starting things off right, the sparkling new space will be hosting a grand-opening show this Saturday, June 27, featuring Shotty, New Faces, the Lonely Forest, and the Kleeners.

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Christopher DeLaurenti wraps up the forthcoming premieres in The Score:

Cellist Joshua Roman boldly wraps up his TownMusic season with an "all premieres" concert (Thurs June 25, Town Hall, 7:30 pm, $15/$18). Roman's chamber group debut works by a slew of living composers, including Chuck Krenner, Alexandra Gardner, fellow cellist Stefan Freund, and Lisa Bielawa. Most of the names are unfamiliar to me, which I take as a good sign. I'm hoping Gardner's "There is a reason why" for clarinet, violin, cello, and drum set skirts the rote, often clumsy writing composers bring to drum kits. I also look forward to Bielawa's The Project of Collecting Clouds, which has Roman recite a poem by Christian Hawkey as part of the performance. A longtime member of the Philip Glass Ensemble, Bielawa has a gift for shaping austere, vocal incantations into arresting melodies.

Also check out Party Crasher and Poster of the Week! Remember to check our online music calendar for a complete listing of bands, DJs and live music.

Re: BTW: One of Fatboy Slim's Best Tracks Is Titled...

Posted by Eric Grandy on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 4:35 PM

Hey! I just noticed that the vocal sample saying "Tina Turner" in the background of that Fatboy Slim song named after Michael Jackson (starts around 3:40) is totally from the same batshit anti-pop religious rant Mylo sampled for "Destroy Rock'n'Roll":


Where the fuck is that from, anyway?

Seriously. I don't care. (And don't piss me off Tour!)

Posted by Terry Miller on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 4:25 PM

It's not that I don't enjoy MJ's tunes, but as the man spun himself into dizzying spirals of utter lunacy over the past 25 years I completely lost interest.

While listening to the news last night I just kept rolling my eyes. "He was such an incredible, giving man." "Touched the lives of millions." "..." "Yadda yadda yadda."

Then Touré dropped this bombshell on an MSNBC special with Ann Curry: "Off The Wall was the greatest disco album ever made!"

I was like, Oh. No. You. Didn't. You will not try to pass off something good as something monumental, just because the poor fucker died!

Excuse me, but have you ever heard of Cerrone's Supernature? Or Donna Summer's Bad Girls? Or Giorgio Moroder's From Here To Eternity?

Shut the fuck up Touré.

At that I turned off the TV and went back to searching for cool new tunes to practice on my Ukulele.

This one is good, don't you think?

This Weekend at the Northwest Film Forum

Posted by Lindy West on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 4:17 PM

9de0/1246062113-bjork_voltaic.jpgThey're screening Björk's Voltaic: The Volta Tour Live in Paris. Eric Grandy saw her on this tour in 2007, at which time he wrote:

Björk was gnarly, out-of-this-world magic. Her stage setup was a
proper spectacle of flags, television screens, neon-clad (dare I
envoke "new rave?") backing brass band, and of course, Björk herself.
I'd never seen her before, and though I was excited, I wasn't even
ready for this. She jumped and danced and air-drummed around the
stage, looking positively elfin in a yellow gown. The jumbotrons were
intermittently flickering off or interrupted by horizontal static,
but that eventually-fixed technical difficulty didn't damper her show
in the slightest—nor did her apparently reading some of her own
lyrics off the TelePrompTer that Droste pointed out. Her band—
including the above mentioned brass players, Mark Bell (of LFO) and
another man on electronics, a pianist, and a live drummer—was
incredibly tight and adventerous. Bell's wild, electronic treatments
of older Björk material were especially impressive. And the sound was
perfect—that flutter was gone, Björk's voice was clear and primal,
and the low-end synth and drums were intense even in the open night air.

Things peaked with a mind-blowing rendition of "Army of Me"—green
lasers shot out from the stage and across the amphitheater in perfect
time with the song, and floating down there in the darkness, all made
up in neon robes and surrounded by flags, Björk's stage really seemed
like a cosmic warship landing on Earth
. If this is what the aliens
looked and sounded like, I would happily be taken over. The whole set
was incredible, and the song selection was perfect, everything was a
highlight, but especially "Hyperballed," "I Miss You," "All is Full
of Love," "Earth Intruders," "Declare Independence," Hunter," and
"Army of Me." Words more or less fail; suffice to say, I was a casual
admirer of Björk before last night's show, I am now a wholly
converted fan.

The Volta Tour screens tonight and tomorrow night at 11 pm.

BTW: One of Fatboy Slim's Best Tracks Is Titled...

Posted by Dave Segal on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 3:56 PM

"Michael Jackson."

This song popped into my head minutes after I received the news that Michael Jackson had died. Am I the only one? Fawkes? Matos? Ivers? Grandy? Schmader?

Will sales for this fairly obscure 12" skyrocket now, as clueless, grief-stricken folks mistakenly wonder about Jacko's little-heard "Fatboy Slim" single?

The Jealous Sound to Support Sunny Day Real Estate on Fall Tour

Posted by Megan Seling on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 3:33 PM

As if seeing Sunny Day Real Estate won't be awesome enough, now the Jealous Sound have been added to the bill. I'm a fan of the Jealous Sound—Kill Them With Kindness is a great record to listen to on a summer's day. I'm listening now, in fact.

Speaking of the Sunny Day reunion: Tickets for Seattle's October 16th show at the Paramount officially go on sale tomorrow at 10 am via Ticketmaster, but the pre-sale started today and will be going until 10 pm tonight. Tickets are $28 before service fees, and you can buy them here. The password is theend (many thanks to Harms for that one).

Glastonbury Envy '09, Part II

Posted by Dean Fawkes on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 2:53 PM

[Part I]

Michael Jackson has put a dark cloud over the Glastonbury Festival, but everything buzzes on.

Today, The Guardian writes: "There are alot of drag queens at The Guardian lounge. They're making wellies work for them."

And: "[Lady GaGa] has just donned a contraption that shoots sparks from her breasts. You don't get that at Fleet Foxes."

Meanwhile, BBC 6 Music writes: "Glad to see Terry Hall hasn't given in to the smilers of the world."

The Rakes, "Have you heard the good news about Jacko?"

Elsewhere, impossibly, The Streets crop-circles his face in the fields.


The Streets - Glastonbury Field

Lily Allen - Glastonbury '09

Glastonbury '09 [01]

Glastonbury '09 [02]

Glastonbury '09 [03]


Photos by Mike Skinner, Tony Kinlan, Glastonbury staff, & Anthony Devlin.

Bellingham Celebrates MJ in the Streets

Posted by Jeff Kirby on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 2:01 PM

As if I needed another reminder of why I will always love Bellingham (and Michael): Hundreds of people shut down the intersection of Railroad and Holly last night for a tribute performance of "Thriller." Truly a thing of beauty.

Video by Matt Fu.

God, It's Going to Be Sad When Jarvis Cocker Dies

Posted by Eric Grandy on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 1:36 PM

"Got to be good-looking 'cause he's so hard to see."

Posted by Megan Seling on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 1:30 PM

There are two times in my childhood I remember being inexplicably attracted to a man in a way my very innocent mind didn't yet understand. The first was David Bowie in Labyrinth. Even at the age of seven, I knew those tights were sexy. The second was Michael Jackson covering of the Beatles' "Come Together" in Moonwalker. I had heard the song over and over again (both my mom and dad are big Beatles fans), but that song was never so electric, never so hot, until I saw Michael Jackson perform it.

Gayness! Boozeness! Danceness! Tonight!

Posted by Adrian Ryan on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 1:10 PM

I wear my fickle little black heart on my sleeve—you all know this. It has therefore been made quite obvious how much I love Comeback. Indeed, according to The Big Book of Adrian, Comeback is the Gold Standard of Queer Club Nights in Seattle. And tonight is not just Comeback—it is the PRIDE Edition Comeback (they call it "Gay Shame"), the Comeback event of the year, the Comeback to put all other Comebacks to (even more), yes, shame! Beautiful fags shall twirl and collude, the sublimest of Seattle DJs—Fucking in the Streets, Colby B, PonyBoy!—will surprise and inspire your limbs to flail, copious sex will most surely be on the menu, and the entire event will be the Pride club event to reckon with—if they manage to go light on the frigging Michael Jackson remixes. (Please, God.)

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Tonight! Chop Suey! $5 before 11PM! (Come early—she's gonna fill up fast!)

New Music from the Redwood Plan

Posted by Megan Seling on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 1:05 PM

The Redwood Plan (read: one of my favorite new local bands of 2009), just released a brand new song via Twitter.

Click here to get it—the log in is trp and the password is leak. And like the songs from their debut EP, it will make you shake your ass. It is literally about moving and shaking, in fact.

The Redwood Plan are playing tonight at Cal Anderson Park as part of Bend-It's Pride festival. Their set starts at 6:15 pm, and it is free and all-ages (obvs, it's in a park!).

Where Were You When You Learned Michael Jackson Had Died?

Posted by Christopher Frizzelle on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 12:57 PM

Ben Gibbard (Death Cab for Cutie): "I was driving in la down La Brea crossing Beverly when I got a text from Nick that read, 'RIP michael jackson.' I was so shocked I momentarily forgot I was driving a car and nearly caused an accident."

Jason Finn (Presidents of the United States of America): "Super boring....I was driving around. But! Interesting side note: I don't keep up with current events as much as I should, so I actually found out about MJ and John Lennon at the same time."

Sean Nelson (writer, singer of Harvey Danger amongst other things): "I heard via text, while driving home from therapy with a copy of The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook on the passenger seat, and Scott Walker's "On Your Own Again" on the stereo—so I guess I was ready. I thought about it a lot, because as with anyone who has been between the ages of 8 and 18 at any point in the past 30 years, Michael Jackson was not just a pop figure but an archetype for pop figures (to understand, embrace, or reject) in my life. Still, news of his death didn't feel sad, or even surreal. Nor was it remotely funny either. His life was such a walking, dancing tragedy and the suffering that enshrouded everything about him was so completely off of any recognizable chart that his recognizable human life—outside the bubble of notoriety or wealth or acclaim or even genius (if genius exists or excuses anything)—seemed to have been over a long time ago. The records, which had become harder to listen to as the shadow of his unimaginably creepy and possibly monstrous real world grew ever longer, are still there. Out of duty and curiosity (and, within about two seconds of the opening bass line of "Wanna Be Startin' Something," reflexive joy), I went home and listened to Thriller, Off the Wall and a Jackson 5 Best Of. I never had Bad or any of his later stuff, but if I had, I'd have listened to them, too. Guess what: His music is still incredible. The perverse interest in his life as a drug-beset, child-obsessed, plastic surgery worst-case scenario will surely be served by the scrolls of revelations that will unfurl in the weeks to come. But that was just his life. Now that it's over, maybe the greatness of his innovative, still-astonishing music won't have to suffer from the insoluble contradiction of its baffling proximity to it."

Spencer Moody (Murder City Devils, Triumph of Lethargy Skinned Alive to Death) reached at his junk shop the Anne Bonny: "I was sitting at work, at the store. I was looking at the New York Times online, and then it came up that he had lost consciousness and been taken to the hospital. And then I refreshed a few minutes later and he was gone." When asked if he has any Michael Jackson stuff (paintings, etc) in the store: "No. I probably have some stuff he would have liked though."

Chris Cornell (Soundgarden, Audioslave) in a statement on his website: "Driving from Poland to Berlin following a show. At 1am I got the news and was immediately saddened. I remembered being six years old and seeing the Jackson 5 on our black and white TV. His brothers were cool but he had a halo around him. Superstar at 12. What promise. He had magic! It was by chance that I recorded and rearranged his song 'Billie Jean' and have been amazed at the response it gets when I perform it every night. He was amazingly talented and largely misunderstood."

Kerry Zettel (See Me River, Aviation Records): "Safeco Field, section 333, isle 16, seat 15. Mariners vs. Padres. Somewhere around the 3rd or 4th inning. My friend had just came back from the concessions stand with the news he had received from his wife: 'Michael Jackson's dead.' It was kind of eerie. I had mixed feelings about the demise of this generations most influential pop musician/creepiest tabloid headliner. Even eerier still was how quickly the news spread like a murmuring wave through the stadium as people turned their attention from the game to their mobile internet browser to confirm the passing of the pop icon."

Gary Smith (Partman Parthorse): "I was at work at Easy Street. I was chilling. We had just finished listening to Michael Jackson. I love a LOT of Michael's music. But I dont give a flying fucking shit that he died. My cat Clyde died recently... that, i cared about."

Sean Horton (Nordic Soul, Decibel Festival): "I was in a conference room with a dozen other coworkers listening to new music when our lead audio tech busted into the room exclaiming "Michael Jackson is dead!". We spent a good remainder of the meeting checking CNN online trying to verify the information, which we eventually did."

Terry Radjaw (Mad Rad): "I was playing put put golf at Funtasia in Edmonds getting my ass whooped by my lady."

Larry Mizell (Cancer Rising, They Live!, and Stranger columnist): "Literally arriving in NYC for the first time. My dad and my uncle who worked with MJ as a kid are both from here. It made me call my pops."

Devin Welch (Past Lives, Flexions): "My coworker Ryan and I were taking out the trash at the thrift store, another coworker Ian came walking up and was tripping out about how MJ was found in cardiac arrest, in a coma, I couldn't believe it. Oddly enough earlier in the day someone donated a suitcase with customs tags from Dubai on it and we had talked about how Michael had sought refuge there after his child molestation scandal. We have played Off The Wall, Thriller and Dangerous in their entirety and displayed the centerfold of Thriller draped with a single white glove at the cash register at the store. As a child I my parents didn't let me watch MTV but I distinctly remember a babysitter putting it on and dancing around my living room to Thriller, I was scandalized. Later on, me and my preteen friends used to rock out to Dangerous with those heavy new jack swing beats and MJ's weird breathy percussive vocalizations. I think 'Wanna Be Starting Something' is my favorite MJ jam though, that beat is so insane! What can you say about this guy, he is one of the greatest mutations that pop culture has ever produced. Sorry to ramble..."

Kim Warnick (Fastbacks): "Napping! My phone kept buzzing....when I finally checked it there were a bunch of texts but the first one I clicked on was from Kevin Willis saying, 'Michael Jackson is dead.' That is how I found out. So very thankful that I actually got to see the (young) Jackson 5 live at the Coliseum (Key Arena) in 1973. They did two shows that day and I went to the 'matinee' one. Who does that? A matinee?They even brought out little Randy Jackson who sang "Superstition." It was a show I will never forget, probably what it would've been like to see The Beatles. Sometimes it's awesome to be this old."

Shannon Perry (Katherine Hepburne's Voice): "I was at work. Carlos got champagne and Moon Pies, and printed out pictures on the copier. He made posters and put them on the wall of his office. We wrote letters to MJ, and watched our favorite videos."

J-Justice (SunTzu Sound, City Soul Radio): "Sitting at my desk. Wishing I was working on music instead of dealing with my dayjob. Decided to check twitter and it all went down from there!"

Adam Swan (Truckasauras, Foscil): ”Drinking a 40, smoking a blunt... I heard it first as a rumor on Twitter. Funny how the Internet was way ahead of the 'real news.' Thriller was my favorite album as a kid. Terrible news."

Lars Finberg (the Intelligence): “Celebrating getting engaged today in Amsterdam.”

Chris Martin (Kinski): “I was woken up by my host in Tokyo, Tabata from Acid Mothers Temple and Zeni Geva, and told that Michael Jackson, Farrah Fawcett, and Sky Saxon all died on the same day. Now I'm going record shopping.”

Joy Von Spain: “Watching the video of ‘Rock With You’ with those splendid sparkly boots. And pants. And shirt. And jheri curl.”

Jeff Albertson (the Lights, Lamborghiniz): "Like most people I was sitting at my desk checking Facebook updates. It's sad that such a talented and gifted performer was reduced to frail shell of his once vibrant self. I prefer to remember him as the charismatic child performer that blew people away with his tremendous voice at an early age and then shocked the world by moonwalking across the stage on the 1983 television special Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever."

Kerri Harrop (publicist, the Crocodile): "Fittingly, I was online, updating my Facebook page. By the time the Jackson 5 video uploaded, reports that MJ had kicked the bucket were rolling in. My first thought: Wow, way to steal Farrah's limelight. Second: TMZ is an actual credible news source? Weird. And, lastly: Dude sure had some cuts. The speed in which this pop culture news has traveled is mind boggling. What incredible media times we live in."

In This Time of National Mourning, Let Us Not Forget Bubbles the Chimp

Posted by Wm.™ Steven Humphrey on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 12:08 PM

Though Michael Jackson has departed, our friends at BWE have graciously reminded us that we shouldn't forget those he left behind: in particular, BUBBLES THE CHIMP! If you can remember back to 1987, you'll know that Jackson was rarely seen without his adorable little hirsute pal. For good-time memories check out this video of Michael and Bubbles visiting Japan, in which the chimp demonstrates his impeccable table manners, devout religion, and the ability to moonwalk. Wait… MOONWALK?!?!



BTW, Michael is survived by Bubbles who is currently alive, well, and enjoying his retirement at a ranch in Sylmar, California.

A Tough Act to Follow

Posted by Eric Grandy on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 10:27 AM

So, obvioiusly, the best part of last night's Major Lazer show was when opener DJ Ayres of the Rub gave over a big chunk of his set to an all-Michael Jackson megamix, expertly selected and spliced for maxiumum dance-floor euphoria (not that that's hard to achieve with MJ), a loving celebration of the man's artistic triumphs. After Ayres eventually mixed out of that set—with "Throw Your Hands Up for Detroit" (?)—a DJ friend remarked that the more modern dance music he started playing actually sounded dated. And it's true—Michael Jackson's classic cuts still sound like they could have been recorded yesterday (chalk that up to a combination of no doubt ridiculous studio power and undisputed singular genius).

It was a tough set to follow, although Major Lazer did all right. Last night the Major was represented by Diplo but no Switch, which attendees of Switch's last Decibel performance might not think is that big a deal (the guy's an amazing producer, but not so essential as a DJ—mostly just stops one track, triggers an echoing sample shouting "Switch!" and then cues up the next). Still, his absence was odd. Joining Diplo on the stage was an under-worked MC (DIplo was playing the vocal versions of Major Lazer's tracks, leaving the MC to just add echoing hypemannerisms) and two exotic(ized) dancers. I was surprised at how 4/4 and tech-housey the set was early on, although Diplo worked up to the more dancehall rhythms later; throughout, it was perfectly thumping and bumping and crowd-pleasing. And goofy: Major Lazer's premiere cut, "Hold the Line," was mixed into that ubiquitous surf guitar song from Pulp Fiction which was then mixed into "Wipeout," like Diplo was just unspooling samples.


Split around 1am with a stop-off at the Fish Fry on the way out, and was pretty sure I heard more MJ coming through the walls of the fry-shop.

Today in Musical Deaths

Posted by Eric Grandy on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 10:01 AM

My iPod. Fuck. That thing had a lot of good work yet to do.

Update: Thanks to Brian Geoghagen's suggestion, I am now using Senuti to recover 4,910 songs to an external hard drive. That shouldn't take long, right?

Tonight in Music: Thee Satisfaction, Daniel G Harmann, Thunderbird Motel

Posted by Chris Govella on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 9:00 AM

Larry Mizell Jr on Thee Satisfaction:

Music1_TheeSatisfaction_BlushPhoto_KristenTruax-570.jpg

Feelin' Alright, Thee Satisfaction, MKNG FRNDZ, The Redwood Plan, My Parade, the Get Off and Lesbianic
"It's been interesting, because we get a lot of love from the hiphop community," says Harris-White. "But it's kind of slower on the queer side—because we're hiphop, we're black. Maybe they're afraid their shows are going to get shot up, just like hiphop heads are scared their shows are going to get queered up. The thing is, fear is the same all over, no matter who you're fearing. But things are changing. We're performing at the Wildrose, and we're doing Pridefest, which is a big, big, big deal. Sure, it maybe took a little shoving, a little 'hey, we're doing stuff, and we'd like to, y'know, be a part of our community!'"

In Up & Coming:

Osaka Explosion, Daniel G. Harmann & the Trouble Starts

(Jules Maes) Daniel G. Harmann's newest release, the Our Arms EP, finds the stalwart Seattle musician expanding and further electrifying his beautiful downer ballads with the help of his band, the Trouble Starts. In the past, Harmann has sometimes played things lo-fi and spare, and while his foggy singing and his sad songs certainly don't suffer from that treatment, they tend to land with a little more satisfying weight this way. The songs are still sleepy-headed and soft, but they're wrapped up in warm, buzzing guitars against far-off echoes, with hard-hit drums holding everything down. It's mope rock for sure, but it's pretty lively mope rock. ERIC GRANDY

Thunderbird Motel, Antique Scream, High Class Wreckage

(Blue Moon) There's nothing on Thunderbird Motel's new record, Rock It Til the Wheels Fall Off, that you haven't heard before—blistering guitar solos, spoken-word intros about "feelin' sneaky," quick blasts of rock and roll with cocky lyrics about being an 18-wheel trucker and the kind of guy your "momma told you not to let in the door." But typical blues-tinted rock be damned, these dudes still deliver the goods. They're gritty, gnarly, and dirty—they're named after a motel on Aurora Avenue, for chrissakes. And just like that establishment, the sole reason they exist is to ensure that you have a good time, at least for one night. MEGAN SELING

Also, you can browse our online calendar for a complete listing of bands, DJs and live music.

"Having Been Fucked Is No Excuse for Being Fucked Up"

Posted by David Schmader on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 8:36 AM

Kimya Dawson's immortal words re: Michael Jackson, from "My Heroes (Are Falling Apart)"....

One Gay Thing I Will Be Doing Tonight…

Posted by Adrian Ryan on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 7:25 AM

GLAAD, is so much more than just a quality sandwich bag to we Gays. GLAAD is also the "Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation." And if you didn’t know, we gays really, really hate defamation. (Unless we’re the one’s doing it, naturally, in which case we love it, but let’s not stray of topic.) Tonight they are holding a drinky and delicious Pride soirée at Purr (just across the street from Valu Village—what’s that smell?—and The Stranger offices, if you must know). I’ve been asked to attend. They are going to give away a copy of my new book! I’m sizzling with excitement!

It is a little mixer they are throwing called TGIF (you know, "Thank GLAAD It’s Friday"? of course.) that is aimed at something called “professionals”. “Young gay and lesbian” ones, specifically. And although I’m not exactly sure what this thing “professional” is, hey, whatever…BOOZE! No defamation! Me! PRIDE!

Please join us. You will be surely GLAAD you did, har har.

At PURR (1518 11 Avenue), $15, 7PM-to-9PM, tonight.

Everyday Music's Michael Jackson/Jackson 5 Sections Decimated

Posted by Dave Segal on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 1:37 AM

I hit Everyday Music around 10 pm Thursday and headed straight for the Michael Jackson CD section. It had been picked pretty clean, along with the Jackson 5 selection. I was hoping to score Off the Wall, but no luck. Over in the vinyl bins, I found zero MJ platters and a few (very cheap) copies of the Jacksons' Triumph and a best-of J5 collection.

Store manager David Miranda told me that within minutes of Jackson's death, Everyday Music experienced a crush of customers seeking MJ's releases. "This 60-something, toothless Caucasian woman came in frantically looking for a copy of Thriller," he said. "That really tells you how broad [Jackson's] impact was."

He said he put in an order for 65 copies of Thriller, which are expected to arrive Saturday within a couple of weeks.

Below is my favorite J5 song that hasn't been over-played.

The Night Michael Jackson Exploded America's Mind

Posted by David Schmader on Fri, Jun 26, 2009 at 12:28 AM

I addressed it a few years ago in "10 Things That Made Us Say 'Wow' Since the Dawn of Time":

MICHAEL JACKSON PERFORMS ON NBC'S MOTOWN 25 TV SPECIAL

For those of us who witnessed it, this moment is indelible. On May 16, 1983, mid-way through a lip-synched performance of "Billie Jean," Michael Jackson, a hyper-talented little nellie boy whose album Thriller was about to change pop music forever, unveiled a new dance move and blew the world's mind. Known as the Moonwalk, the move saw Michael taking a simple step forward, then gliding effortlessly backward across the stage and into the pop culture stratosphere. Never mind that Michael's earthshaking move had been swiped from inner-city break dancers, or that, in later years, this cute and charming black guy would be replaced by a pasty-white child molester. Michael Jackson's Moonwalk achieved what all great art aspires to—bonding his audience in awe, propelling its maker to new heights, and simultaneously making and improving upon history. Can Neil Armstrong's boring, actual moon walk of a decade and a half earlier even compare with Michael's dazzling artistic reinterpretation? No.

And Fnarf eloquently expounded on it in the comments to this post:

When Michael turned the world upside down at the Motown anniversary show, EVERYONE was watching: white, black, young, old, rich, poor and middle-class. I was a "punk rocker" then, or something like one; but although we had our Prince albums in rotation we were pretty cut off from black music; but the grapevine told us to watch, and we did, and Michael lit the world on fire. Truly, it was Elvis on Ed Sullivan, or The Beatles on Ed Sullivan; it was all anybody could talk about, and the punks bought Thriller just like the gay disco boys and the grandmothers with granddaughters did.

It's true. America's love affair with Michael Jackson was an amazing thing to behold. As for the instigating performance: It's a freaking lip-synch. And it's still fucking amazing.

(Truly, he'll never be better than this. He got so mannered, so fast...)

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