interview with lonesome shack

March 19, 2013 in interviews, lonesome shack

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The vocals are distant and sound as if they’re coming through to you via a walkie-talkie, the guitar spits dusty riffs, the drums boom and clank longingly, impatiently, thoughtfully.  Somewhere a bass thuds boogie grooves of heart thumping sonorous sounds, and occasionally a saxophone weeps the sad tale of city man.  These aren’t some long lost blues recordings plucked from the mud of the  Mississippi delta, these are the gritty, weathered sounds of Seattle’s own blues inspired Lonesome Shack.

Though the name sounds like it was ripped from the back of an old blues album, which it was, it was also the name of a real shack, built by the architect of Lonesome Shack Ben Todd.  The shack was a small wood structure built off the side of an old tractor trailer, in the middle of Alma New Mexico, in f Catron County, right on the boarder of New Mexico and Arizona.  The New Mexico board of tourism, officially lists Alma as a ghost town.  Not so coincidentally, Ben describes the sound of Lonesome Shack as Haunted Boogie.

That trailer and shack would serve as Ben and his girlfriend’s home for ten years, before attending a Luthier school in Phoenix, which eventually brought him back home to the Pacific Northwest, to work at the Trading Musician on Roosevelt Ave. in Seattle, where he would fix and build guitars.  Just one block south of the Trading Musician was the quirky, Cafe Racer, which hosted a weekly performance from Ben.

This is where Ben met Kristian Garrard, a drummer, who knew exactly what Ben needed, real percussion.  Together they put out three albums, Bound to Die, Slidin Boa, and last year’s City Man.  Recorded live at Cafe Racer, City Man would effectively bring the duo full circle, back to where it all began.  Though by this time the band had expanded, adding bassist Luke Bergman (who plays in Kristian’s other band Thousands) and Andrew Swanson on Saxophone.

The story of City Man, is full of heart break and ingenuity.  It was Kristian’s idea to go for broke and record the album in front of a live audience at Cafe Racer.  Lonesome Shack had always seen themselves as a party band, they played best in front of an audience, feeding off that live, and ravenous energy.  City Man is far from a polished and precise album full of effects and edits, it’s a live and raw recording, a aural record of one night of music at Cafe Racer.

That was April 6th.  Nearly two months later on May 30th Ian Stawicki entered Cafe Racer and opened fire, killing four and injuring another.  It would kick off a bloody day as Stawicki would later take the life of another before ending his own in West Seattle.  The incident rocked the community to it’s core, especially those at Cafe Racer who were already a tight knit group.

City Man had been posing a host of problems for Kristian and Ben, the recording was messy, far messier than they had hoped.  They were toying with scrapping the whole thing and instead recording the album at their home.  But following the shooting, they were determined to find a way to make the album work.  It wasn’t just a live album full of problematic sounds, it was a recorded memory of friends, some who were killed on May 30th.  City Man is dedicated to the victims and their families, and serves as a fitting tribute to the scene at Cafe Racer.

When you talk about bands in the Northwest who for one arbitrary reason or another haven’t received the recognition they deserve, certainly Lonesome Shack tops the list.  Perhaps too traditional for the indie scene, and not blues enough for the blues scene, the band is left in limbo.  They shouldn’t be garnering attention simply because they’re some kind of novelty, but rather because there’s just so few who manage to do what they do, as good as they do it.  Their music makes you want to dance, and hours later the rhythms and melodies are still clanging around your body.

There’s a strong emotional core to this music, it catches you off guard, but it’s present throughout their catalog.  The tear educing City Man, the giddy smile of Longtime Love, the cool fear of Robert Pete, or the solitary isolation of Down and Alone.  It could be so easy to quickly judge this band without giving them a chance, they are so much more than any simple surface description that I could muster.

Just as with Lindsay Schief and Angelo Spencer, though certainly not purposely, not long after interviewing Shana Cleveland I returned to her home which she shares with her boyfriend Ben Todd, to interview Ben and Kristian.  City Man had just come out and  not long before that I’d seen them woo a packed house at Cafe Racer.

I would see them again at 20/20 Cycle, once again filling the house so full that people had to be turned away.  Though they’re still making the same kind of infectious music that they made years ago when Kristian joined up with Ben, it seems that finally they are beginning to receive the recognition they deserve.  There are many ways to describe a good show, fun doesn’t necessarily apply to all, but with Lonesome Shack it certainly does.

I’m guilty of building opinions of musicians before even meeting them, based purely on the type of music they make.  I fear that they’ll be pretentious, snobbish, or even just rude.  As excited as I was to meet Karl Blau I was nervous for our interview, my fears were completely unfounded.  The same could be said for Kristian and Ben, I had wrongly assumed that only serious no nonsense musicians could have devised the genius music of Lonesome Shack.  I could not have had more fun interviewing them.  They were relaxed, fun, and more than welcoming.

Occasionally I feel like I manage to strike just the right chord in an interview and hit on all the right answers.  As a result I feel particularly proud of the final result in this interview.  I felt like we really got to the core of what Lonesome Shack is and how they work.  While this written interview serves as a nice jumping off point, I strongly urge you to listen to the full audio podcast.  Which you can listen to right here, or in itunes.

 

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brian snider
The story goes that Lonesome Shack began in an actual shack that you built yourself in New Mexico.

ben todd
A friend of mine from Bellingham owned some property in New Mexico and he wasn’t living there at the time, so I asked if my girlfriend and I could move to his land.  So I got a sixteen foot travel trailer and pulled that onto his land, and built a shack off the side, using the trailer as one of the walls, so I only had to build three walls.  That became the Lonesome Shack.  Lonesome Shack is also the name of a Memphis Minnie song, but it became the name of the shack, and eventually the name of the band.

brian
You were recording some music and putting it on tape?

ben
I think the first tape that was called Lonesome Shack was around 2002.

brian
How did that get around?

ben
Mostly just sending them to friends.  We had a “huge sale” once, at a wedding that we played.  I think we moved ten tapes.

brian
How did you find your way back up to the Northwest?

ben
After being in the Southwest for about ten years I went to a Luthier school to learn how to fix and build guitars in Phoenix.  I was there for a year and I didn’t know where I was going to go after that.  I was either going to move to Tucson or New Orleans.  I ended up getting a job offer at Trading Musician in Seattle.  I wasn’t planning on moving back but the job seemed like just what I was looking for.

brian
How did you two meet?

kristian garrard
When Ben came back here, he started playing weekly shows at Cafe Racer on Roosevelt.  I lived around the corner from there and my girlfriend at the time was a bartender there, so I hung out there a lot, and would see Ben play every week.  I’d been playing drums for a long time, and at some point it occurred to me that we should try to play together.

ben
He said if I ever felt like I wanted drums, he’d be into trying that out.  Then I saw him play drums in this old band that he used to be in and I noticed that he was really good.  I used to stomp my feet on a little box, and I’d do some percussion with my feet.  So I had some rhythm going on.  Once we tried playing together, I felt like it clicked right away.  My song writing has changed partly because of the way Kristian and I work together.  Because I think of rhythm or a part, that I think is interesting rhythmically.

brian
Up until this most recent album, City Man, it had just been the two of you.  But with City Man you added bass and saxophone.  Was it a choice to be just a two piece before.

kristian
It’s easier for touring, but we just didn’t want to complicate things too much.  I like the bareness.  Our record Slidin Boa, that’s just drums and guitar.  If you listen to it back to back with almost any other band recording, it sounds very empty.  Thin guitar and booming bass drum.  We were trying to go for that spareness.  We’ve always looked at ourselves as a party band, whenever we play at Racer we encourage dancing, we get drunk and play for a few hours.  Adding the bass, just gave us an extra element of something to dance to.

ben
It thickens it up a little.  That bass is a good frequency for people to feel as they’re dancing.  The sax was so appropriate for the song City Man, because it’s the “urban sound.”

brian
It’s rare for an album of original music to be recorded live first.  Why choose to do a live album?

kristian
The set up of the recording was no different, it’s just that we did it all in one night in front of an audience.

ben
Kristian came up with the idea.  It sounded like a good thing to shoot for.  Why not try it.  It’d be novel, because this happened in one evening.  You’ve got to let it go and let it be what it is.  You can’t nitpick over little things.  There’s plenty of stuff that I wasn’t happy with in my performance, but overall I was really happy with how it sounded.  I think it’s good to let go of some of that perfection.  For the style that we play it works really well, to have that live sound spontaneity, to hear the crowd.

kristian
We definitely play better in front of an audience.

brian
Was there any extra challenge to recording this way?

kristian
The mix was challenging.  We couldn’t figure out how to mix it and have it sound as jamming as we’d hoped.  It was messy, there was a lot of bleed from all the mics being live.  The raw material was pretty rough.  We almost scrapped it and wen’t “alright, let’s just do it at home.”  But I had a few ideas that I wanted to try, and it ended up working out okay.

ben
I’m happy with the way it turned out.  Some of the original mixes just didn’t sound that great.  So we did quite a bit of post production.  There’s only so much you can do with live recording.  We took the final mix and put it onto a cassette, cranked up the levels a bit to get more compression, and add some crustiness.  That technique has worked really well.

brian
The album was recorded live at Cafe Racer on April 6th of last year.  Just shy of two months later there was a shooting that took place there.  As a result, you dedicated the album to the victims and their families.  Did that effect how you proceeded with this album?

ben
I think it did.  There was a time when we were on the fence about whether we would use this recording, and that definitely pushed it more towards wanting to use it.  Because of the significance of Racer to us and the fact that a few of the people the were shot were at the show, and you can hear them on the recording.  I wanted to use it more after that happened, to honor the scene there.

kristian
That was definitely the driving reason why we kept the live recording.  There’s a moment in the end of the last song on the record where you can hear Drew, who was one of the people killed, yell his signature phrase, “goddamn!”  He used to say that almost every song.

ben
If he thought that it was a good song.

kristian
That’s a special moment on the record. The last thing you hear before it fades out.***

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You can purchase Lonesome Shack’s albums as a digital download, audio cassette, cd, or vinyl album at lonesomeshack.bandcamp.com.  You can see them live in the coming months; at Blue Moon Tavern in Seattle 4/13, Cafe Racer in Seattle 4/19, and the Comet Tavern in Seattle 6/22.  Keep up to date with all their comings and goings at Lonesomeshack.com.

As I said before, while this abridged article is certainly a good look into a unique and talented band, I strongly urge you to give the full podcast interview a listen, there’s some much to learn from these guys, and so many insights into how they create their amazing music.  Listen to the podcast here, or in itunes.

 

lonesome shack: website/facebook/twitter

 

episode 15. lonesome shack

March 19, 2013 in the podcast

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In episode 15. lonesome shack, I interview Kristian Garrard and Ben Todd.  Named after an actual shack built by Ben Todd in New Mexico, Lonesome Shack began making records after Ben met Kristian while playing at Cafe Racer.  To date they’ve recorded three albums, Bound to Die, Slidin Boa, and City Man, recorded live at Cafe Racer.  You can find them at lonesomeshack.com.

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city arts best new music, gets it totally right

March 1, 2013 in lists

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What are you up to City Arts Magazine, with your best new music issue?  What’s that?  You’re listing off the 10 best new bands in Seattle?  Oh, and you totally hit the mark? SWEET!

I came across the latest issue of City Arts Magazine, who by the way is right about things most of the time.  This was their “Best New Music” issue, where they featured ten new(ish) bands.  And what to my wondering eyes should appear, but a hand full of my favorite local bands.  Lemolo, Deep Sea Diver, La Luz, Reignwolf, and THEESatisfaction.  Really, every band on the list is amazing, but those five have all been mentioned here on Secretly-Important, and Lemolo, Jessica Dobson the frontwoman of Deep Sea Diver, and Shana Cleveland the frontwoman and mastermind of La Luz, have all been featured in interviews here.

If you don’t know who these bands or any of the bands on the list are, then you should acquaint yourself, because they’re going to be taking over the city very soon.  I couldn’t be happier for all these bands, they’ve worked so hard to receive this very deserving recognition. Even just being some dude who interviewed a few of these bands makes me extremely proud.

Pick up the issue, wherever free newspapers and magazines are distributed, probably a street corner near you.  Also make sure to check out the online article were City Arts compiled a playlist for these bands which can be downloaded for F-R-E-E.

Lastly, if you want to hear the voices of Meagan Grandall and Kendra Cox of Lemolo, Jessica Dobson of Deep Sea Diver, and Shana Cleveland of La Luz, talking about their music etc. check out our podcast.

LAKE on tour with r. stevie moore

February 20, 2013 in events

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Recent guests on the podcast and all around favorites LAKE are going on a smallish tour with the legendary R. Stevie Moore.  They’ll be hitting all three west coast states including the fine province of British Columbia.  If you’re in Seattle tomorrow, they’ll be playing the Crocodile.  If I didn’t have a big meeting I would be there in a heartbeat.  LAKE has written a lot of new music over the last year and you can bet that you’ll be hearing some of it on this tour.

 

interview with LAKE

February 8, 2013 in interviews, LAKE

LAKE

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I attacked this profile from every  angle, I symbolized, I mythologized, I literalized and still I could not boil the essence of what LAKE is or what LAKE means to me, down to something simple and compact.

By the mid 1990‘s the boom of the Grunge years had begun to decay, and by the late 90‘s we were reading it’s obituary.  The great tradition of music in the Northwest didn’t die, it was simply struggling to find it’s place in a post grunge world.  In the mid 2000‘s a new generation of artists living and working in the PNW emerged, finding their way to a new and hungry audience.

In 2009 I was living in Los Angeles and had been removed from the burgeoning music scene of the PNW.  It was sheer accident that I stumbled upon the song On The Swing, a hauntingly beautiful fantasy of a song by LAKE.  Soon after I took a trip to Amoeba records, and as if placed their by the hand of fate, I found LAKE’s catalog of music waiting for me.  A year and a half later when I decided to move back to Seattle, one of my first thoughts was how much closer to their music I would be.  Who were these people that made this music that so easily destroyed me?

LAKE: Lindsay Schief, Ashley Eriksson, Kenny Tarantino, Eli Moore.  That these disparate artists would find each other in the same city, let alone the same band, is so serendipitous that it sounds like I made it up.  Lindsay was a recent transplant to Los Angeles from Michigan, when through a friend of a friend she met Ashley.  Through Ashley she would meet Kenny, Markly Morrison, and Andrew Dorsett who was a transplant from Florida.  It was on a whim that Lindsay would move to Olympia Washington, where she met and collaborated with Eli Moore who was originally from Whidbey Island.  When Eli took a trip to California to visit an uncle, Lindsay suggested that he meet up with Ashley, and miraculously he did.  Soon after Ashley would move to Olympia, and not long after that, everyone else would follow.

By 2006 LAKE had recorded and self-released their first album the self titled, LAKE.  Recorded by Karl Blau in Anacortes at the now defunct Department of Safety, it would be the first of many albums and collaborations with Karl who is like the Neil Young to Crosby Stills and Nash.  Their second album simply referred to as Cassette (after the fact, because until recently it was available only on cassette) was recorded with members of the Portland band Typhoon.  Originally these recordings were seen as raw demos to be polished and refined later, but in the end they contained too much “spontaneous magic,” and the album was left as is.

Their next album was Oh The Places We’ll Go, originally self-released, before Calvin Johnson founder of the infamous K-Records expressed interest in re-releasing the album under K.  They would release two more albums for K in the coming years, Let’s Build A Roof and Giving and Receiving.  This past year the band recorded two more albums both of which are in the process of being completed.

Magic is a word that I often think of in reference to LAKE, whether it’s their unlikely formation, the sound of their music, or their glaring passion and talent.  I find myself at a loss for words when it comes to meaningfully describing the music of LAKE, one part the jazzy softness of Steely Dan, one part the endlessly addictive melodies of Fleetwood Mac, and one part R. Stevie Moore quirk, the rest?  As banal as it sounds… magic.

If there is a cradle for that magic you could say it’s in the band’s ability to collaborate.   There are no defined roles in LAKE, songs are constructed by exploiting members strongest attributes.  It’s birthed in the writing process and continues all the way through to live performance.  A song could be written, played, and sung by anyone on any instrument.  This can be challenging for live performances, as song beaks become Chinese fire drills, wherein everyone dashes to find the instrument needed for the next song.

LAKE is at their best when they work in conjunction to one another, alone they are all amazing musicians, each of have appeared in other music, Baby Island, Skrill Meadow, Solid Home Life, among others, but something happens when they come together to write music.  I often think of their album titles as being perfect representations of what the band stands for, Oh, The Places We’ll Go, Let’s Build a Roof, Giving and Receiving, it’s obvious.  It’s possible to imagine that the emotions I feel when listening to LAKE pales in comparison to the emotions the band feels when they finish writing a song together.

I originally contacted Eli about an interview back in February of 2012, at the time the band was just beginning to work on the first of the two albums recorded last year, and Lindsay was still a member.  By April the band would have moved on to a second recording in Phil Elverum’s Unknown studio, and Lindsay would step away from the band to attend Evergreen State college.  I interviewed Lindsay in the midst of all this transitioning, it was a bittersweet time for everyone it seemed, the first LAKE album not to feature Lindsay would turn out to be improvisational(esque), thrown together in just a matter of days.  Even in a changing landscape LAKE took their collaborative efforts to new heights.

When finally I caught up with Ashley, Eli, and Markly (Andrew couldn’t make the taping) it was mid November and much had changed since my original email.  I’ve come accustomed to taking the trip down I-5 south to interview artists, coincidentally Ashley and Eli’s house was just blocks from where Lindsay and Angelo Spencer live.

It was a surreal experience to be sitting there talking to a band that just a few years earlier I had only envisioned in my head.  What wonderful and delightful people, I interview artists because I’m fascinated to hear what they have to say about music and get a small peek into their artistic process.  I keep interviewing artists because they have all been such welcoming and generous people.  An enormous thanks to everyone for taking the time to sit down with me and talk about themselves, without question, every artists least favorite topic.

As always, what follows is just a slice of what you’ll hear in the full podcast interview.  So take a listen to the podcast here or in itunes.  And don’t forget to “like” us in facebook and subscribe to us in itunes.

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Brian Snider
When I interviewed Lindsay Schief, she was in the process of playing her last few shows with the band, before moving on to attend Evergreen state college.  What has it been like moving on without her?

Markly Morrison
She’s an element that we miss.  It’s a tough void to fill, but it’s forcing us to think more creatively.

Eli Moore
We did an album without her in Anacortes with Paul Benson (Ever Ending Kicks) filling in.  The feeling was different for a multitude of reasons, but it was more experimental, it was very therapeutic to do something and hear it, and still have it sound like LAKE but be different.

Markly
We Kind of Pulled it all out of thin air.  We went into the studio with next to nothing, and largely made it up as we went along.

Ashley Eriksson
It felt really healing to do it at that time, instead of moping.  It was fun.  They [Eli, Andrew, & Markly] would sometimes just record the songs and I would be outside working on lyrics.

Eli
A third of that album is music that we wrote collaboratively, including lyrics.

Brian
You recorded the first LAKE album in Anacortes with Karl Blau, and at this point you’ve worked with him so often that I see him almost as a member of the band.  What about his process keeps you going back to work with him?

Ashley
We really connect with his aesthetic and admire his openness.  He’s really into finding the beauty in first takes.  He tries to keep this raw element and not over-producing, even though that’s our tendency.  It’s nice to have him to balance that out.

Markly
Karl has a really good ear for spontaneity.  I’m always surprised by the things he singles out and wants to focus on.  He’ll come up with ideas for our songs and he’s back there at the controls.  Captain Karl wants us to try something and we’ll go for it, whether it flies or not.

Eli
It’s real faith based, if there’s a mistake he’ll trust that it was supposed to happen, and rather than try and correct it, he’ll try and bring it out.  There’s one song we did where on the very last note, someone played this note that wasn’t in the key of the song.  We were like, “let’s just punch in that note.”  And he was like, “I think that’s supposed to happen.”  So we ended up all punching in, and the song had this outro that’s in this really bizarre key.

Brian
During live shows it’s fun to watch you all shift instruments.  I assume that has to do with how the song was written, and who played what.  Is there a reason you don’t have defined roles?

Ashley
We’re all multi-instrumentalists and we really enjoy playing different things, and get bored playing the same instrument all the time.

Markly
When we’re working on something new, one person will be like, “I hear a keyboard, or I hear a good bass line.”  And that person does it.

Eli
Sometimes someone will write a part on an instrument and then decide to switch.  It’s also skill, some people can play certain things on guitars that others can’t.  Some people can play a certain funkiness on the bass, some songs Andrew’s better on drums…

Ashley
It takes a long time to switch between songs, so it’s not totally idea from an entertainment aspect.  We’re not doing it as a gimmick.  Sometimes it’s frustrating.

Eli
It gives people a chance to look at their iphones.

Brian
After you finished recording Giving and Receiving you found that the tape it was recorded on began to disintegrate.

Eli
We had to save it, so we transferred all the tracks to the computer.  We ended up adding more tracks because we had more available to us.  It led to the album, maybe being over-produced.  We probably never would have transferred it to the computer.  We would have finished it on tape, and it would have been slightly rawer.  The reason I prefer tape has more to do with process.  I think projects go faster, I like the limits of tape, it’s a creative limit.  But with digital the possibilities.  The first album [the album recorded at K with lindsay in 2012] is all on the computer at this point.  It’s the first album we’ve made where we’ve been able to try every idea we’ve thought of. It’s been a cool freedom.

Brian
After you finished Oh, The Places We’ll Go, you were approached by K-Records about releasing it.  What was it like back then to have a storied label like K want to release your music, and then more of your music in the future?

Markly
I was really excited.  When I moved up here that was a goal I had envisioned.  Wouldn’t it be cool, specifically if K wanted to put this stuff out.

Ashley
When I was first making music in Santa Clarita, I had barely any idea of what indie record labels were.  I knew two, K-records and Saddle Creek.  I moved to Olympia not ever thinking that I would end up having music on K-Records.  That was really cool when that happened.

Eli
When I moved to Olympia in 2002, I was a huge K-Records fan, I felt awkward when I saw people associated with the label at the co-op.  It was a very natural progression for them to ask us.  It wasn’t like it came out of nowhere, because we’d been collaborating with Karl, and we played as the backup band for Adrian Orange.  Not to say that we deserved it, or that we knew it would happen.  K is very community oriented, we were a part of the community at that point.  I think Calvin [Johnson] appreciates people who are a part of the community and not just passing through.

Brian
Did you look at the band different after that, that this wouldn’t just be something you do for a few years, that there was a real vision for the future?

Ashley
It’s hard to end a band and start again.  Once you have a name and an identity, it feels so good to have that and keep going.***

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Oh, The Places We’ll Go, Let’s Build a Roof, Giving and Receiving, as well as some special singles and b-sides are available through k-records.  You can download LAKE’s earliest albums through their bandcamp page, at laketheband.bandcamp.com. They’ll be performing live at The Shakedown in Bellingham Feb. 22, The Waldorf Hotel in Vancouver BC on Feb. 23, and the Treefort Music Fest March 24.  And keep a look out for two new albums later in the year.

Back in mid 2011 when I decided I wanted to conduct podcast interviews I did so with LAKE in mind.  In fact I came up with the website after I did a review of Giving and Receiving, it’s safe to say that without LAKE I wouldn’t be doing what I’m doing now.  There’s so much I could thank them for, but what I thank them for the most is the unending inspiration they have given me.  A big thanks to everyone in LAKE, past and present members.  Don’t forget to listen to the full audio podcast of our interview here or in itunes.

 

LAKE: website/facebook/bandcamp

episode 14. LAKE

February 7, 2013 in the podcast

secretly-importantcast

In episode 14. LAKE, Eli Moore, Ashley Eriksson, and Markly Morrison are my guests.  Since 2006 LAKE has been a fixture in the Northwest music scene.  They’ve released five albums, three on K-Records and this past year they recorded two new albums with release dates expected later in 2013.  LAKE is a truly collaborative band from they way they write and perform songs, right down to their name. Lindsay Ashley Kenny Eli.  You can find LAKE at laketheband.com.

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2 years of secretly-important

December 10, 2012 in columns

Today marks exactly two years since I started Secretly-Important.  Actually Secretly-Important started a few months later, the site originally began as a personal blog at blogspot called Secretly, I’m an Important Man.  When I grew tired of talking about myself all the time I shifted gears and began talking about things that I thought were secretly-important.  So technically the website began in June of 2011 but I consider the official start December 2010.

Last year I simply republished my very first article, I acknowledged how poorly written it was back then, and then this year I reread it and realized that it is basically unreadable.  So I will not be republishing it a second time.  If you really wish to visit the old blog you can do so here, please be kind.

Instead I want to take a moment to reflect on the amazing things that have happened since December 10th 2011.

2011 for me was a learning experience.  I knew nothing about how a website worked and assumed they appeared magically on the internet and were maintained by wizards who could speak its magical numerical language.  I know better now.  By the beginning of 2012 we had a new design (but we’re always working on making it better) and I even figured out how light coding worked.

By the end of 2011 I’d interviewed singer Caety Sagoian, artist Stacey Rozich, musician Karl Blau, and filmmaker Matt Vancil.  Every interview was recorded on a hand held Xoom digital recorder, and though it’s a great recorder, was sensitive as hell.  I’m serious you could almost hear your eyes blinking.  In 2012 I continued to interview amazing people… people far more amazing than I probably deserved: Molly Prather, Josh Kornbluth, Jessica Dobson from the band Deep Sea Diver, Lindsay Schief, Angelo Spencer, The The The Thunder, Lemolo, Shana Cleveland, and She Keeps Bees.  I had a set of actual microphones and a mixing board.  Not only that but my editing skills got better and I think that the listening experience you get now is better than ever.

I can’t even begin to thank everyone who’s appear on the podcast enough.  Often people want to know how I get in touch with these artists, well, I just email them.  That so many respond to me and agree to either come to me or let me into their homes to spend a couple hours talking about themselves, is baffling.  I am oh so grateful for every guest I get.

I attended two major festivals, both Sasquatch and Bumbershoot.  I took thousands of pictures at these events, and even did some interviews.  2012 was also the first year that I began to feel like what we were doing here was getting noticed.

Not only do I want to thank the artists who have appeared as guests on the podcast or written for the website, I also want to thank everyone who reads or listens to the website.  I sincerely hope you find it informative, fun, entertaining, and useful.  Please recommend us to your friends, and if you or your friends have a chance rate and review us in itunes.

So what is coming in 2013?

I am so excited for all the things that 2013 will be brining.  In November I interviewed LAKE which was a dream come true for me.  You can expect to see that interview pop up in December some time.  By January we’ll be publishing an interview with the PNW blues band Lonesome Shack.  Beyond that we’re working on some other really wonderful guests, including some who will be returning for their second go-round on the podcast.  I’m also working on expanding the podcasting experience by adding a few other segments… no specifics yet.

You can also expect some new columns this year written by past guests and others.  This will go hand in hand with the sleeker website program that will become more specific.

Then there’s the super secret project that I’m in the early stages of that I think has the potential to be really, really cool.  I can’t say what it is just yet (not till I start getting confirmations) but I think it has the potential to set us apart from what other similar websites are doing.  I’ve got meetings in early January and hopefully by February I can start to leak some of the details to you.

Again, it’s been a really wonderful two years, and I can’t wait for everything we have coming in the year ahead.  I’m so glad you’ve stuck with me this long and I hope that you’ll continue to make the poor decision to do so this year as well.

sincere thanks!
brian snider

LIST: 2012’s best albums

December 6, 2012 in album reviews, reviews

I love lists, it might even be my preferred method of reading really.  I might finally get around to reading Dostoyevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov if it was in the form of a list.  This also happens to be the most list-worthy time of year.  Basically if you want to countdown the best lists, or the best lists from years past, I don’t really care I’ll read it.  A few days back I put up a list of the ten best comedy albums of the year.  This is basically the same thing, however it won’t come with a cute picture of our Internaut logo with a Santa hat.  This isn’t just a list of the best music of the year to buy (which it is) it’s also a list of the best music of the year period. (It’s redundant to say period followed by a period but I did it period.)

I thought that 2011 was an unbelievable music year that would be nearly impossible to match in 2012 or any other year for that matter.  2011 saw some of the best albums by LAKE, Angelo Spencer, Mirah and Thao, Bryan John Appleby, The Cave Singers, The Curious Mystery, and so many others.  I naively believed that they would all have to top their 2011 releases, and totally discounted the possibility of any newcomers to make 2012 better.  As it turns out the best albums of 2012 came from newcomers.

What I’m about to is can probably be crumpled up and throw away as soon as I say it, “2012 will be long remembered as a landmark year in music.”  Ignore the fact that I would have said the same thing about 2011.  If I feel comfortable at all making that statement it’s because 2012 had debut albums from some bands who will be making waves in the music scene for years and years to come.

While I love lists I personally don’t believe in numbered lists.  Even if I tried I couldn’t accurately gauge who was best and who was only 10th best.  Every album on this list was not only a great 2012 release, it was a great all-time release.  So here they are in no particular order.

Deep Sea Diver – History Speaks
I’m going to go out on a limb, a sturdy limb, but a limb nonetheless, and say that Deep Sea Diver is the best band in Seattle.  History Speaks, follows on the success of DSD’s 2009 EP New Caves.  I love this album so much that I don’t really even know what to write here.  Every song is expertly crafted indie rock, from fast paced danceable pop, to hard edged rock, to moody ballads, History Speaks is about as perfect an album as you’ll ever find.  And coincidentally front woman Jessica Dobson was a guest on the Secretly-Important Podcast.

 

Father John Misty – Fear Fun
Ninety years from now list-makers will place Fear Fun as one of the defining records of the 21st Century.  The brain child of former Fleet Foxes drummer and the artist formally known as J. Tillman, Father John Misty appears as a non-alter ego persona for Tillman.  Every song on this album is a sing along, and every song is beautiful, fun, quirky, and perfect.  At one moment Tillman is channeling Harry Nilsson while the other he’s taking right from the Beatles playbook.  This Album is just too good.

 

Solid Home Life
These first three albums all make my list for best albums of all time, and at some point my wife literally ordered me to play something else.  Solid Home Life was born out of a collaboration of Lindsay Schief (formally of LAKE) and Greg Olin (Graves).  You will never find a more sweet and lovely album.  I’ve spent countless hours singing along to these soft folky songs by myself and with my daughter.  It’s a shame that more people don’t or won’t really know about this album because it’s so gentle and honest that you can’t not like it.  Lindsay was also a guest on the Secretly-Important podcast.

Lemolo – Kaleidoscope
My love affair with Lemolo and this album was like a whirlwind, one minute I’d never heard of them, the next minute I was sitting in a coffee shop gushing to them about how much I loved this album.  The Kaleidoscope fluctuates between dark and moody almost eerie tones and light and almost uber-pop.  Every note feels right, and once you’ve heard it you turn right around and start it over again.  Just four albums into this list, and my all time list is looking full.  Meagan and Kendra were also guests on the Secretly-Important podcast.

 

Damien Jurado – Maraqopa
Having been around the PNW for years and establishing himself as an elder statesmen of the music scene I wouldn’t expect this album to be as fresh and beautiful as it is.  I would be wrong because Maraqopa shows a wonderful growth in Jurado’s work.  This album mixes genre’s all over the place, but Jurado puts a focus on the folk-rock he’s known for with blues and it’s magical.  You’ll find this album on a lot of other lists and it’s no surprise, it belongs there.

 

 

Ana Tijoux – La Bala
I can’t help it, Ana’s my musical crush.  Her previous album 1977 was spectacular, but not to be outdone by herself La Bala rises to the occasion and offers up a new listening experience.  If you don’t know Ana then you should be aware that she’s a quick rhyming Spanish speaking Chilean Hip Hop artist.  I don’t have a clue what she’s saying but it just feels right.  La Bala features a number of guest artists and at times departs from the quick raps and exhibits her beautiful singing voice which was underused on 1977.

 

The The The Thunder – All At Once
Even after this album was recorded TTTT had never played All At Once as a full band, that would come later.  You can’t hear that little tidbit in the music but it does make it all the more impressive doesn’t it?  I see this album as the love child of Lou Reed and the Talking Heads.  That combination right there should be enough to make any list right?  Well, TTTT succeed with flying colors here, churning out an incredible album that easily could have sounded disjointed.  Once again 3/4 of the band was featured in the Secretly-Important podcast.

 

Lonesome Shack – City Man
City Man begins like all Lonesome Shack albums, with the dropping of a glass bottle, and it’s basically the best thing ever.  The moment I heard the clanking glass beer bottle I knew that everything that preceded was going to be incredible, and it was.  LS expands their minimalist haunted boogie blues duo to include bass and  sax.  The album was recorded live at Cafe Racer (two months before the tragic shootings) and is dedicated to the victims and their families.  Lonesome Shack is one of the most pure extensions of blues that you’ll hear just about anywhere.  There’s a Lonesome Shack interview coming in January on the Secretly-Important podcast.

Ruby Fray – Pith
Last year K-Records released a single of the Christmas song Namiot, and the first thought that went through my head was, “I need a solo album by Emily Beanblossom.”  Here it is.  It’s technically not a solo album as the usual suspects around the K office lend their talents to the album.  At times Pith is weird and quirky, at others she seems to be channeling Carol King or Fleetwood Mac.  I had high expectations for this album and they were totally exceeded.  Pith is all over the place in terms of genre, but what it all has in common is Beanblossom’s incredible voice.

Karl Blau – Songles
There’s isn’t another single PNW artist who I simply don’t understand why they aren’t a household name.  Karl has made some of the most interesting, unique, risky, and flat out amazing music.  What’s unique  is that he can present you with ten new songs and each one is like looking at a blank canvas, they can be anything and go anywhere.  Songles is ten songs, low-fi indie meets Karl’s amazing ability to spin gold from kelp.  At first listen you might not get Songles, but I urge you to give it a second try, once you do I promise you’ll find that it’s really amazing.  No surprise here but Karl has also been featured on the Secretly-Important podcast.

 

I only gave myself ten slots here to talk about my favorite albums of 2012, so naturally there were many that were left off.  Honorable mention goes to Chain and the Gang – In Cool Blood, The Soft Hills – The Bird is Coming Down to Earth, THEESatisfaction – awE naturalE and many, many others.  It just so happens that these were the albums that I listened to the most, the ones that inspired me everyday, and that reminded me why I was still in the PNW.

If you’ve got a music fan on your shopping list (and who doesn’t) any of these albums are a perfect gift.  If you’re worried about name recognition, just think about how awesome it will be to introduce someone to something new that they’ll love forever.

***** 2012 was not only a great year for some amazing full length albums, it also featured some incredible EP’s and singles.  My next list will feature my favorite (not full-length) music.  That music is just as good as this here. *****

interview with she keeps bees

November 21, 2012 in interviews, she keeps bees

On the surface there are so many things people want to compare Jessica Larrabee and Andy LaPlant to; Cat Power, PJ Harvey, The White Stripes, The Black Keyes, basically any bluesy duo or female singer with a stone smooth voice.  I wouldn’t deny that there is a common thread that runs through those bands and into She Keeps Bees, but for this duo there is so much more.

Somewhere in an inferior parallel universe is a Jessica Larrabee who never transitioned from the drums to the guitar.  In another is an Andy LaPlant who continued to play the guitar and never learned the drums.  And in one more universe Andy never entered the bar the Jessica was working at, they never met and She Keeps Bees withered.  In our clearly superior universe, we can celebrate the beauty that is She Keeps Bees because Jessica did move from the drums to guitar, because Andy did trade in his guitar for the drums, and because in the mid 2000’s Andy, a New Orleans transplant, did walk into Jessica’s Brooklyn bar and they met.

Jessica had already been writing, performing, and home recording her songs when she met Andy who at the time had done some engineering and played the guitar.  I often think about fate when it comes to a band’s formation, so often the best bands rely so much on seemingly coincidental events and meetings to come together.  Invariably this creates a perfect give and take, like mixing the perfect drink.

Sensing that what was needed was a solid beat, Andy took a seat behind the drum kit.  Jessica who followed in her musician fathers foot steps as a drummer began to focus exclusively on the guitar, honing her rhythmic style.  Since that time in 2006 Andy and Jessica have released three albums, each evolving in mass and density.  Their minimalistic construction was nurtured in their infancy and grew from their debut Minisink Hotel, to Nests, and then Dig On.

It was Dig On which boasted the best of what Jessica and Andy had to offer.  Thunderous percussion with metronomic time.  Simple yet powerful guitar riffs that grab your gut and twist it.  And Jessica’s sultry vocals which basically massage your heart.  It has a Patti Smith quality, belting out pristine and uncracked notes that hold the music together like a smooth and satisfying adhesive.  Her voice is so strong that throughout the SKB catalogue you’ll come across songs that are almost completely absent of anything but vocals, where Jessica’s voice carries everything on its back.

Though they’ve spent six years as a minimalistic duo, for their July, 7” release they enlisted the help of experimental cellist  Gaspar ClausCounter Charm fills the room unlike any previous SKB song, and it’s possible that this is a hint at what is to come.  Of course the B-side empties that room with the 1930’s classic Blue Moon, which is sung like a gentle and warming lullaby by Larrabee.

She Keeps Bees in another way is a band of deceptions.  You might not expect a band with the quaint name like this to rock, you might not expect a duo to fill the space with so much sound, you might not expect such a beautiful voice from such raw and gritty indie-blues-grunge-rock.  But you would be wrong wrong wrong, because SKB does it all.

I became aware of SKB just this past Spring when past guests The The The Thunder announced tour dates on the West Coast, SKB was on the bill of their Seattle show at the High Dive.  I was immediately in love, it was heavy, it was soft, it was a pair of steel toed boots and moccasins all at the same time.  Though I didn’t know it, I was looking for music just like this.

But as delightful as they were blasting through my speakers, what I got when I saw them live was something almost otherworldly.  It was like the splitting of an atom, how something so tiny could produce so much exceptional sound was beyond me.  It was one of those amazing moments in music that I crave so dearly, when my heart leaps in my chest and I am left awestruck and speechless at what a band can do.

I spoke to Jessica and Andy via skype from their home on the East Coast.  It was a little strange to talk to a band without any Northwest roots or solid connections.  Their Summer tour through the PNW was their first ever.  But if you’d told me that SKB was from the Northwest I would have believed you without question.  It’s either regional music sensibility or just wishful thinking on my part.

Jessica and Andy were such a joy to speak with.  These are two people who I respect immensely and I’m not afraid to admit that I was a little star struck while speaking with them… I hope it didn’t come through in the podcast.  A big thanks to both of them for taking the time to interview with me.

As always, what you can read here is just a fraction of what you’ll find in the full podcast.  Which by the way you can listen to by clicking here, or by visiting itunes.

She Keeps Bees at the High Dive

brian snider

How did you and Andy meet each other?

jessica larrabee
I was bartending in Brooklyn and Andy had just moved from New Orleans, and naturally went to the closest bar to his house, and that was the bar I worked at.  We just became friends, I knew he was an engineer, so I gave him a CD of my solo stuff. Then we started to record together.  He was coming to the shows anyway, so I was like “just start playing drums.”  We were growing together, he was accompanying me on my folkier songs, then it became more rock.

brian
This is almost too strange to be true, but Jessica, you were originally a drummer.  Now you obviously play guitar.  And Andy you originally were a guitarist, and now you play drums.

andy laplant
When I met Jess, I didn’t play the drums particularly well.  I found my place in the band more as a rhythmic section than as an accompaniment.  I could have played guitar but I thought what it needed was a beat.  So I worked at that as hard as I could to try not to embarrass her because she’s a good drummer in her own right.

jessica
My father was a drummer, that’s why it was my first instrument.  I wanted to play guitar, but my hands weren’t strong enough.  I’m not going to be Steve Vai with my guitar playing, I just have to focus on what is natural, and rhythm is what speaks the most with my guitar playing.

bs
Was being a duo born out of necessity or was it preference?

jessica
I think it was necessity because it’s a thing of convenience.  Also low overhead, we could travel lightly.  And we weren’t really thinking that we needed another person.  I think that was good to just narrow the vision of the songwriting to very simple terms, until we could start inviting other instrumentation in.  We have it in mind, maybe for the next record.  It’s allowed us to do what we want.

brian
From your first album to Minisink Hotel to your last Dig On, your sound has become bigger and more full.  But then some of my favorite songs are often the very simple ones.  Those that are acapella or almost-acapella.

andy
A lot of times a song comes to [Jessica] and it doesn’t have a guitar part, she’ll just start singing a melody.  And we’ll discuss if it needs anything and usually I’ll say less is more.  Especially with her voice because it’s so powerful, it doesn’t need much behind it.

brian
Do you feel like you over complicate or over simplify your songs when you first write them?

andy
We’re usually starting with the most simple and then adding a few accompaniments that we find necessary.  We’ve never really blown anything up like crazy then had to scale it back.

jessica
But then it’s only been us.  Other artists have big teams of producers to bounce ideas off.  That’s what we’re excited about for the new album.  We don’t know where we’re recording but we are open to adding another person/conversation and have different ideas.

andy
It becomes something so personal that when you release it out to the public you want to throw up because not more than five people have heard it before.

brian
In July you released the single Counter Charm, which has an even bigger and more filling sound than what’s on Dig On even.  Is that something that we can expect from the next record?

andy
I think yes.  It was the first time we ever had someone else record and mix our music.

jessica
Because Gaspar [Claus] our friend who plays the cello, he’s and experimental cellist, the things that he can pull out of that instrument makes me feel very proud of that song.  It was really beautiful to have this mix expand what he does.

She Keeps Bees at the High Dive

As She Keeps Bees prepares to enter the studio for their fourth album, I am literally giddy at what they’ll bring to the table this time.  Counter Charm added a whole other dimension to their music, it’s not better, just different, another evolutionary step.  

I’ll admit that I’ve come close once or twice to penning a letter to whom it may concern, begging She Keeps Bees to relocate to the Northwest.  Their music has that dark and heavy yet soulful and melodic quality that North Westerners would devour like a much needed break in the rain clouds.  For now I suppose I have to wait for the next time they tour our beautiful coast.  You can find all their albums and various merch at their website shekeepsbees.com.   And let’s face it if you don’t immediately close this window and buy up all their music, then we’re not on speaking terms.

Again, if you read only this brief excerpt you will miss the wonderful conversation we had, full of so much really great stuff.  You can hear the full audio podcast by clicking here, or in itunes.  And while you’re in itunes check out our other interviews and maybe even rate and review us.



episode 13. she keeps bees

November 21, 2012 in the podcast

In episode 13. she keeps bees  Jessica Larrabee and Andy LaPlant are my guests.  For six years She Keeps Bees has been self recording and releasing their music.  Three full lengths, two singles and an EP.  Based on the East Coast, they took the Summer to criss cross the country visiting the Pacific Northwest for the first time.  You can find all their albums at shekeepsbees.com.

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