FREE EVERY WEDNESDAY VOL. 24, NO. 36 MAY 6–12, 2015 ASSIGNEDMALE.TUMBLR.COM JEN GRAVES ON THE GIFT EVER P. 14 WHAT COMPUTER NERDS HAVE DISCOVERED (SO FAR) ABOUT SEATTLE COPS P. 9 I THINK HGROOV IS A LITTLE HARD TO SAY, I’M GOING TO CALL YOU HVAC. MOST UNUSUAL ART ANGELA GARBES EATS AT THE CITY’S MOST EXCLUSIVE P. 31 RESTAURANT CHILDBIRTH (THE BAND) DISCUSSES MOTHER’S DAY P. 43 2 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER THE STRANGER 3 May 6, 2015 Custom Design Your special design ideas... Our expert guidance and craftsmanship 1407 FIFTH AVENUE | FIFTH & UNION | SEATTLE, WA 98101 | 206.447.9488 turgeonraine.com TR_Stranger2013.indd 8 8/21/13 12:21 PM Personal Village Project & The Lakeridge Institute LLC Present Personal Village Workshop with Marv Thomas, LICSW May 9, 2015 9:30 AM to 4 PM Tickets: $120 Lakeridge Institute 11013 Alton Ave NE, Seattle, WA Photo by Autumn Swisher. Brownpapertickets.com/event/1438023 People are your most important asset. However, many of us do not take the time to learn how to bring people into our “personal village” who will make our lives sparkle. This workshop will do that for you! You will learn to: • Turn a stranger into an acquaintance and then a friend. • Transform an online friendship into a rewarding face-to-face relationship. • Create for yourself the family for which you always longed. • Take your friendships to a deeper level. • Craft a map of the type of community that you would like to have. For more information visit www.marvthomas.com or call Marv at (206) 364-9494 JOSE IS WEARING WEIGHTS AND SEPTUM JEWELRY BY BUDDHA JEWELRY ORGANICS, EXCLUSIVELY AT DEEP ROOTS. SEATTLE LYNNWOOD BELLEVUE 206.633.2639 425.774.7668 425.453.5244 DeepRootsTattoo.com TRIM SIZE: 9.75"W x 13.5" H, LHP 4 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER M AY 15 TH IN T E R N AT IO N A L FLUEVOG DAY ENTER TO WIN 10 YEARS OF FREE SHOES TODAY! TRY ON OR BUY A PAIR TO ENTER UNTIL MAY 14TH — WINNER ANNOUNCED MAY 15TH * FURTHER DETAILS IN-STORE * J O H N F L U E VO G s S E A T T L E P I N E S T · · FLU E VO G CO M THE STRANGER Volume 24, Issue Number 36 May 6–12, 2015 LAST DAYS ............................. 7 NEWS ..................................... 9 DEED OF GIFT ......................14 STRANGER SUGGESTS ......... 23 ARTS .................................... 25 CHOW ...................................31 MUSIC .................................. 35 FILM ..................................... 55 I ♥ TELEVISION.................... 56 CLASSIFIEDS ....................... 58 SAVAGE LOVE ......................61 COMIC ................................. 63 FREE WILL ASTROLOGY ...... 63 Editorial EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Dan Savage EDITOR IN CHIEF Christopher Frizzelle MANAGING EDITOR Kathleen Richards ASSOCIATE EDITOR Eli Sanders ARTS EDITOR Sean Nelson MUSIC EDITOR Emily Nokes VISUAL ART EDITOR Jen Graves FILM EDITOR Charles Mudede THEATER EDITOR Brendan Kiley FOOD WRITER Angela Garbes STAFF WRITERS Sydney Brownstone, Heidi Groover, Ansel Herz, Dave Segal STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Kelly O SOCIAL MEDIA MANAGER Zachary Peacock CALENDAR EDITOR Krishanu Ray MUSIC CALENDAR EDITOR Kyle Fleck COPY CHIEF Gillian Anderson COPY EDITOR Katie Allison COLUMNISTS Wm.™ Steven Humphrey, Larry Mizell Jr., Trent Moorman, Adrian Ryan Art & Production ART DIRECTOR Aaron Huffman PRODUCTION MANAGER Erica Tarrant EDITORIAL DESIGNERS Mike Force, Mary Traverse SENIOR AD DESIGNER Mary Traverse AD DESIGNERS Chelcie Blackmun, Joel Schomberg, Shena SmithConnolly Marketing/Promotions/ Personals READER INTERACTIVE DIRECTOR Nancy Hartunian LOVELAB/LUSTLAB Bobby Anderson Business GENERAL MANAGER Laurie Saito CFO Rob Crocker CREDIT MANAGER Tracey Cataldo ACCOUNTING MANAGER Renée Krulich RECEPTIONIST Mike Nipper OFFICE MANAGER Evanne Hall Technology and Development CHIEF TECHNOLOGY OFFICER Anthony Hecht IT COORDINATOR Erin Resso LEAD DEVELOPER Jay Jansheski DEVELOPERS Brenn Berliner, Michael Crowl, Nick Nelson Bold Type Tickets WALLINGFORD 206-545-3685 BD Baggies Billy Reid Champion + Todd Snyder Civilianaire Imogene + Willie Kato J Brand J. Press York St. Circulation Lightning Bolt CIRCULATION MANAGER Kevin Shurtluff CIRCULATION ASSISTANT Paul Kavanagh LVC PUBLISHER Tim Keck SALES DIRECTOR Carol Cummins SENIOR ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Ben Demar, Katie Phoenix SENIOR ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE/THEATER Juliette Brush-Hoover SENIOR ENTERTAINMENT ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Cheree Best DISPLAY ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Devin Bannon, Liz Hill SENIOR CLASSIFIEDS ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Bobby Anderson SALES OPERATIONS MANAGER Taffy Marler COVER ART Fallen Buddha by JEFF MIHALYO See more of Jeff ’s work at mihalyo.com and at AXIS Gallery’s Sur|Real, opening May 7 (axispioneersquare.com). Find podcasts, videos, blogs, MP3s, free classifieds, personals, contests, sexy ads, and more on The Stranger’s website. 1535 11th Avenue, Third Floor, Seattle, WA 98122 V O I C E (206) 323-7101 FA X (206) 323-7203 S A L E S FA X (206) 325-4865 H O U R S Mon–Fri, 9 am–5:30 pm E - M A I L editor@thestranger.com WWW.SLAVETOTHENEEDLE.COM BALLARD 206-789-2618 multi-brand men’s shop since 2002 PRODUCT MANAGER Ryan Sparks CUSTOMER SERVICE MANAGER Katrina Hirsch CUSTOMER SERVICE Grant Hendrix EQUIPMENT WRANGLER Kevin Shurtluff Advertising THE STRANGER TATTOO BY JOHN FITZ Levi’s Made & Crafted Life/After/Denim M.nii Relwen Save Khaki United Spiewak Todd Snyder Topo Designs Woolrich John Rich 1913 2nd Ave www.ianshop.com May 6, 2015 5 6 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER Please join us on Wednesday May 13th, 2015 7:00 to 8:00 pm tomorrow exchange buy * *sell*trade sell*trade U-DISTRICT: 4530 University Way NE • 206-545-0175 BALLARD: 2232 NW Market St. • 206-297-5920 BELLINGHAM: 1209 N. State St. • 360-676-1375 BuffaloExchange.com THE STRANGER LAST DAYS The Week in Review MONDAY, APRIL 27 This riotously B Y D AV ID S CH M AD E R who arrived in full riot gear, reportedly acting on “credible threats” of a violent, gang-driven uprising—inflamed a dicey but nonviolent situation. “According to eyewitnesses in the Mondawmin neighborhood, the police were stopping buses and forcing riders, including many students who were trying to get home, to disembark,” reported Mother Jones. “Cops shut down the local subway stop. They also blockaded roads near the Mondawmin Mall and Frederick Douglass High School, which is across the street from the mall, and essentially corralled young people in the area.” In closing, Reuters reported, “Police have said they would conclude their investigation by Friday and forward the results to state prosecutors.” (Spoiler alert: foreshadowing.) American week in America kicked off in Baltimore, where today brought the funeral for Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old African American man who was arrested after running away from police in a high-crime area while carrying a knife on his person, and who wound up dead from a spinal-cord injury sustained after his aforementioned run and before his arrival at the police station. “At Gray’s funeral, speaker after speaker before the crowd packing the 2,500-seat New Shiloh Baptist Church said the world was watching to see if justice would be done for Gray,” reported Reuters. Hours after the funeral, the watching world got a serious show, as rioters rioted, looters looted, and the chronically traumatized Baltimore burned, with Maryland governor Larry Hogan declaring a state of emergency and the nation-guarding National Guard brought in to restore order. By the time police peppersprayed the situation into submission for the night, 254 people had been arrested, 98 police officers had been injured, and the whole thing escalated into an event of the magnitude that’ll be remembered through iconic images and historical impact. So thanks to Mother Jones for showcasing the stories of eyewitnesses, who offered details on the prickly beginnings of the henceforth monolithic Baltimore Riots, suggesting antagonistic actions by police— TUESDAY, APRIL 28 Speaking of days that history will remember, the week continued in Washington, DC, as the US Supreme Court heard arguments in Obergefell v. Hodges, popularly known as “the gay marriage case.” At issue: whether constitutional guarantees of due process and equal protection under the law support a right to same-sex marriage (and, if To submit an unsigned confession or accusation, send an e-mail to ianonymous@thestranger.com. Please remember to change the names of the innocent and guilty. May 6, 2015 7 Redacted Erotic Fan Fiction Seattle City PolitiCS edition Chapter 3: Reaching Out to Labor I t wasn’t just ideologies causing tension in the Seattle City Council chambers that spring night. I was just there to vacuum the floors, wipe down the desks, empty the trash cans, same as I always do. You can imagine my surprise when I flipped on the lights and saw Council Member on the dais, sitting dead center below the corporate seal of the city. “Bright light!” I let out a startled scream and then turned the lights back off. “I’m sorry to disturb you, Council Member ! I didn’t realize you were still here.” “Don’t apologize. You’re just doing your job. So am I. Except only one of us is about to get a nice, sweet raise, am I right?” I didn’t understand what she meant, so I said nothing and blushed harder. “Hey,” she said. “Don’t be so bashful. You’re a beautiful girl. You should smile more. Come up here where I can see you a little better…” There was a little catch in her voice. “My eyes aren’t what they used to be.” I did as I was told, leaving my vacuum and supply bucket by the door and crossing the great chamber. I hesitated slightly as I approached, but her long finger beckoned me nearer. Even in the dark, I could see it glistening. Just then, I noticed an object in her other hand, poking up from behind the desk like a gearshift. As my eyes adjusted, I realized what she was driving at. “Council Member , what are you doing with that gavel?” “I’m calling,” she said, heavily, “a special session”—I could practically hear her heart pounding (or maybe that was mine?)—“to order. Sit. I’ve got a motion I need you to second.” Without a moment’s hesitation, I loosened my coveralls and sat in the chair next to her. “What do you think you’re doing?” she said sharply. “That chair is for elected officials only.” I started blushing again and looked away. “You’re so serious,” Council Member laughed and rolled her chair backward a few inches, letting the blazer on her lap fall to the floor in in front of her. There had been nothing under it. No clothing, anyway. She nodded toward the blazer, as if urging me to kneel, which, of course, I was only too happy to do. “I just thought you’d like a little face time with local government. Besides I—” I interrupted by pressing my finger to her lips. Her mouth fell silent. “You politicians. All you ever do is talk.” I pulled the chair toward me, making a mental note of all the dust bunnies under that desk. Looks like I’m working late again tonight. To be continued… ARGUING ABOUT GAYS STEVEN WEISSMAN they don’t, whether states that restrict marriage to the union of one man and one woman must recognize legal same-sex marriages from other states). “The lead petitioner is James Obergefell, who wanted his home state of Ohio, which bans gay marriage, to recognize his Maryland marriage to John Arthur as Arthur was dying from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease,” reported Reuters. “Obergefell sought to have his name on Arthur’s death certificate as surviving spouse.” Summary of “pro” arguments: Fair is fair, marriage equality does nothing to harm the preexisting rights and privileges enjoyed by male-female married couples, and the idea of millennia of “traditional marriage” being ruined by marriage equality is bunk (marriage has been an ever-evolving concept forever). Summary of “con” arguments: The traditional family will wither and die and America will be doomed to hell. A decision is expected by late June. CARS VS. BIKES, VOL. MCMLXIV: PASSIVEAGGRESSIVE PRIUS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29 The week MICHAEL LOCCISANO / THINKSTOCK Dear angry crew-cut dude who came to a screeching halt on a busy street because he thought I should cross right then and there: Do you really think you can order people to cross the street and nearly cause a pileup in the process? You pointed at me, and when I didn’t move, you yelled “GO! I DIDN’T STOP HERE FOR FUN!” as if I didn’t understand the concept of a crosswalk. Screw you, buddy—there was oncoming traffic! Just because you decided to stop doesn’t obligate a person to cross. The cars behind you started honking, and you got a well-deserved middle finger from me as I pedaled off. But you just had to whip into a driveway, get out of your car, and start after me on foot, bellowing obscenities and threats. Wow. Did you think you could catch a guy on a bike? Was your jacked-up diesel truck in the shop that day? Were you forced to drive your wife’s emasculating Prius? Maybe you ought to get on a bike yourself and stomp out some of that anger before your head explodes, you pathetic, self-entitled fucktard. —Anonymous continued exactly where we left it: in Washington, DC, where today Cyndi Lauper—an artist so accomplished she lacks only the O from EGOT—testified in front of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies about the need for increased resources to combat youth homelessness. Of particular interest to Lauper: the REPPING FOR plight of transgenTRANS KIDS der kids, who make up an estimated 40 percent of all homeless youth. “Basically, the kids come out and they get thrown out,” said Lauper in testimony that’s gloriously easy to imagine being spoken in her Brooklyn Betty Boop patois. “Truth is, they didn’t choose their identity. You know, it’s like you choosing the color of your eyes. You know, you’re born that way.” The 61-year-old Lauper’s knockout finale: “If it’s a faith issue, I implore you not to pray to God to change your kid. Pray to God to change your heart.” THURSDAY, APRIL 30 Nothing happened today, unless you count the Facebook post by Baltimore public defender Marci Tarrant Johnson, who reported on the alarming conditions at Baltimore’s Central Booking, where more than one hundred people were held in overcrowded cells with deplorable conditions for 48 hours before being released with no charges ever filed against them. CHARGING “ They ’re denyTHE COPS ing due process to people,” said human rights lawyer Nicole Lee to Newsweek. “This is an issue of the City of Baltimore having to respect their citizens.” FRIDAY, MAY 1 Speaking of Baltimore and the fallout from the death of Freddie Gray, today brought a bracing press conference led by Baltimore City State’s Attorney Marilyn J. Mosby, who proclaimed that police officers “illegally arrested” Gray (whose alleged switchblade was actually a lawful knife), shared the coroner’s findings that Gray’s death was the result of homicide, and announced criminal charges against the six Baltimore police officers implicated in Gray’s death. Among the charges: assault, false imprisonment, manslaughter, and second-degree depraved heart murder. (“Depraved heart murder is a super manslaughter case,” attorney Walter Balint told Newsweek. “It is like taking a loaded gun and firing it down the street. You kill someone standing on the other side of the street with that shot. You didn’t intend that specific victim, but you killed someone.”) “To the people of Baltimore and the demonstrators across America, I heard your call for ‘No Justice, No Peace,’” said Mosby. “Your peace is sincerely needed as I work to deliver justice on behalf of this young man.” SATURDAY, MAY 2 Nothing happened today, unless you count noted woman-beater Floyd Mayweather boringly scoring more punching points than antigay loser Manny Pacquiao in a “boxing match.” SUNDAY, MAY 3 The week ended in Texas, where tonight a pair of gunmen attacked the site of a “Draw Muhammad” contest, nonfatally shooting a security guard before being shot dead by police. By tomorrow, one of the dead suspects will be identified as Elton Simpson, an American Muslim from Phoenix who’s been on the FBI’s terror watch list for the past five years. There is still no word on who won the drawing contest. n Send hot tips to lastdays@thestranger.com and follow me on Twitter @davidschmader. The traditional family will wither and die at THESTR ANGER.COM/SLOG 8 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER A NEW FIREARMS STORE IN SEATTLE Specializing in Sporting Firearms, Shooting & Reloading Equipment We welcome new shooters and everyone curious about shooting sports! FRIDAY, JUNE 19th Our entire inventory is available on our web site: www.preciseshooter.com 7503 Aurora Ave N, Seattle, WA 98103 • 206.489.4907 Opens at 6pm Deltron 3030 RA SCION, AYO DOT & THE UPPERCUTS $25 SINGLE DAY PADASY PASS S , AL l AG ES Redhook Main stage $5 MO RE DA Opens at 6pm the Presidents United States of America AYRON JONES AND THE WAY, FOX AND THE LAW FREE Playing on the Reyka vodka waterfront stage Home Sweet Home Publish The Quest The Dip Rippin Chicken Marmalade McTufF * Party Boys Weatherside * * Band Deception * * The Fabulous Whiskey Past * * The Warren G. Hardings The Student Loan Wild Rabbit Poor Man’s Whiskey * * Lineup subject to change. * For tickets and other Solstice Music Festival venues visit FremontSolsticeFair.com FREMONT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE SEATTLE INTERNATIONAL BEERFEST NEEDS VOLUNTEERS seattlebeerfest.com for more info. SATURDAY, JUNE 20th OF THE (Really good beer) July 10 - 12. Solstice music festival’s $ 4 5 T w o-Y OF SH OW WORK FOR BEER! NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER NEWS What Two Programmers Have Revealed So Far About Seattle Police Officers Who Are Still in Uniform Using Public Disclosure Laws, Eric Rachner and Phil Mocek Have Found Troubling Trends in Police Accountability BY ANSEL HERZ F or most of their lives, Eric Rachner and Phil Mocek had no strong feelings about police. Mocek, who grew up in Kansas, said he regarded police officers as honorable civil servants, like firefighters. Both chose careers as programmers: Rachner, 39, is an independent cyber-security expert, while Mocek, 40, works on administrative software used by dentists. But through their shrewd use of Washington’s Public Records Act, the two Seattle residents are now the closest thing the city has to a civilian police-oversight board. In the last year and a half, they have acquired hundreds of reports, videos, and 911 calls related to the Seattle Police Department’s internal investigations of officer misconduct between 2010 and 2013. And though they have only combed through a small portion of the data, they say they have found several instances of officers appearing to lie, use racist language, and use excessive force—with no consequences. In fact, they believe that the Office of Professional Accountability (OPA) has systematically “run interference” for cops. In the aforementioned cases of alleged officer misconduct, all of the involved officers were exonerated and still remain on the force. “We’re trying to do OPA’s job for them because OPA was so explicitly not interested in doing their own job,” said Rachner. Among some of Rachner and Mocek’s findings: a total of 1,028 SPD employees (including civilian employees) were investigated between 2010 and 2013. (The current number of total SPD staff is 1,820.) Of the 11 most-investigated employees—one was investigated 18 times during the three-year period—every single one of them is still on the force, according to SPD. In 569 allegations of excessive or inappropriate use of force (arising from 363 incidents), only seven were sustained—meaning 99 percent of cases were dismissed. Exoneration rates were only slightly smaller when looking at all the cases between 2010 and 2013—of the total 2,232 allegations, 284 were sustained. “This is exactly why we have the robust Public Records Act that we have,” said Jared Friend, director of technology and liberty for the ACLU of Washington. “People are obviously dissatisfied with how OPA is handling its investigations, and our Public Records Act has enabled folks like Phil and Eric to engage in oversight. Through the work they’re doing, we can see some of the deficiencies and lapses in the process.” SPD spokesman Sean Whitcomb agreed that what Rachner and Mocek are doing “is great,” and that “the more information that’s publicly available, the better.” But he added that OPA has its own independent oversight, in the form of an OPA auditor and review board. “SPD has been a leader in government transparency, with SPD staff receiving two Washington Coalition for Open Government awards since 2012,” he wrote in an e-mail. In response to a 2010 incident (of which The Stranger obtained dash-cam video) in which two officers derided poor black people and joked about beating them up, Whitcomb said the incident was investigated and that several police reforms have been instituted since then. Both of the involved officers remain on the force. police accountable for mistakes and abuses. And Rachner saw an opportunity to do just that when, in August of 2011, the Washington State Supreme Court ruled that police records of internal investigations into officer misconduct were subject to the state’s Public Records Act, one of the strongest transparency laws in the country. Prior to the ruling, Rachner believes, the OPA, which investigates police misconduct, would systematically “sweep all these records into the investigative file, and then after the officer was exonerated, KELLY O investigated SPD employees between 2010 and 2013, all continue to remain on the force. H ow did two nerds come to hold SPD accountable? It started in 2008, when Seattle police arrested Rachner during a game of “urban golf.” The cops charged him with obstruction, but Rachner fought the charges and won. Then he sued the police for withholding video of his arrest, which they had denied possessing. The video turned up, and in the end, Rachner won more than $60,000 in settlements. Then, in February 2011, Rachner met Mocek at an SPD town hall meeting. Mocek had had his own run-in with police. In 2009, security agents at Sea-Tac Airport threw him in a jail cell for lacking identification and causing a disturbance. Mocek challenged the misdemeanor charges against him and, like Rachner, won. Their run-ins and legal battles with security agencies galvanized them, they said, to hold none of those records were accessible.” They were never destined to see the light of day. Kathryn Olson, the OPA director from 2007 until 2012, was widely seen as more of a lapdog than a watchdog. During her tenure, the department fell under a federal consent decree, requiring it to address a pattern of excessive force and concerns about racial bias. The day after the state supreme court ruling, Rachner filed a public records request for all OPA records from 2010 to 2013. Six days later, the head of the SPD public disclosure unit responded in an e-mail message, “The estimated cost for the records you have requested is $29,370.00 (plus postage).” (That amount was later revised down to $21,500, plus postage.) “At the time,” Rachner said, “I had no money to spend, and I was like, fuck. So I dropped it.” 9 He rues the decision now. Under the department’s contract with the Seattle Police Officers’ Guild, the largest public union in the state, OPA is required to shred its records after three years. That means that from 2011 to 2013, the department was destroying records covering the period from 2008 to 2010—the crucial period leading up to the federal government’s investigation of SPD and the initiation of the consent decree. Then, Rachner got a break—in the form of another payout for a violation of the Public Records Act. In the fall of 2012, Ben Livingston (a past Stranger contributor) was the subject of a Washington State Patrol traffic stop. Livingston requested dash-cam video of the traffic stop, but the Washington State Patrol denied possessing such footage. The following year, Livingston, Rachner, Mocek, and Seattle civil rights attorney Cleveland Stockmeyer created a nonprofit called the Center for Open Policing (COP). Their first effort was to sue. They won, and the state patrol settled to the tune of about $23,000. “I particularly enjoyed that case,” said Mocek. Perhaps more significantly, Rachner and COP had suddenly come into possession of the funds they needed to follow through on the public records request for Seattle’s OPA data. On December 9, 2013, Rachner walked into SPD headquarters and wrote a check for $2,150—a down payment that would get the disclosure process rolling. “The guy at the public-records desk was like, ‘I’ve never seen one this big!’” recalled Rachner, flashing a sheepish grin. I ERIC RACHNER AND PHIL MOCEK Among their findings: of the eleven most May 6, 2015 n the intervening 17 months, however, the SPD has delivered less than 10 percent of the records, according to Rachner, and some of the files are incomplete. At this pace, the SPD won’t fully comply with his records request until 2028. “We’re never going to catch up at this rate,” he said, calling the flow of records an unacceptable “trickle.” He plans to file more requests for post-2013 OPA data. A recent City of Seattle audit of the police department’s public disclosure unit found that it relies on an “antiquated and inefficient system,” and is “risking legal liability and endangering the public trust,” the Seattle Times reported on March 18. Rachner believes that the big problem with policing right now “is that police misconduct is evaluated from the standard of the police, and not the standards of the community.” The name of their nonprofit (COP), Mocek said, originally stood for “Citizens Overseeing Police.” “That was one of our goals,” he said. “Empower regular people to perform their own investigations of police.” But even with the “trickle” of records coming from the SPD, Rachner and Mocek are already overwhelmed by reams of data—thousands of pages, along with hours of dash-cam videos and 911 dispatch calls. “We’re sitting on a heap of records,” Rachner said. “We’re just a group of people who are fully employed,” doing police accountability work in their spare time, Mocek added. COP considered dumping the raw data online for anyone to view, but decided against it because it would involve the publication of sensitive personal details—things like mental illness, drug addiction, or cases involving minors. The solution they have in mind involves applying for grants, or even some kind of crowdsourcing. But they’re not sure how to do it. In the meantime, Rachner and Mocek will continue to file requests and comb through the data, attempting to hold police officers accountable. “Ideally, we should be able to evaluate these things through the OPA process,” said the ACLU’s Jared Friend. “I think the work they’re doing is great, and I think we should be able to learn a lot from it, and hopefully it will stimulate some change.” n 10 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER BUNNIES FOR BIRTHDAYS real live bunnies by the hour! seriously! Have us for a morale event at work! You don’t have to share with children! Relax and keep all the bunnies for yourselves. 425 223 6668 bunniesforbirthdays.com WORK FOR BEER! (Really good beer) KELLY O RENTERS ARE BEING PRICED OUT While developers keep building new profit centers. Three Things Seattle Can Do Right Now to Help Renters While City Hall Fights Over Linkage Fees and Rent Control, It Could Close Loopholes That Allow Landlords to Unfairly Evict Tenants SEATTLE INTERNATIONAL BEERFEST NEEDS VOLUNTEERS July 10 - 12. seattlebeerfest.com for more info. Experienced staff to help beginners Large selection of flavors and hardware Gift Certificates Available Locally owned FUTURE-VAPOR.COM Hours: Mon-Fri 10-9 | Sat-Sun 11-8 | 18+ 206.323.9654 1828 B 12th Ave Seattle, WA 98122 2 and a half blocks North of Pine St VIC DELIRIUM Art, antiques & collectibles Unique furnishings, vintage taxidermy, medical oddities, and bizarre tchotchkies. Showroom and studio located in SoDo at the fabulous Bemis Art Building. www.etsy.com/shop/VicDelirium BY HEIDI GROOVER R ight now, city leaders and tenant advocates are arguing over how to best address the lack of affordable housing in Seattle. Institute rent control? Sell city bonds to build affordable housing? Charge developers linkage fees? These are huge policy decisions that will likely require long, ugly fights over the next few months or years. Meanwhile, rent is still going up. Here are three small things the city could be doing to make life a little better for renters. Like, now. Fix the just cause eviction rules. Currently, tenants on month-to-month lease agreements are protected by the city’s Just Cause Eviction Ordinance, which requires landlords to have one of 18 valid reasons to evict them. Tenants on fixed-term leases are similarly protected by the terms of their lease, which usually specify that they can’t be evicted unless they do something like fail to pay rent. If a fixed-term lease ends without automatically rolling over to a month-tomonth agreement, however, tenants are no longer protected by either the terms of their lease or the just cause rules, meaning a landlord can evict them for no reason. Jonathan Grant, the former director of the Tenants Union and a member of the mayor’s Housing Affordability and Livability Advisory Committee, calls this a “backdoor way to discriminate against people.” One proposed fix is to make all leases automatically transition to month-to-month when they end, meaning that even after a lease term ends, a landlord would have to have one of the reasons listed in the just cause law to evict. Close the tenant relocation assistance loophole. If a landlord evicts a tenant in order to demolish or renovate a building, he or she is required to help with moving costs—$3,255, split between the city and the landlord—for anyone making less than half of the area’s median income. But there’s a sneaky way landlords can get around this: by first jacking up rents so high that tenants are forced to leave on their own. The landlord gets an empty building, and the tenant gets what is often called “economically evicted.” Because of the state’s ban on rent control, the city can’t place limits on rent increases, but it can deter landlords from making such a maneuver. A proposal by city council member Nick Licata, his legislative aide Lisa Herbold (who’s running for city council), and Grant (who’s also running for city council) would allow a tenant who suspects a large rent increase is an attempt to get him or her to move to notify the city’s Department of Planning and Development. DPD would then determine whether the rent increase is “reasonable” and ask the landlord to sign a certificate promising he or she isn’t raising rents in order to get tenants to move out. (Landlords really hate this part of the idea, by the way, saying allowing the city to determine reasonableness looks too much like rent control.) Landlords who sign the pledge and then apply for permits to do significant rehab work could be fined $1,000 a day. Tenants may end up displaced anyway, but the threat of fines is meant to deter landlords from trying to get around the rule in the first place. Make landlords give tenants more notice in “no-fault” evictions. Landlords can legally evict tenants on monthto-month lease agreements for various reasons, including ones that have nothing to do with the tenants—for example, if the landlord or a relative of the landlord wants to move into the dwelling. In that case, a landlord can give a tenant just 20 days’ notice. Lengthening that window to 60 or 90 days would give tenants more time to find alternative housing. Former city council member Sally Clark was working on creating a 90-day notice requirement for these types of evictions before she left the council last month. Now that idea is stuck in limbo, waiting for someone to revive it. If someone does, the proposal could be strengthened even further: by adding the sale of the building—another, more common “no-fault” eviction—to those that get a longer heads-up. Of the three aforementioned proposals, the first one—already in motion from Licata’s office—is causing the most heartburn among landlord advocates, who say it’s preempted by state law. Mayor Ed Murray says he’s “there with [Licata] conceptually,” but won’t commit to actually supporting the idea. That leaves the decision with the city council—allow useful policy fixes to get bogged down in a drawn-out fight over big policies like rent control, or act now on behalf of renters. n NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 11 OPENING NIGHT GALA SPY MAY 14 | 7:00 PM | MCCAW HALL Smart, thrilling, and hilarious, SPY headlines tour-de-force Melissa McCarthy as a backroom analyst catapulted into the field as a fullfledged CIA agent. From the mind of comic genius Paul Feig (Bridesmaids) with an all-star cast: Jason Statham Jude Law, Rose Byrne, Miranda Hart, Bobby Cannavale, Allison Janney. DIRECTOR PAUL FEIG SCHEDULED TO ATTEND ATTEND THE BIGGEST PREMIERE PARTY OF THE YEAR FOLLOWING THE FILM WITH FOOD, LIBATIONS, MUSIC AND DANCE. AN EVENING WITH KEVIN BACON MAY 27 | 8:00 PM | SIFF CINEMA EGYPTIAN BOD_Stranger_3-25-15.pdf 1 3/25/15 7:22 AM Join acclaimed actor Kevin Bacon for a special Tribute followed by a screening of Cop Car. Mr. Bacon will be honored with the Seattle International Film Festival Career Achievement Award and an onstage interview before the screening. SPECIAL EVENT 54: THE DIRECTOR’S CUT MAY 29 | 7:00PM | FILM | EGYPTIAN An ode to the glitterball era and the infamous NYC dance club, the director’s cut of 54 unleashes 40 minutes of never-before-seen footage of the decadent and sexually free characters portrayed by Mike Meyers, Ryan Phillippe, Breckin Meyer, Mark Ruffalo, Neve Campbell and Selma Hayek. THE STUDIO 54 EXPERIENCE MAY 29 | 9:00PM | EVENT | NEPTUNE C Go beyond watching the film and experience it live as the Neptune Theatre is transformed into Club Studio 54. Disco Lessons at 9pm with a live show from 10pm til late featuring Studio 54 Dancers, videoke, flash mob performances, contests and more. M Y CM MY CY CMY K BUY TICKETS ONLINE SIFF.NET PHONE 206.324.9996 IN PERSON ALL FESTIVAL VENUES Sponsored in part by 12 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER Vashon Island Weddings & Events Tour Sunday May 17, 2015 Noon - 5 pm Chamber of Commerce Visit beautiful and unique venues. Meet the professionals who can help you plan your special Vashon wedding or event. Pick up your map at the Vashon Chamber Of Commerce office (17141 Vashon hwy SW). Visit www.WeddingOnVashon.com for more info! Photo coutesy of Terry Behal Photography CAPITOL HILL TRANSIT-ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT Curious about future development at Capitol Hill Station? COMMUNITY OPEN HOUSE MEET THE SELECTED DEVELOPER Saturday, May 16 1– 4 p.m. Century Ballroom 915 E Pine St. Seattle, WA 98122 FIND OUT MORE: capitolhillchampion.org In partnership with NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER MIDDLE WAY PEACEFUL MAY DAY ENDS WITH ARRESTS, INJURIES, AND FLASHBANGS After a May Day of peaceful protests trailed by bike cops—a Black Lives Matter march in the morning, followed by the annual El Comité march for immigrant rights—an anticapitalist march on Capitol Hill saw flashbangs, broken glass, officers in timeline? (The Arctic fleet is supposed to be in the Chukchi Sea by July 1.) Or will the port decide not to reapply? The mayor said he’s hoping the port commission will take this opportunity to “reconsider” its original decision, which bypassed any real public input. “It’s time to turn the page” on oil dependence, Murray said. This just got way bigger than kayaktivists, folks. If Seattle says “no” to Shell, will other ports follow? SYDNEY BROWNSTONE EVERYONE’S TALKING ABOUT KSHAMA SAWANT Seattle City Council member Kshama Sawant’s open criticism of her newest colleague, John Okamoto, has the chattering class callANSEL HERZ ing her divisive and This was the happy, peaceful part of May Day. Then the antimean. But instead of capitalists showed up, and arrests, injuries, and skirmishes followed. apologizing—as the Seattle Times editofull riot gear, and 16 arrests of protestrial board said she should do—Sawant is ers the police referred to as “rioters.” The leveling her own critique at the rest of the march began peacefully when protesters council. When Okamoto was appointed to left Seattle Central College around 7 p.m., the council by a 5–3 vote on April 27, Sawabut tensions worsened around 7:30, when nt (who had supported low-income-housing bike-mounted officers charged into the advocate Sharon Lee) called the Port of crowd and arrested a protester (it’s still Seattle a “cesspool of corruption” during not clear why), scattering the Black Bloc. Okamoto’s tenure as chief administrative Officers then formed lines, blocked off the officer. That set off a string of criticisms, instreet, and shouted at protesters to “move cluding from Council President Tim Burgess. back.” After the arrest, some protesters “There’s no need for personal attacks or smashed car windows, pushed dumpsters disrespectful labeling,” Burgess said at Okainto the street, and threw rocks and glass moto’s May 4 swearing in. In her response at police. Over the course of the evening, to the Times’ editorial board calling for three officers were injured, according an apology, Sawant reframed the debate, to the Seattle Police Department. Yet, the saying divisiveness on the council is not department also appeared to do little in about personal style but priorities. “Monthe way of de-escalation. Officers were day’s vote,” Sawant wrote, “demonstrates a generous in their use of flashbangs and bias by the majority on the council in favor rubber bullets, injuring some protesters, of political insiders and a lack of urgency to reporters, and at least one legal observer. address the housing crisis.” HEIDI GROOVER The National Lawyers Guild released a statement afterward saying police “singled FEDS FINALIZE CRUDE-OIL-TRAIN RULES, out and harassed… legal observers.” A AND THEY’RE NOT VERY GOOD Five briefing from the SPD to the city about the months after missing the first deadline to department’s response is scheduled for May come up with safety standards for vola6. HEIDI GROOVER tile crude-oil-by-rail transportation, the federal Department of Transportation finally issued a 395-page-long set of regulations for “bomb” trains in early May. The Feds rolled back transparency requirements proposed in their first draft, set speed limits on trains rolling through “high threat urban areas” (a limp designation that doesn’t look at population density close to the tracks), and gave KELLY O After a decision by Mayor Murray, this oil rig—currently parked the industry until 2018 in Port Angeles—might not be allowed into Seattle’s port after all. to phase out its oldest, most dangerous tank CITY THROWS ROADBLOCK AT SHELL’S cars. Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA) was ARCTIC DRILLING RIG Well, hot damn, Ed not happy. “The new DOT rule is just like Murray! On May 4, the mayor announced saying let the oil trains roll,” she said in a that the city’s Department of Planning statement. “It does nothing to address and Development found that the Port of explosive volatility, very little to reduce Seattle’s decision to host Shell’s Arctic drillthe threat of rail-car punctures, and is too ing fleet was not in compliance with its slow on the removal of the most dangerlocal permit. Now the port has to reapply ous cars. It’s more of a status quo rule than for the permit, which could take weeks, the real safety changes needed to protect or months. 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THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 15 Most Unusual Art Gift Ever The After Matthew Offenbacher won a $25,000 art prize, he did something radical. He made a conceptual artwork with Jennifer Nemhauser that consisted of buying works by women and queer artists for Seattle Art Museum. By Jen Graves W hen the traveling Elles exhibition came to Seattle Art Museum in 2012 from one of the most respected modern art museums in the world, Seattle encountered an embarrassing problem. Elles was a big show, organized by the Centre Pompidou in Paris, with more than 130 pieces in it dating from 1907 to 2007. Momentously, it included zero male artists. Women artists alone told 20th-century art history, from Frida Kahlo to Diane Arbus to Marina Abramovic. As a symbolic gesture, Seattle Art Museum wanted to create a companion exhibition out of its own holdings. The plan was that SAM would empty out the galleries and rehang them entirely with art in their permanent collection by women. There was just one problem. SAM’s 20th-century holdings, like the holdings of most museums, are so womanpoor that there was no way to fill their galleries solely with art by women. Private lenders were solicited to step in. SAM’s “collection” galleries temporarily became galleries filled with other people’s stuff. The point had been to demonstrate how much Seattle’s largest art museum values women. But Elles inadvertently revealed how much it hadn’t. Among the women artists whose work SAM had never acquired was Ann Leda Shapiro. Shapiro lives on idyllic Vashon Island, the perfect place for an early feminist artist to hide out during the Reagan, Clinton, and Bush years. The last time Shapiro made a splash as an artist was in 1973, when she had a solo show at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, her hometown. There were two solo shows by women at the Whitney in November of 1973. The other artist was Lee Krasner—an abstract painter who, at that time, was still almost entirely known as a famous man’s wife (that drippainter fellow, rhymes with “bollock”). Unlike Krasner, Shapiro is no abstractionist. She’s completely out there with her subject matter. Her 1970s watercolors are feminist and antiwar fantasias, depicting hermaphroditic mermaids with interlocking nipples, fish that look like little missiles, and deemed obscene and inappropriate for a fineart museum. But she took notice the following year when her friend Jim Nutt, a male artist who uses overtly sexualized imagery, had a big exhibition at the Whitney. At the time of her own show, Shapiro didn’t even think of fighting it. “I was young and I was shocked, and I just sort of said, oh, I’m lucky the show is hanging, and that was that,” she told me. “I chose not to participate in the art world per se after that, just at alternative spaces or university art galleries. But what I think is important is that I didn’t do internalized censorship. I painted what I wanted to paint.” An archivist at the Whitney confirms Shapiro’s exhibition in November 1973, but SAM’s 20th-century holdings are so womanpoor that there was no way to fill their galleries solely with art by women. COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND SEATTLE ART MUSEUM female astronauts whose penises and breasts are imprinted with the American flag. When the drawing department at the Whitney invited her to show, Shapiro sent slides, the works were approved, and then she sent in the works themselves. At that point, she was confoundingly informed by the curator that two pieces, one titled Two Sides of Self (the mermaids) and one titled Anger, would not be allowed to be shown in the Whitney because “anything erect was edited out, anything limp was hung, if you know what I mean,” according to Shapiro. (This anecdote may prompt your own extended consideration of whether the female mermaids’ penises are, in fact, erect. They appear to be in something of a middle state.) In other words, Shapiro’s work was the museum’s files contain no mention of censorship. Nor do the files contain a final list of which works went up on the walls. After a time, Shapiro turned her studies toward acupuncture and Chinese medicine, moved to Vashon Island, and mostly disappeared from the art world. She kept painting, but Seattle Art Museum, the major art museum in her adopted region, never even knew she existed. A few weeks ago, Two Sides of Self, the mermaid watercolor, and another watercolor that has never gone on exhibit anywhere, Woman Landing on Man on the Moon, crossed over to the other side—into SAM’s permanent collection. Now SAM is spending its money and energy protecting these pieces, each no larger than a kitchen cutting board. Shapiro hopes that SAM in 2015 will be willing to exhibit what the Whitney of 1973 would not. “I hope they hang it on the walls—that’s my concern,” Shapiro said. “I wouldn’t be Continued on page 17 CANNABIS 16 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER RAIN CITY Mon - Sat 10 -11 Sun 12 -7 21 & OVER LEGAL WEED www.sholdtdesign.com | 206.623.2334 Central Co-op Owners OWNER DISCOUNT DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN! @rain cannabis #SPARK HAPPY EXPERT STAFF RARE STRAINS EDIBLES CONCENTRATES HIGH THC $10 grams 11537 RAINIER AVE SOUTH WEED IS FOR ADULTS 21 AND OVER. KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN. DO NOT OPERATE A VEHICLE OR HEAVY MACHINERY WHILE UNDER THE INFLUENCE. MARIJUANA CAN IMPAIR YOU. MARIJUANA CAN BE HARMFUL TO YOUR HEALTH. Monday through Saturday May 11 to May 16 Take 10% off one shopping trip! 1600 E Madison St 206.329.1545 www.centralcoop.coop NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 17 COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND SEATTLE ART MUSEUM KLARA GLOSOVA’S ‘LIFE ON THE SIDELINES’ From a series of giant watercolor-on-paper paintings, this one was recently acquired by SAM. surprised if they don’t.” She paused. “I usually show at the credit union on Vashon.” T he only reason that Ann Leda Shapiro has been inducted into future art history as told by SAM is that Seattle artist Matthew Offenbacher recently won a prize and, together with Jennifer Nemhauser, decided to do something revolutionary with it. Offenbacher is a mid-level Seattle artist. He’s a painter but also an organizer of artists, and the publisher of a smart, influential zine called La Norda Specialo. His paintings are not included in any Seattle museum collections, but he has been recognized for them. In 2013, he won the Neddy at Cornish in painting, which comes with an unrestricted $25,000 award. An unrestricted award means you can do whatever you want with the money—buy a convertible, blow it on the best beach vacation ever. But Offenbacher and Jennifer Nemhauser, his partner of 25 years, decided to take the money coming into their household and send it right back out. They bought art by female and queer artists who live locally and they donated it to SAM for the permanent collection. “It’s a conversation we’ve had for as long as we’ve been together—the issue of who is valued, who gets to be written into textbooks in history,” Nemhauser said. She’s a biology professor at the University of Washington, and has the same questions about science as Offenbacher has about art. After Elles made painfully obvious just how slim museum holdings are, meetings of Seattle artists were convened, including one called the Seattle Women’s Convention, to ask: What next? What can we do to support women artists better? Not long after Offenbacher won the $25,000, he sent SAM curators Catharina Manchanda and Chiyo Ishikawa a simple e-mail requesting a meeting. Right away, there was interest. Soon the two curators were in a fifth-floor conference room with Offenbacher and Nemhauser, talking about their idea. Offenbacher and Nemhauser had brought with them a list of 50 artists and works they felt represented the best of local feminist and queer art. It was, Manchanda said, “the most unusual project in relation to an acquisition that I’ve ever worked on.” Offenbacher and Nemhauser proposed the whole project as a work of art unto itself, called Deed of Gift. The work is not only the gift of the small collection to the museum, but the process leading up to the gift. “As a gesture, as a project, as an undertaking, I see it as need to be asked and discussed. This art project is a bit of a prod.” In other words, giving to SAM was a way of critiquing SAM from the inside. “I ’m not naive, I never would have made it into the Seattle Art Museum,” said Joey Veltkamp, the only male artist of the seven. His piece that entered the collection as part of Deed of Gift is a quilt, referencing that domestic “feminine” craft, made using fabric that’s patterned with butch plaids and symbols of the rugged outdoors in Montana—plus swatches with bears and squares of fuzzy faux polar-bear fur. “It’s just so damn sweet. It’s just such a gentle institutional critique. Like a hug. Like, ‘Okay, you’re missing some things, so let’s give them to you. That seems to be really hard, maybe this will help.’” When Manchanda visited Veltkamp for a studio visit as part of her stealth research for Deed an extension of Matt’s larger of Gift, Veltkamp didn’t know why self-understanding as an artist,” someone so important was visitManchanda continued, “and as an ing him. He’s a self-taught artist. artist who wants to make a differBeing part of SAM’s collection is ence in the local community. I may “shockingly validating,” he said be overstating it if I say I’m seeing later. It was good at the time he it as an art project, but it felt that didn’t know the stakes were high, COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND SEATTLE ART MUSEUM way.” because he figured why not go for Deed of Gift—there is an actual JOEY VELTKAMP’S ‘GLACIER’ QUILT His version of the it, and he and the curator were domestic “feminine” craft is patterned with butch plaids and legal deed documenting the deed able to have a real conversation, that was done—can also be seen as symbols of the rugged outdoors. he said. an epic act of kindness. “She talked about [how] it actu“What a generous gift,” said ally is hard to get work at SAM project that was trying to start conversations by women artists and queer artists, because, Robert Kaplan, a museum trustee who is and have symbolic value in the community on the acquisitions committee. (Kaplan is a you know, someone might approach you with around how artists and artworks are valued, major collector of Australian aboriginal art.) money, and you direct them toward a piece, how museums make value.” “He must be quite an interesting person.” and that money might dry up if it’s a piece by “It starts from a hard place,” Nemhauser But that’s not how Offenbacher and Nema woman or a queer artist,” said Veltkamp. elaborated. “It wants to bring up really hard hauser prefer to see it. “It just kind of shocked me that in 2015, things to talk about. Charity is a little differ“We don’t like it at all when people say, that’s still a challenge sometimes.” ent. [Deed of Gift] is not selfless. We’re really ‘You’re so generous,’” Offenbacher told me. (Manchanda said later that she would deeply invested in our community in Seattle “The intention of it wasn’t to be generous, characterize their conversation differently. and think there are some hard questions that really… I’d like it to be understood as an art Continued on page 19 A SAM curator called it “the most unusual project in relation to an acquisition that I’ve ever worked on.” May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER Mon-Fri: 10am-8pm/Sat-Sun: 10am-6pm *Kobe Animal Kingdom in Kobe, Hyogo prefecture 18 Japan Air + Hotel packages, Japan Rail Pass, everything to customize your unique Japan experience DISCOVER JAPAN MORE WITH Direct inquiries to H.I.S. Seattle Branch: 206-682-0850 • http://hanavi.his.travel 610 Maynard Ave S, Seattle WA, 98104 NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND SEATTLE ART MUSEUM WYNNE GREENWOOD In one of her signature videos, this one titled YOUNG WOMAN WARRIOR PREPARED FOR BATTLE, which was just acquired by SAM. As she explained it, “Some people are drawn to things that are more classic—to, say, key moments in the history of art—and then others want to be politically engaged.” Manchanda added that she “would personally love to build the legacy” at SAM in feminist work and conceptual art of the 1960s, two areas where SAM’s collection is thin.) SAM does not keep tabs on the gender breakdown of its modern and contemporary art collection, according to a spokesperson. But upon request, SAM was able to tally how many works by male and female artists the museum has acquired in the last two years for its modern and contemporary collections, which cover the 20th and 21st centuries. In that span, SAM acquired 221 works total: 35 by women and 186 by men. It’s difficult to come to tidy conclusions about a project as complex as Deed of Gift, but one sure thing is that Deed reveals how much unseen power and sway people with money have over what the museum decides to preserve for posterity. This should come as no surprise. Almost every art museum in this country was founded by a rich man giving over his rare, expensive stuff. The family gets the windfall from the tax break for donating, and the public gets culture, so it’s a win-win. But science was always part of the The project reveals how much unseen power and sway people with money have over what the museum decides to preserve for posterity. COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND SEATTLE ART MUSEUM DAFT KUNTZ “So good it could have been made by a man” is something a man told artist Victoria Haven, who is half of Daft Kuntz. “collectors and donors should realize they have much more of an influence” on the city and the museum than they might think. And with power comes you-know-what. There is a bright side to the arbitrary way that a single donor can make a difference. Someone with money who wants to help round out a museum collection simply “has to put a stake in the sand,” said Josef Vascovitz, a wealthy Seattle donor. Vascovitz and his wife, Lisa Goodman, donate almost exclusively art by artists of color to SAM. Somebody has to do it, because the museum has very little budget for any new art, let alone artists who aren’t household names. The art-going public still prefers Picasso, Matisse, and the impressionists. Donors can intervene to provide balance in the permanent collections. “If you say ‘feminist artists’ or ‘black artists,’ even if those artists are offering their commentary on landscape, you scare museum-goers away,” said Vascovitz, who was on the acquisitions committee that approved Deed of Gift. “It’s one thing when Lisa and myself give, because everybody assumes we can and should,” said Vascovitz. But when people like Offenbacher and Nemhauser take “their very limited resources and use them as a multiplier effect like this? It’s exceptional, and I don’t use that adjective lightly.” Offenbacher and Nemhauser have an agreement that they check in with each other any time either of them wants to spend more than $100. She recalled how this time he described his idea over dinner, and Nemhauser “basically said, ‘Wow, you have such an awesome brain—I totally want to do this with you!’ It was really that simple.” By contrast, “This time of year, we spend a lot of time… debating about how many bunches of asparagus are reasonable versus pure decadence.” K COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND SEATTLE ART MUSEUM A CHAPBOOK BY ANNE FOCKE The picture, too. Museums are meant to gather together artistic experiences and assess them in a comprehensive way that no single person’s taste could. They are meant to write history, to be factual. They classify art by breaking it down into time periods and geographical regions and styles, and those styles are understood as more than mere fashions—they reflect back the larger world from which they derive. The professionalized, academically based, quasi-scientific, yet popular art museum— the American art museum as it stands today, like Seattle Art Museum—is crawling with conflicts and paradoxes that never overtly make it into the galleries. Those are the heart of Deed of Gift. Seattle Art Museum is a private entity, THE STRANGER founder of the 1974 alternative art space and/or published this piece called “a pragmatic reponse to real circumstances.” but with that name, it sounds like a public agency. As a civic symbol, it ought to reflect the entire city and not just an elite slice of it. Offenbacher and Nemhauser chose SAM rather than the Henry Art Gallery or the smaller Frye Art Museum for that reason. What SAM owns in some senses the city owns. If SAM supports women artists, then this particular city is a comparatively good place for women artists. “Giving work to a museum is automatically made to be a charity act,” Offenbacher said. He’s getting heaped with praise for being a donor. But, he said, like it or not, lara Glosova, another Seattle artist whose work is entering SAM’s collection thanks to Deed of Gift, has always made art from her everyday. She has teenage sons who play soccer. A lot of soccer. For Glosova, this means many hours spent on the edges of sports fields, the edges of her sons’ heartbreaks and triumphs. Last year, Glosova made something of a departure from her more typical ceramic sculptures of everyday objects—dirty socks on the floor, for example—by creating a series of huge, gorgeous watercolors on paper called Life on the Sidelines. The paintings depict, over and over, rows of parents on the sidelines of athletic fields. The parents cast long shadows, and nothing is happening on the field. You never see faces, only backs. Last month was the first time Glosova had ever been behind the scenes at SAM. She is used to showing work in galleries and DIY spaces. When Glosova brought the watercolor SAM had acquired through Deed of Gift, it was treated with a reverence she’d never experienced before. “Nobody wanted to touch it, and they asked me to slide it off the cardboard,” she said. “It was like it crossed over to another place that’s very unfamiliar to me.” While she was there, she noticed the freight elevator was so big and beautiful, she Continued on page 21 May 6, 2015 19 (5/6) Scholar in Residence Mona Akmal Scratch Night TOWN HALL CIVICS SCIENCE ARTS & CULTURE COMMUNITY 2-for-$5 Double Feature! 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(Newly Tweaked and Relabeled) Be sure to visit our Taproom next time you visit the Valley! 8032 Falls Ave SE, Snoqualmie, WA fallsbrew.com I BET YOU CAN’T WAIT FOR THE FRESHEST BEER POSSIBLE www.3pubs.com r ou hborh Neign 15thood P o u b Y 20 507 15th Ave E 206-328-3120 9219 35th Ave NE 206.525.0752 6423 Latona Ave NE 206.525.2238 Mon 5/11, 7pm Cask Beer 101 with Bill from Machine House Tue 5/12, 7pm Two Beers & Seattle Cider Co tasting Wed 5/13, 7pm Photography from Paul Orchard & release of Paul’s Beer Camp beer. Thu 5/14, 7pm Black Raven Brewery Night Sat 5/9, 4pm Tue 5/12, 7pm Backwoods Brewery Night w/ Bluegrass BrewBQ with Silver City Wed 5/13, 7-pm Alaskan - Get smoked! Special smoked porter Sat 5/16, 4pm BrewBQ Collaboration Everybody’s Naked in the Backwoods Wed 5/13, 5pm Wall of Casks! Boundary Bay, Anacortes, 7 Seas, Big Time, Hales & Stoup. Fri 5/15, 5pm Sierra Nevada Happy Hour F E AT U R E SUGGESTS CHOW MUSIC FILM an excellent essay he wrote about Northwest artists titled “Green Gothic,” is held in SAM’s library, which means that when Manchanda searches for “Offenbacher” in SAM’s internal system, she at first thinks he is officially included in the permanent collection, then no, then maybe, and finally: no. “That really pleases me, that my status in relation to the museum is confusing,” Offenbacher said, in his calm, gentle-voiced, nonconfrontational way. He sounds curious. He always sounds curious. The only work of art SAM did not acquire is Deed of Gift itself. That belongs to Offenbacher and Nemhauser, and they’d be willing to sell—but the price is $25,000, which they would turn around and spend the same way, on more art for a museum. O n April 21, SAM hosted a party for the donors of all recent acquisitions. There were drinks and hors d’oeuvres, and most of the people were in fancy dress, suits and ties. This was the final “window into how SAM does things” that Offenbacher and Nemhauser got. Artists were also invited, and all sat together at one table. No seats were assigned, but the tables ended up divided by role anyway: donors, artists, museum staffers. Seattle artists Dawn Cerny and Victoria Haven were there. They collaborate under the pseudonym Daft Kuntz, a name that’s a play on “cunts” and kunst, the German word for “art.” Their 2012 silkscreen So Good It Could Have Been was also included in Deed of Gift, so it was part of the video slide show depicting all the acquisitions SAM has made so far in 2015. The newest work in the slide show was Glosova’s 2014 Life on the Sidelines; the oldest were Japanese prints from the 1790s. (This blew Glosova’s mind.) When the video got to the Daft Kuntz silkscreen, you could at first see only the top of the print, with the words “So good it could have been” on a white background. Then the camera scrolled slowly down to see the rest of the words: “Made by a man.” “Somebody later told me they were sitting behind Barney Ebsworth, and he was audibly chuckling when it panned down,” Haven said. “Because it’s softer and sentimental at the top, and then it hits you over the head at the end.” Ebsworth is a former cruise-ship and Build-A-Bear tycoon who lives on the Eastside and owns a 20th-century American art collection many museums covet—important pieces by major artists. He has, or has given to SAM or the National Gallery of Art, major works by David Hockney, Edward Hopper, Charles Sheeler, Andy Warhol, Georgia O’Keeffe, and other artists. For a moment, the fan of American classics was enjoying two new American artists. And the only reason that Daft Kuntz piece was ever made in the first place was because of a gendered insult. After the opening of Elles at SAM in 2012, Haven and friends walked to a nearby bar for drinks. Another piece of Haven’s had been included in SAM’s Elles companion show, and a male artist—Haven won’t say who it is—told her he loved her work. “I don’t know why it has to be [in] an allfemale show,” he told her. “Your work is so good, it could have been made by a man.” n Offenbacher, the original instigator, is the only artist in all of this who does not have art in SAM’s collection. THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 21 GEORGE & DRAGON PUB encouraged them to put on shows there. As for how it felt watching her art entering SAM’s collection, she talked about it like a parent giving away a child. “Somebody else will take care of it much better than I ever would,” she said. “That’s huge for an artist.” Being part of Deed of Gift “kind of seems like the best thing that could ever happen to an artist.” Offenbacher admits with a smile that the path Glosova’s painting took to get into SAM’s collection was “extremely nonlinear.” “We started with a very naive view,” Nemhauser said. “We didn’t realize how much of a political process it is,” added Offenbacher. Don’t forget that Offenbacher and Nemhauser started with a list of 50 artworks; Deed of Gift ended up consisting of seven total. As for what didn’t make the cut, all the specifics of the conversations between the donors and the museum are confidential. Nemhauser explained that artists in Seattle are told often enough that they’re inadequate that they don’t need to know they were on the losing end of yet another competition for scarce resources. But it sounds like the curators and Offenbacher and Nemhauser really hashed it out. “Those conversations were substantive,” Nemhauser said. At first, Nemhauser wanted to donate more obscure pieces. “That doesn’t fly at all at a museum,” she learned. The museum wants an “iconic” piece by Wynne Greenwood—one of her nationally known videos, for example—not one of her soft sculptures. Greenwood’s signature 2007 video YOUNG WOMAN WARRIOR PREPARED FOR BATTLE was selected for Deed of Gift. Over the course of months of e-mails, phone calls, meetings, and studio visits, there was horse trading. There were times when the curators came back from the director’s office with changes. Offenbacher and Nemhauser never met the director or any board members. “The idea of ‘women’s experience’ came from the museum, and ‘feminist and queer thought’ was coming from our side,” Nemhauser said. “So— those met.” Nemhauser and Offenbacher both laughed, and she said, “It’s politics, right? Museums are intensely conservative. It’s more clear to me now why holes that everybody can see and point to don’t get filled over time.” In the end, Offenbacher and Nemhauser spent $16,800 directly on the art. They estimate they spent about $20,000 total on Deed of Gift, including various expenses, paying themselves an artists’ fee, and a planned party. The artworks cost from $5,000 down to $6 for a chapbook by Anne Focke, who emerged in the 1970s by founding the interdisciplinary center and/or, and went on to become a legendary Seattle artist/administrator. The curator Manchanda argues that Offenbacher continues Focke’s legacy. “She redefined artistic practice at an earlier time,” said Manchanda. “She writes, ‘the patterns I make, the work I do, is functional like a container… not simply a container for something else. A form-er.’” Likewise, Deed of Gift is functional like a container, and it forms something new. And think about this: Offenbacher, the original instigator, is the only artist in all of this who does not have art in SAM’s collection. One issue of his zine, containing ARTS THE NEWS 22 Tap Handles! All of them delicious. Enjoy yourself on our our ouTdoor pATio! Mondays: Free Pool Tuesdays: Quiz Night, 8pm Every Day: Football on Telly! Happy Hour Mon-Fri: 3p-7p, Sun: 8p-2a Cocktails, Fine Ales & Great Food Seattle’s British Pub since 1995 206 N. 36th St. Fremont georgeanddragonpub.com BOOMBOX IPA CAN RELEASE PARTY Thursday, May 7th, 6-10pm Breakdancing, DJ, Music and $3 Tallboys 1550 NW 49th ST -- BALLARD 206-257-4486 drink@hilliardsbeer.com Thu 5/8, 6pm DRAKES PINT Night Sat 5/9, 6pm HEAVY METAL Beer Night: Trve, Trinity & Epic Brewing Wed 5/13, 6pm Pint Night Challenge: GIGANTIC & ECLIPTIC fight to the death. Thu 5/14 6pm OLD 48 Imp Stout w/Naked City Bus Ride Sat 5/16 6pm BALLAST POINT Barrel Aged Beer Night 1205 NE 65th St. Seattle, WA 98115 WWW.TORONADOSEATTLE.COM FULL LIST OF EVENTS ON 22 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER This Friday capitolhillblockparty.com s Pluny mao r e ! m THE STRANGER STRANGERSUGGESTS WED MAY 6 The Shilohs THU A night of gentle music for easy humans. The Shilohs (Vancouver, BC) are a sweet blast of heartfelt retro— 1960s Kinks–like pop bursting with handclaps and boy harmonies and sprinkled with sincere rock à la Teenage Fanclub. In the ever-rising sea of frayed garage rock, the Shilohs keep their edges nicely hemmed. Also playing are iji, Zach Burba’s everevolving smooth dance-pop project that will keep you in the deepest groove, and the soft hug of Thousands, a duo bringing you acoustic hints of a more whimsical Elliott Smith meeting a more timid Simon and Garfunkel. (Sunset Tavern, 5433 Ballard Ave NW, sunsettavern.com, 8 pm, $8, 21+) EMILY N O KE S FRI MAY 8 The Rentals 23 SO MUCH MORE AT THESTRANGER.COM/EVENTS ‘Clouds of Sils Maria’ MAY 7 MUSIC May 6, 2015 FILM Firstly, Clouds of Sils Maria is directed by one of the smartest and coolest (cool as in Jim Jarmusch or Wong Kar-wai) directors in the world, Olivier Assayas. Secondly, one of its two stars is Juliette Binoche, a French actress who has entered the splendid autumn of a career that began in the mid ’80s. She has become one of the queens of cinema. Thirdly, the other star of the film, Twilight’s Kristen Stewart, who plays the personal assistant of Binoche’s character, Maria Enders, is just perfect. This role was made for this kind of human being, this kind of American. (Seven Gables, 911 NE 50th St, landmarktheatres.com, 4:30, 7:10, and 9:45 pm, $10.50) C H ARLE S MUD E D E MUSIC Former Weezer bassist Matt Sharp (legend has it he was the magic ingredient that made Weezer so damn great, back when they were so damn great) went on to form a very fun, very on-again/off-again exuberant, buzzing synthesizer pop project called the Rentals (“Friends of P.” is their must-mixtape hit). With the switch recently flipped back to the on position, Sharp and his everrotating bandmates return with all the buoyant harmonies, black-framed glasses, and mid-’90s-flavored alt pop you can handle. (Crocodile, 2200 Second Ave, thecrocodile.com, 8 pm, $15, all ages) E M I LY NOK E S MAY 9 Small Pieces at SAM SUN MAY 10 ART Every once in a while, you should go to the art museum not to see the big exhibitions but to look for small moments, little pieces to love. Right now at SAM, I recommend Harun Farocki’s Serious Games, four channels of video playing simultaneously in a room, enclosing you in a box of images. They follow soldiers training for war, or coping with its aftermath, in actual therapeutic video games and theatrical stagings. Go on to Joseph Cornell’s collages—eccentricity at its best—nearby (this is all on the third floor), and finish with Robert Gober’s handmade urinal, which at first looks sleek and slipcast, until it doesn’t, and turns into white flesh. (Seattle Art Museum, 1300 First Ave, seattleartmuseum.org, 10 am–5 pm, pay what you can) JEN G R AVE S MON MAY 11 MARK NOMURA SAT Neil Michael Hagerty As coleader of Royal Trux—America’s greatest rock group of the ’90s—Neil Michael Hagerty fused the Rolling Stones at their grittiest with Ornette Coleman’s harmolodics. Since Royal Trux’s split in 2001, guitarist/vocalist Hagerty (who also played in Pussy Galore) has created a huge canon of idiosyncratic, thorny avant rock while changing personnel and approaches with every release. Of all the underground rockers who bloomed in the ’80s, Hagerty remains among the most adventurous, restlessly seeking new ways to wring wicked magic out of rock’s moribund corpus—and succeeding more often than not. (Black Lodge, 8:30 pm, all ages) D AV E SE GAL This Is Washington Dammit! Last year, more craft breweries opened in Washington than any other state—83, according to the national Brewers Association. (New York came in a distant second with 67; California came in third with 59.) What better way to celebrate our state’s beer-soaked supremacy than by sampling 35 different Washington-brewed beers (and one cider) from 35 different breweries for just $3.50 a pint? The event, part of Seattle Beer Week (which runs May 7–17), is appropriately titled “THIS IS WASHINGTON DAMMIT!” (Beveridge Place Pub, 6413 California Ave SW, seattlebeerweek.com, noon–2 am) A N G EL A G A R B E S BOOZE TUE MAY 12 Hallucinatory Maps MUSIC Gentlemen Take Polaroids DJ Night Named after a song by elegant British glam-pop group Japan, Gentlemen Take Polaroids is a new monthly DJ night dedicated to melodramatic music pertaining to romance and its complications and paradoxes. DJ Domenica (who also cohosts The Buoy and Bellow Radio Program on Hollow Earth Radio and spins at the Spread Thick dance party) and her fellow selectors will air songs by the emotionally fraught likes of Roxy Music, Dusty Springfield, Timi Yuro, Scott Walker, Lee Hazlewood, the Associates, and others. Prepare for a night of gorgeous melodies and deep swooning. (Rendezvous, 2322 Second Ave, jewelboxtheater.com, 7 pm, free, 21+) D AV E SE GAL MUSIC FILM At times, measured doses of experimental cinema can actually serve to lighten the mood, rejuvenate the mind, and recalibrate the senses. I swear, just try it! Start with this program, which showcases the work of oddball pastiche filmmaker Georg Koszulinski. Prepare (or better, don’t) to be led through periods of narrative documentary about the American mystery full of ideas and introspective commentary and then to be suddenly cut loose from the concrete: long sequences of layered ephemera, trance-inducing cutups of salvaged home movies, blown-out film, wild colors and visions. In total, the hallucination should last two hours, beamed into existence both digitally and through beautiful 16-mm film. (Grand Illusion, 1403 NE 50th St, grandillusioncinema.org, 7 pm, $9) K R IS H A N U R AY 24 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER ARTS Theater…below Books…27 The High List…29 I Don’t Even Know Where to Begin Talking About Beware of the Dandelions Detroit Collective Complex Movements Is Aptly Named BY BRENDAN KILEY May 6, 2015 25 about their work with the Black Panthers in the Deep South, as well as current struggles in Detroit), the conversation was a little livelier. People talked about generational conflict within “the movement” and so on, and I asked a question. Complex Movements frequently references Grace Lee Boggs, its 99-year-old Chinese American activist mentor, and her talk about complex science and emergence theory (defined by Wikipedia as “a process whereby larger entities, patterns, and regularities arise through interactions among smaller or simpler entities that themselves do not exhibit such properties”): What do they have to do with culture, activism, and conflict within “the movement”? Then Invincible/ill told a story. They had just returned from Detroit, where they had gone for a few days of downtime. (They prefer gender-neutral pronouns.) But, shortly after they arrived, a federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot and killed 20-year-old Terrance Kellom, the cousin of a dear friend. Kellom was supposedly hiding out at his father’s house after stealing some cash and pizzas from a delivery guy. Officials say Kellom was shot because he was “wielding” a hammer—the father, who watched as his son was gunned down, as well as press reports, contradict this claim. Then reporters dug up the ICE agent’s long and troubling history of domestic and on-the-job A hiphop epic about a toxified future-world where people revolt against an elite class in a communistic, nonhierarchical, ecofriendly way. DOUG COOMBE COMPLEX MOVEMENTS The Detroit-based art-activist collective: Wesley Taylor, Waajeed, Invincible/ill, and Carlos Garcia (L05). L ast month, while working on a preview of Beware of the Dandelions, a show by Detroit-based collective Complex Movements at On the Boards, I kept running into a stubborn problem: Nobody seemed able to describe what it actually was. People generally agreed that the show involved a small audience inside a videodrenched “pod,” as well as hiphop, audience participation, and social-justice issues. As the company (sort of) explained in an e-mail: Audience members play the role of postapocalyptic survivors in a parable that tracks the plight of a community struggling to create change and new societies… The experience in the pod begins to help communities understand how the ideas of complex sciences are applicable to local social-justice issues. The story unfolds through projected animation, immersive sound, and interactive components. I still couldn’t quite picture it. To complicate matters, the collective had scheduled weeks of events, video installations, and “community conversations” featuring local activists: prison abolitionists, food-justice advocates, leaders of “undoing racism” workshops, and so on. Typically, when a company comes to On the Boards, it hangs out for a few days, does its theater or dance, maybe teaches a master class, and then decamps to the next city. What was Complex Movements—and On the Boards—up to? After taking a few trips to the pod, I can understand why people have trouble describ- Invincible/ill were a little tough to follow. The performers are hidden, except for a ing Beware of the Dandelions. It’s not one thing, but three things stacked on top of each brief appearance at the end, but video images other: a political proposition (Detroit artists streak across the interior walls of the pod: take over a Seattle theater with an unusual raindrops, silhouettes of vines and barbed degree of autonomy), a performance (the wire, gutted buildings, digitized faces, bloompod), and a conversation the collective wants ing dandelions (a symbol, as you might have us to have with ourselves about racism, capi- guessed by now, of populist resilience). The audience is then encouraged to chant talism, and resistance. Let’s start in the middle of this triple- “WAGE LOVE” while being led to another decker sandwich with a concrete, spoiler- room for a postshow discussion “circle,” alert account of the show itself—which, de- where things get even more sincere. (This is spite all the rhetorical fog, is actually quite the third part of the sandwich: conversations.) simple. Small audiences are escorted into the After the performance, one woman quietly sobbed into her hands, one man ofegg-shaped pod for about an hour fered robust “mmm-hmms” after and listen to a hiphop epic about a PREVIEW hearing sentiments he agreed with, toxified future-world where people Beware of the a couple of people looked like they revolt against an elite class called Dandelions “the Captains of Industry” in a Complex Movements were trying to suppress smirks, and most of the rest of us wore communistic, nonhierarchical, ecoat On the Boards studiedly neutral smiles. It was friendly way. You may be familiar May 7–10 difficult to tell what we were collecwith the old communistic tension between Vladimir Lenin and Rosa Luxem- tively thinking. That night, the conversation burg: He advocated for top-down revolution- was a little strained, with shy audience memary cells led by elite and trained cadres; she bers and a nervous local activist-facilitator. It would be dishonest to omit the fact that fought for horizontal, spontaneous uprising from below. (For what it’s worth, he died in being released into the fresh night air was a bed and was venerated. She was shot in the relief. I have no opposition to love, and also street and thrown into a canal.) Dandelions suspect capitalism isn’t the most intelligent takes the Luxemburg line. Sample lyrics: “In- or humane way to organize our affairs, but stead of being trapped / controlled and grown socially compulsory chanting and sharing— in rows / we the wild seeds that overthrow / however well-intentioned and solidaritydreams take root / deep in the soil / cracking minded—gives me the heebie-jeebies. This weekend, after attending one of the the street / and reach like sequoias…” Unfortunately, on the night I attended, the sound installations (a series of video interviews with was not at peak clarity and the lyrics by MC mostly African American activists talking violence. Something had to be done. So Invincible/ill and others in Detroit organized a march near the scene of the killing. After a little chanting and a press conference, they expected the crowd to disperse. It did not. As a massive green paddy wagon pulled up, Invincible/ill said, organizers negotiated with police and the crowd, trying to prevent a mass arrest. But then Invincible/ill and a few others started spreading the word that there was a legal loophole. The crowd could hold the intersection and avoid arrest if they kept moving by marching in a circle through the crosswalks. The worst the police could do in that case—legally, anyway—was hand out tickets for jaywalking. The demonstrators whispered that to each other, person to person, and the tactic worked. “The way that was achieved,” Invincible/ill said, “was small-scale communication—like ants, like starlings… that’s emergence. A complex system made up of relationships, and not just moving parts.” Detroit has become a point of fascination for people who are curious about capitalism and its failures: 39.3 percent of its residents live in poverty, 26 percent of its residential parcels are vacant, 30 percent of its streetlights are out, tens of thousands of people are facing water shutoffs, and businesses are muscling in to privatize branches of government, including utilities. It is also a place that is finding collective ways of solving problems in the bottom-up, Luxemburg, Dandelions mode—crowdfunded and solar-powered streetlights, volunteer groundskeeper crews to tend neglected city parks, collective urban gardens to ensure that neighborhoods have access to fresh produce. This is the home of Complex Movements. Given all this, in which vicinity of Beware of the Dandelions should the critic point and say, “There’s the art and I think X about it”? The pod? The awkward conversations? The 26 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM FEDORA EL MORRO DUMP SITE Gothic, mysterious, and ADA compliant. astonishingly revelatory conversations? However murky that question may be, it’s at least clear that the members of Complex Movements have not just come to show us some work—they’re here for the emergence. n ism, transforming us into a flock of mute, glitter-eyed witnesses peering from corners and through trees. Encouraged to explore the environments and find clues, viewers become scavengers, moving and shuffling like crows to get the best view of the grisly action. n T H E AT E R Dump Site Immerses Audience in a Macabre, Mesmerizing Horror Play BOOKS Resurrecting Denise Levertov Rebecca Brown Talks Breathing the Water, a Celebration of the Northwest Poet BY RICH SMITH BY SARRA SCHERB N ever has the plural “a murder of crows” seemed more apt than in Dump Site, the macabre, mesmerizing new show by Seattle Immersive Theatre. A particularly Northwest blend of dark forests, deep silences, and serial killers, the horror unfolds in three custom-built environments in a warehouse in Sodo, transformed by the company into 8,500 echoing feet of gothic, mysterious, taxidermied menace, replete with cocktails. Dump Site’s plot is classic horror movie: Siblings Reed (Simon Hamlin) and Charlotte (Evelyn DeHais) meet in their late father’s storage unit to go through his effects, only to discover a mysterious videotape—featuring the eerie, effective Rebekah Boroughs as a teenage runaway—that shatters their fond memories of Daddy. The tropes are familiar—unraveling tortured artist, shovel radiating menace in the corner, web of yarn and pins on a conspiracytheory map, conflation of young female victims with birds—but the reason the show works (and it does, deliREVIEW ciously) is because we’re used to watching this stuff Dump Site on a screen. Dump Site Seattle Immersive puts us right in the thick Theatre of it. Through June 7 Though the audience isn’t called upon to interact (a mercy), we’re not just spectators, either. Each audience member dons a black mask in the shape of a hybrid finch/raven—each a beautiful resin cast by Gage instructor Elijah Evenson. (Though the show is ADA compliant, woe is anyone who needs to wear glasses in their mask.) However commonplace they are in such immersive productions (hello, Sleep No More), audience masks are an inspired device. They remove the temptation to watch fellow spectators and heighten the sense of voyeur- A fter her death in 1997, the poet Denise Levertov was buried just up the hill from Bruce Lee in Lake View Cemetery. The pairing has always made absolute sense to me. Levertov was a feminist poet, an environmentalist poet, an antiwar poet, but she was also a fiery pilPREVIEW grim who never wanted to Breathing be known as any of those the Water: A Celebration things. She also liked to shop at Elliott Bay Book of Denise Company, attend church at Levertov St. Joseph, and go for tea at Various locations Through May 16 the Sorrento with her friend Jan. Apropos of tea, Bruce Lee said, “When you pour water in a teapot, it becomes the teapot. Now, water can flow, or drip, or creep, or crash. Be water, my friend.” With the help of volunteers and St. Joseph Parish, the writer and treasure Rebecca Brown has organized Breathing the Water, a three-week-long celebration of Levertov’s work that will culminate on May 16, which the City of Seattle has declared Denise Levertov Day. To get the lowdown on Levertov, I caught up with Brown by phone. Levertov wrote nearly 30 books, mostly poetry, but also a few prose collections. Where did you start with her? For me, the early stuff is just wellbehaved, imitative work. It’s about the muse and the body, and there’s all sorts of conclusions in them—whatever. The work got really interesting with some of the political poetry later. And the last four or five books—Sands of the Well, Evening Train, A Door in the Hive, The Great Unknowing—they’re about the big, big issues: the whole “What is a mountain? Who’s God? What’s knowledge?” thing. In those later books, she’s more in the presence of her materials. Art. 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Your Price: $20 SHOCK, SCREAM & RUN! SELF DEFENSE FOR WOMEN WALLINGFORD! Learn to use your natural strengths to effectively defend yourself with some simple techniques. Don’t wait to be attacked before you learn how to protect yourself, take the time now to protect yourself in the future! Six Self-Defense Classes for Women ($95 Value). Your Price: $47.50 PURCHASE THESE GREAT OFFERS AND MORE AT STRANGERPERKS.COM Want your business in StrangerPerks? E-mail StrangerPerks@thestranger.com or call 206-323-7101 SUMMER 2015 COMING JUNE 10TH! A STR ANGER QUARTERLY Vol. 4, No. 1 Spring 2015 / FREE FF O % 50 TO ADVERTISE, CALL 206-323-7101 OR E-MAIL ADINFO@THESTRANGER.COM NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS for God. Her impending death and illness. And I found something in her posthumous collection, The Great Unknowing, that was more than just poetry for me. A kind of openended seeking, not the frantic seeking I’m much more familiar with. You mean personally? Oh, absolutely. The last poem of hers that was published in her last book is called “Primary Wonder,” and it’s a knockout. It feels as if she’s getting it for the first time that there’s something rather than nothing. I think I’m safe in saying that Stranger readers aren’t widely known for being awed by the Christian mysteries. Does Levertov offer some pleasures to skeptics and raging atheists? Yep. Her political stuff is fucking fierce. In one of her later poems, “News Report, September 1991,” she uses testimony from an article written in the Seattle Times about how our American soldiers bulldozed over 4,000 Iraqi people. It’s brutal. If you added up all Levertov’s poems, the majority aren’t about the Christian thing. We can’t fuck the environment and we can’t fuck other countries anymore, because that’s wrong: That’s the bigger chunk of her work. Also: her attitude. She misbehaved appropriately. Why this celebration of her life now? During much of her lifetime, she was up at the top of the heap in terms of literary accomplishment. She got the Guggenheim and taught at Stanford. She was published by New Directions. But now nobody teaches her. She’s not part of the contemporary conversations about poetry. And I find that a large THE HIGH LIST RECOMMENDED EVENTS FOR STONERS BY E M I LY N O K E S New Kids on the Block, TLC, Nelly MUSIC Wed May 6, Tacoma Dome (2727 East D St, Tacoma) OMG, my grade-school, middle-school, and high-school selves are ecstatic right now—not only because this lineup represents very important songs, posters, and music videos from each of those eras, but also because seventh-grade me still cannot wrap her mind around the joys of legalized marijuana. Belly-button rings and copious amount of shiny denim are encouraged. Nearby snack: Southern Kitchen (1716 Sixth Ave, Tacoma) serves down-home faves like fried catfish, fried chicken, and, most deliciously, hush puppies (fried cornbread)! AND they’ve been visited by the Food Network’s human hedgehog/schnauzer hybrid GUY FIERI, so you know it’s legitimately caloric. An Evening of Edgy Culture MUSIC Thurs May 7, Vermillion (1508 11th Ave) Dig this night of sounds informed by/assisted by/best enjoyed with marijuana—free jazz, natch—featuring local legends SUBDUCTION ZONE (Wally Shoup on alto sax, Dennis Rea on electric guitar, Tom Zgonc on drums), plus solo trumpeter Greg Kelley and poet Doug Nufer. Nearby snack: What Rancho Bravo (1001 E Pine St) lacks in decor, or even a sign, they make up for in satisfying tamales, nachos, tacos, and more. National Coconut Cream Pie Day PIE Fri May 8, Dahlia Bakery (2001 Fourth Ave) ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 29 NEW LOCATION - NOW OPEN! part of me wants to belligerently say: “Fuck you. She’s interesting.” Why has she fallen off the radar? There are all kinds of reasons. She didn’t want to be put in a box, but she was clearly part of communities. She wanted to be acknowledged by her mentors—William Carlos Williams and Robert Duncan—but she didn’t want to live in their shadows. She was using and being aware of her femaleness as access, but not wanting to be just a girl, or the only girl with the boys, or the “feminist poet.” And yet, when she was the poetry editor for the Nation, she published more women than anyone had before. In her famous poem “Making Peace,” she wrote: “But peace, like a poem, / is not there ahead of itself, can’t be imagined before it is made, / can’t be known except / in the words of its making, / grammar of justice, / syntax of mutual aid.” The clear suggestion is that poetry, or maybe just language, could be a means to achieving peace in a political sense. Do you find Levertov naive on this point? It goes back to the tension between the Shelley line “Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world” and the Auden line “Poetry makes nothing happen.” The poem won’t put a bowl of soup in front of you. But I certainly do believe and have seen people respond to literature in a way that is necessary for the continuation of their lives. It gives them a spark of the sense of their own validity. I taught nontraditional students who were treated as or assumed to be stupid, and in talking about poetry, I saw them discover that they’re not stupid. That’s extremely powerful. n National Coconut Cream Pie Day is today (which stoned-ass mayor approves these cah-raaazy holidays?), and Dahlia Bakery— makers of the best coconut cream pie in town—are hosting a pie-eating contest “to see how many mini pie bites 25 contestants can eat in two minutes.” TGINCCPD, amiright? Nearby snack: Oh what the hell, Serious Pie (316 Virginia St) is directly next door to Dahlia. Slap some gourmet pizza pie on that gourmet coconut cream pie. You deserve it. Average Joe Cat Show CATS Sat May 9, Spartan Recreation Center (202 NE 185th St, Shoreline) Enough of these highfalutin purebred model cats with perfect fur—it’s time we celebrate regular felines! The Average Joe Cat Show includes categories like “loudest purr,” “best cat in a box,” and “most impressive ear hair” and is hosted by Purrfect Pals, Washington’s no-kill cat shelter. Pro tip: There will be friends available for adoption at this event, which is a decision you should make before you pick up the bong. Nearby snack: If you love eating in your car, Burgermaster (9820 Aurora Ave N) will bring a hormone-free burger and fancy shake out to your vehicle, just like the olden days before people knew about sitting inside restaurants. ‘Henry Horenstein: Racing Days’ ART Through June 13, Photographic Center Northwest (900 12th Ave) Contemplate the strange sport of people betting money on (smaller) people riding very fast horses. This exhibit features Henry Horenstein’s black-and-white photographs chronicling characters—bettors, trainers, jockeys, clockers—found at racetracks across the US in the 1970s and early ’80s. Nearby snack: For Vietnamese street food, Ba Bar (550 12th Ave) has a pretty tasty happy hour from 3 to 6 p.m. n “America’s Greatest Lawn” –WeSeedAmerica.com a 150-acre public garden on bainbridge island. www.bloedelreserve.org 1021 6th Ave. S. Seattle, WA 98134 206-623-2740 aliquidators@gmail.com 30 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER T H I NGS T O R E A D ▼ T H INGS TO DO ▼ Today’s Events Music Movie Times Theater&Dance Comedy Art Readings&Talks Food&Drink Events Festivals Sports Restaurants Bars&Clubs Weed The New Guide to Everything. thestranger.com/events thestranger.com/events Café Nordo’s latest show “Don Nordo del Midwest” runs every Thurs-Sun evening now through June at Nordo’s Culinarium, their new venue in Pioneer Square. Photo Credit: Bruce Clayton Tom NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 31 CHOW COURTESY OF CANLIS LIKE AN OPULENT SHIP Canlis is gorgeous and sleek, a mid-century-modern dream of clean lines and striking natural elements. What Is It Like Eating at Seattle’s Most Exclusive Restaurant? Behind the Curtain at Canlis BY ANGELA GARBES D espite having lived in Seattle for 16 years, I have never eaten at Canlis, arguably the city’s most iconic and revered (not to mention expensive) restaurant. Canlis has always seemed like it was for other people—people who drive “He’s a 28-year-old helming a 65-year-old luxury cars, not people, like me, who drive ship. Canlis is like a 60-foot-long yacht cruisToyota Corollas with tape decks. But there’s ing through the ocean. It’s beautiful.” According to Brian Canlis, that yacht is no denying or escaping the restaurant’s reputation and status. Canlis, founded in 1950, still more accessible than ever. “We fight this routinely appears on “essential Seattle” and reputation that we are a crazy-expensive, old-people restaurant. That’s not really the “best of ” dining lists. But in March, when the restaurant an- case,” he said. “Here’s the thing: Special and nounced it had hired a new executive chef, I accessible are not mutually exclusive. We’re also reaching for more beautiful was intrigued. Brady Williams, just Canlis plates and dishes. We don’t want to 28 years old, was most recently 2576 Aurora Ave N, become cheaper and more casual.” sous chef at Roberta’s in Bushwick, 283-3313 The words “cheap,” “casual,” Brooklyn, a wood-fired pizzeria made from cinder blocks and shipping con- and “Canlis” don’t even belong in the same tainers that features an indoor garden and, sentence. Pulling up to the restaurant, I was oh, a 12-seat, two-Michelin-star restaurant immediately made aware of this fact: There, called Blanca that serves a $195 tasting menu. neatly parked in a row by valets, were three Hiring Williams was a surprising move for a Mercedes-Benzes, a Jaguar, a Land Rover, restaurant steeped in tradition, perhaps one and a glossy red Mini Cooper. Inside, it’s easy to see why Brian Canlis reaching toward a different, younger audience. “It’s surprising only because he is so likened the restaurant to an opulent ship: young,” said Brian Canlis, grandson of the It’s gorgeous and sleek. Windows line the restaurant’s founder, Peter Canlis, who runs entire east-facing side of the restaurant, ofthe family business with his brother Mark. fering unmatched views of Lake Union and the Cascades. At night, tiny lights hidden in the ceiling mirror the twinkling lights of the city. The Roland Terry–designed building is a mid-century-modern dream of clean lines and striking natural elements, including a dark wood and stone interior. In the dining room, formal attire unites servers and diners adhering to Canlis’s dress code (men are asked to wear a suit or sport coat). “I love the fact that people dress up for “Special and accessible are not mutually exclusive. We don’t want to become cheaper and more casual.” dinner,” said Brian Canlis. “I think our city needs at least one place like that. Dressing up tells me that this night is different from any other night.” Indeed, part of the pleasure of dining at Canlis actually happens before you arrive, when you’re at home, getting dressed with your date, perhaps enjoying a predinner cocktail and getting a little tipsy on the anticipation of what the night might hold. And if you didn’t already realize that your night was going to be special, you’ll know it the moment the food—brought to you by a fleet of flawlessly choreographed servers, hosts, bussers, and sommeliers (everyone does a little bit of everything here, and they all do it very well)—arrives at your table. From the first bite of steak tartare—unctuous mini cubes of Wagyu beef nestled in a delicate, savory tuile—it was clear that the kitchen aims to blow your mind. And it succeeds. Canlis’s current eight-course tasting menu ($145 per person) is remarkable. It’s a respectful yet playful interpretation of the restaurant’s classic dishes, executed with modern techniques and an abundance of local and seasonal flourishes. (It’s worth noting that a highly skilled and confident kitchen staff conceived of the menu during the months Canlis was operating without an executive chef.) Along with steak tartare, the meal starts with two other dishes: a small portion of the iconic Canlis salad, unchanged in 65 years, featuring romaine, bacon, oregano, Parmesan, and mint tossed in a little wooden bowl with a flat, thin “crouton” laid on top like a lid. Atop that sit two sweet, quivering tomato hearts. (The salad was too salty, but that was the only disappointing part of the meal.) Then there’s the teriyaki beef, which you prepare yourself: A slice of raw meat comes on a plank of wood, and you cook it on an accompanying hot stone using tweezers, then squirt on a little teriyaki sauce from a plastic capsule and garnish the dish with bits of green onion. Think of it as an icebreaker—a slightly awkward but fun excuse to roll up your sleeves. The rest of the meal is a bit of a blur, 32 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER INAY’S Asian Pacific Cuisine Football on Telly ALWAYS! 2ND MONDAY OF THE MONTH BOOK EXCHANGE - Happy Hour til 9pm! 206 N. 36th St. Fremont GEORGEANDDRAGONPUB.COM FREE DELIVERY! OPEN LATE! Delivery til 3AM! Pick-Up til 2AM! Friday & Saturday Happy Hour Specials Mon-Thu 3-6 Dine-In Only Order online at toscanapizzeria.com - Since 1995 - 2503 Beacon Avenue South Seattle, WA 98144 206.325.5692 - www.inays.com Open Tuesday thru Sunday 9am - 9pm GOURMET Pizza & Pasta, Beer & Wine 601 Summit Ave. E. • Capitol Hill • 206-325-0877 “Two ducks fly into Harry’s, but only one flies out. Duck fat waffles and biscuits is what I’m talkin’ about.” - Thom McClure 6 0 32 Calif o r n i a Ave SW i n West Se a ttle • 206-938-9000 PICK A WINNER! us Serio ab Pullt rs Playe $50-$2,500 top prizes HAPPY HOUR DAILY, 3-6 Fast Service STOP CROSSWALK 8556 Greenwood Ave. N. 206-789-9691 AND PLAY PULL TABS Bring your culinary skills to our team! Centerplate at Safeco Field is looking for talented and experienced associates in the following roles: Dishwashers/stewarDs • PreP cooks hot line cooks • leaD line cooks • concessions cooks If interested, please contact Human Resources at cPhr@mariners.com Centerplate is an equal opportunity employer. MESOB HAS MOVED! ...and is now known as.... ON 12TH AND S MAIN ST 1221 S. Main St - Seattle 206 860 0403 each course more delicious and impressive than the last. There are lightly smoked rectangles of salmon served with big, briny spheres of roe and set amid a tangy yogurt and a verdant but mild Bibb lettuce sauce. The whole dish is topped with a few leaves of miner’s lettuce, whose lovely, lemony presence won’t last much longer through spring. Squab was served two ways: breast meat cooked to a perfect, rare purple, and confit thigh—deep, dark, satiny, and begging to be picked up and sucked clean to its tiny bone. The carrot puree served alongside was stunning in both sweetness and acidity. Surprisingly, there’s no citrus or vinegar added: The carrots are simply fermented in salt for a month. My favorite course was the updated version of Peter Canlis’s prawns, traditionally prepared with garlic, lime, and dry vermouth. Two prawns are served: one, head on, poached in butter then marked for a few moments on the grill, its texture slightly firm but still so rich that it seemed to melt on the tongue. It held just a whisper of char and smoke, and the perfect amount of lime to cut the buttery fat. I got so lost in the moment that I didn’t think twice about breaking its head off with my fingers and crunching through the whole spiny thing, its juice running down my chin. The other prawn is served, simply, raw— perfect and sweet. The prawns had arrived from Anacortes that afternoon, from a guy who Williams had found to be his supplier. The new chef, whose first day on the job was April 13, is clearly wasting no time making use of the best the Pacific Northwest has to offer. Unsurprisingly, service at Canlis is outstanding, if a bit rehearsed. Everyone is From the first bite of steak tartare, it was clear that the kitchen aims to blow your mind. And it succeeds. clearly knowledgeable about the food being served but, more importantly, when they don’t know the answer to a question, they say so, and come back promptly with a response. The experience is designed and executed so that every diner feels cared for and respected. While Canlis patrons may be younger than they’ve been in the past, the majority of them are still well over 50 and overwhelmingly white. The most accessible thing about my dinner at Canlis happened at the start of the evening, when the piano player played “Say My Name” by Destiny’s Child as we were being escorted from the lounge to our table. We got so excited that we sang along and it felt, at least for a moment, like we might actually belong in such an exclusive club. (Later, when the piano player walked by our table and we expressed our appreciation, he laughed and said, “Pretty sure you guys are the only people in this place who noticed that.”) Small moments like this might reflect a thoughtful shift toward greater accessibility. But don’t expect change to come quickly. This is still, after all, a restaurant where female servers were made to wear kimonos as uniforms until 1996. The third generation of Canlises have been making adjustments since they began running the restaurant in 2005, but as Brian Canlis noted during his yacht metaphor, “You don’t crank the rudder when you hop on, you start with a small course correction.” n Comment on this review at THESTR ANGER.COM/CHOW NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM EATER’S DIGEST THE CENTRAL DISTRICT IS GETTING LOTS OF CHICKEN AND WAFFLES Darren McGill, owner of Rainier Beach’s Nate’s Wings & Waffles, announced he plans to open a second location in south Capitol Hill/Central District this fall. Just days later, Marcus Lalario (Li’l Woody’s, 95 Slide) announced he’ll also be opening a chicken and waffles joint in the neighborhood. Fat’s Fried Chicken and Waffles will take over the space long held by Catfish Corner. Fat’s is aiming for a July or August opening. PRESTON MILLER NAMED NEW CHEF DE CUISINE AT BAR SAJOR Bar Sajor chef de cuisine Edouardo Jordan has departed to open his own restaurant, Salare, in Ravenna later this summer. Owner Matt Dillon has named Jordan’s replacement: Preston Miller, formerly sous chef at Dillon’s Sitka & Spruce and, most recently, the Breslin in New York City. Also new: Sajor is now serving a regular weekend brunch with dishes like smoked halibut pâté, cinnamon-and-juniper rolls, rhubarb turnovers, and baked eggs with ramps and morels. MOLLY WIZENBERG AND CHEFSTEPS WIN JAMES BEARD AWARDS Seattle writer Molly Wizenberg and local company ChefSteps won top honors at the James Beard Book, Broadcast, and Journalism Awards ceremony held on April 24 in New York City. Wizenberg won best individual food blog for her food blog Orangette, while ChefSteps won in the best video webcast and the visual and technical excellence categories. n May 6, 2015 33 AIR CONDITIONING! BY ANGELA GARBES JAPANESE NOODLES AND ICE CREAM COME TO CAPITOL HILL Japan-based Kukai Ramen & Izakaya (320 E Pine St, 844-585-2487) has opened its third Seattle-area location on Capitol Hill. (Kukai’s other two locations, in Bellevue and Northgate, have been open since 2012 and 2014, respectively.) Diners can expect the same menu and decor. Speaking of Japanese noodle shops, the second outpost of fresh noodle shop U:Don (1640 12th Ave, 466-1471) opened on the same day just up the road in the 12th Avenue Arts building. The new U:Don serves an expanded menu and, unlike the original University District location, sake and beer. The building’s food and drink options will expand later this spring with the opening of Pel’Meni Dumpling Tzar and Rachel’s Ginger Beer, which, along with its signature ginger beer, will also serve cocktails and hand-cut french fries with an array of dipping sauces. Kurt Timmermeister’s Kurt Farm Shop (1424 11th Ave, 696-9999) is the first business in Capitol Hill’s new Chophouse Row building to open its doors. (Other tenants slated to open in the coming months include Sara Naftaly’s Amandine bakery, Ericka Burke’s Chop Shop Cafe and Bar, and Matt Dillon’s Bar Ferd’nand II.) Timmermeister will be serving ice cream made from the milk of the Jersey cows on his Vashon Island farm, which have been better known as the suppliers of Dinah’s and Flora’s cheeses. Farm Shop’s opening flavors include strawberry, Jersey cream, and Flora’s cheese. The shop will also sell a selection of Northwest-made cheeses, as well as plant and fruit starts from Timmermeister’s farm. THE STRANGER Cakes for Weddings & Parties... Delicious Gluten Free & Vegan Choices Available www.sweetviolette.com 60+ Sushi Rolls Teriyaki & Bento Boxes Beer & Sake Mon - Fri Sat Sun DOGFRIENDLY PATIO 10:30am-9pm 11:30am-9pm CLOSED 2nd Wed of Month CLOSED Visit us at www.cuttingboardseattle.com 5503 Airport Way S. Georgetown • 206-767-8075 We have veNISON & eLK! we ship seafood overnight anywhere in the usa or we pack for air travel Place Market Pike Saturday 5/9 & Sunday 5/10 Bar open until 2am 206.682.3049 • ilbistro.net Hap py Hour Daily Watch all the MLB Games Here Pacific Inn Pub New Late Night Happy Hours $1 off Well Drinks & PBR Pints + Free Pool Sun-Thurs 10:30 till Close Serving Seattle’s Best Fish & Chips at the Corner of 35th. and Stone Way N. $19.95 We’re The Last Place You’ll Go For A Sandwich Capitol Hill 721 E Pike St (206) 257-5927 Ballard 5315 Ballard Ave NW (206) 789-0936 Call us or Order Online at www.OtherCoastCafe.com DECADENT VEGAN FOOD EVERY SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY, 4PM - 8PM LIVE MUSIC MOST NIGHTS, FOR FULL CALENDAR VISIT OUR WEBSITE 210 Broadway Ave E • 328.7837 • highlineseattle.com 34 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER OF THE TOP 100 SONGS OF 2014, WOMEN PLAYED GUITAR ON ONLY 8. * *Billboard Magazine PUT A GUITAR IN A GIRL’S HANDS THIS SUMMER. VOLUNTEER AT RAIN CITY ROCK CAMP for GIRLS. www.raincityrockcamp.org NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 35 MUSIC and Art of Movement B-boy crew member Chase “Cha Cha” Malone, “the younger people that he thought had potential, and bring them together and make a team that represented his brand of Mash Hall. Hence: the M Team, the Mash Team.” Fox has since become something of a cultural ambassador/consultant, brokering agreements with companies like Red Bull, Starbucks, and Sub Pop among other corporations that seek to use breakdancers in promotional campaigns. His mediation has proven beneficial both to the dancers, for whom he helps negotiate deals, and to the cli- “Get the boom boxes out of the background, and don’t make them wear Adidas suits and fat gold chains. All this ’80s bullshit nobody does.” WILLIAM OLGUIN THEM TEAM Member and world champion solo B-boy battler Thias “Thesis” Lopez. Breakdance Crew Them Team Celebrates 10 Years of Preserving Northwest B-boy Culture BY TODD HAMM Hall love family thicker than blood.” MC Ronnie “M ash Voice laid down those words 20 years ago on “Straight Outta West Coast,” the first song created by the hiphop group that would come to be known as Mash Hall. The from the jaws of novelty and nostalgia. Fox says the desire to preserve the legacy line has become something of a mantra (not to mention at least one pair of forearm tattoos) of breaking was a major component of the defor the loose collective of creative friends and cision to form Them Team in the first place. associates that has been ringing bells in break- “Originally,” he tells me over coffee, “it was kind of to protect, and to have outside people dancing and rap circles across the region. Voice and his cousin Kip Fox (better known show respect to, what we were doing.” Having come of age in the ’90s, when breakas djblesOne) came of age in the 1990s, living up and down the West Coast, from Los Angeles ing was already seen by many as something and Oakland to Portland and Seattle, making that died in the ’80s, or was inextricably tied to gang culture, Fox was used music about their core interto his interests being downests: rapping, B-boying, DJing, Them Team 10 Year Anniversary played and disregarded by and writing graffiti. The name Sat May 9, Q Nightclub, event organizers. After moving of their group is a reference to 2–8 pm, $10, all ages to Seattle in the early 2000s and this cultural mash-up, which finding work on the club circuit, Mash Hall strives to translate into music as danceable as dancehall… with- he decided to try to make the road better for dancers from the front and back ends. out sounding anything like dancehall. “The dancers were getting treated like Them Team is the breakdancing counterpart of the Mash Hall project, an outgrowth sideshows,” Fox remembers. It awakened in of the collective and a stand-alone phenom- him a protective instinct. “That was one of the enon; the groups often perform together and things in forming Them Team: If these guys share Fox/djblesOne as a founding member. ever needed someone to talk to promoters or As the footprint of Seattle hiphop continues anyone in a business way, or to ask advice like to deepen, Mash Hall and its associates— ‘Is this good or am I getting taken advantage especially sister group Don’t Talk to the of? What should I be getting here?’ I was alCops!—have gained an increasing national ways available for them to help, because I don’t profile while their local prominence remains want to see people being taken advantage of.” That sense of looking out for his fellow strong. But it’s not like that for breakdancing. Whereas hiphop has only become more and travelers—the love family thicker than blood more central to mass culture over the 30-plus aspect—has been the key element of Fox’s years of its existence, breaking made a big, approach to B-boy cultural preservation. “[Fox] wanted to gather some of his closest brief splash and was subsequently relegated to the fringes, forced to snatch legitimacy friends in Seattle,” explains music producer ents, whom he nudges away from the clichéd framing devices that often go along with representations of B-boy culture by outsiders. “Like, get the boom boxes out of the background, and don’t make them wear Adidas suits and fat gold chains,” he says. “All this bullshit nobody does. That’s all ’80s stuff, and some of those kids weren’t even born in that era… nobody needs or cares for these big outside companies to make them look corny. At this point, if you don’t know or respect what we’re doing, we’re not messing with you.” Them Team has now been around for 10 years. Fox will celebrate the decade-long run Saturday at an all-day, all-ages party and break battle with the rest of the Them Team crew: B-boys Thesis, Tim the Pit, Cha Cha, Chico, Juse Boogey, Roc, Mango, Junior, and Dial Tone. But as much as the anniversary is cause for revelry, it’s also an important part of the ongoing campaign to reestablish the legitimacy of breakdancing as a popular form. To that end, Fox and his business/life partner, Megan “Emecks” Xaybanha, purchased a pair of billboards to advertise the party (and the accomplishment that occasions it), one at the corner of Madison and 16th on Capitol Hill, the other at 45th and Roosevelt in the U-District. Them Team’s 10-year anniversary party is one of only two certified Pro Breaking Tour events to hit Seattle this year—the long-running annual Massive Monkees Day fell last month. And while billboards are a familiar signifier of showbiz ambition, they also represent a very different significance within the community they’re addressing, and even within the crew they’re advertising. “Stuff like that gives us B-boys, especially B-boys who don’t have that much but have a lot to offer, that gives us hope,” says Them Team member and world champion solo Bboy battler Thias “Thesis” Lopez. Seeing those billboards “gives us the inspiration and motivation that we can actually create something out of ourselves. Bles is pretty much the outlook on that. He’s pretty much the guy who’s doing that the most in Seattle. It’s always inspiring to talk to him, he always shows his respect to people, and he always has something—an idea for them that they can possibly do to better themselves.” n Better yourself at THESTRANGER.COM/MUSIC dinner & show WED/MAY 6 • 7:30PM liz longley / anthony d’amato THU/MAY 7 • 7:30PM AN EVENING WITH howard jones FRI/MAY 8 • 8PM nellie mckay w/ ben ballinger SAT/MAY 9 • 7PM & 10PM LILY VERLAINE PRESENTS nightcap: l’edition noire SUN/MAY 10 • 7:30PM in dreams: a live tribute to roy orbison w/ the james apollo five MON/MAY 11 • 7:30PM luke wade w/ tommy simmons TUE/MAY 12 • 7:30PM susan galbraith, zarni and nick drummond next • 5/13 amos miller presents supersquare • 5/15 the pine hill project • 5/16 the seattle sound • 5/17 craigmont’s midlife crisis • 5/18 grant lee phillips and steve poltz • 5/19 elvis perkins • 5/20 showgirls with david schmader • 5/6 michaela anne (brooklyn, ny) • 5/7 first thursday art opening w/ kirk stauffer / papa josh & friends • 5/8 supersones / seabop • 5/9 mackapalooza 3 • 5/10 hwy 99 blues presents • 5/11 crossrhythm sessions • 5/12 singer-songwriter showcase featuring: sam wheeler, kristen ford and allison preisinger • 5/13 the workshop TO ENSURE THE BEST EXPERIENCE PLEASE ARRIVE EARLY DOORS OPEN 1.5 HOURS PRIOR TO FIRST SHOW ALL-AGES (BEFORE 9:30PM) thetripledoor.net 216 UNION STREET, SEATTLE 206.838.4333 36 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM I knew better, which is why my heart broke when, six short months later, the dryer in my apartment stopped rotating during its drying cycle while still blasting heat. A majority of the shirt was charred, but by some freaky act of divinity—like when a single house is left standing in a tornado-ravaged county— the image of Neil Diamond was spared. Now we were both shirtless. Over the course of two nights, I carefully cut the graphic away from the carbonized T-shirt and hand-stitched it to the back of a blue Rustler denim jacket that never quite fit right. I christened it the Forever in Blue Jean jacket and wore it everywhere. Years later, I wore it to my first-ever Neil Diamond concert at Toyota Center in Houston, joined by my girlfriend at the time. I scored a free pair of tickets from the publisher of Houston Press, where I was working at the time. The seats weren’t great: nosebleeds in a side wing, high above the main floor, but the show was magnificent, packed to the gills with decades of hits, performed with all the schmaltz, pomp, and dazzle one expects from a true showman. As he sang “America,” an eagle soared across the wind-rippled canopy of a blazing American flag on the Jumbotron, and I bopped along in a surreal communion with the near-capacity arena crowd of grandmothers, daughters, and a tiny minority of NEIL DIAMOND He got the way to move me, Cherry, he got the way stray males dragged along by their spouses. to groove me. None of this was enough to keep my girlfriend awake. She slept through at least half of the show. On the way out, the only merchandise I could afford was a bumper sticker that said “I’d Rather Be at a Neil Diamond Concert. World Tour 2005.” I moved to Seattle the following year, stopping back in Redding to collect the things I’d stored at my mom’s house before moving to Houston. It was comforting to picture my secret Neil Diamond records in the closet where I’d left them. But they weren’t there. Because many of them were marked up with Sharpie and collage, my mom had assumed they were junk and donated the lot. I was devastated. B Y T R AV I S R I T T E R All those records, discarded, dispersed, dry omewhere in the world, possibly in a eventually found someone I could bond with your eyes, come dry your eyes. I could never landfill, or in some dusty basement of over Neil Diamond, and I lost my virginity to bring myself to rebuild the collection. It was a thrift store in Northern California, there her. Girl, You’ll Be a Woman Soon. too much to bear. Despite the undeniable Neil Diamond had become cool again in kitsch factor that rides shotgun in Neil Diais a copy of the Neil Diamond LP September Morn with Neil’s eyes bloodshot by a red the 1990s. After Urge Overkill covered “Girl, mond’s cultural stretch limousine, the project You’ll Be a Woman Soon” on of collecting and even defacing those albums Sharpie marker, and a blackthe Pulp Fiction soundtrack, had been an act of discovering love among ened, bleeding red pentagram Neil Diamond a number of bands followed the rubble of objects—the way music fandom Sun May 10, KeyArena, on his forehead. 8 pm, $61–$146, all ages suit, including pop-punk band used to work. Not that I was conscious of it at I’m responsible for that, and Groovie Ghoulies covering the time; my obsessive-compulsive Neil Diafor the eye patches, blacked-out teeth, and excessive body and facial hair that “Hello Again,” and Murder City Devils (with mond habit was always more of a “before you adorn the custom-vandalized covers of another Kim Warnick) doing “I’ll Come Running.” get to feeling good, you simply got no choice” 30 or so Neil Diamond records. Something The bands did Neil proud, and I welcomed it. kind of situation. It was when eBay was still the Wild West about defacing Diamond’s sage, somber face A handful of remnants survived the purge. was funny to me, but it wasn’t done in malice. I of vintage and tour T-shirts from the early Before leaving Houston, I had purchased the was a bored teenager in search of amusement, ’80s were still cheap. I found a perfect Neil 1970 Shilo compilation with the connect-theit’s true, but more importantly, I was a believer. Diamond T-shirt for $10, a size-small ring- dots cover (scribbled on). It still sits on my And besides, the records I defiled were er tee with a stunning record shelf today. The just the doubles. The Neil Diamond LP framed portrait of a Forever in Blue Jean No one needed to collection I amassed in my late teens—pri- shirtless Neil in a black jacket hangs in my closmarily from the bins of Bogbean Books and leather jacket, perfectly et next to the “NEIL know I owned three Music in my hometown of Redding, Cali- coiffed, chest plumage F**KING DIAMOND” copies of The Jazz fornia, at a quarter or a dime apiece—was untamed, a sexier verT-shirt I bought off Neil extensive enough that duplicates were inevi- sion of the cover art to Singer, or two Jonathan Diamond’s webstore last table. By the time I was 18, I had somewhere the album he was tourOctober when his latest Livingston Seagulls, between 70 and 80 unique Neil Diamond re- ing at the time, On the album, Melody Road cords, including almost every single studio Way to the Sky. The (which I also have), was or a pristine copy recording through the late ’80s, all his live back listed Midwest conreleased. And I just of Stones. records, best ofs, and soundtracks. The con- cert dates in black with pulled out the “I’d Rathdition of these LPs was generally bad, but I SOLD OUT emblazoned er Be at a Neil Diamond didn’t care. Any time I found a Neil Diamond in red across each show. This shirt became Concert” bumper sticker I bought at his show record I didn’t have, I bought it, storing it my second skin, and not just because it was in 2005, feeling a burst of excitement knowing away on the top shelf of my closet, my Dia- skin-tight (this was during the indie-rock I’ll actually be at a Neil Diamond concert the monds in the dark. None of my friends knew tiny-tee heyday at the turn of the century). week you read this. Given what happened last what I was doing. No one needed to know I wore it almost every day, including the day time, I’ll probably go alone, a solitary man. I owned three copies of The Jazz Singer, I boarded an airplane with a one-way ticket And I know exactly what I’m going to or two Jonathan Livingston Seagulls, or to Houston, where I would be moving in wear. n a pristine copy of Stones. I bought a CD with the only two people I knew. I ended up compilation of his Early Years, and listened meeting a lot of people because of that shirt. Bring us flowers at to it constantly in my bedroom, alone. I Some people thought I wore it out of irony. THESTRANGER.COM/MUSIC Confessions of an Obsessive Neil Diamond Collector Learning to Love the Jewish Elvis by Amassing Objects S THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 37 925 E. PIKE STREET, SEATTLE, WA NEUMOS.COM THEBARBOZA.COM THURSDAY 5/7 IVAN & ALYOSHA FRIDAY 5/8 DAN DEACON PRINCE RAMA + BEN O’BRIEN SATURDAY 5/9 CHRIS ROBINSON BROTHERHOOD TUESDAY 5/12 OTHER LIVES RIOTHORSE ROYALE FRIDAY 5/15 BOOTIE SEATTLE: 5-YEAR ANNIVERSARY! SEATTLE’S ONLY ALL-MASHUP DANCE PARTY FT. 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KILDA + BOOTS TO THE MOON WEEKLY FRIDAY & SATURDAY DANCE NIGHTS FROM 10:30PM TO CLOSE COMING UP 5/9 Unknown Mortal Orchestra (SOLD OUT) • 5/11 Songwriter Sessions (FREE) • 5/15 Colonies • 5/16 Torres • 5/17 Urban Music Farm • 5/20 Vaadat Charigim • 5/21 Heatwarmer + Spyn Reset • 5/22 Hutch & Kathy • 5/23 Bryan John Appleby • 5/24 J Ras • 5/26 Copeland • 5/26 King Chip • 5/27 Wire • 5/27 Speedy Ortiz • 5/28 Shy Girls • 5/29 Vendetta Red • 5/29 The Physics • 5/30 The DØ • 5/31 Rob Lyons • 6/2 Mae • 6/3 Blackbird Blackbird • 6/4 All Them Witches • 6/5 The Dusty 45s + Country Lips PIKESTFISHFRY.COM TICKETS AVAILABLE AT MOE BAR AND ETIX.COM 38 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 39 Yes, the Rentals Are a Band Spanning Time with the Little Weezer Side Project That Could B Y L A R RY M I Z E L L J R . S DANCE LEARN TO pinning through the radio dial in 1995, the itinerant American indie-rocker slows you’d probably run across Montell down near the seventh minute on the dreamJordan’s “This Is How We Do It,” Alanis like “Jumping Around,” as Sharp, feeling his Morissette’s “You Oughta Know,” and Wee- age, wonders how to find someone he can zer’s “Say It Ain’t So.” If you watched hold on to, seeing as he’s “not educated and… 120 Minutes, though, you might just have not respected.” been lucky enough to catch the memorable Cut to 2014’s Lost in Alphaville, the first and monochromatic clip for proper Rentals album in 15 The Rentals “Friends of P.,” the low-key years, on which a wistful, somew/Rey Pila, Radiation City smash debut single from what wizened Sharp revisits Fri May 8, Crocodile, the Rentals, side project of Catalonia—it’s the perfect 8 pm, $15 adv, all ages Weezer’s then-bassist, Matt sequel to those Minutes, spiriSharp—who, incredibly, was recording Re- tually in line with the most recent albums from turn of the Rentals at the same time that ’90s R&B stalwarts D’Angelo and Jodeci. The he and the rest of the “=W=” were record- nearly 20-year gap between projects ends up ing 1994’s triple-platinum Blue Album. Two sounding like a trip up the street and back, perfect albums. But 20 years later, only one no steps lost. All the more surprising given represents the beginning of an intriguing, un- that in the years between albums, Sharp derappreciated catalog, while the other stands meandered something fierce, putting out a as a symbol of the perils of peaking early. It four-song EP (2007’s The Last Little Life) helps to think of the Rentals as Sharp’s ver- and a photo-book/short-film collection with sion of the Breeders—the beloved side-project-ternt-main-project of another bass player/vocalist who should’ve gotten more equity in another, bigger band that should never have continued without him/her. Shortly after Weezer’s eventually beloved, rightfully cult classic second album, Pinkerton, landed with a thud, Sharp became a full-time Rental. As with the Pixies and Kim Deal, every move Weezer made post-Sharp was more embarrassing than the last. As for Return, yes, I hold it to be absolutely one of the finest moments in the canon of ’90s “alt-rock,” not to mention sneakily influential. Its geeky, forlorn future-retro chic was both throwback (the Moog!) and some years MATT SHARP Rentals band meetings look pretty fun. ahead of its time—bands like Ozma and more notably the Postal Service a seven-disc instrumental soundtrack called wouldn’t mix plaintive power pop with pretty Songs About Time, both under the Rentals synths until the new millennium. The unexpect- moniker, as well as a 2004 solo acoustic folk ed presence of Petra and Rachel Haden—of album recorded in Tennessee. LA band that dog., with whom I was more But all the gaps raise an important questhan a little obsessed—was an added bonus al- tion: Are the Rentals really a band—or is the most too sweet to bear after I befriended “P.” name just a multimedia clearinghouse for Then there is the matter of onetime backup Matt Sharp’s good ideas? Listen to Sharp’s vocalist/keyboard player Maya Rudolph— solo acoustic work, then deduct it from the brilliant Saturday Night Live alum, daughter three Rentals LPs for your answer—it’s the of Minnie Riperton, life wonder you hear in those partner of director Paul synths, the strings, the Thomas Anderson—who Lost in Alphaville is all-important leavening of got her first screen time those ever-present female spiritually in line in the video for Return’s vocals, be they Cherielynn “Waiting.” I’m just saying. Westrich, the Haden siswith the most Having tasted a bit of Maya Rudolph, or recent albums from ters, his own success, Sharp Lucius’s Jess Wolfe and shook the first album’s D’Angelo and Jodeci. Holly Laessig. All these self-consciously nerdy elements, these other image (and most of its perpeople, make the Rentals sonnel) for 1999’s Seven More Minutes, and greater than just the sum of the voices in Matt lost some fans in the process. But the album Sharp’s head. Yes, they’re a band. They’re a is no less a joy. Like Pinkerton, it’s an under- Greek chorus chronicling one man’s downs rated jewel inspired by new surroundings and ups and downs again. Having shed the and love lost in a faraway land—minus the naive mid-’90s math-club swagger, Sharp can creepy colonial lens of the Madame Butter- still posit that “there must be some hope in the fly character who inspired the Weezer album. future,” as he sings on Alphaville’s closer. If Minutes chronicles a raucous, carefree love he really does break down at 50, as the superaffair with Barcelona, where Sharp had made model narrator of “P.” predicted, he’ll have left a second home. The thoughtful hedonism of some of that wonder behind. n FUN SOCIAL AFFORDABLE HEALTHY SINGLES AND BEGINNERS WELCOME YOU KNOW YOU WANT TO SO MANY CLASSES TO CHOOSE FROM! SALSA•BACHATA•LINDY HOP•SWING•WALTZ WEST COAST SWING•TANGO & MORE! CLASSES START THE WEEK OF MAY 10 SCHEDULE & REGISTRATION ONLINE NOW CENTURY BALLROOM DINE & DANCE 915 E PINE ST CAPITOL HILL WWW.CENTURYBALLROOM.COM 206.324.7263 THURS, 5/7 - SAT, 5/9 JASON RESLER with Mitch Burrow Jason Resler is a stand-up comedian and a writer. He has wanted to be a comedian ever since he was convinced, mostly by his own coaches, that he’d probably never be able to hit a big league curve ball. Now he headlines at top comedy clubs, resort casinos, universities, and theatres nationwide with over 200 showdates anually since ’98. 109 S.WASHINGTON ST. (ON OCCIDENTAL PARK) (206) 628-0303 WWW.COMEDYUNDERGROUND.COM 40 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 41 MY PHILOSOPHY H I P H O P YA D O N ' T S T O P BY L A R RY M I Z E L L J R . WAY DOWN IN THE HOLE First of all—prayers and thoughts up for all affected by the earthquake in Nepal, which includes actual millions of people. At the time of writing, 7,000-plus people are dead. If you’re the praying type, there are some folks who could use yours. As they could right now in West Baltimore, of course, where the death of local man Freddie Gray—who at the time of this writing is still alleged to have snapped his own spine in the back of a police van—has sparked another American powder keg. How many folks who imagined themselves immersed in the desolation of Charm City’s streets and the desperation of its people for five whole seasons of The Wire now gently shake their heads and ask each other, “How could they burn down their own neighborhoods?” (The same way we snap our own necks, apparently.) May everybody out in RESERVE THE TROPHY ROOM FOR YOUR NEXT EVENT C D + DV D SALE PRICE $19.99 COCKTAILS • TASTY HOT DOGS LOTSA PINBALL • FROSTY BEER 2222 2ND AVENUE • SEATTLE EELS 206-441-5449 BETWEEN BELL AND BLANCHARD ROYAL ALBERT HALL CONCERT FILM AND LIVE ALBUM THU 5/7 HIGH DIVE PRESENTS: FUNK/SOUL/GROOVE MARMALADE FT. ARTIST OF THE MONTH: TEMPLE CANYON $6/8 PM AVAILABLE AS DOUBLE CD+DVD AND TRIPLE PURPLE VINYL LP+DVD HIGH DIVE PRESENTS: ROCK /INDIE FRI 5/8 Freddie Gray THE REQUISITE AMERICAN ISLAND, NORTHERN SHAKEDOWN, KYE ALFRED HILLIG $8 ADV, $10 DOOR / 9 PM HIGH DIVE PRESENTS: PUNK/ALTERNATIVE those streets get home safe, free of violence at the hands of the cops or others—and may they not get black-bagged for walking or taking pictures, either. Martial law is scary shit. RIP to Mya Hall, a trans woman who was killed by police in Baltimore early in April after crashing her car outside an NSA headquarters. (Yikes.) Judging by Erick Sermon’s recent comments in the wake of Bruce Jenner’s transitioning (thanks, TMZ, for this needless and disappointing insight into the Green-Eyed Bandit’s head and heart), I can guess that the EPMD founder will not drop Hall’s name in a song anytime soon. (Not that anybody listens to new Erick Sermon songs in 2015.) Trans artists, he says, can’t be a part of hiphop—never mind the fact that they already fucking are—that’s just taking the culture too far. Much as I love EPMD’s classic output, this is still the dude who some say set up his own partner to get robbed—not exactly the person to trust when it comes to delineating what’s “too far.” Now: To paraphrase Chi-Town MC Mick Jenkins, “WHAT’S HAPPENING IN BALTIMORE IS COMING TO A CITY NEAR YOU.” All caps. And when it does, what are you going to do? Cry out for the broken windows? Bitch about “thugs” and “looters”? (Just say the word you’re really thinking.) You want to talk about looting? Check out “civil forfeiture.” Not only do the cops have an inalienable right to loot your body of its life, they can also snatch up your cash, your car, your family’s house—if they think it’s nebulously related to a crime. This land you stand on was and is being looted, quite legally. Hiphop, soul, funk, jazz, rock—looted. All I see are thugs running in and out of the culture, arms full of goods. They can take our last breaths and literally break our backs and blame it all on us. This situation is simply untenable, just way, way, way too hot—and heat, Goodie Mob’s Khujo once rapped, “will make anything move.” Summer’s comin’. ■ SAT 5/9 MILHOUS W/ THE DEITIES, THE STUNTMEN, GRAPHENE, DIE NASTY $8/ 9 PM SUN 5/10 MON 5/11 TUE 5/12 WED 5/13 CLOSED FOR MOTHER’S DAY ABSOLUTE KARAOKE WITH KJ-NOMI! $5 JAMESON DRINKS ALL NIGHT LONG! SINGING STARTS AT 9 PM! FREE/7 PM HIGH DIVE PRESENTS: ELECTRO/POP TIM HEID RAICA, GEL-SOL $6/8 PM HIGH DIVE PRESENTS: CTPAK RECORDS SHOWCASE SO PITTED CHILDREN OF KIDS, NOSTALGIST $7/8 PM LIVE MUSIC • FOOD • BOOZE No Cover until 1 Hour before show! 513 N 36th | Fremont | 632.0212 WWW.HIGHDIVESEATTLE.COM STRONG ENOUGH FOR A CARNIVORE, MADE FOR AN HERBIVORE LIVE MUSIC! SUNDAY MAY 10 10PM • CHEAP COVER KLED & VALUE PAC BRING YER MOM! VEGAN & VEGETARIAN MENU HAPPY HOUR MON-FRI: 4PM-7PM WEEKEND BRUNCH: 10AM-2PM 5501 Airport Way S. ‘Round back by the tracks (206) 763-6764 • georgetownliquorcompany.com WEST SEATTLE: 4559 CALIFORNIA AVE SW (206) 938-3279 WWW.EASYSTREETONLINE.COM 42 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER v M U S ICFE STNW WATERFRONT PARK 3 AUGUST 21-23 MUSICFESTNW.COM/TICKETS FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY FOSTER THE PEOPLE BEIRUT MODEST MOUSE DAYS OF MUSIC ALL AGES! TICKETS ON SALE NOW! MISTERWIVES MILO GREENE LOST LANDER BELLE AND SEBASTIAN TWIN SHADOW BATTLES TITLE FIGHT CAYUCAS TALK IN TONGUES SALES ALIALUJAH CHOIR THE TALLEST MAN ON EARTH DANNY BROWN THE HELIO SEQUENCE LADY LAMB STRAND OF OAKS PURE BATHING CULTURE DIVERS BEAT CONNECTION NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER I wanted to ask about “Marination Station,” your song about astronaut Lisa Nowak, who drove 18 hours to confront the woman her lover dumped her for. I remember the headline: “Diaper-Wearing Astronaut Jailed in Love Triangle Plot.” Did Nowak really shit in the diaper? Or was that your take? B: We took creative liberties as songwriters, imagining there might be shit in that diaper. S: Actually, the song is about that restaurant above this QFC. May 6, 2015 43 ALL SHOWS / ALL AGES BAR W/ID UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED JUST OFF 1ST AVE SOUTH - 110 S. HORTON More Info 206-286-1312 or www.studioseven.us She controlled the robotic arm of the space shuttle. She had service medals. She was married with three kids. Then she put a diaper on and drove from Houston to Orlando. I guess astronauts have affairs, too. J: And I think they do wear diapers in space. That’s why she had the diapers in the first place. Space diapers. CHILDBIRTH Keep calm and call your mom. THE STRANGER Nothing Says Mother’s Day Like Childbirth Side-Project Supergroup Finally Opens Up About How Hard It Is to Be Funny and Popular at the Same Time BY TRENT MOORMAN A baby goose (known as a gosling) hatches from its egg and imprints upon the first moving thing it sees. This instinctual drive to bond with a mother is one of the strongest forces in nature. S: I’m just looking forward to catching When Seattle punk band Childbirth hatched their song “Will You Be My Mom?” the first up with whatever Julia’s up to, and even if thing it saw was the B-52’s playing “Monster I don’t understand it, I still plan on being Mash” with the Sex Pistols’ Steve Jones on supportive. guitar. Childbirth’s Julia Shapiro sings tautly: “Don’t be annoyed. But can you fill this void? I was thinking you all might go to the senCan you do French braids? Don’t be afraid. I sory-deprivation tanks and do ayahuasca. need a mom.” Her guitar tone cuts glass with Or go to the dog track and do ayahuasca? a diamond. Bassist/vocalist Bree McKenna You know, like racing greyhounds. Maybe Childbirth just like old-fashand drummer Stacy Peck are Childbirth ioned hoofprints, though. bound together like conjoined w/Mommy Long Legs, J: Wait, what? goslings giving Childbirth the Dee Dees, Listen Lady its muscle juice. Though the Sun May 10, Do you have any birth three members are busy with Chop Suey, 3 pm, $5, 21+ stories? Like, have you ever other bands—Chastity Belt, Tacocat, and Pony Time, respectively—they seen a horse being born? Real birth or metwere able to meet me in the egg section at a aphorical birth. B: I was a teenage horse girl. I worked at QFC for an interview. some stables, and I’ve actually helped deliver baby horses before. Horse births are much What’s the latest Childbirth news? Julia: We can say that we’re recording a more clean than human births. They come out in a membrane. new record, right? S: I have never delivered a baby horse. Bree: It will be out by fall. I also have a J: I have never delivered a baby horse, new chakra tuner. Stacy: I have a new stuffed animal named either. I have cleaned a horse’s shaft. Kwackers. It’s a baseball with arms and legs. J: Nothing is going on with me. I check my Please watch this video of a baby cow being born and describe it in one word. I can’t Instagram sometimes. believe the mom continues to graze at the beginning. Oh, what’s that? A baby coming What’s the new Childbirth like? J: Some of the new songs are called “Tech out of me? Well, I got some time, I’ll keep Bro,” “Since When R U Gay,” “Baby Bump,” grazing. J: Cute. and “Nasty Grrrls.” B: Fine. S: The new songs are much more mature. S: Wow. How will Childbirth be celebrating Mother’s Is the person you wrote “I Only Fucked You Day? J: I will probably take Stacy out for Moth- as a Joke” about upset about the song? J: We didn’t write it about any one parer’s Day brunch at Linda’s, where Bree will be working. It’s probably not the best place ticular person, but it definitely upsets a lot of to take your mom, but Stacy is a cool mom. people. S: Everyone thinks it’s about them. She gets it. What’s the longest you’ve ever held your pee? B: Probably a tour situation. S: I don’t know an exact time. I constantly have nightmares about peeing. J: I was on an airplane, and the person next to me was sleeping. When I finally went pee, I actually had to go twice. When I woke up this morning, I peed for five minutes. I’ve had a lot of long pees. In Nowak’s car, after her arrest, they found plastic gloves, cash, a floppy disk with 15 images of a woman undressing, drawings of bondage scenes, and 69 orange pills. Of those items, which is your favorite? J: Floppy disk. B: Orange pills. S: The rubber gloves, I guess. What were the 69 orange pills? B: Adderall? J: Why 69 of them, though? Maybe it was a sex pill? S: Maybe it was Tic Tacs. The orange ones are the best. B: We have decided, as a band, they were Tic Tacs J: And there were 69 of them because she was kinky. Her lawyer said she suffered from major depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, insomnia, and brief psychotic disorder. He also said she had Asperger’s syndrome. What’s your diagnosis? J: Hard to say. As a female guitarist, I don’t really try to pretend like I know everything. Can you still go into space with all those problems? That’s crazy. I thought if your eyes were bad, you’re out. PALOOKA If you all were to speak to Lisa Nowak, what would you say to her? J: You’re a disgrace to all women in space. S: I’d like to know what her road-trip music was. I want to know if she made herself a sweet playlist before she left, and what it was called. What would you say to Lisa Nowak’s children? S: I wouldn’t want to bring her kids into it. B: I try not to talk to children. They make me nervous. How do you think Lisa Nowak is spending this Mother’s Day? J: Not in space, am I right? B: Be careful, she’s gonna read this! S: I don’t know her personally. J: Yeah, I don’t know how she spends her time. B: On a beach, rocking out to the new Sleater-Kinney album, reading Kim Gordon’s new book. n UP & COMING 5/16 GOOD MEN AND THOROUGH 5/31 KOBRA & LOTUS / ROMANTIC REBELS 6/4 TONY MACAPLINE 6/5 STARS FROM THAT METAL SHOW 6/6 DEICIDE / ENTOMBED A. D / HATE ETERNAL 6/7 10 YEARS 6/8 VEIL OF MAYA 6/10 KOTTON MOUTH KINGS 6/10 1349 / NECROPHAGIA @ CLUB SUR ALL EVENT TICKETS AVAILABLE THRU WWW.ETIX.COM AND STUDIO 7 BOX OFFICE 44 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER UP&COMING Lose your alpha-asshole attention whores every night this week! For the full music calendar, see page 51 or visit thestranger.com/music For ticket on-sale announcements, follow twitter.com/seashows a = All Ages. has the distinction of being the biggest influence on Snoop Dogg’s style. On TLC’s “Creep,” the sample is drawn from Slick Rick’s dubby and bubbly and dreamy “Hey Young World.” CHARLES MUDEDE Wednesday 5/6 Inter Arma, Yautja, Mercy Ties, Great Falls, Witch Ripper (Highline) How much similarity is there between Slayer and Sleep? Dio and Drudkh? Molly Hatchet and Morbid Angel? They’re all metal bands, but they have such wildly different approaches that it’s hard to see how they all fall under the same umbrella. In an era where metal has come to mean so many things, new bands typically get pigeonholed into a narrowly defined niche or sloppily jump across various microgenres. Few metal bands can fluidly traverse a wide span of sonic territories, and even fewer can do so in a way that creates something truly original. Leave it to Richmond’s longhaired punks Inter Arma to show everyone how influences as varied as Crazy Horse, Neurosis, Pink Floyd, and Craft can be seamlessly melded together into a cohesive, coherent, and punishing new sound. BRIAN COOK New Kids on the Block, TLC, Nelly a (Tacoma Dome) What do MC Solaar’s ethereal “A La Claire Fontaine,” Erick Sermon’s slamming “Stay Real,” and Tricky’s austere “Christiansands” have in common with TLC’s most important contribution to the history of American popular music, “Creep,” which dropped back in 1994 and was produced by Dallas Austin? They all sampled the voice of Slick Rick, a rapper who got his start with Doug E. Fresh and the Get Fresh Crew, released a classic for Def Jam in 1988 (The Great Adventures of Slick Rick), and Thursday 5/7 Sleater-Kinney, THEESatisfaction (Showbox) There’s nothing new about bands from the 1990s, from Pavement to Ride, re-forming to cash in on nostalgia and to make a mortgage payment or two. In 2007, Sleater-Kinney actually went on hiatus, but the trio didn’t return simply to play the old hits, signature tracks like “Dig Me Out” and “You’re No Rock ’n’ Roll Fun,” but to unveil a Though Deacon’s live shows used to involve (too much) audience-participation shenanigans, they were never dull. new record, No Cities to Love, their hardest-hitting, most adventurous statement to date. And their live shows have been generating the best reviews of their career, to the extent that their three-night stand at the Showbox is sold out (May 7–9, Saturday is all ages). For those without a ticket: Let’s hope somebody, such as ace documentarian Lance COME & GET ‘EM BRIGITTE SIRE SLEATER-KINNEY Not just coasting on nostalgia. Thurs May 7 at Showbox. WWW.TAKEWARNINGPRESENTS.COM WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/TAKEWARNINGPRESENTS TWITTER @TAKEWARNINGSEA TICKETS @ WWW.TAKEWARNINGPRESENTS.COM Best Coast California Nights THURS MAY 28TH @ SHOWBOX SODO $10.95-cd/$16.95-lp Best Coast’s new one is bright, sophisticated, a little more psychedelic, and all with a California state of mind. STREETLIGHT MANIFESTO Wed 5/6 WILD WANTS, I’d Die For Lo-Fi, The Beach Boy, & Guest - $7 Thu 5/7 DOGS OF WAR, Green River Thrillers, Crawler, Sun Giants - $7 Fri 5/8 MAMMA’S CAVE PRESENTS: Katie Kate, Erik Blood, Aeon Fux Sat 5/9 EMERALD CITY SOUL CLUB - $10 8pm MuMford & sons Wilder Mind $13.95-reg.cd/$16.95-dlx cd DAN POTTHAST, SYCAMORE SMITH Mumford & Sons have ditched the banjos and have gone with a more minimalist rock feel on their newest album. Also available on vinyl. 8:30 PM / ALL AGES (BAR W/ ID) $21.50 ADV / $25 DAY OF SHOW SATURDAY MAY 16TH @ ECLECTIC THEATER *2 SHOWS / LIMITED TICKETS!* EMILY HELLER My Morning JaCket The Waterfall ELICIA SANCHEZ $10.95-cd/$12.95-dlx cd MMJ is back with a little bit alt.country, a little jam-band, and little folk for a stunning album of sonic scenery. Also available on vinyl. Sale prices good thru 5/24/15 More than a record store! We have turntables, vinyl accessories, posters, headphones & More. sed new & u Vinyl & s d C d s , dV CAPITOL HILL 1520 10th Ave. • 206.568.3321 Open everyday 10 a.m.-10 p.m. 7:30 PM (EARLY) & 10:00 PM (LATE) ALL AGES (BAR W/ ID) $18 ADV / $20 DAY OF SHOW 9pm 9pm THURSDAY JUNE 25TH @ THE VERA PROJECT *JUST ANNOUNCED / TICKETS ON SALE NOW! JEN KIRKMAN 9PM BELLINGHAM 115 E. Magnolia • 360.676.1404 Open everyday 9 a.m.-10 p.m. for any & all used Cds, dVds & Vinyl www.everydaymusic.com “I’M GONNA DIE ALONE (AND I FEEL FINE)” 8:00 PM DOORS / 9:00 PM SHOW ALL AGES $16 ADVANCE / $18 DAY OF SHOW NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER Bangs (singer/guitarist Corin Tucker’s husband), is documenting this tour. KATHY FENNESSY (Lo-Fi) Two Matts and an Adam make up the Seattle band Crawler (note, there’s also a nice-sounding indie-pop band from Paris called “CRaWLeR”). Seattle’s Crawler sound just like they should—angsty, rock hard, almost kind of (ooh, I hate to use this word) grungey. You might remember one of the Matts from his other bands—the Keeper, Makeshift, or Hungry Crocodiles. Or maybe you don’t remember shit (’cause you drink/drank too much beer, plus who cares anyway?). If you just wanna see a really solid, really loud rock show on this fine Thursday, then head to Lo-Fi. The openers, Seattle stoner metalheads Dogs of War, won’t disappoint, either. KELLY O White Wards, Nudes, Wetbrain, Bricklayer, Glutton, Cuckold a (Ground Zero) Bellevue gets infinitely more punk tonight—at least at youth stronghold/community center Ground Zero—with a hardcore show featuring all local acts. Olympia’s reigning What better show to take your mom to than one with a band based on the Harry Potter book series? Ramsey Lewis Quartet Friday 5/8 Dan Deacon, Prince Rama, Ben O’Brien a (Neumos) Former Hare Krishna adherents Taraka and Nimai Larson of Brooklyn’s Prince Rama gained attention with fresh takes on Eastern-leaning, 45 tones down his exuberant maximalism. Though Deacon’s live shows used to involve (too much) audience-participation shenanigans, they were never dull—and he instilled an unparalleled camaraderie between artist and crowd while sometimes achieving a Boredoms-esque level of adrenaline overdose. DAVE SEGAL Crawler, Dogs of War, Green River Thrillers, Sun Giants a (Jazz Alley) With almost 65 years of recordings and live performances to his name, Chicago souljazz keyboardist Ramsey Lewis can bestow treasures on Jazz Alley’s crowds for four nights in a row (May 7–10) without repeating himself. He’s always been a preternaturally smooth operator on electric and acoustic pianos, as adept with dulcet ballads as he is with rousing up-tempo jams. He’s also had his astral and funky phases, as did most jazz musicians in the 1970s; go to Sun Goddess—a rare example of a heady album that was wildly popular—for the strongest convergence of those styles. Lewis is also an exceptional interpreter of other people’s compositions, with the Beatles songbook being a particular specialty, as the 1968 LP of Fab Four covers, Mother Nature’s Son, proves. The man’s oeuvre is an elegant joy, in any mode. DAVE SEGAL May 6, 2015 PRINCE RAMA No matter what style they attempt, they can’t help sounding cavernously psychedelic. Fri May 8 at Neumos. spiritual, ungrid-like dance music with the Shadow Temple and Trust Now albums, which sounded like a more blissful Gang Gang Dance. They achieved an even headier swirl of sound on Top 10 Hits of the End of the World, an audacious concept record in which they assume personas of 10 different imaginary pop groups (glam rock, grunge, TIMES LISTED ARE SHOW TIMES. DOORS OPEN 30-60 MINUTES BEFORE. Wed May 6 HARMONY-LADEN ROOTS DELLA MAE LEFT COAST COUNTRY 8PM - $15/$18 Thu May 7 ALBUM RELEASE PARTY THE FOGHORNS CASEY RUFF & THE MAYORS OF BALLARD THE RAINIEROS 9PM - $8 Fri May 8 AUSTIN PSYCH ROCK THE BRIGHT LIGHT SOCIAL HOUR TALK IN TONGUES, DUKE EVERS 9PM - $10/$12 Tue May 19 KISW PRESENTS UK BLUES-DRENCHED ROCK THE TEMPERANCE MOVEMENT FOX & THE LAW 8:30PM - $12/$15 Mon June 1 UK INDIE ROCK PALMA VIOLETS PUBLIC ACCESS T.V. 9PM - $15 H 5/10 STARS & GARTER SNAKES H 5/11 SQUARE DANCE W/ THE TALLBOYS H 5/12 FOUNTAINS H 5/14 THE CAVE SINGERS H 5/16 ZOE MUTH H 5/17 SUMMER MELTDOWN SHOWDOWN H 5/20 SISTER GIRLFRIEND LIKE US ON FACEBOOK, TWITTER & TUMBLR new wave, cosmic disco, etc.). No matter what style they attempt, Prince Rama can’t help sounding cavernously psychedelic. Headliner Dan Deacon is one of those rare musicians who can toggle from whimsical, goofy electro pop to transcendent Philip Glass–ian workouts with the twist of a knob on an analog synth, even if his 2015 album, Gliss Riffer, hardcore-punk group White Wards issue forth an onslaught of intelligent rock ugliness, their cauterizing riffs making them a favorite at esteemed local punk label Iron Lung Records. White Wards’ one-minute fury-blasts sound perfectly in place with Seattle hardcore freaks Nudes, whose garageinformed dirge is promising on their Stain 7-inch (also an ILR release), paving the way for unlikely subgenre garage-rock powerviolence. Wetbrain’s wall-of-noise sludgy hardcore appeals to those who enjoy feral feedback and artfully delivered rage, while Bricklayer’s approach is more polished with nearly sing-along-able guitar lines. BRITTNIE FULLER Prism: Pärt & MacMillan a (St. James Cathedral) To celebrate Arvo Pärt’s 80th birthday, Seattle Pro Musica pairs his work with contemporary James MacMillan and a world premiere by John Muehleisen (May 8–9). JEN GRAVES 46 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER Helmet (Crocodile) New York’s Helmet were part of the wave of 1990s noise rock bands on the roster of Amphetamine Reptile Records (the subject of 2014 documentary The Color of Noise). Sometimes described as the East Coast counterpoint to Seattle’s grunge scene, this underground movement explored the heavier, darker side of punk rock in a game-changing way (although the bands didn’t break through to the mainstream in the same way as their West Coast brethren). In the Monday 5/11 Willis Earl Beal, Skin Lies, Rowe Simply put, it’s absolutely fucked. But it’s the perfect kind of fucked. NEIL MICHAEL HAGERTY From noodle-headed drunk 'n' roll to redemptive boogie and everything in between. Sun May 10 at Black Lodge. level of popularity and prime festival slots with relatively understated music that’s easy on the ears yet never fades into the background (not that there’s anything wrong with that) or makes you think of shopping in malls. Accomplishment! DAVE SEGAL Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Nurses (Barboza) Making psychedelic pop that skews cute is fraught with the possibility of saccharine overdose, but Portland-via-New-Zealand band Unknown Mortal Orchestra elude that fate. Vocalist/guitarist Ruban Nielson sings with a coy coo over deceptively funky beats and low-frills instrumentation; the band’s melodies insinuate their way into your memory rather than barge in like alpha-asshole attention whores. (Is anyone else getting Grandaddy vibes from these guys?) Over the last four years and two albums, UMO have ascended to a reasonable NECTAR LOUNGE 412 N 36th St 206.632.2020 www.nectarlounge.com 5.7 Thursday (Bluegrass) PETER ROWAN with FRANK SOLIVAN & DIRTY KITCHEN plus The Blackberry Bushes Stringband $20adv / $25dos, 7:30pm, 21+ 5.8 Friday (Deep Funk Festival) THE WESTSOUND REUNION feat. POLYRHYTHMICS plus Lucky Brown & The Westsound Union, Grace Love & The True Loves, Unsinkable Heavies, Mystery Three, DJ Funkscribe & DJ Dave McRaw $10adv / $15dos, 8pm, 21+ 5.9 Saturday (Electronic) DESERT DWELLERS KAMINANDA w/ Halo Refuser, Lotus Drops $15adv / $20dos, 8pm, 21+ 5.10 Sunday (Modern Bluegrass) TAARKA with Renegade Stringband, Crow & the Canyon $10adv / $15dos, 7pm, 21+ 5.11 Monday (Weekly Jam) MO’ JAM MONDAYS Where Seattle Musicians Come To Jam NO COVER, 9pm, 21+ 5.12 Tuesday (Live Band Karaoke) KARAOKEGRASS!! 8pm Sign-Ups, NO COVER, 21+ 5.13 Paul Wall 5.15 McTuff + Horns 5.16 Blockhead 5.17 StoneLoweCoe 5.22 Prince & Michael Experience 5.23 Shafty - Portland’s Tribute to Phish 5.24 The Lowest Pair 5.27 JeConte & The Mali All-Stars 47 catalog makes for a disparate playlist of highlights that surprises and delights with genuine character and morbid curiosity. Simply put, it’s absolutely fucked. But it’s the perfect kind of fucked. Local longhairs Brain Drain, the Conor Kiley all-stars Bad Blood, and ramshackle shagsters CMRTYZ round out this very oblong night of debauchery. TRAVIS RITTER Saturday 5/9 case of Helmet, frontman/guitarist Page Hamilton incorporated his formal jazz training into a strippeddown, technically precise, and groove-oriented version of post-hardcore. More than 20 years after the release of Betty, Helmet—whose lineup has changed throughout the years, except for Hamilton—are on tour playing the album from beginning to end, plus a second set of songs spanning the band’s entire career. If you’re in need of a dose of therapeutically loud noise, this show should rearrange your molecules nicely. KATHLEEN RICHARDS May 6, 2015 Sunday 5/10 Harry and the Potters, Lisa Prank a (Vera) Happy Mother’s Day! What better show to take your mom to than one with a band based on J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter book series, playing songs with such titles as “Save Ginny Weasley” and “Gryffindor Rocks”? Since 2002, the charming DeGeorge brothers (hailing from Norwood, Massachusetts) have delighted Harry Potter nerds and fans of DIY indie/punk alike with their Rentals meets the Unicorns (and sometimes meets Meatloaf) protagonist pop punk. It’s not quite bedroom, not quite basement, not quite garage—it’s cupboard-under-the-stairs wizard rock. Wear your best maroon-and-gold scarf! EMILY NOKES Neil Michael Hagerty, Brain Drain, Bad Blood, CMRTYZ, Versing a (Black Lodge) From Pussy Galore and Royal Trux to the Howling Hex and solo releases under his given name, Neil Michael Hagerty has kept a firm grip on America’s weird music underground with a prolific output. A staple of the Drag City roster since its beginning, Hagerty’s music is a mash of surly psychedelic feedback, noodle-headed drunk ’n’ roll, redemptive boogie, and unapologetic folk. Hagerty’s staggering (Sunset) Willis Earl Beal is a rare bird in the twentyteens music ecosystem: a self-aware musical outsider combining raw blues, tender lo-fi troubadourism, and the sort of alien/alienating sonic textures more commonly associated with esoteric post-punk mavericks (This Heat, Swell Maps, Homosexuals, etc.). His 2011 debut album, Acousmatic Sorcery, announced the arrival of a true original musician, an artist who can meld unlikely elements into compelling songs, sung in a voice that carries a blunt authority and a soulfulness that splits the difference between Richie Havens and Nick Drake. The follow-up, 2013’s Nobody Knows, found Beal entering a pro studio for a change and opting for a more traditional soul/gospel/folk hybrid. The man can sing a conventional, lush ballad competently, but so can thousands of others. Maybe it’s churlish to say, and it may infuriate his manager, but I’d rather Beal return to the ramshackle gear he deployed on his debut and give his weirdest proclivities free rein. Let’s hope he does that tonight. DAVE SEGAL Music of Remembrance presents ‘After Life’ a (Benaroya Hall) A new opera by Tom Cipullo in which Gertrude Stein and Pablo Picasso meet in the afterlife to continue their far-flung conversations on art, love, and all the other big things. JEN GRAVES Tuesday 5/12 On this day in 1963, Bob Dylan walked off the set of The Ed Sullivan Show when they wouldn’t allow him to play “Talkin’ John Birch Paranoid Blues.” 48 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER for a full schedule visit www.mikETHRAsHERpREsENTs.COm follow us online at: facebook.com/mikethrasherPresents twitter.com/mikethrashersea · instagram: @mikethrasherPresents E L C O EnsIfErum R A THIs Z O sAT N TROLLfEsT N E u m O s KorpIKLAAnI sAT mAy THE wEATHER & vALisE TuE mAy 9 26 7:00pm doors ALL AGEs BAr W/propEr Id 6:30pm doors ALL AGEs BAr W/propEr Id & skELATOR sAT juL 18 8:00pm doors 21 And ovEr THIs TuEs TuE mAy 925 e pIke 12 6:00pm doors ALL AGEs BAr W/propEr Id TEAm dRivER fRiENdLy & HydRA mELOdy wOLvEs AT THE GATE fRi mAy fOREvERmORE uNTiL THis suNRisE & HERmOsA 1 0 9 e A S T l A k e A v e n u e 15 6:30pm doors ALL AGEs BAr W/propEr Id BATTLEmE & sHivER TwiNs sAT mAy T H E C R O C O d i L E & wiLd pARTy 2200 2nd Ave 1 877.4.fly.TIX TuE juN RivAL sONs 855-CAS-TIXX X2 1700 1ST Ave SouTh mIcroWAvE · of mIcE And mEn · croWBAr · TAyLor cAnIff dr. KnoW fEATurInG KyLE ToucHEr · AccEpTAncE suIcIdEGIrLs · ovErKILL / sympHony x 9 6:30pm doors ALL AGEs BAr W/propEr Id & ROyAL THuNdER 8:00pm doors 21 And ovEr 1-888-929-7849 go to www.mikethrasherPresents.com for complete details and info on how to get your tickets early Deerhoof 5/6 Killer Ghost, Summer Cannibals wednesday $3 w/RSVP - $10 w/o RSVP, 21+ The Crocodile Takeover 5/7 The Mama Rags, Acapulco Lips, Wind Burial, The Jesus Rehab, Black Giraffe, Megasapien thursday All Ages The Rentals 5/8 Rey Pila, Radiation City Friday All Ages KISW 99.9 & The Crocodile presents an evening w/ 5/9 Helmet “Betty” 20th Anniversary Show saturday (Playing The Album From Start To Finish) 21+ The Crocodile & ReignCity Present:: 5/10 Kyle “King Wavy Tour” Brothers From Another, Otieno Terry sunday All Ages DEV 5/11 Go Periscope (DJ Set) monday featured mON juN 8:00pm doors ALL AGEs BAr W/propEr Id s H O w B O x s O d O 16 COmiNG sOON: 1-877-725-8849 All Ages Tue 6/2 DeAD MeADOW Tue 7/7 TRAnS AM Sat 8/29 ROCKy VOTOLATO up & coming EVERY monDAY & TUESDAY LIQUID CoURAGE KARAoKE 5/12 WoLf ALICE 5/13 RAnDY & mR. LAHEY of TRAILER PARK BoYS 5/14 THE Jon SPEnCER BLUE ExPLoSIon 5/15 THRoUGH THE RooTS 5/16 BRITE LInES 5/17 ToVE STYRKE 5/18 GBH 5/20 KLInGAnDE 5/21 3RDEGREE 5/22 PUBLISH THE QUEST 5/23 SmALLPooLS 5/24 SLY & RoBBIE AnD THE TAxI GAnG 5/28 LUnIz 5/29 mIAmI HoRRoR 5/30 REfUSED 5/31 SCHooL of RoCK 6/1 mEG mEYERS 2200 2ND AVE H CORNER OF 2ND & BLANCHARD TICKETS @ THECROCODILE.COM & THE CROCODILE BOx OFFICE H MORE INFO AT WWW.THECROCODILE.COM H NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC HIGHWAY 99 Brian Lee & BASS-CENTRIC CHOONS the Orbiters: 8 pm, $7 H a JAZZ ALLEY Ramsey Lewis Quartet, 7:30 pm JEWELBOX THEATER DRUNK OF THE WEEK…BELOW THE HOMOSEXUAL AGENDA…51 DATA BREAKER…52 POSTER OF THE WEEK…53 WED H a TACOMA DOME New Kids on the Block, TLC, Nelly TRACTOR TAVERN Della Mae, Left Coast Country 5/6 L I VE BARANOF The Life Acoustic: Alex Rasmussen, Brendan Shea, 7 pm, free H CROCODILE Deerhoof, Killer Ghost, Summer Cannibals H HIGHLINE Inter Arma, Yautja, Mercy Ties, Great Falls, Witch Ripper HIGHWAY 99 Drummerboy JAZZ ALLEY Eric Bibb, Michael Jerome Browne KELLS Liam Gallagher LO-FI Wild Wants, I’D DIE FOR LO-FI, The Beach Boy NARWHAL Gaythiest, Baby Gurl, Sayonara: 9 pm, $6 NECTAR Pablo Moses & The Revolutionary Dream Band, Jonny Sonic, Ladro, DJ Court, Loveward Steps Q NIGHTCLUB Kaytranada THE ROYAL ROOM The Minor 9, Chaotic Noise Marching Corps, 8 pm SEAMONSTER Crack Sabbath: 10 pm, free SHOWBOX SODO All Time Low, Issues, Tonight Alive, State Champs, 6 pm SKYLARK CAFE & CLUB Open Mic: 8:30 pm, free H SUNSET TAVERN The Shilohs, iji, 8 pm, $8 TRIPLE DOOR MUSICQUARIUM LOUNGE Michaela Anne, 8:30 pm THE TRIPLE DOOR THEATER Liz Longley, Anthony D’Amato, 7:30 pm a VERA PROJECT A Weekend at the Feelies, Soft Fangs, Red Alder, 8:30 pm VICTORY LOUNGE Lazy Animals, Topless, Rock N Roll Suicides, Stuporhero J A ZZ CONOR BYRNE The Brotherhood of The Drum EGAN’S JAM HOUSE Dina Blade Student Showcase: 7 pm, Elizabeth Perera, 9 pm SERAFINA The Shawn Mickelson Trio: 8 pm, free TULA’S Kareem Kandi Band VITO’S RESTAURANT & LOUNGE Brad Gibson Trio DJ CHOP SUEY BYOV: 8 pm CONOR BYRNE Rainier Soul Sounds: 9 pm, free CONTOUR NuDisco FOUNDATION SUBstance Wednesdays: Guests, 9 pm HAVANA Wicked & Wild: DJ SoulOne, ZJ Redman, Selecta Element FILM H KREMWERK Chinga la Renta!: 9 pm NEIGHBOURS Pulse: DJ Trent Von, DJ Dirty Bit PONY He’s a Rebel: Guests CLAS S I CAL a MCCAW HALL Ariadne auf Naxos: Seattle Opera Sessions of She KELLS Liam Gallagher a LAKE CITY COMMUNITY CENTER Christa Burch LITTLE RED HEN Steve Frame & Western Rebels H LO-FI Crawler, Dogs of War, Green River Thrillers, Sun Giants: 9 pm, $7 THE MIX Yada Yada Blues Band, 9 pm, free NECTAR Peter Rowan, Frank Solivan & Dirty Kitchen, The Blackberry Bushes String Band, 8 pm, $20/$25 H NEPTUNE THEATRE They Might Be Giants: 8 pm a NEUMOS Ivan & Alyosha, 8 pm, $15 OWL N’ THISTLE Darci Carlson Q NIGHTCLUB Sharam Jey THE ROYAL ROOM Royal Ramble: Red Jacket Mine SHOWBOX SODO The Panda Funk Tour: Deorro, 7 pm H THE SHOWBOX SleaterKinney, 8 pm, $30 SNOQUALMIE CASINO 5/7 Wynonna & the Big Noise SUNSET TAVERN R. Ring TRACTOR TAVERN The Foghorns, Casey Ruff & the Mayors of Balldard, The Rainieros, 9 pm, $8 AQUA BY EL GAUCHO Ben THE TRIPLE DOOR THEATER Papa Josh & THURS LI VE Fleck, 6 pm, free BLUE MOON TAVERN Morning Glory Revival, Chris Patocka Ensemble, Swords for Arrows, $5 CENTRAL SALOON Lisa Legros a CHAPEL PERFORMANCE SPACE Machinations Musical, Divers & Sundry a CROCODILE The Mama Rags, Acapulco Lips, Wind Burial, the Jesus Rehab, Black Giraffe, Megasapie DISTRICT LOUNGE Cassia DeMayo Quintet, 8 pm, free a DOWNPOUR BREWING Open Mic Night a EL CORAZON: Sick of Sarah, The Tenfivesixty, A Clockwork Tragedy, Amsterdam HIGH DIVE Marmalade Friends: Howard Jones H VERMILLION An Evening of Edgy Culture: 8 pm VICTORY LOUNGE Unwelcome Guests, 9 pm J A ZZ H BARCA Jazz at Barca: Phil Sparks Trio, Adam Kessler CONOR BYRNE The Guitar Summit: 8 pm, $13/$15 a EGAN’S JAM HOUSE Jacob Zimmerman Quintet, 7 pm a OSTERIA LA SPIGA Thursday Night Jazz PINK DOOR Bric-a-Brac a SHUGA JAZZ BISTRO Chris James Quartet, 7 pm, CJQ, 7:30 pm TULA’S Sarah Partridge Quartet, Ted Brancato, Paul Gabrielson, Steve Korn VITO’S RESTAURANT & LOUNGE Casey MacGill, DRUNK OF THE WEEK 5:30 pm, Rik Wright, 9 pm DJ BALLROOM Throwback Thursdays: DJ Tamm of KISS BALTIC ROOM Sugar Beat BARBOZA No Duh! 90’s Dance Party: 9 pm CONTOUR Jaded: DJ Jades, Morgueanne H HAVANA Sophisticated Mama: DJ Nitty Gritty, DJ Sad Bastard, free H MERCURY Sex.Wave NEIGHBOURS Tinder OHANA Get Right: DJ Sosa Q NIGHTCLUB Scuba: 9 pm SAINT JOHN’S BAR AND EATERY Peel Slowly: DJ Squid Vicious, Fentar, DJ Kool Mike B, DJ Bargain Bin THERAPY LOUNGE DUH. TRINITY Space Thursdays THE WOODS Jobot, PressHa C L A SSICA L a BENAROYA HALL Mozart: The Great Concertos a BRECHEMIN AUDITORIUM Brechemin Piano Series: 7:30 pm, $5 FRI 5/8 L IVE KELLY O WEED OF THE WEEK H ave you ever asked a friend if they could spare a handful of weed? Yeah, well, this happened. (Thanks, Michael!) A friend with weed is a friend indeed. KELLY O a BALLARD HOMESTEAD Courtney Marie Andrews, Whitney Lyman, Anna Tivel BARBOZA Megan Wilde, A String of Pearls, Big World Breaks, 7 pm, $8 BLUE MOON TAVERN Colorworks, Little Fixtures, H = Recommended a = All Ages For the complete, searchable, constantly updated calendar, go to thestranger.com/music For ticket on-sale announcements, follow twitter.com/seashows THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 49 50 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER On Sale Now at StrangerTickets.com THE SEATTLE TRANSGENDER FILM FESTIVAL MULTIPLE LOCATIONS : TZ R A U Q N E V TE S Kickstart the Economy By Being Cool Through June 7 UNDISCLOSED SEATTLE LOCATION THURSDAY, MAY 7 Town Hall Friday, May 8 Word Works: Dorianne Laux on Music Hugo House ianS mixinG up younG muSic popu ineST lar n’S F u S i c , r o c k , r& b , c e l l i and m o i n a G o STS, e m r a Gl S Ja z & he n T a z a obal G G n n in o T d m So r u p, o r un aT ho STG preSenTS Fe h i p e ! dS MAY 14 - 16 the 14th Annual RE-BAR Sunday, May 10 MORE MUSIC@THE MOORE may 8 7:30pm The moore TheaTre Unicorn - Narwhal Friday, May 15 • Fremont Foundry A VERY QUEER DINNER PARTY (to Benefit PrideFest) July 10-12 Rare, hard-to-find, and exotic beers! Seattle Center Fisher Lawn Pavilion SUNDAY, MAY 24 BROught BROUGHT BROUGHTtO TO TO yOu YOU YOU By BY BY SUPPORT SUPPORT PROVIDED PROVIDED BY BY Music Direction by Sheila e. The Bradley Family Foundation presented by Pike Place Market Atrium Kitchen drummer, percussionist, singer TICKETS CALL (877) 784-4849 GROUPS 10+ (206) 315-8054 STGPRESENTS.ORG EST. 1907 2ND AVE & VIRGINIA ST NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS Gully, $5 Prince Rama, Ben O’Brien CAFE RACER The Grindylow, RE-BAR Quiver: Guests Weird Ons: 9 pm CHINA HARBOR Orquesta la Solucion, 9:30 pm, $15 COLUMBIA CITY THEATER Real Don Music, Screens, Richie Dagger’s Crime, 9 pm H a CROCODILE The Rentals, Rey Pila, Radiation City, 8 pm, $15 a EL CORAZON Icarus The Owl, The Ongoing Concept, Moments, the Bomb Shelter H GROUND ZERO (BELLEVUE) White Wards, Nudes, Wetbrain, Bricklayer, Glutton, Cuckold: 7 pm, $6 HIGH DIVE The Requisite, American Island, Northern Shakedown, Kye Alfred Hillig HIGHLINE Assemblage 23, Alter Der Ruine: 9 pm, $15 HIGHWAY 99 DoctorfunK HOLLOW EARTH RADIO Glossophonic Showcase H a JAZZ ALLEY Ramsey Lewis Quartet, 9:30 pm THE KRAKEN BAR & LOUNGE Night, Coyote Bred, The Snubs: 9 pm, $5 LITTLE RED HEN Marlin James Band: 9 pm, $5 LO-FI Katie Kate, Erik Blood, Aeon Fux: 9 pm, $8/$10 a MACHINE HOUSE BREWERY Ben Hunter and Joe Seamons, 7 pm, free THE MIX Jamie Nova Band, Machine, Xolie Morra & the Strange Kind, 9 pm, $8 MOORE THEATRE 14th Annual More Music @ The Moore: 7:30 pm, $10, $15 NECTAR Annual Northwest Deep Funk Festival: Lucky Brown & the Westsound Union, Polyrhythmics, Unsinkable Heavies, Mystery Three, Grace Love & the True Loves, 8 pm, $10/$15 H NEUMOS Dan Deacon, ARTS RENDEZVOUS Johnny Hoffman & the Residents, John Paul & the Apostles, Shark the Herald: 9:30 pm THE ROYAL ROOM Jason Sees Band, Runaway Symphony, Being Lucius SEAMONSTER Live Funk SHOWBOX SODO Griz, Floozies, Muzzy Bearr H THE SHOWBOX SleaterKinney, 9 pm, $30 SKYLARK CAFE & CLUB Jon Davidson, Pross, George Grissom, 9 pm, $7 SLIM’S LAST CHANCE Tom Price & the Desert Classic, Jilly Rizzo, Tit Nun: 9 pm a STUDIO SEVEN N8V, Supercult, Under Sin, Woodshed: 7 pm, $15 SUNSET TAVERN Jupe Jupe, The Gods Themselves, Ssnackss, Reptilian Children TACOMA DOME Big Band World Tour: Diplo, Laidback Luke, Bro Safari, Branchez TRACTOR TAVERN Bright Lights Social Hour, Talk in Tongues, 9 pm, $10 TRIPLE DOOR MUSICQUARIUM LOUNGE Supersones, 5 pm, free a THE TRIPLE DOOR THEATER Nellie McKay, Ben Ballinger, 8 pm, $26-$33 J A ZZ 88 KEYS Dueling Piano Show: 8 pm, free EGAN’S JAM HOUSE 45th Street Brass, Gavin Templeton Quartet, Dawn Clement Trio: 6:30 pm NORDIC HERITAGE MUSEUM Friday Night Concert & Ballard Jazz Walk SERAFINA Shawn Mickelson Trio, Tim Kennedy Trio TRIPLE DOOR CHOW MUSICQUARIUM LOUNGE Seabop, 9 pm, free TULA’S Jovino Santos Neto Quinteto: 7:30 pm, $16 VITO’S RESTAURANT & LOUNGE Casey MacGill DJ ASTON MANOR #AstonMob Fridays: Guests BALLROOM Rendezvous Friday: Guests, 9 pm BALMAR 80’s/90’s Night BALTIC ROOM Fundamental Fridays: Guests CHOP SUEY Shimmy Shimmy Ya!: DJ Curtis CUFF DJ Night: Rotating DJs FOUNDATION Resonate Fridays: Guests, 9 pm FUEL DJ Headache, Guests HAVANA Viva Havana & Havana Social: DJ Sean Cee, DJ Send, DJ Pho Sho MERCURY Illumination: Major Tom NEIGHBOURS Absolut Fridays: DJ Richard Dalton, DJ Trent Von, 9 pm PONY Shenanigans: DJ Porq, DJ kKost Q NIGHTCLUB DJ Christyle R PLACE Swollen Fridays: Swollen Friday: DJ E, 9 pm THERAPY LOUNGE Rapture TRINITY Playday: Guy, VSOP, Tyler and DJ Phase VERMILLION The Jam: Specs Wizard, DJ Able One, aMadman, free CLAS S I CAL a CHAPEL PERFORMANCE SPACE Seattle Composers’ Salon: 8 pm, $5/$15 a MEANY HALL The Magic Flute: Pacific MusicWorks, University of Washington’s School of Music, 7:30 pm a SEATTLE ASIAN ART MUSEUM Music of the MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 51 Japanese Imperial Court H a ST. JAMES CATHEDRAL Prism—Pärt & MacMillan: Seattle Pro Musica, 8 pm SAT 5/9 L IVE 192 BREWERY Michele D’Amour and the Love Dealers, 6:30 pm, free AQUA BY EL GAUCHO Ben Fleck, 6 pm, free a BALLARD HOMESTEAD Julia Massey & The Five Finger Discount, Robb Benson H BARBOZA Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Nurses BLUE MOON TAVERN The Hasslers, Biddadat, Faint Peter, $5 CAIRO Chastity Belt, Pleather, Mommy Long Legs a CHAPEL PERFORMANCE SPACE FHTAGN, 8 pm CLUB HOLLYWOOD CASINO Johnny and the Bad Boys, DJ Becka Page COLUMBIA CITY THEATER Freddy and Francine, 7 pm CONOR BYRNE The Barn Owls, Ben Hunter & Joe Seamons, Squirrel Butter H CROCODILE Helmet a EL CORAZON Ensiferum, Korpiklaani, TrollFest, 7 pm HARD ROCK CAFE Kalimba, The Spirit of Earth Wind and Fire HIGH DIVE Milhouse with The Deities, The Stuntmen, Graphene, Die Nasty HIGHWAY 99 Too Slim & the Taildraggers: 8 pm, $18 H a JAZZ ALLEY Ramsey Lewis Quartet, 9:30 pm JAZZBONES Stay Grounded, Positive Rising, Da Beckoning KATE’S PUB Decoys!, Deep NO COVER! THE 350s Sponsored by the Seattle Drum School 9pm EVERY TUESDAY AT THE MIX IN GEORGETOWN Bruce Hazen (Guitar), Alan Paisley (Bass), Steve Smith (Drums) BY ADRIAN RYAN C an you smell that? Wafting softly on the evening breeze? Like the singular aroma of an H&M on fire combined with the lingering scent of a glitter factory explosion? It’s Pride, of course, which is now looming larger than Mama Tits under a microscope. It’s critical to plan ahead for it. And so! Please drop the bong (just kidding—don’t ever do that!) and keep your beady little lashes glued to Slog this week, because we here at The Homosexual Agenda™ (i.e., ME) will be giving away two highly coveted ALL-ACCESS WEEKEND PASSES to Nark’s absurdly popular battery of Pride events, including Gender Blender (with our good friend BenDeLaCreme, Ginger Minj, and Miss Fame, which is frankly the worst drag name in history, but don’t let that stop you), the debaucherous Pride Cruise, a new super-secret event I’ve promised to not even MENTION yet (so pretend I didn’t), and MORE! So pay close attention for a chance to WIN BIG, MOTHAFUCKAH! In the meantime, we need to discuss Mark Finley. THURSDAY 5/7 HOW TO ROAST A MOM If you’ve been gay and/or in Seattle for more than 10 seconds, Mark (aka “Mom”) Finley has probably left a big, throbbing scar on your psyche. It’s only to be expected: She’s a natural disaster in heels! A scandal in a wig! She’s harder to kill than a Kevlar cockroach, more vulgar than two turds in a teacup, and funnier than falling down a flight of stairs! Indeed, Mark Finley and her clacking dentures have scintillated, tantalized, and wrought pure terror upon Gay Seattle since Adam and Steve were roller-skating with dinosaurs. Everybody but EVERYbody has an opinion about dear old Mom, and tonight we get to hear them: ECLECTIC INSTRUMENTAL ROCK COVERS AND ORIGINALS. The Mix - 6006 12th Ave. S. - Georgetown - Seattle, WA 98108 How-Mo-Lo-Can-Lo-Mo-go?! Lo-Mo Mondays! Manny’s Pale & Lucille IPA for the price of Logan Morrison’s batting average. EVERY MONDAY - ALL DAY!! Happy Hour: Late Nite Fri & Sat 11pm-1am, A luminous panel of luminaries (including, well, me, god help them) are lining up to take low jabs, make pot shots, and share stories both triumphant and terrible about the most polarizing and notorious queen in all of Seattle herstory! The Roast of Mark Finley! (Roasts are totally the rage lately, you’ve noticed?) It’s going to be hosted by none other than the legendary Lady Bunny from NYC, several notable local drag artists will participate, and there are even whisperings that Wendy Ho and Lily Tomlin will be joining from afar. You will laugh, you will cringe, you will cry (with more laughter), and best of all, you’ll finally get to see ol’ Mom get what’s coming to her. Hashtag karma. FRED Wildlife Refuge, 7 pm, $20/$50 VIP, 21+. SUNDAY 5/10 JUST D-FACTS The wait has ended at last! Julia’s has revived Seattle’s own Drag Race, whence fresh new queens (and trust me, there are millions—is there something in the water?) show off their C.U.N.T. (charisma, uniqueness… yadda, yadda) for the chance to win the title and a spot on the Le Faux cast—D-Factor season six! It’s always a fun show, the celebrity judges can be delightfully brutal, and tonight is just the beginning… Julia’s, 6:30 pm, free, 21+. Daily 4pm-7pm, Weekends 10am-2pm Mariners Games in HD 206-547-1417 • 460 North 36th Street • normseatery.com 52 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER Channel, 8:30 pm, free Seeger R PLACE Therapy Saturday KIRKLAND PERFORMANCE CENTER Ina Mina Dika TRACTOR TAVERN Cash’d REVOLVER BAR Jazz Brunch: KRAB JAB STUDIO Lennon TRIPLE DOOR MUSICQUARIUM LOUNGE RUNWAY CAFE DJ David N THE KRAKEN BAR & LOUNGE Guns of Barisal, Odyssey, They Rise, We Die H a LANGSTON HUGHES PERFORMING ARTS INSTITUTE B’Shnorkestra: Fri 5/8 - 8pm ELECTRONIC MUSIC NIGHT Sat 5/9 - 7:30pm HONEY NOBLE AND NEIL WELCH ds it. deman ex life s COM r T. S u A o Y EC GELOV .SAVA WWW Fri 5/14 - 7:30pm OPEN MIC Fri 5/15 - 7:30pm MASON TURNER AND THE REIGN sat 5/16 - 8pm PLANET FLY $10 GROWLER FILLS ALL WEEK (5/8 thru 5/15)! 3510 STONE WAY N SEATTLE, WA (206) 420-4435 • stonewaycafe.com Global Concertos: Thione Diop, Srivani Jade, Christos Govetas, Guests, 8 pm LITTLE RED HEN Troy Fair Band: 9 pm, $5 THE MIX Load Levelers, Spiderface, Suburban Vermin, Know Nothingz H MOORE THEATRE Seattle Rock Orchestra Performs The Beatles: 8 pm, $25 NECTAR Desert Dwellers, Kaminanda, Halo Refuser, Lotus Drops, 8 pm NEPTUNE THEATRE Wednesday, May 6th Inter ArmA Yautja, Mercy Ties, Great Falls, Witch Ripper 9PM, $10-$12 Friday, May 8th Mechanismus Presents AssemblAge 23 and Alter Der Ruine 9PM, $15 Monday, May 11th FUCK YeAH bIngO! 7PM, FREE Friday, May 15th DOA Hilltop Rats, Dead Bars, Bad Future 9PM, $12-$15 Kodaline, Gavin James NEUMOS Chris Robinson Brotherhood, 8 pm, $18 a OMCULTURE Love + Music = Education: 7 pm a PIES & PINTS Next 2 the Tracks: 8:30 pm, free THE ROYAL ROOM Twisted Groove: Meter Music School Student Recitals H THE SHOWBOX SleaterKinney, 9 pm, $30 SKYLARK CAFE & CLUB The Music of Weezer, U2, and Guns N’ Roses: 9 pm, $7 SLIM’S LAST CHANCE The Disco Cowboys, John Hamhock & the Rooster Run Band, Stoned Evergreen Travelers: 9 pm a STUDIO SEVEN Kung Fu Vampire, Guests: 7 pm, $22 SUNSET TAVERN Zooma Bella, 5:30 pm, $8, McTuff, Haiku Chi, The Cosmopolites, 10 pm, $8 a TOWN HALL Hootenanny! A Town Hall Tribute to Pete Out, 11 pm, $17 Mackapalooza 3: Charles Mack, 9 pm, free J A ZZ green JellO Headless Pez, Paralyzer, WARNING DANGER, Wolfgang Fuck 9PM, $10-$12 Sunday, May 17th Highline’s 5 year anniversary show!: eYeHAtegOD Special Guests! Transient 9PM, $20-$24 www.highlineseattle.com 210 Broadway Ave E • 21+ Dinner service Sun - Tues 4pm-8pm SUBSTATION Brian Lyons, Erin O’Connor, Ramiro, 9 pm TRINITY Reload Saturdays CLA S S ICA L 88 KEYS Dueling Piano Show BRASS TACKS Triangular Jazztet, 7 pm, free a KERRY/PONCHO HALL Vijay Iyer Trio, 8 pm TULA’S Greta Matassa Quartet: 7:30 pm, $15 VITO’S RESTAURANT & LOUNGE Kareem Kandi, Jerry Zimmerman, 6 pm, free DJ 95 SLIDE Good Saturdays: Sean Cee, Hyro, 9:30 pmASTON MANOR NRG Saturdays: Guests BALLROOM Sinful Saturdays: Guests, 9 pm BALMAR Top 40 Night BALTIC ROOM Crave Saturdays: McClarron, Swel BARBOZA Inferno CHOP SUEY Dance Yourself Clean: Guests H COLUMBIA CITY THEATER Cirque du Bollywood: DJ Kazan, 9 pm CORBU LOUNGE DJ BBoy, DJ 5 Star a FADO IRISH PUB Fado Saturdays: DJ Doogie, free HAVANA Viva Havana & Havana Social: DJ Sean Cee, DJ Send, DJ Pho Sho KREMWERK Bottom Forty Interior Revival X: 9 pm H LO-FI Emerald City Soul Club: 9 pm, $10 MERCURY Machineries of Joy: DJ Hana Solo, $5 NEIGHBOURS Powermix: DJ Randy Schlager PONY Glitoris Saturday, May 16th Rob Femur, DJ Vice Diamond a BENAROYA HALL Mozart: The Great Concertos a MEANY HALL The Magic Flute: Pacific MusicWorks, University of Washington’s School of Music, 7:30 pm H a ST. JAMES CATHEDRAL Prism—Pärt & MacMillan: Seattle Pro Musica, 8 pm a UW KANE HALL Soloists with Philharmonia NW SUN 5/10 LIV E BARBOZA Tal National H BLACK LODGE Neil Michael Hagerty, Brain Drain, Bad Blood: 9 pm H CAFE RACER The Racer Sessions, 7:30 pm, Free CHOP SUEY Childbirth, Mommy Long Legs, The Dee Dees, Listen Lady: 3 pm, $5 a CROCODILE Kyle, Brothers from Another: 8 pm a EL CORAZON Sólstafir, Ancient VVisdom, Guests H a HARD ROCK CAFE Caspar Babypants H a JAZZ ALLEY Ramsey Lewis Quartet, 7:30 pm JAZZBONES Sinatra at the Sands: Paul Wall KELLS Liam Gallagher a KEYARENA Neil Diamond LITTLE RED HEN Honky Tonkers H MOORE THEATRE Seattle Rock Orchestra Performs The Beatles a MURAL AMPHITHEATRE Stone Karaoke Light Real Music Festival: 6 pm NECTAR Taarka, Renegade Stringband, The Crow & the Canyon, 7:30 pm, $10/$15 THE ROYAL ROOM Meter Music School Student Recitals: 11 am-5:30 pm a THE SHOWBOX James Bay, Elle King, 8 pm, $16 a SKYLARK CAFE & CLUB Fallow, Trauma Del Ray, Harpoon the Whale TIM’S TAVERN Kirsten Silva’s Seattle Songwriter Showcase: Guests a THE TRIPLE DOOR THEATER In Dreams: A Live Tribute to Roy Orbison H a VERA PROJECT Harry and the Potters, Lisa Prank VICTORY LOUNGE Cmrtyz, Versing: 9:30 pm JA Z Z THE ANGRY BEAVER The Beaver Sessions HOPVINE PUB Miss Miller & the Swells, free THE ROYAL ROOM Roxy Coss Quintet, 7 pm, SEAMONSTER Travis Hartnett Trio, 7 pm, free H a TULA’S Lonnie Mardis & SCC Jazz Orchestra H VITO’S RESTAURANT & LOUNGE Ruby Bishop, 6 pm, Ron Weinstein Trio DJ CONTOUR Broken Grooves CORBU LOUNGE Salsa Sundays: DJ Nick, 9 pm KREMWERK Sin: Soul-Fi: Lust Strength MERCURY Interzone: DJ Coldheart, 9 pm, $5 NEIGHBOURS Noche Latina: DJ Luis, DJ Polo PONY TeaDance: DJ El Toro, Freddy King of Pants BY DAVE SEGAL THURSDAY 5/7 DEORRO DROPS HOUSE-MUSIC BOMBAST FOR THE PANDA FUNK TOUR Some weeks in Data Breakerland, the shows just don’t inspire much enthusiasm. This, unfortunately, is one of them. Our column begins with the Seattle stop on the Panda Funk Tour, headlined by Deorro. The LA native’s a wildly popular house-music producer/DJ who does big numbers on Beatport, the massive electronic-music retail outlet that serves as a barometer for what’s pleasing the punters at any given moment. Deorro makes bombastic, acidic house anthems that trigger all the rote responses with tried-and-true tricks (hands in the air during the high-pitched synth parts when the beat drops out, air punches for the coming-back-with-a-vengeance beats, shouts for the accelerated buildups, etc.). Dude’s giving the not-so-demanding people what they want and making bank, but this stuff gives me hives. With Zoofunktion, Dirty Audio, and IEZ. Showbox Sodo, 7 pm, $37.50–$45.50, 18+. FRIDAY 5/8 DIPLO HAS BASS FOR YOUR ASS(HOLES) Hard to believe now, but I used to like Diplo—back in the mid ’00s when he was a wild-ass DJ in Hollertronix and putting out weird down-tempo records on Ninja Tune subsidiary Big Dada. Now he’s the random white dude who’s everywhere, glomming onto myriad hot international styles and converting them into global smashes, producing tracks for Madonna, and collaborating with Skrillex as Jack Ü. His latest work’s all about big-room, alpha-male, bass-centric choons that center on moving asses—literally, if you consider “6th Gear,” a recent cut with Alvaro that serves as the soundtrack for the “Official Fraules Team Twerk” video. How Kettenkarussell the whitey has risen… Big Bang World Tour with Laidback Luke, Bro Safari, and Branchez. Tacoma Dome, 8 pm, $68, 18+. SATURDAY 5/9 GERMAN LABEL GIEGLING SHOWCASES SHIVER-INDUCING TECHNO AND HOUSE Okay, here’s a gig that redeems the week. Decibel, secondnature, and Blue Spectral Storm team up to bring us the German triumvirate of Giegling label recording artists Kettenkarussell, Leafar Legov, and Konstantin. Kettenkarussell (Legov and Herr Koreander) create understated techno that weaves acoustic guitars, vibes, keyboards, and odd noisemaking toys for a seamless, shiver-inducing synthetic/organic vibe. The effect is moody yet tranquil. What little music I’ve heard by Legov solo sounds like a more intimate iteration of the Knife— creepy, quasi-gothic, and more about enticing textures than danceability. He shows a light touch for haunting melodies and calmly chugging rhythms. Finally, Konstantin’s a house DJ/producer of similarly subtle sublimity. If you want to immerse yourself in Giegling’s levitational aesthetic, tonight’s the night. With Archivist and Joel Pryde. Re-bar, 10 pm–4 am, $15 adv, 21+. NEWS F E AT U R E R PLACE Homo Hop ★ RE-BAR Flammable: DJ Wesley Holmes, Xan Lucero C LA S S I C A L a BENAROYA HALL Tchaikovsky’s String Quartet No. 1 a BRECHEMIN AUDITORIUM Barry Lieberman & Friends a MEANY HALL The Magic Flute: Pacific MusicWorks MON 5/11 L I VE 88 KEYS Blues On Tap CAPITOL CIDER EntreMundos, 9:30 pm a CROCODILE Dev, Go Periscope a EL CORAZON Maid Myriad, The Fine Constant, Tides of Malice, Thread the Sky, 7:30 pm, Mothership, Dirty Streets, Mother Crone, 8:30 pm a JAZZ ALLEY Mercer Island Jazz Band, Bothell High School Jazz Band KELLS Liam Gallagher MOLLY MAGUIRES Open Mic NECTAR Mo’ Jam Mondays: Morganica Quartet, Guests SEAMONSTER The Halvornaughts, 10 pm, free ★ SUNSET TAVERN WIllis Earl Beal, Skin Lies, 8 pm TRIPLE DOOR MUSICQUARIUM LOUNGE Crossrhythm Sessions a THE TRIPLE DOOR THEATER Luke Wade, Tommy Simmons: 7:30 pm SUGGESTS CHOP SUEY Some Girls, DJ Sloppy Jo, DJ Dyl Widdit a CROCODILE Wolf Alice, Gateway Drugs, 8 pm, $12 a EL CORAZON Cartel, Chroma, Team, Driver Friendly, Hydra Melody a FREMONT ABBEY Loch Lomond, Windoe, Guests HIGH DIVE Tim Held, RAICA, Gel-Sol, 8 pm, $6 a JAZZ ALLEY Jane Bunnett & Maqueque KELLS Liam Gallagher ★ THE KRAKEN BAR & LOUNGE All Eyes West, Vic Bondi, Guests: 9 pm, $5 LITTLE RED HEN T & D Revue NARWHAL Sciatica, Frustration, Hurry Up and Die, Clocks! NEUMOS Other Lives, Riothorse Royale, 8 pm, $15 PARAGON You Play Tuesday: Guests, 8 pm, free ★ SEAMONSTER McTuff Trio a STUDIO SEVEN Dog Fashion Disco, Beebs & Her Money Makers, Burn the Travesty, Guests, 7 pm Rushing, 8 pm, donation TULA’S David Marriott Big Band: 7:30 pm, $5 DJ BALTIC ROOM Jam Jam: Mista’ Chatman, DJ Element ★ BAR SUE Motown on Mondays ★ THE HIDEOUT Industry Standard: Guests, free MOE BAR Moe Bar Monday ★ RE-BAR Collide-O-Scope C LA S S I C A L ★ BENAROYA HALL After Life: Ava Pine, Catherine Cook, Robert Orth TUE 5/12 L I VE CAFE RACER Jacobs Posse MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 53 1 On Sale Now at StrangerTickets.com Per Espen Stoknes: How (Not) To Build Support for Climate Policy Greyhounds, The Witness: TIM’S TAVERN Open Mic TRIPLE DOOR MUSICQUARIUM LOUNGE Singer-Songwriter Showcase THE TRIPLE DOOR THEATER Susan Galbraith, Zarni, Nick Drummond VERMILLION Tinfoil and Tape, DJ Oliver & M.F.’s Fish of Water, 8 pm, free Pre-Bridgetown Comedy Festival Showcase Thursday, May 7 • Town Hall J A ZZ OWL N’ THISTLE Jazz with Eric Verlinde THE ROYAL ROOM THE ROYAL ROOM Zachary CHOW SUNSET TAVERN PINK DOOR Marina Albero JAZZ ARTS Christian Pincock’s Slipstitch & Ivan Arteaga, Chris Icasiano, Jeff Johnson SEAMONSTER Celestial Navigation, 8 pm, free TULA’S Emerald City Jazz Orchestra: 8 pm, $5 DJ BLUE MOON TAVERN Blue Moon Vinyl Revival Tuesdays CORBU LOUNGE Club NYX Wave & Goth: 10 pm, $5 DARRELL’S TAVERN DJ Wade T, free THE EAGLE Pitstop: DJ Nark HAVANA Real Love ‘90s MERCURY Die: Black Maru, Major Tom, $5 NEIGHBOURS Pump It Up C L A S S I CAL a BRECHEMIN AUDITORIUM BM Recital Friday, 5/8 Diamonds & Gold Tour: The Art Deco Skyscraper Northwest Style HOOTENANNY! Seattle Architecture Foundation All Ages Sing-along Tribute to Pete Seeger Decibel presents: Leonard Mlodinow: The Evolution of Scientific Discovery Giegling Tour Saturday, 5/9 • Town Hall featuring Kettenkarussell, Leafar Legov & Konstantin Saturday, May 9 at Re-Bar WEDNESDAY, 5/13 • COLUMBIA CITY THEATER Monday, 5/11 • Town Hall Thursday, May 14 The Rendezvous Friday, May 8 I t’s time again for the annual Sasquatch! poster show, which includes work by a bunch of designers (Shogo Ota, Matt Harvey, Aaron Bloom, and many more) who appear regularly in this space. This fine example is by Benjamin K. Shown. AARON HUFFMAN Sasquatch! Poster Show Thurs May 7, Piranha Shop with Screens -Richie Dagger's Crimes -and more! Columbia City Theater 54 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER 5030 ROOSEVELT WAY NE, SEATTLE • 206-524-8554 www.scarecrow.com for a Sign Up hip for s r e b Mem ts & Discoun eals! D l ta n Re website see our ils for deta 1 2 FORAL T REN DAY WEDNES ON SALE THIS WEEK Also available for rent SELMA One of the Most Important Films of 2014 DVD $22.95 Blu-ray $28.95 MR. TURNER How Does Such a Grumpy Man Make Such Lovely Art? Blu-ray $26.95 MAD MAX (Collector’s Edition) The Last of the V8 Interceptors! Blu-ray $16.95 ALSO NEW THIS WEEK For a full list of New Releases for rent + sale, visit scarecrow.com FIFTY SHADES OF GREY (Available Fri. 5/8) Whip It! DVD / Blu-ray $28.95 WINTER SLEEP Meditative Modern Turkish Masterpiece Blu-ray $24.95 42ND STREET Classic Busby Berkeley! Blu-ray $19.95 DUEL Spielberg’s First Thrill-ride Blu-ray $17.95 GOODFELLAS (25th Anniversary) One Dog’s Goin’ One Way, One Dog’s Goin’ the Other Way Blu-ray $29.95 THE ADVENTURES OF FORD FAIRLANE This was Peak “Dice”. Blu-ray $15.95 Frank Sinatra 5-Film Collection! $54.95 on Blu-ray Anchors Aweigh, One the Town, Robin & the 7 Hoods -- $17.95 Each CLINT EASTWOOD 7-Film Set! $69.95 on Blu-ray 6009 SW 244th St 21+ Mountlake terrace Wa 98043 (425) 672-7501 - Movieline 1490 nW 11th ave All Ages! iSSaquah, Wa 98027 (425) 313-5666 - Movieline 206.324.9996 siff.net 2015 Seattle International Film Festival Begins May 14 with Opening Night Film NOW PLAYING Fri May 8 - Thu May 14 EGYPTIAN IRIS Midnight Adrenaline | May 9 THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW UPTOWN THE MOST POPULAR GUIDE TO THE SEATTLE INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL THE MOST POPULAR GUIDE TO THE SEATTLE INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL Academy Award Nominee TANGERINES Futuristic shocker with Director Paul Feig in Person Best Party of the Year! Issue Date: WEDNESDAY, MAY 13th For over 20 years, The Stranger’s guide to the Seattle International Film Festival has been the go-to resource for 150,000 filmgoers each year. Noah Baumbach’s WHILE WE’RE YOUNG FILM CENTER Stage to Screen | May 8-10 NT Live: THE HARD PROBLEM Held over: Fri-Sun DIOR & I Albert Maysles’ final documentary, following 93-year-old style maven Iris Apfel and WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS SIFF EDUCATION May 9 CRASH CINEMA TO ADVERTISE call 206-323-7101 or e-mail us at adinfo@thestranger.com Ad Deadline: WEDNESDAY, MAY 6th EX MACHINA Special Renton Edition at CARCO Theatre Register Now! SIFF SUMMER CAMPS Animation Camp | Ages 8-10 Filmmaking Camp | Ages 10-13 MAY 8-14 | EGYPTIAN SNEAK PREVIEW THU MAY 7 NOW SERVING BEER & WINE! SIFF CINEMA EGYPTIAN | 805 E Pine St SIFF CINEMA UPTOWN | 511 Queen Anne Ave N SIFF FILM CENTER | Seattle Center NW Rooms siff.net/summercamps FESTIVAL 2015 Save the date: May 27 An evening with KEVIN BACON at SIFF Cinema Egyptian NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 55 FILM LAMBERT & STAMP Chris Stamp and Kit Lambert, without whom Pete Townshend might never have smashed a guitar. The Amazing Journey of Lambert & Stamp Brilliant New Documentary Examines the Unlikely Duo Behind the Who BY NED LANNAMANN A ll Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp wanted was to make a movie. The fate of this pair of would-be impresarios was sealed in 1964, when they decided to make a documentary about a West London rock ’n’ roll group. Thanks largely documentary about the managers’ partnerto their intervention, the band they set their ship and the era that fed and was fed by it, the circle is complete. sights on became the Who, and Lambert, in particular, is a Lambert and Stamp became Lambert & Stamp fascinating figure, well worthy two of the most notorious—and dir. James D. Cooper Sundance Cinemas of a movie of his own. (Which ingenious—rock managers in a could be in the offing—Cary field crowded with the likes of Brian Epstein, Andrew Loog Oldham, and Elwes has been attached to direct a Lambert Robert Stigwood. With the release of Lam- biopic.) The Oxford-educated son of a wellbert & Stamp, a brilliant, wholly absorbing regarded classical composer, Lambert had Morgan Freeman and Diane Keaton Grow Old Together BY SEAN NELSON I t’s hard enough to know how you authenti- equations that nearly all narrative screencally respond to a film like 5 Flights Up, plays basically are. In this case: The couple (Ruth and Alex) in which Morgan Freeman and Diane Keaton is trying to sell the big Brooklyn walk-up play a long-married couple who— they’ve lived in for 40 years and can’t afford Okay, let’s just back up one second. Morgan Freeman. Diane Keaton. Married to move to a building with an elevator until couple. Live with that image. Marinate in its they do. He’s a once-successful, now-unfashionable painter; she’s a retired vast potential. But you’re right to teacher. The formerly sketchy, ask: Is this the real Keaton and 5 Flights Up now-Starbucksed neighborhood Freeman, or is it Mad Money dir. Richard Loncraine has changed—though the onlyWide release Keaton and Bucket List Freein-the-movies neighbors all know man? For the first 10 minutes of 5 Flights Up, it’s difficult to say, since Ameri- each other’s business and even the cabdrivcan movies are forever spending their first ers are menschy. Meanwhile: A breaking 10 minutes establishing characters—and story about an abandoned truck that may or thus insulting viewers—to within an inch may not contain a terrorist bomb is all over of their lives, the better to set up the math the news and on everyone’s mind. Also: Their an unconventional upbringing that bridged Stamp’s vibrant footage of the band perEngland’s conservative aristocracy and the forming in a seedy London pub, years before flamboyance of his father’s artistic peers. Monterey Pop and Woodstock. And there are After finishing his studies, he traveled to the the requisite Keith Moon stories, although Amazon, where a member of his team was one of the film’s most powerful moments killed by natives. Upon his return to England, comes when Townshend and Roger Daltrey he worked at Shepperton Studios, on big quietly discuss the troubled drummer’s menBritish productions like From Russia with tal-health problems. But this remains chiefly Love and The Guns of Navarone. Later, as a film about the men behind the band. Workthe Who’s producer and manager, he urged ing in unlikely concert, Lambert and Stamp Pete Townshend to push beyond the limits transformed Townshend, Daltrey, Moon, and of three-minute pop singles and compose John Entwistle (“a fucking genius,” Townshsomething more ambitious; “A Quick One, end yells in one interview) from a bunch of While He’s Away” and later Tommy were the street-fighting yobs into a multifaceted popgroundbreaking results. Naturally, Lambert art act at the height of Swinging London—an was a man of appetite and ego, and his life incredible feat given how volatile the relationended at age 45 in a fog of booze, drugs, and ships between the group’s members were. rent boys. Massive success followed, and of course it Stamp, on the other hand, was strictly all went to shit as the partnership dissolved working-class, the brother of renowned ac- in lawsuits, acrimony, and frantic grabs for tor Terence Stamp and a cash. Despite the preperfect everyman foil to dictable narrative, the Lambert’s upper-crust Lambert and Stamp documentary is insightgentleman. He was as ful, sad, and moving, transformed the hetero as Lambert wasn’t, making particular use of first breaking into showbiz Who from a bunch of a series of interviews conas a stagehand at the balstreet-fighting yobs ducted with Stamp before let, a position that suited his death in 2012. He and into multifaceted him perfectly, as he could the surviving members of eyeball the dancers during the Who are reconciled, pop art. the performance and then and all parties appear to court them afterward. be as amazed as we are The men came together at an auspicious at the remarkable, weird, tragic, triumphant time and place: London in the early 1960s, story of their lives. as the Beatles were breaking through and as Lambert & Stamp comes at a bountiful James Bond’s virile British suavity became time for Who devotees. The band’s studio althe biggest export in international cinema. bums have all been newly reissued on vinyl, After generations of stuffiness, empire, and and Mark Blake’s excellent new biograwarfare, the United Kingdom’s capital city phy, Pretend You’re in a War: The Who & had become a hotbed of artistic fecundity, the Sixties, was just published a few weeks unrivaled in terms of breadth, depth, and ago. Meanwhile, Daltrey and Townshend are influence to this day. Postwar gloom finally currently touring for the band’s “50th” angave way to Carnaby Street Technicolor, niversary (a number that must come from and an entire nation seemed to loosen. But the release date of their first single, “I Can’t the prizes—notably sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ Explain”). Cooper’s terrific documentary is roll—also became pitfalls. an essential addition to the canon of one of Lambert & Stamp was painstakingly as- the most-documented careers in music hissembled over many years by director James tory, providing more insight than ever into D. Cooper, whose bulldog filmmaking style an incredibly mismatched group of men that suits his subjects. There’s plenty about the made violent, impassioned, often misunderWho, of course, including Lambert and stood music. n dog has a very expensive back injury. Which is to say: Everything is up in the air. The stage is set for the kind of real-life, lower-middle-class kitchen-sinker—in which economic circumstance is one of the prime dramatic engines— that Hollywood is notorious for getting completely wrong. 5 Flights Up both is and isn’t that kind of film. If its identity is somewhat muddled (there’s an awful lot of supposedly comic material that will only be of interest to people who have experience with the New York City realestate market, and the terrorist subplot feels weirdly stapled on), this adaptation of Jill Ciment’s novel Heroic Measures—in which Alex and Ruth are a pair of old-line leftist Jews—succeeds at depicting a plausible marriage at an unconventional crossroads. There’s no sense that the couple won’t make it (or that the dog will be fine, or that the guy will turn out not to be a terrorist, etc.), but their dawning awareness that the life they’ve built has long since entered its final act lends a tenderness to their bickery banter, and invests their quest to up stakes with a preciousness. The good kind. Freeman and Keaton make their worth known (duh) in the sad, sweet moments between their otherwise whatever dialogue, thus allowing a film that would like to pretend it’s about city life, race and class in America, and the conflict between art and commerce reveal, however gradually, that it’s actually about the real price of sharing your life. n 56 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER ENTER TO WIN FILM SHORTS More reviews and movie times: thestranger.com/film LIMITED RUN RAD 2Q%OX5D\ TM Combo Pack For a chance to win, email ¿IW\VKDGHV#WKHVWUDQJHUFRP ZLWK\RXUIXOOQDPHDJH DQGPDLOLQJDGGUHVV ),)7<6+$'(62)*5(<LVUDWHG5IRUVWURQJVH[XDOFRQWHQWLQFOXGLQJGLDORJXHVRPHXQXVXDO EHKDYLRUDQGJUDSKLFQXGLW\DQGIRUODQJXUDJHXQUDWHG :KLOHVXSSOLHVODVW2QO\OLPLWHGQXPEHURIFRPERSDFNVDYDLODEOH0XVWEH\HDUVRUROGHUWRHQWHU 1RWHYHU\RQHZLOOUHFHLYHDSUL]H(QWULHVPXVWEHUHFHLYHGE\IRUFRQVLGHUDWLRQ:LQQHUVFKRVHQ DWUDQGRPDQGQRWL¿HGYLDHPDLOE\/LPLWHQWU\SHUSHUVRQ7KH6WUDQJHUDQG-DQHW:DLQZULJKW 3XEOLF5HODWLRQVDQGWKHLUDI¿OLDWHVDFFHSWQRUHVSRQVLELOLW\RUOLDELOLW\LQFRQQHFWLRQZLWKDQ\ORVVRU DFFLGHQWLQFXUUHGLQFRQQHFWLRQZLWKXVHRIDSUL]H6WUDQJHUHPSOR\HHVQRWHOLJLEOH12385&+$6( 1(&(66$5<1RSKRQHFDOOV On Digital HD Friday May 1 and Blu-ray Friday, May 8 INVITES YOU AND A GUEST TO AN ADVANCE SCREENING OF MONDAY, MAY 11TH AT 7:00 P.M. PLEASE VISIT WBTICKETS.COM/REDEEM AND ENTER THE CODE MMFRSTR TO DOWNLOAD YOUR COMPLIMENTARY TICKETS! THIS FILM IS RATED R FOR INTENSE SEQUENCES OF VIOLENCE THROUGHOUT, AND FOR DISTURBING IMAGES. Please note: Passes are limited and will be distributed on a first come, first served basis while supplies last. No phone calls, please. Limit two passes per person. Each pass admits one. Seating is not guaranteed. Arrive early. Theater is not responsible for overbooking. This screening will be monitored for unauthorized recording. By attending, you agree not to bring any audio or video recording device into the theater (audio recording devices for credentialed press excepted) and consent to a physical search of your belongings and person. Any attempted use of recording devices will result in immediate removal from the theater, forfeiture, and may subject you to criminal and civil liability. Please allow additional time for heightened security. You can assist us by leaving all nonessential bags at home or in your vehicle. INMadMaxMovie.com THEATERS#MadMax MAY 15 STRANGER WED: 5/6/15 BLACK & WHITE 4.75 x 3.25 SS ALL.MMF-P.0506.TS A BMX drama from 1986 that allegedly “has one of the most romantic dance sequences on bikes that you will ever see.” Central Cinema, Fri-Tues 9:30 pm. ROAR capital and largest city. The king is brutally repressing his subjects. And the king is kept in power by freedom-loving USA (photo of Hillary Clinton shaking hands with the king), which has a military base on the island and is also economically addicted to its oil. To keep things in order, the king turns directly to Saudi Arabia for military support. The movement for democracy, however, has been committed to peace and also to rights for women. Women march with men, women want wrongs to be addressed, women remember their dead. The documentary is fearless, insightful, and has a big heart for those who are in this long but beautiful struggle. (CHARLES MUDEDE) Grand Illusion, Thurs May 7 at 8 pm. STIFF continues through Sun. For complete schedule and showtimes, see trueindependent.org. In the five decades since she starred in The Birds, Tippi Hedren has spent more time helping to save the animals than acting, so it’s fitting that she appears in this oddball 1981 artifact about big cats in Africa (it was actually filmed in California). Just as Janet Leigh, another Alfred Hitchcock veteran, starred with her daughter, Jamie Lee Curtis, in John Carpenter’s The Fog, Hedren’s daughter, Melanie Griffith, came along on the arduous, 11-year journey. The story, such as it is, pivots on the efforts of a shouty zoologist (director Noel Marshall, Hedren’s husband at the time), NOW PLAYING his wife (Hedren), and their kids (Griffith and Noel’s sons, AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON John and Jerry) to make peace with the lions and tigers Even those whose nerd blood runs lukewarm should that have overrun their property. The animals are amazacknowledge the skill with which The Avengers did its ing—whiny young lion Gary may remind you of teenagers thing, throwing together multiple franchises into a jumbo you’ve known—but the acting is terrible. Unlike 1971’s combo pack that somehow didn’t feel like a Wake in Fright, which featured a real kangaletdown. Age of Ultron is, it must be said, a roo hunt, the American Humane Association Tons more clunkier affair than its predecessor, shoehornsigned off on Roar, stating that “no animals reviews online! ing too many new characters into a narrative were harmed during the making of this film,” thestranger.com/film that devotes more time to setting up future though the animal-on-human violence led conflicts than to resolving the ones in the to 70 injuries, including the partial scalping constantly exploding now. And yet, while you’re watching of cinematographer-turned-Speed-director Jan de Bont. it, none of these deficits really seem to matter all that much. John Marshall recently summed up this boondoggle best Warts and all, this is one of the all-too-rare preordained when he told the Los Angeles Times, “I guess it’s a labor blockbusters that doesn’t take the audience’s enjoyof love or stupidity or whatever.” (KATHY FENNESSY) ment for granted. Opening with a confidently show-offy Grand Illusion, Sun May 10 at 5 and 7 pm. battle scene, director Joss Whedon’s script finds Iron H THE TRIPLETS OF BELLEVILLE Man, Black Widow, Hulk, and the rest putting aside their This animated classic from France tells the surreal tale of ideological bickering to square off against the rogue AI an elderly woman who enlists a trio of music-hall singers Ultron (James Spader, who delightfully refuses to sound and one obese dog to help her rescue her kidnapped even the slightest bit robotic). Things go boom, lasers go grandson. Central Cinema, Fri-Sat 7 pm, Sun 3, 7 pm, kapow, Captain America 3 is up next. Whedon, who has Mon-Tues 7 pm. announced that he’s bowing out after this installment, makes the most of having too full of a plate, expanding the H WITNESS BAHRAIN action scenes while also ensuring that the quippy wealth One of the best documentaries I have seen this year is much better distributed among the characters this time premieres at Seattle Transmedia & Independent Film around. (Jeremy Renner’s Hawkeye gets the best lines, Festival (STIFF), is made by a local director, Jen Marlowe, which even he seems pleasantly surprised about.) Two and concerns the state of the small island country Bahrain hours and change is a long time to mainline anything, really, two years after the turbulent Arab Spring. Witness Bahrain throws us right into the struggle for basic human rights and Age of Ultron definitely loses some of its juice by the and democracy in the streets of Manama, the country’s third act, especially when it starts laying the groundwork I♥ TELEVISION TM B Y W M . TM S T E V E N HUMPHREY MOST FULLEST HOUSE As you know, I’m always in search of my next “gravy train.” You know, a person or scheme that will make me rich beyond my wildest dreams—although I would never say no to an actual train filled with gravy. Recent gravy trains include my plan to marry a rich old person… but Warren Buffett wasn’t interested. Another involved inventing an app that would notify ice-cream trucks to drive by your house… kind of like an Uber for adult-onset diabetics. But that idea blew up after learning my customer base is primarily morbidly obese 10-year-olds whose parents refuse to further fatten up their kids. HEY, DUMB PARENTS! IT’S NOT MY FAULT ICE CREAM IS DELICIOUS! Well, I recently stumbled onto a new potential gravy train called “your nostalgic need for crappy reboots of Full House.” As you may have heard, Netflix is producing a reboot of the 1980s sitcom classic Full House to be called Fuller House. Spoiler alert: THAT IS A TERRIBLE NAME. Already signed up to star are Candace Cameron Bure (big sis D.J. Tanner), Jodie Sweetin (middle sis Stephanie Tanner), and Andrea Barber (neighbor Kimmy Gibbler), who shack up to help raise D.J.’s twin boys. Uncle Jesse (hunky mullet-owner John Stamos) will guest star, and plans to bring on Bob Saget, Dave Coulier, Lori Loughlin, and Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen (SQUEEEEEEEEE!!!) are in the works. Everybody in the world knows this show is going to suck hippo anus—and yet? There is money to be made off your nostalgia addiction, my friend! And nobody knows this better than the Lifetime network, which—after achieving wild success with its horrific The Unauthorized Saved by the Bell Story—is hitching its wagon up to this nostalgia-driven project and is currently casting the made-for-TV movie Unauthorized Full House Story. A woefully unoriginal idea? YES, IT IS! Do they care? NO, THEY DO NOT! And do I want in on this gravy-train action? YES, I MOST CERTAINLY DO. Sure, I could spend the rest of my days dreaming up brilliant, original ideas—but those don’t put gravy in the train, my friend! The dumb people of the world know that recycling crappy ideas is the only way to make maximum buckage (aka dollars, aka mucho dinero, aka moolah-lah). And with that, here is MY $$$$-earning idea to cash in on the Full House craze. It’s called “The Most Fullest House Experience!” and here’s how it works: You pay me to move you into a San Francisco house that you share with two other guys and three small girls (actually four small girls, because two are twins… who are never in the same room at the same time but share a name). So basically, you become either a stick-in-the-mud dad, a really bad comedian, or a dude with a mullet—and you spend your days in the worst communal living situation in the universe. But on the upside? There’s always a laugh track! You’ll stay there for 18 years until the girls graduate, while paying for all living expenses, as well as their college. And I’ll charge you only $100,000 per year—which may sound a tad expensive… but what price “nostalgia,” am I right? n Read Humpy’s weekly TV listings at THESTRANGER.COM NEWS F E AT U R E SUGGESTS for all of the Marvel movies down the road. Even at its most cosmically overstuffed, however, the fun everyone seems to be having up there remains infectious. Yes, comic-book movies are crowding out everything else, are the eventual heat death of cinema, and so forth. But, man, there’s just so much neat stuff here. Boom. Kapow. (ANDREW WRIGHT) Various locations. ARTS CHOW MUSIC FILM THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 57 Seattle 4500 9th AVE NE • 206-633-0059 H CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA Those who are familiar with the films of the great French director Olivier Assayas will receive useful information from the place I locate his latest feature, Clouds of Sils Maria, in the body of his previous work: It’s somewhere between Irma Vep and Late August, Early September. The first is about the state of cinema; the second is built and feels like a deep novel. In Clouds, the director takes a look at the state of 21st-century Hollywood—it’s dominated by superheroes and green screens. The story, which concerns a very close relationship between a famous but aging French actress (Juliette Binoche) and her young and snappy American personal assistant (Kristen Stewart), unfolds with the grace and intellectual momentum of a novel—the film even has chapters and an epilogue. Clouds also has many, many beautiful scenes and sequences. While watching, you feel like you are breathing the special air of the rich and famous. You walk with them up and down the Alps, you dine with them at posh restaurants, you sit with with them in first class. Assayas knows the elite region of entertainers inside and out, and Stewart’s performance will make you see her beyond the horrors and stupidities of the Twilight series. (CHARLES MUDEDE) Seven Gables, Fri 4:30, 7:10, 9:45 pm, Sat-Sun 1:50, 4:30, 7:10, 9:45 pm, Mon-Tues 4:30, 7:10, 9:45 pm. H EX MACHINA This is the near future. A sleek black helicopter flies toward a place that looks like the Arctic. Miles upon miles of hills and fields are covered in ice and snow. There is only one passenger in the helicopter; he is a young employee, Caleb (Domhnall Gleeson, who in this film looks like a young Bill Gates, and with good reason), of a huge internet corporation that’s very much like Facebook. It is, in fact, called Bluebook (a name based on a book of lectures delivered by the early-20thcentury philosopher and logician Ludwig Wittgenstein). In a competition, Caleb has won the honor of meeting his boss, Nathan (rising star Oscar Isaac), a man who has amassed the kind of fortune that can buy the whole Arctic and who has plans for his employee. Caleb soon learns that his boss is developing a robot, Ava (Alicia Vikander), with the power of self-awareness. But the trillionaire wants to be certain about his creation (which is top secret and the next big thing that will change human history and make him yet another trillion bucks). He wants proof that it is as self-aware as a human. It is Caleb’s job to determine the extent, depth, and realness of the robot’s self-awareness. He begins performing tests on the beautiful Ava, which unlike the beautiful Rachael in Blade Runner is aware that it is a robot, created by a human. I very much doubt that the year will produce a better sci-fi film than Ex Machina. It has a solid plot with a pace that is not slow but not at all fast. Every word matters in this film: Not a look, movement, or sequence is wasted by first-time director Alex Garland. And it all leads to an impressive conclusion that’s not so much about the future but about what it really takes to stage a revolt against your masters. The break (or, to use the language of Foucault, the rupture) has to be brutal and total. For the effective beginning of a new world, nothing of the past must be preserved. (CHARLES MUDEDE) Various locations. WHILE WE’RE YOUNG Intentionally or otherwise, Noah Baumbach’s While We’re Young plays like a sequel to 2010’s Greenberg, in which middle-aged Ben Stiller was both befuddled by and attracted to game-for-anything millennials like Greta Gerwig. In Baumbach’s nouvelle vague-inspired follow-up, 2012’s Frances Ha, cowriter Gerwig took the lead as a 27-year-old dancer at a crossroads in her life. It was a deeply sympathetic piece of work—and his best film. If the new one doesn’t hit the same heights, it’s acutely perceptive and painfully funny. This time, Stiller’s Josh isn’t a single sadsack, but a married sadsack. His career as a documentarian is stuck in neutral, his friends (including a very good Adam Horovitz as a Wilco fan with back problems) are having babies, his father-in-law (Charles Grodin, a minimalist par excellence) makes him feel like a failure, and he and his wife, Cornelia (Naomi Watts, an underrated comic actress), are bored. Then they meet Jamie (Adam Driver) and Darby (Amanda Seyfried), a couple in their 20s who listen to bad ‘80s records, watch beat-up VHS tapes, and make all their own stuff. Josh and Cornelia come alive again in their presence. Once Josh segues from besotted mentor to hectoring detective, the film threatens to go off the rails until Baumbach restores equilibrium by ending on the same funny-sad grace note with which he began. (KATHY FENNESSY) Sundance Cinemas, Fri-Tues. For showtimes, see thestranger.com/film. Two ways To save aT Sundance Seattle Monday iS $6 oRca day show your orca card all seaTs are $6** ($7.50 for 3d) NoT good oN holidays. tueSday iS GiRlS Movie niGht out! Two or more ladies geT $5 admissioN ($6.50 for 3d) all day full Bar & BisTro fare • reserved seaTs $2 ParkiNg afTer 5Pm aT adjaceNT loT* +21 aT all Times For ShowtimES ViSit: sundancecinemas.com FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD AVENGERS: AGE OF ULTRON IN 2D/3D THE D TRAIN 5 FLIGHTS UP IRIS LAMBERT & STAMP EX MACHINA WHILE WE’RE YOUNG -Jake Coyle, a film by james d. cooper THE UNKNOWN STORY BEHIND THE CREATION OF “ THERE ARE FEW BETTER WAYS RIGHT NOW TO SPEND 80 MOVIE MINUTES THAN TO SEE ‘IRIS’” . THE WHO WWW.SONYCLASSICS.COM * Pay aNd validaTe aT our Box office ** Tix avail aT Box office oNly SUNDANCE CINEMAS SEATTLE STARTS fRiDAY, 4500 9th Avenue NE, Seattle Reserved Seats +21 All Shows sundancecinemas.com MAY 8 VIEW THE TRAILER AT WWW.LAmbERTAndsTAmpfILm.com 4.75" X 2" WED 05/06 SEATTLE STRANGER DUE moN 4Pm -MANOHLA DARGIS, THE NEW YORK TIMES “A DELIGHTFUL FILM. FABULOUSLY ENTERTAINING.” – DENNIS DERMODY, PAPER HHHH IT’S LIKE TIME “ SPENT WITH YOUR COOLEST, FUNNIEST AND MOST SAGE AUNT.” – JORDAN HOFFMAN, NEW YORK DAILY NEWS “ENORMOUSLY ENTERTAINING. MOVING AND SURPRISINGLY MEMORABLE. BY ALL MEANS CELEBRATE ALBERT MAYSLES BY SEEING ‘IRIS’” . – KENNETH TURAN, LOS ANGELES TIMES FROM T H E D I RECTOR OF GREY GARDENS & GIMME S HELTER A FI L M BY A L B E RT MAYS L E S WOMAN IN GOLD The fact that Holocaust victims and their descendants are attempting to reclaim art stolen by the Nazis in increasing numbers could have a huge impact—not just on museum holdings, but on the world’s ability to remember the ills of history. The case of Maria Altmann (Helen Mirren) is perhaps the most significant—along with a rookie lawyer (Ryan Reynolds, trying to hide behind khaki pants and glasses), Altmann successfully sued the Republic of Austria for the return of several Gustav Klimt paintings, including a portrait of her aunt that had become the nation’s equivalent of the Mona Lisa. That’s pretty badass, but Simon Curtis’s portrayal of the years-long battle is a plodding, oversimplified courtroom procedural spliced with pretty-but-wooden flashbacks. Content to cheerlead its protagonists, the film’s refusal to engage in any reasonable way with the opposing argument is borderline irresponsible… and irresponsibly dull. The film also features Katie Holmes reprising her role as a housebound, baby-having yes-woman. (MARJORIE SKINNER) Various locations. “RIOTOUSLY ENTERTAINING. LAMBERT AND STAMP WOULD MOLD THE WHO INTO ONE OF THE GREAT ROCK ‘N’ ROLL BANDS.” m a g p i c t u re s .co m / i r i s STARTS FRIDAY, MAY 8 SEATTLE SIFF Egyptian Theatre (206) 324-9996 SEATTLE Sundance Cinemas Seattle (206) 633-0059 STRANGER Artist: Heather Emmett Confirmation #: AE: (circle one:) Angela Maria Josh (circle one:) Steve Staci Ronnie Tim Jane Deadline: ART APPROVED AE APPROVED CLIENT APPROVED 58 May May 6, 6, 2015 2015 THE THE STRANGER STRANGER 1000s more free classified ads online at CLASSIFIEDS EMPLOYMENT YOUNG MEN & women are wanted for a study on health-related behaviors. Participants must be ages 18-20. 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If you do not serve your written response within 60 days after the date of the first publication of this summons (60 days after the 15 day of April, 2015), the court may enter an order of default against you, and the court may, without further notice to you, enter a decree and approve or provide for other relief requested in this summons. In the case of a dissolution, the court will not enter the final decree until at least 90 days after service and filing. If you serve a notice of appearance on the undersigned person, you are entitled to notice before an order of default or a decree may be entered. WORK FOR BEER! (Really good beer) 6. One method of serving a copy of your response on the petitioner is to send it by certified mail with return receipt requested. 7. Other: Order for Service of Summons by Publication. This summons is issued pursuant to RCW 4.28.100 and Superior Court Civil Rule 4.1 of the state of Washington. Dated: 4/10/15 Deborah West Signature of Petitioner or Lawyer/WSBA No. File original of your response with the clerk of the court at Clerk of the Court at: Maleng Regional Justice Center 401 - 4th Avenue N. Kent, Washington 98032 Serve a copy of your response on: Petitioner (you may list an address that is not your residential address where you agree to accept legal documents. Any time this address changes while this action is pending, you must notify the opposing parties in writing and file an updated Confidential Information Form (WPF DRPSCU 09.0200) with the court clerk.) Deborah West 25040 - 106th Ave SE #H-306 Kent, WA 98030 COCKTAIL COMPASS Keep Seattle’s comprehensive Happy Hour Guide 4. Your written response to the summons and petition must be on form WPF DR 01.0300, Response to Petition (Marriage). Information about how to get this form may be obtained by contacting the clerk of the court, by contacting the Administrative Office of the Courts at (360) 705-5328, or from the Internet at the Washington State Courts homepage: http://www.courts.wa.gov/forms 5. If you wish to seek the advice of an attorney in this matter, you should do so promptly so that your written response, if any, may be served on time. subscribe on itunes and at nerdhole.org TODAY DOWNLOAD OR SEATTLE INTERNATIONAL BEERFEST NEEDS VOLUNTEERS July 10 - 12 seattlebeerfest.com for more info. E FOR iPHONID! ANDRO right in your pocket! THE THESTRANGER STRANGER May 6, 6, 2015 2015 May 59 WARNING HOT GUYS! Read bucketloads more (or place your own) online at www.thestranger.com/personals BUZZED BEAUTY Buzzed, black haired beauty with glasses rode E Line from Denny to Greenlake, noticed you before we got on @5 PM, nice smile when you got off. Me: tall, older, bi-colored nails. You’re adorable, get to know each other? When: Saturday, April 25, 2015. Where: Denny Triangle. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921072 CORGI GUY Passing by on the #40 bus near 5th and Bell. You were walking your cute as hell corgi. You: Backwards hat,beard, flip flops, green shirt. Cute dude. Beer and corgi date? When: Thursday, April 23, 2015. Where: 5th and Bell. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921071 PULLED ME OVER, 1-5 NORTHBOUND You’re the cop that pulled over a cute girl that didn’t have any registration, proof of insurance, outdated tabs since 2008, oh boy and what else. The flood light isn’t the most flattering, but you are hot! Can we date? When: Wednesday, April 22, 2015. Where: On the side of the road 1-5 Northbound. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921068 EAST SIDE SAFEWAY STOCK BOY Our eyes met, a smile shared, the energy felt was undeniable. I hope you see this, because if you do, you’ll know who you are. Let’s add words to this connection. When: Monday, April 20, 2015. Where: Juanita Safeway in Kirkland. You: Man. Me: Man. #921067 RED APPLE BATTERY JUMP You needed a jump and I wished I knew how to open my hood. Even more I wished I gave you my card in case you needed roadside assistance again! : ) When: Saturday, April 18, 2015. Where: Red Apple on Jackson St.. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921066 PFI AND SHARED FETA You were with your mom at Big John’s PFI Monday, April 20th buying fascinating beans. We bought the same gouda, and shared Bulgarian feta. We should make quesadillas. When: Monday, April 20, 2015. Where: Big John’s PFI. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921065 TOP KNOT AT ADD-A-BALL You were at Add-a-ball Saturday night. You are so handsome. We kept on smiling but neither of us said anything. That was silly of me. Lets try again soon. When: Saturday, April 18, 2015. Where: Adda-ball. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921064 DINNER FOR 1 AT LINDA’S You forgot avocado on my burger on my birthday when I was by myself.. You offered my whole meal for free. This was last November and I haven’t forgotten.Dinner on me? .You- waiter, dark hair, a couple tattoo’s, Keanu Reeves lookin. When: Saturday, April 18, 2015. Where: Linda’s Tavern. You: Man. Me: Man. #921063 HEY, ORANGE NAIL POLISH You rolled up real cool and calm to bum a cigg from me in alley. I should have smoked a bowl with you and your friends! lets meet again When: Friday, April 17, 2015. Where: In the alley by the 5 point. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921062 EL BORRACHO, TATTOOED BEAUTY El Borracho tonight in Ballard. Sexy black dress, tattoos on your arms, black hair pinkish bangs. Looked like you were on an awkward first date? You are absolutely beautiful, I was praying for an opportunity to talk to you. When: Thursday, April 16, 2015. Where: El Borracho Ballard. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921061 BLONDE BOMBSHELL SINGER NORTHCITY TAV Hi Kate-Hated to leave Saturday night but I had to take my friend to Everett. You were getting ready to sing ‘hit me with your best shot’ I’m John. I sing too, lets harmonize! When: Saturday, April 11, 2015. Where: North City Tavern. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921058 CLEVER TROUSERS When I saw you I was electrified, which was fitting considering your lightning bolt shirt. The sincerity of your smile really spoke to me. Ceviche sometime? When: Sunday, April 12, 2015. Where: smarty pants, georgetown. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921057 WELCOME TO SEATTLE GRACE Thanks for the help - your cheery smile made my day. You’re invited to drinks if you like. When: Saturday, April 11, 2015. Where: Downtown Nordstrom Clinique. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921056 DAWN WITH A W BEAUTY AT BUFFALO EXCHANGE The day before Halloween, you told me you were going to be a witch; I wanted to be Spiderman. I just walked in and, finally, saw you again. You’re gorgeous,petite with black/red hair. Me:wearing leather jacket, wantingto take you out. When: Tuesday, April 7, 2015. Where: Buffalo Exchange UD. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921048 WE MET AT REIONEASTER We met at REI on Easter, I asked to play with your adorable blue heeler. She was deaf but she responded to her sign (floppy ear). My opening line was talking to you about stoves (such an REI move). When: Sunday, April 5, 2015. Where: REI. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921047 106 STOP GEORGETOWN Red boots and glasses. I had glasses and a blue jacket. Both reading books on the bus. I said a quick hi today. Want to grab coffee? When: Thursday, April 2, 2015. Where: Georgetown. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921046 CUTE CHEF @ ROCKCREEK! Let it slip to my friend that you were cute; she’d passed it on to the bartender, and down the grapevine it went. Next thing I know, we’re getting desserts. I gave you my number. You should use it. When: Friday, March 20, 2015. Where: RockCreek. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921043 72E SOUTHBOUND 4/1 GODDAMIT U long gray haired nose-pierced stocking clad hi-tek backpack goddess. Me: sweaty black shirt glasses and stealing glances. Stoner guy was yelling about how stuffy it was. U off at 45th and my heart dropped. I’ll be back When: Wednesday, April 1, 2015. Where: 72E Roosevelt. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921041 CAFE, NORTH BALLARD Dawn. You were adorable at La Spiga Saturday night, but it felt presumptuous asking for your number. Perhaps you are reading this? When: Sunday, April 12, 2015. Where: La Spiga. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921055 You: blond- ish, short- ish. No dog this time... Me: usually in a hat.. I’m sure we’ve chatted, but I’d like the chance to make a proper introduction. When: Sunday, March 29, 2015. Where: standing in line at the cafe. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921040 GLANCE AT TACO DEL MAR? JAMES LOOKING FOR ELLIE Northgate TDM. Me: a black sweater, grey dress, black leggings. White, shortish, red hair. With my teen. You: with your friend, seated by the south door. Short dark hair. Wearing a moss-green t-shirt, jeans. What shoes were you wearing? When: Saturday, April 11, 2015. Where: Northgate Taco del Mar. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921054 When: March 8 (Sun) @ SAAM & then March 13 (Fri) @ SAM Remix Me: James- bearded gallery-goer You: Ellie(spelling?)- recent Seattleite from Israel You don’t always meet someone who seems like a good friend before you meet them. When: Sunday, March 8, 2015. Where: Seattle Asian Art Museum then Spring SAM Remix. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921039 FOUND YOUR DREADLOCKS “MAYBE HE’S YOUR WINGMAN”.... I found a pile of dreads onstage at the Highline after the Bell Witch show. I took them home, washed them, and have started a hair doll. I need to know whose head they came from to complete the spell. When: Friday, April 3, 2015. Where: The Highline. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921050 I see you on occasion at the dog park I frequent, we chat a bit but just socially gibberish not in any way that feels like either of us wants to get to know the other in any deeper capacity. When: Monday, March 30, 2015. Where: West Seattle. You: Transsexual (female to male). Me: Man. #921038 BUS 49 PIKE & BOYLSTON Me: green beanie, front seat. You: brown hair, said I’m cute JUST TOO quietly while exitting. Cursed my reaction time+got off to jog back, but you had vanished like the ghost of a promise that my life could be better. When: Sunday, March 29, 2015. Where: Bus 49 near Broadway. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921036 LINK FRIDAY NIGHT MARCH 27 YOU: Blonde hair (almost white). I saw you sitting a few seats ahead of me, and you had cute, pink toenails in sandals. ME: Goatee, grey hoody. I was bobbing my head, listening to music, sitting in the very back. When: Friday, March 27, 2015. Where: LINK. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921035 Seattle 206.877.0877 REAL PEOPLE REAL DESIRE REAL FUN FREE to listen and reply to ads! FREE CODE: Stranger For other local numbers call: 1-888-MegaMates FLIGHT BRUSSELS/LONDON TO SEATTLE TM 24/7 Customer Care 1(888) 634.2628 18+ ©2013 PC LLC 2588 We were both working on that trip. I complimented you on your ink. Fell in love with your baldy appearance. It has been almost a year now. I want to be completely unprofessional with you! When: Monday, September 1, 2014. Where: Flight. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921034 HALES ALES BAR CONVERSATION We talked about everything from relationships to our ancestry but never got to exchange numbers since I had to run and felt awkward asking you in front of my friend. Did you confirm whether you are related to King Magnus? When: Friday, March 27, 2015. Where: Hales Ales Fremont. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921033 CHATLINE TM 206.686.5484 Try for FREE Ahora en Español Find your flame on For More Local Numbers: 1.800.926.6000 www.livelinks.com Teligence/18+ BESPECTACLED BIKE MESSENGER BABE Spotted you near downtown on Yesler. Red bicycle. Delivering something. You had glasses, dark hair, a neck tattoo, and what looked like a robot tattoo on your lower leg. ‘Just wanted to let you know you looked really pretty. When: Saturday, March 28, 2015. Where: Downtown. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921032 Free to TRY! Free 24/7 - LiveMatch CHATROOMS and member FORUMS. Ladies, chat with VIPs FREE all the time! DRIVING UP 1ST AVE SOUTH You, good looking guy with dark hair driving a black Nissan on 1st Ave S Saturday morning at 10:45. I was the brunette in the black Mercedes. Regret not pulling over to chat! Hoping you see this! When: Saturday, March 28, 2015. Where: 1st Ave South near SafeCo Field. You: Man. Me: Woman. #921031 Seattle 206-753-CHAT (2428) Tacoma 253-359-CHAT Everett 425-405-CHAT Vancouver, WA 360-314-CHAT Vancouver, BC coming soon... Portland 503-222-CHAT YONDER KINGSPORT ARKANSAS GEORGIA CAROLINA If all those words mean anything, you3¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢ll immediately know what I3¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢m talking about. I had a wonderful time hanging out with you! I hate that we didn3¢‚Ǩ‚Ñ¢t exchange contact info. I’d love to chat over coffee sometime. Get in touch? When: Friday, March 27, 2015. Where: Neptune Theatre. You: Woman. Me: Man. #921030 or WEB PHONE on LiveMatch.com MAN to MAN Free group chatrooms 24/7! 206-753-CHAT phone services phone services phone services THAT AMAZING MOMENT WHEN NSA turns into LTR Try it for free 206-576-2406 More local numbers: 1-800-777-8000 Ahora en Español/18+ www.guyspyvoice.com 60 May 6, 2015 THE STRANGER 2015 The Stranger and the Portland Mercury invite local filmmakers, porn stars, porn-star wannabes, hotties, kinksters, regular folks, and all other creative types to make short porn films - five minutes max - for HUMP! 2015. Films selected for HUMP! 2015 will be screened over three weekends in November at theaters in Seattle and Portland. HUMP! 2015 films can be hardcore, softcore, live action, animated, kinky, vanilla, straight, gay, lez, bi, trans, gender-queer anything goes at HUMP! (Well, almost anything: No poop, no animals, no minors.) Deadline for HUMP! submissions is Wednesday, September 30th, 2015. CALL FOR ! S N O I S S I M B SU HUMP! films are not released online or in any other form. Filmmakers retain all rights, and HUMP! does not keep any permanent copies. Our copies are destroyed onstage in front of the audience at the last screening. Appearing in a HUMP! film means being a porn star for a weekend - not the rest of your life! CASH PRIZES! Photo of Barry by Kelly O. Barry starred in the “Best of Show” award-winning HUMP! 2009 film, “The Modern Housewife”. Watch these ads for more lovely HUMP!-ers! Three first place prizes and one grand prize are awarded at HUMP! and decided by secret audience ballot. Films may qualify in more than one category. This year’s categories and prize packages: BEST HUMOR: $1000 First Prize, $250 First Runner-Up BEST SEX: $1000 First Prize, $250 First Runner-Up BEST KINK: $1000 First Prize, $250 First Runner-Up BEST IN SHOW: $5000 Grand Prize This year’s extra credit items: Mike Huckabee’s book “God, Guns, Grits, and Gravy” and Hula Hoops! ALL HUMP! 2015 SUBMISSIONS DUE NO LATER THAN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30. For complete information about entering HUMP! - including all technical requirements, extra-credit items, and submission deadlines - go to humpseattle.com THE STRANGER May 6, 2015 61 SAVAGE LOVE Teaching Moment Last summer, I reconnected with a high-school teacher I hadn’t seen for a year. We first met when I was 15, and I had nothing but respect for him and his intelligence. I also had a crush on him for the next four years. Fastforward a year. He is sexting me and sending dick pics and wants to hook up. He has told me he loves me. I feel violated and tricked, like he was supposed to be someone I could trust and he didn’t respect that. Now I wonder how teachers really see underage high-school girls. This whole experience has made me feel dirty. Moreover, he has never respected that I have a boyfriend and that I want nothing to do with his advances. I met up with a former classmate, and she told me that this teacher and another teacher said similar things to her. Ew! Most former classmates of mine still believe him to be a respectable man and a great teacher. But I know him for what he really is, and when I think of it, I get so angry. How do I move on from this? Schooling Thankfully Over Permanently I would never want to minimize the creepiness factor of a former teacher sending you dick pics and refusing to take “I want nothing to do with your advances” for an answer. (And you didn’t just say “I have a boyfriend” and hope that he would hear “And I want nothing to do with your advances,” right? Because if all you said was “I have a boyfriend,” STOP, he may have heard, “I would love to fuck you, but I have a boyfriend.”) And I definitely believe high-school teachers— all teachers who work with minors—should refrain from fucking current students and sending dick pics to former students. One is statutory rape and an abuse of power (fucking underage students); the other is career suicide (hitting on former students will get your ass fired eventually). As for the other issues you raise… This guy was your teacher when you were 15… you had a crush on him for four years… a crush he doubtless picked up on… and you somehow reconnected with him after not seeing him for a year… and one year after reconnecting, he’s still contacting you despite your rejection of him. If I’ve got the timeline right (math is still hard!), STOP, you were 19 or 20 when you reconnected with your former teacher and you’re 20 or 21 now. Maybe even 22. That means nothing happened—nothing appropriate or inappropriate—until you were (1) no longer his student and (2) legally an adult. Your former teacher did nothing inappropriate when you were his student (you surely would’ve included that detail), and so far as you know, he’s never behaved inappropriately toward a current student. Which means either your former teacher has a solid age-range floor (he’s not attracted to anyone under the age of 18) or he’s capable of exercising self-control (not only can he refrain from fucking girls under the age of 18 who he happens to find attractive, but he can conduct himself in such a way that those girls have no idea he finds them attractive). Your former classmate’s story complicates the picture—and yucks the picture—but she was a former student and an adult when these teachers said “similar things” to her, right? That’s still creepy, of course, it’s still not okay, and it’s still potential career suicide for both these idiots. But it’s not technically illegal. If you honestly believe that either or both of these idiots are behaving inappropriately toward their current students, STOP, you should approach the administration at your old high school with your concerns. Doing so will result in the end of their careers as educators—but if these guys are trying to fuck their current students and/or grooming their current students for fucking a year or two after they graduate, then both should get the fuck out of teaching. As for feeling dirty, STOP, I don’t understand where that’s coming from. You didn’t do anything BY DAN SAVAGE dirty. The realization that this teacher might have had a crush on you back when you had one on him—and he might not have had a crush on you then—shouldn’t hurl you into some sort of existential crisis. If knowing that a teacher might have found you sexually attractive back when you were a junior in high school leaves you feeling violated, tricked, and angry, STOP, if that realization has you convinced that all teachers are secret perverts, then you seem to be operating under a faulty set of assumptions about what teachers are. They’re not robots, they’re not eunuchs, they’re not humanoids from a parallel uniJOE NEWTON verse where life isn’t occasionally complicated by an unwanted sexual attraction. Teachers are human beings, and like all other human beings*, they sometimes experience sexual attraction, including sexual attraction of the unwelcome and/or inappropriate variety. What they choose to do about it—suppress it, act on it—determines whether they’re respectable men and women and (possibly) great teachers or total creeps and/or sex offenders. This does not, of course, excuse what your former teacher is doing to you now. He’s sexually harassing you. Tell him to stop and threaten to take it up with the school board if he doesn’t. How do you move on? You do what I do on Twitter: Block and forget the asshole—BAFTA. Male here, 21 years old. I’ve been in a relationship with my girlfriend for a year and a half. We have somewhat kink-themed sex, though nothing too intense. My girlfriend is very submissive, and I’m more on the submissive side myself, so we have done only light bondage and light flogging. Recently, my girlfriend and I had a fight, and while things were still kind of heated, she suggested I “punish” her by spanking her, which I did, and we wound up having a much better, calmer conversation after the spanking. The next day, she proposed that this be something we do more often. I am not certain about all the dynamics at play here. Is this a healthy approach to resolving conflict? We already do a bit of kink, and there would be two consenting partners. But at the same time, I don’t want to be an abusive boyfriend or something. It seemed to help us resolve the conflict—but if we do it more, I’m not sure it would play out as well. It happened only that one time, so I haven’t moved forward on it. I’m uncertain whether it would be good for our relationship. Keeping It Newly Kinky Research conducted at Tilburg University in the Netherlands found that kinky people— people who engaged in consensual submission, bondage, and pain play—scored better on most measures of psychological health than nonkinky people. So enjoying a spanking, asking for one, giving one on request, etc., isn’t evidence that there’s something wrong with you or your relationship. As for whether it’s a good idea to spank your girlfriend in the heat of an argument, well, that depends on two things: whether she wants to be spanked at those times (gotta keep it consensual) and whether the spanking—for you—represents an extension of the argument or a suspension of the argument. If you’re setting aside the argument to enjoy a spanking—maybe a little conflict gets her blood pumping and turns her on—and then picking it up later, after you’ve both enjoyed a spanking, then I don’t see the harm. * Except for asexual humans, of course. Except for them. n On the Lovecast, science PROVES that liberals are happier than conservatives: savagelovecast.com. mail@savagelove.net @fakedansavage on Twitter Exotic Dancers & FULL BAR Check us out! Now Open: Wed-Sun 8PM - 2:30am 5220 Roosevelt Way NE • 206-526-5653 Now hiring dancers. No license or exp. required. Call today! 62 May May 6, 6, 2015 2015 420 THE THE STRANGER STRANGER thestranger.com/grassifieds GRASSIFIEDS T I G E R H E A LT H C L I N I C $100 NEW MEDICAL MARIJUANA AUTHORIZATIONS* Regular price $150, mention this ad for above price* RENEWAL $75 FOR 12 MONTHS* *With qualified medical records Assists with: Pain management, Energy Level, Chronic illnesses, Appetite, And More! MMJ card starts at $50 Provides: General Wellness Exams, Sports Physicals, Nutrition Consultations Professional & Discreet! 206-359-0094 (206) 853-5165 11680 Renton Ave S. 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Serving Seattle, Bellevue, Lynnwood. Flowers. Concentratres. Edibles. 206-946-5524 FIND LOCAL POT! Recreational, Medical, and more… THE STRANGER’S GRASSIFIEDS online and in print rd’s Balla al n Origi 716 NW 65th St herbshouse.org 206.557.7388 Sun - Thur 11 - 9 Fri - Sat 11 - 10 21 & OVER Marijuana has intoxicating effects and may be habit forming. It can impair concentration, FRRUGLQDWLRQDQGMXGJPHQW'RQRWRSHUDWHDYHKLFOHRUPDFKLQHU\XQGHUWKHLQŴXHQFHRIWKLV drug. There may be health risks associated with consumption of this product. For use only by adults twenty-one and older. Keep out of the reach of children. THESTRANGER STRANGER THE 63 420 COMIC | B Y D A R I N S H U L E R OPEN MON-SAT, 11-4 WITH EVENING CLINICS $75 May May 6, 6, 2015 2015 SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT ONLINE TheHopeClinics.com RECOMMENDATIONS FOR QUALIFIED PATIENTS Check out our website for new locations & services! Call Us 206.466.1766 Fax 206.913.2815 BOTANICAL HEALTHCARE PRIMARY CARE & COMPREHENSIVE CANNABIS TREATMENT PLANS! *Low Income Sliding Scale Visit Costs Available with Proof of Income U-DISTRICT 5267 University Way NE, Seattle, WA 98105 WEST SEATTLE 2532 Alki Ave SW, STE B, Seattle, WA 98116 CLEARVIEW 16510 Washington 9, STE E, Snohomish, WA 98296 LYNNWOOD 15804 Hwy 99, Bldg A, STE C, Lynnwood, WA 98087 SEATTLE 3107 Eastlake Ave. E, Seattle, WA 98102 TACOMA 4051 Tacoma Mall Blvd, Tacoma, WA 98409 CBD EFFECT: CONNECTING PATIENTS, PROVIDERS, AND CANNABIS HEALTHCARE FREE WILL ASTROLOGY BY ROB BREZSNY For the Week of May 6 ARIES (March 21–April 19): Benedictine monks observe the Latin motto laborare est orare. The 19th-century abbot Maurus Wolter interpreted these words to mean “work is worship” or “work is prayer.” He was trying to impress upon his fellow monks that the work they did was not a grudging distraction from their service to God, but rather at the heart of their devotion. To do their tasks with love was a way to express gratitude for having been blessed with the gift of life. I propose that you experiment with this approach in the coming weeks, even if your version is more secular. What would it be like to feel contentment with and appreciation for the duties you have been allotted? TAURUS (April 20–May 20): Here’s one of the best things you can do for your mental and physical health: withdraw your attention from the life that lies behind you and be excited about the life that stretches ahead of you. Forget about the past and get wildly inventive as you imagine the interesting future you will create for yourself. Forgive everyone who has offended you and fantasize about the fun adventures you’ll go on, the inspiring plans you’ll carry out, and the invigorating lessons you hope to learn. GEMINI (May 21–June 20): In the children’s book The Little Engine That Could, a little blue engine volunteers to pull a long chain of train cars up a steep hill, even though it’s not confident it has the power to do so. As it strains to haul the heavy weight, it recites a mantra to give itself hope: “I think I can, I think I can, I think I can.” The story ends happily. The little blue engine reaches the top of the hill with its many cars in tow and is able to glide down the rest of the way. As you deal with your own challenge, Gemini, I recommend that you use an even more forceful incantation. Chant this: “I know I can, I know I can, I know I can.” CANCER (June 21–July 22): Here’s a confession: I have taken a vow to foster beauty, truth, love, justice, equality, tolerance, creativity, playfulness, and hope. To do this work is one of my life goals. I approach it with the devotion of a monk and the rigor of a warrior. Does that mean I ignore difficulty and suffering and cruelty? Of course not. I’m trying to diminish the power of those problems, so I sure as hell better know a lot about them. On the other hand, my main focus is on redemption and exaltation. I prefer not to describe in detail the world’s poisons, but rather to provide an antidote for them. Even if you don’t normally share my approach, Cancerian, I invite you to try it for the next two weeks. The astrological time is right. LEO (July 23–Aug 22): The hill where I take my late-afternoon hikes is teeming with the six-petaled purple wildflower known as the elegant cluster-lily. Every one of them—and there are hundreds— lean hard in the direction of the sun in the west. Should I deride them as conformists that follow the law of the pack? Should I ridicule them for their blind devotion? Or should I more sensibly regard them as having a healthy instinct to gravitate toward the life-giving light? I’ll go with the latter theory. In that spirit, Leo, I urge you to ignore the opinions of others as you turn strongly toward the sources that provide you with essential nourishment. VIRGO (Aug 23–Sept 22): Am I reading the astrological omens correctly? I hope so. From what I can tell, you have been flying under the radar and over the rainbow. You have been exploiting the loopholes in the big bad system and enjoying some rather daring experiments with liberation. At this point in the adventure, you may be worried that your lucky streak can’t continue much longer. I’m here to tell you that it can. It will. It must. I predict that your detail-loving intelligence will paradoxically guide you to expand your possibilities even further. LIBRA (Sept 23–Oct 22): According to the three science-fiction films collectively known as The Matrix, we humans suffer from a fundamental delusion. What we think is real life is actually a sophisticated computer simulation. Intelligent machines have created this dream world to keep us in suspended animation while they harvest our energy to fuel their civilization. Now as far as I can tell, this scenario isn’t literally true. But it is an apt metaphor for how many of us seem to be half-asleep or under a spell, lost in our addiction to the simulated world created by technology. I bring this to your attention, Libra, because now is a favorable time to diminish the hold that the metaphorical Matrix has on you. What can you do to at least partially escape your bondage? (Hint: A little more contact with nature could do the trick.) SCORPIO (Oct 23–Nov 21): In the coming weeks, you may be as alluring and intriguing and tempting as you have been in a long time. I suggest you capitalize on this advantage. Proceed as if you do indeed have the power to attract more of the emotional riches you desire. Assume that you are primed to learn new secrets about the arts of intimacy, and that these secrets will make you even smarter and more soulful than you already are. Cultivate your ability to be the kind of trusted ally and imaginative lover who creates successful relationships. SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22–Dec 21): Physicist Frank Wilczek won a Nobel Prize for his research into quarks, the tiny particles that compose protons and neutrons. The guy is breathtakingly smart. Here’s one of his operating principles: “If you don’t make mistakes, you’re not working on hard enough problems. And that’s a big mistake.” Let’s enshrine his advice as your meditation, Sagittarius. I think you’re strong enough and brave enough to go hunting for some new super-rich dilemmas. Yes, they may lead you to commit some boo-boos. But they will also stretch your intelligence beyond its previous limits, giving you a more vigorous understanding of the way the world works. CAPRICORN (Dec 22–Jan 19): In 1934, Capricorn baseball player Dizzy Dean was named the most valuable player after winning 30 games. It was a feat that no National League pitcher has repeated ever since. After Dean retired, he was inducted into the Hall of Fame. Never shy about acknowledging his own prowess, he declared: “If you can do it, it ain’t bragging.” It is in this spirit that I invite you to freely expound on your talents and accomplishments in the coming week. You won’t be boasting. You will simply be providing information. And that will ultimately result in you being offered an interesting new opportunity or two. AQUARIUS (Jan 20–Feb 18): There has rarely been a better time than now to refine the art of being your own mommy or daddy. You’re finally ready to take over from the parental voices in your head and assume full responsibility for raising yourself the rest of the way. What do you want to be when you grow up? You may feel a giddy sense of freedom as it becomes clear that the only authority who has the right to answer that question is you. PISCES (Feb 19–March 20): The universe has always played tricks on you. Some have been so perplexing that you’ve barely understood the joke. Others have been amusing but not particularly educational. Now I sense a new trend in the works, however. I suspect that the universe’s pranks are becoming more comprehensible. They may have already begun to contain hints of kindness. What’s the meaning of this lovely turn of events? Maybe you have finally discharged a very old karmic debt. It’s also conceivable that your sense of humor has matured so much that you’re able to laugh at some of the crazier plot twists. Here’s another possibility: You are cashing in on the wisdom you were compelled to develop over the years as you dealt with the universe’s tricks. Homework: No one can make you feel any emotion unless you agree to feel it. 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