Friday, July 3, 2009

Friday Night Fetch*: Quipsters

Posted by Gina Young on Fri, Jul 3, 2009 at 7:47 PM

* In which we talk to people on the street about their clothes.

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Gina Young: Mercado, what the hell are you wearing— are those glasses even real? Do you need glasses?
Nicole Mercado: I do need glasses, but I wear contacts. These glasses aren't prescription. They're actually considered sunglasses, but with clear lenses. I bought 'em in a boutique in Spokane for $10. So... pretty much I wear glasses AND contacts.


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And skinny jeans? Do tell.
Do you see me in flared jeans? C'mon now. Awkward city. That would remind me of when I used to wear platform Sketchers. It just doesn't work. Skinny jeans are my niche. I can't go back.

Do you think there is a Capitol Hill "look?"
Definitely. Capitol Hill is just so inventive. Everyone tries out different things. The other day I wore baseball pants, and although it was a little weird at first, I actually got praised for it. Pin-striped baseball pants!
Nice. Are you from Seattle?
Not originally; I'm from good ol' Eastern Washington. I came here to go to school.
Was your style this fetching in your undergrad days?
My first few years at UW, my style was definitely... Eastern Washington. But being in Seattle and around such craziness, I came out of my shell fashion-wise. The hair started to look like a Tegan & Sara mullet, the jeans got tighter and the t-shirts became more vintage and less Abercrombie.

So you abandoned Abercrombie as a rite of passage. What other brands do you eschew?
I try to avoid the mall.
Conversely, what brands do you like?
Members Only jackets. Sperry boat shoes. Tank tops by Blayne Walsh— those are designed locally and available at Strut Boutique in Belltown. Oh, and anything Value Village.

So Merc, forgive me for asking this, but are you a hipster? Do you identify as a hipster?
Hahahaha... I've had this conversation so many times!
I bet.
I identify as a queer. Is it possible for queers to be hipsters? Or are queers just inherently fashionable?


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You tell me. Or better yet, tell me this: do you judge people based on what they're wearing?
Hmm... I might be more likely to talk to someone wearing a pair of skinnys with an old school Spice Girls t-shirt than I would be likely to talk to someone sporting a pair of khakis... I think you look on the outside how you feel on the inside.
And how do you feel on the inside?
Colorful.

Tonight in Music: Dirty Projectors, Derrick May, Valis, Green Day

Posted by Chris Govella on Fri, Jul 3, 2009 at 9:00 AM

In Up & Coming:

Dirty Projectors, What's Up?

(Chop Suey) Portland's What's Up? create the sort of manic, netherworld pop that makes them ideal openers for Dirty Projectors. Restless, odd rhythms spasm below weirdly tuned keyboards and guitars that unpredictably billow and surge. A quasi-African notion of intonation animates the playing; songs sound like they're headed to non-Western places via the prog-rock path of most resistance. Their Content Imagination CD (on the Obey Your Brain label) is all instrumental and mostly rewarding, in a puzzling, furrow-browed way. DAVE SEGAL See also Stranger Suggests, and preview.

Derrick May, Pezzner, Nordic Soul

(Neumos) If you've never seen Derrick May work the decks, you need to catch this DJ gig at Neumos. Forgive me if I've written this before, but it bears repeating: The Detroit techno innovator is a brilliant electronic-music historian who invariably does the crucial job of educating and entertaining over multiple eras and styles; dude dropped a Pigbag cut in a fantastically polyrhythmic house and techno set last time he came through Chop Suey. Seattle's Pezzner (of Jacob London fame) is a freewheeling producer ushering minimal techno into some of the most enjoyable hot spots it's ever been taken. Fellow local Nordic Soul (Sean Horton) possesses an uncanny ability to read crowds and adapt to myriad situations, abetted by deep crates and deeper knowledge. DAVE SEGAL

Green Day, the Bravery

(KeyArena) Recently, a friend suggested that my continued, if seldom expressed, affection for Green Day's classic albums Kerplunk and Dookie was just misguided nostalgia, that these albums hadn't aged well, that my teenage tastes were just bad. While I'll concede that last point on some occasions, in this case, my friend is very, very wrong. I gave these records a spin the other day just to make sure that they were still exemplars of the East Bay pop-punk genre, and sure enough they totally rule. I lost touch with Green Day before they entered their current phase of scoring big, radio-ready, face-palmingly political mall-punk rock operas, but a quick listen to American Idiot and the new 21st Century Breakdown reveal the band have managed to take to their new role without completely embarrassing themselves. ERIC GRANDY

Valis, Stone Axe

(Comet) Featuring ex—Screaming Trees member Van Conner, Valis peddle heavy rock that's neither outwardly psychedelic nor exceptionally beautiful nor bracingly powerful enough to stand out from muscle-bound rock's middling masses. Sorry, Van. Screaming Trees wrote much better melodies, and so did Solomon Grundy, Conner's other group, for that matter. Port Orchard, Washington's Stone Axe conjure a guttural, soulful hard-rock cauldron that suggests they've absorbed their share of Humble Pie and Thin Lizzy. Singer Dru Brinkerhoff valiantly rasps in ways that make Steve Marriott and Rod Stewart comparisons seem not at all absurd. DAVE SEGAL

Octagon Control, Le Face, B-Lines, Le Shat Noir

(Funhouse) Line Out commenter (and Police Teeth guy) J. Burns pointed my internet browser in the direction of Bellingham's Octagon Control recently, and I can't thank him enough. Octagon Control remind me a whole lot of the convulsive punk rock deployed by Seattle's defunct Popular Shapes, only here the guitars are replaced by one fuzzed-out bass guitar and some spastic keyboard riffs. Everything is going about a million miles an hour, and the singer has the ideal sort of smart-assy snarl to complement the racket. Dudes currently have a split 7-inch out with Philadelphia's Doctor Scientist; here's hoping we hear some more from them in the record department soon. GRANT BRISSEY

The Fall of Troy, Black Houses, Beware of the Sea

(Sunset) Seattle's guitar-shredding, screamo-influenced trio the Fall of Troy have been very quiet this year, as they've been hiding out in the studio writing new material with Terry Date (Pantera, Deftones, Smashing Pumpkins' Zeitgeist). Tonight we'll finally be able to hear the fruits of their labor, and you folks who might've shrugged off the band in the past may want to reconsider not attending, as working with Date has uncovered a new sound for the band. Singer and guitarist Thomas Erak says people can "expect a more mature and musically pleasing Fall of Troy. The new material is a lot more grown-up. It's darker and more moody, as opposed to just being fast and wild." MEGAN SELING

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

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