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MONDAY
ROCK/POPWashed Out, Yoshi Flower
If I canât make it to the show, make sure to thank Washed Out (aka Ernest Greene) for all the reliable soundtracks to my everyday existential crises for me. If his recent Adult Swim Single âFace Upâ doesnât wow you, the rest of the show will topple you right back into your ambiguous, bedroom-haze daydream about asking out your cute neighbor to smoke a joint, go to the beach, or do something equally ephemeral and wistfully romantic before waking up and realizing that youâve been dreaming all along, in public, at the show. SOPHIA STEPHENS
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY
JAZZLean On Me: José James Celebrates Bill Withers
What a fine endeavor it is to honor soul singer supreme Bill Withers, so hats off to JosĂ© James. If your head has been near a radio or television over the last 45 years or so, youâve probably heard Withersâs voice of brimming mahogany benevolence. James approximates Withersâs warm, consoling timbre, and his backing band extrapolates the grooves and teases out the melodic nuances of Withersâs original hits and deep cuts with jazzmenâs cunning and flair. Itâll be a lovely night (or three), particularly if James and company do âLovely Day.â DAVE SEGAL
TUESDAY
CLASSICAL/OPERAPortland Cello Project
Since the dawn of time, there has been a high demand for classical instruments playing contemporary pop songs. Portland Cello Project delivers, demonstrating both the complexity of the instrument (of which there are typically four to six on stage) and the under-appreciated musicality of certain Top40 jams.
X___X, Tissue, DYED
True heads have long worshipped Cleveland hell-raisers Electric Eels, who burned briefly and brightly around the time Pere Ubu were starting to kick up atomic-bomb dust nearby. If you wanted to mainline the purest nihilism being channeled during those years leading up to Punkâą's official coming-out party, you needed to wreck your ears to Eels songs like âAgitatedâ and âCyclotron.â That group's guitarist/vocalist John Morton went on to form X___X, who dropped two explosive singles during post-punk's heyday before flickering out after a six-month run in 1979. Buoyed by renewed interest in the group from labels like Smog Veil and Soul Jazz, though, Morton and Andrew Klimek recently re-formed X___X with Rocket from the Tombs bassist Craig Bell and drummer Matthew Harris. Odds are, they will be as caustic and exhilarating as ever, and don't be surprised if they cover Albert Ayler's âGhosts.â DAVE SEGAL
TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY
ROCK/POPThe Afghan Whigs, Built to Spill, Ed Harcourt
I havenât kept up with the Afghan Whigs, but Iâll note in passing how everybody was talking about them at one point (this paper included), so they must be doing something right. And their new album seems accomplished at mating soul music with Mellotron. Built to Spill, on the other hand, have always been a psychedelic band without the paisleys or the light show. Psychedelic music is supposed to mate the mind with the universe and show how nature and divine design (or something) made both the same. Bull's-eye. ANDREW HAMLIN
WEDNESDAY
DJ8th Annual Linda's Tavern Prom
For the eighth year in a row, the ever-popular Capitol Hill watering hole will transform into the dimly lit gymnasium of your dreams, fit to house all the Axe Body Spray, cheap booze, and revelatory dancing of your youth. Per the rules of proms everywhere, a king and queen will be crowned at midnight, and DJ Curtis will surely provide a generous dose of throwbacks. And, on your way out, you can grab a handful of Linda's Tavern Prom 2018 condoms.
Mount Kimbie, Smerz
For many producers, thereâs a gap between making a track and playing it live. How does one translate the hours spent toiling in front of a computer to something that makes sense onstage? To wit: London electronic duo Mount Kimbie have transitioned over the past decade from a minimalist post-dubstep studio act to a full band, replete with live drums and a Guitar Centerâs worth of synths and hardware. Somethingâs lost, to be sureâthe amorphous indietronica of the groupâs recent work doesnât reach the same heights as their early EPs. But change is good, and so is not having to worry about spending $20 to watch dudes stare at their laptop screens. ANDREW GOSPE
Satyricon, Goatwhore, Inquinok, VoidThrone
Nowhere as controversial as Mayhem or Burzum, and lacking the name recognition of Darkthrone, Satyricon nevertheless have created a discography that probably has aged the best out of the early-1990s Norwegian black-metal underground. The bandâs first three albums are considered masterpieces of the genreâand more recently, Satyricon have evolved from the traditional blasting black metal to a more dynamic blackened rock ânâ roll style. Their tourmates Goatwhore play pure devil-worshipping death metal, with song titles like âPerversions of the Ancient Goatâ and âFucked by Satan.â KEVIN DIERS
Rufus Wainwright
Rufus Wainwrightâthe belting vocal pop composer and songwriter with baroque and operatic persuasions and finely honed piano chopsâhas a rĂ©sumĂ© that includes nine Shakespeare sonnets set to music, originally inspired by a theater piece he scored for Robert Wilson. That release, 2016âs Take All My Loves, has cameos by Helena Bonham Carter, Carrie Fisher, William Shatner, and Florence Welch. Wainwright lands in Seattle on his All These Poses 20th Anniversary Tour, which celebrates his 2001 breakout LP, Poses, featuring his beloved quasi-hit âCigarettes and Chocolate Milkâ and a cover of Loudon Wainwright IIIâs âOne Man Guy,â with his dad actually sitting in. LEILANI POLK
Piano Starts Here: The Music of Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Aretha Franklin, DâAngelo
Piano Starts Here as a series showcases the work of musical icons who contributed to the knowledge and appreciation of the instrument. This iteration celebrates Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Aretha Franklin, and DâAngelo, all vast contributors to the American canon of modern piano and keyboard composition and performance and leaders of the soul and R&B industries.
Who Let Who Let the Dogs Out Out
In a unique multimedia talk engaging over 250 pieces of memorabilia and artifacts, artist Ben Sisto will explore a mystery of great millennial importance: who exactly let Baha Men hit "Who Let The Dogs Out" out into our world?
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY
JAZZJazz Innovations
Led by a mentoring faculty team of professional musicians, UW student jazz ensembles will pay homage to the many varied icons of jazz and tackle new and progressive orchestral jazz compositions.
WEDNESDAY-SATURDAY
CLASSICAL/OPERAAida
Seattle Opera's production of Giuseppe Verdi's Aida is going to be massive. We're talking more than 150 performers, 200 costumes, innovative sets from graffiti artist RETNA (Marquis Duriel Lewis), complex choreography, and a wild story about an enslaved Ethiopian princess who falls in love with her Egyptian captor, who is himself betrothed to the pharaoh's daughter. This one is shaping up to be the production of the year from Seattle's largest opera house, and it's not to be missed. RICH SMITH
No performance on Thursday
Ballard Jazz Festival 2018
The 16th Annual Ballard Jazz Festival, which highlights both the historic neighborhood and Seattle's vibrant jazz scene, is happening this year at locations including the Conor Byrne Pub and the newly relocated Nordic Museum. Enjoy three days of live sets from local and national acts, a jazz walk down Ballard Avenue, and more. A few notables on this year's talented lineup include Detroit-based jazz drummer and composer Clarence Penn and Swedish flugelhorn and trumpet player Oskar Stenmark, as well as locals like Cornish College of the Arts jazz voice professor Johnaye Kendrick, percussionist Tarik Abouzied, and vibraphonist Susan Pascal.
THURSDAY
ELECTRONICDepth: Answer Code Request
Patrick GrĂ€ser, aka Answer Code Request, is a longtime fixture in Berlinâs electronic-music scene. Heâs a resident DJ at Berghain, and he releases music on Ostgut Ton, the legendary clubâs in-house label. With credentials like those, itâs hardly surprising that GrĂ€ser makes sophisticated, hi-fi techno. The tracks on Februaryâs Gens evolve gradually, dealing in subtle textural changes rather than monumental shifts in energy or mood. Also notable is GrĂ€serâs omnivorous streakâhis work incorporates elements of electro, ambient, breakbeat, and bass musicâa welcome feature thatâs sure to stand out in this set. ANDREW GOSPE
Cough, Grime, Serial Hawk, Isenordal
There hasnât been as big of a motivation for reefed heshers to get off the couch in recent years as the Sleep album that dropped on 4/20, but anyone pining in the interim between Dopesmoker and The Sciences for pyroclastic flows of sludgy guitars pouring out of PA-punishing amps should have been spending some quality time with Richmondâs Cough. Their most recent album, 2016âs Still They Pray, vacillates between troglodyte low-end hammering and third-eye cosmic voyages with the portal-opening power of all the stoner-doom greats. With a half-decade gap between their last two albums, Cough donât buck any notions of pothead industriousness, so donât dose yourself into decommission tonight. BRIAN COOK
Dark Moon Lilith: A Tribute To Lilith Fair
In honor of the famed, now-inclusive womxn's music festival Lilith Fair, local drag favorites Americano, Amoania, Arson Nicki, Britt Brutality, Castor Pollux, Jordan OâJordan, Harlotte O'Scara, and others will perform covers of some notable acts from the festival's history.
KEXP Presents: Mi Casa Es Tu Casa â A Homeless Coalition Benefit
Join KEXP in supporting the homeless services provided by Coalition on Homelessness by dancing to luscious tunes from local singer-songwriters Sera Cahoone and Robin Holcomb, chamber pop artist Tomo Nakayama, keyboardist Wayne Horvitz, folk artist JR Rhodes, and several others.
Susan Pascal Quintet Featuring Pete Christlieb: Remembering Stan Getz
Here is a confession I must make: I'm not big into jazz guitar. Indeed, I have never bought a record by a band led by a jazz guitarist, even by one of the big names in jazz history, like Charlie Christian or Django Reinhardt. Why? Because I can't help feeling that the real home for this instrument is the blues. But what breaks this dumb feeling in me every time is when a jazz guitarist performs with a jazz vibraphonist. Those wondrous, vaporous, Venusian sounds of the vibraphone seem to magically transform the licks and picks of the guitar into something that's utterly necessary and meaningful to the jazz home. For example, when Susan Pascal, Seattle's great vibraphonist, plays with Milo Petersen, a local jazz guitarist and educator, I honestly fall in love with an instrument that does almost nothing for me on all other occasions. Pascal, an artist who really knows her instrument and handles her sticks in the way that all masterful vibraphonists do (like wands casting warm spells), also frequently performs with Bill Anschell, an established and very productive pianist. CHARLES MUDEDE
THURSDAY-FRIDAY
La Luz, Savila, Ancient Forest
Now reveling in Los Angeles, Seattle-forged surf-rockers La Luz are back in town. They will have just dropped their new third studio album, Floating Features, so theyâll definitely have some fresh-squeezed treats up their sleeve. It can be a bummer when your favorite acts reach a level when they usually play 1,200+ capacity venues, but itâs our lucky break because La Luz are rockinâ two smaller stages instead of playing one spiffy stage, which means twice the shred and (letâs hope) twice the dosage of their signature surf-riff rendition of the Soul Train line dance. ZACH FRIMMEL
THURSDAY-SUNDAY
JAZZMadeleine Peyroux
Peyroux, an American-born jazz singer/songwriter and guitarist who's been compared to Billie Holiday and was discovered busking on the streets of Paris, is touring in support of her newest album, Anthem.
FRIDAY
BLUES/COUNTRY/FOLKLaura Veirs, The Hackles
Indie-folk music has housed its fair share of acoustic guitars accompanied by easy, breathy voices, but Portland-based singer-songwriter Laura Veirs makes these two components as endearing as ever. Catch her tunes after a guest set from Astoria duo the Hackles.
Bun B, Dyme Def, Huey P, New Track City, DJ Indica Jones
Many know Bun B as one half of legendary hiphop duo UGK, but the Texas-based rapper has carried on with a solo career ever since the death of the duo's other half, Pimp C. Tonight, he'll perform with support from Dyme Def, Huey P, New Track City, and DJ Indica Jones.
Great Falls, Burmese, Solo Organ, Nervous Corps
Formed 20 years ago in Iowa City, Burmese have had a revolving-door lineup, which has included at various points in time the Oh Sees' John Dwyer and Flying Luttenbachers' Weasel Walter behind the drum kit. Now operating out of Oakland, Burmese use the tools of rock to generate noise pieces that spasm with unruly power. The best noise musicians know when to relent and when to put listeners on blastâlike Wolf Eyes and Pharmakon, to name but two. Burmese are masters of creating tension through intelligent dynamics. Their 2004 album on Load Records, Men, might be the best introduction to Burmese's controlled sonic catastrophes. DAVE SEGAL
Paul Simon
If there were an award given for the Most Paul Simonâlike lyrics to ever Paul Simon, Paul Simon would surely win. âSonny wanders beyond his interior walls, runs his hands through his thinning brown hair,â he sings in âThe Obvious Childâ from 1990âs The Rhythm of the Saints. Simon, miraculously, has been giving us the most poignant lyricsâand some of the most rhythmically eclectic musicâfor more than five decades. He has always been a slightly sentimental old man, even when he was young. He is the ultimate cool dadâas wise and thoughtful as he is darkly humorous and caustic. Though Simon began as an acoustic folk musician, since 1972 his solo albums, including this yearâs Stranger to Stranger, draw inspiration from music as far-flung as Brazil and South Africa. His career disproves his own lyric âHow itâs strange that some roots are like cages.â ANGELA GARBES
Poptone
Yet another Bauhaus offshoot project, Poptone features guitarist Daniel Ash and drummer Kevin Haskins playing material by Love & Rockets, Tones on Tail, and yes, Bauhaus... and other stuff, too. Recycling is good for the environment, yeah? A fresh take on nostalgia is good for the soul, yeah? You can't go wrong with any of those groups, really, and we 21st-century post-goths who also like psychedelia and strange Motown covers (they ratchet up the tension supersonically on âBall of Confusionâ) are primed for a substantial nostalgia wallow in Love & Rockets and Tones on Tail. The latter's version of âGo!â really knocks, with the bass-heavy swagger of dudes half their age. Tonight you'll probably hear L&R's âMirror People,â Bauhaus's âSlice of Life, Tones on Tail's âChristian Says,â and more. Peter Murphy could not be reached for comment. DAVE SEGAL
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
ELECTRONICThe Glitch Mob, Elohim, Anomalie
One of Los Angelesâ biggest electronic groups, the Glitch Mob leverage blockbuster beats and outrageously distorted synth bass riffs to create Burner-friendly jams. They were previously on tour supporting their album, Love Death Immortality, their first since 2010âs Drink the Sea. LDI sounds very expensive and ready to grace Hollywood thriller movie soundtracks. The Glitch Mob are very good at what they do, generating bold, un-nuanced moods with dramatic dropouts and build-ups. But an inescapable sense of hollow bombast pervades the album. Maybe thatâs why their shows sell out? DAVE SEGAL
SATURDAY
BLUES/COUNTRY/FOLKChris Young, Kane Brown, Morgan Evans
Swiftly rising country star Chris Young, recently inducted as the newest member of the Grand Ole Opry, will provide an evening of new Americana hits with support from Kane Brown and Morgan Evans.
C89.5 & KW Present: Josh Wink
Talk about longevity⊠Josh Wink has got it. The Philadelphia DJ/producer flirted with pop stardom in the mid 1990s, taking acid house to the charts in Europe with âHigher State of Consciousness,â âDonât Laugh,â and âIâm Ready.â He couldnât maintain that level of popularity, but Wink has carved out a nice niche on the semi-underground circuit with his brainy minimal techno that still grooves like a mofo. Yes, you need all three of Winkâs Profound Sounds mixes. As a bonus, he has extensive knowledge of acid house and techno, as his 2007 mix Josh Winkâs Acid Classics proves (two of its tracks, A Guy Called Geraldâs âVoodoo Rayâ and Hardfloorâs âAcperience 1,â changed my life, and maybe yours, too). Wink seems like one of those DJs whoâll never lose his ear for underground-club greatness; his track record makes this show a safe bet for heady thrills. DAVE SEGAL
Kool & The Gang
There's no doubting the large funk/soul ensemble's technical proficiency, but clips of recent live performances show a troubling tendency for cheesy crowd interaction and emphasis on their frothier material (who doesn't grimace after hearing "Celebration" for the millionth time?). But in their 1970s prime, Kool and the Gang cut some of the filthiest and sweetest funk to ever maximize a gluteus. If they fill at least half their set with burners like "Jungle Jazz," "Hollywood Swinging," "Funky Stuff," and "Love the Life You Live," this will be worth the trip to the EQC. DAVE SEGAL
Nuggets Night Traveling Road Show: The Pynnacles, the Reverberations, Knights of Trash, the Shriekers, the Hauer Things, the Mean Reds, Dr. Quinn and the Medicine Woman
Tonightâs show is part of an ongoing Portland-music-related nonprofit benefit event, âNuggets Night,â and is landing in Seattle as "Nuggets Night Traveling Road Show" and acting as a primer for their big weekender in June. So the bill is loaded with PDX bands: fuzz ânâ jangle from the Pynnacles, dreamy and driving paisley sounds from the Reverberations, shredding covers from the Shriekers, raw and catchy garage-rock from the Mean Reds, and even MORE killer garage-rock from the Hauer Things. Not to be outdone, Seattle steps up with Dr. Quinn and the Medicine Woman and the Knights of Trash. MIKE NIPPER
Rogue Wave, Dear Boy
To mark the 10th anniversary re-issue of their seminal third album, Asleep at Heavenâs Gate, Oakland-based indie rock five-piece Rogue Wave will no doubt elicit sighs of nostalgia with a performance of their hit song "Eyes." They'll be joined by LA alt rockers Dear Boy.
Shitty Person, Dirt Face, HYWAYS, DJ Mamma Casserole
Drummer/guitarist/vocalist Benjamin Thomas-Kennedy's newish project, Shitty Person, finds him exploring a more intimate, morose style of rock than his work with Fungal Abyss and Lesbian would lead you to expect. Abetted by members and ex-members of Rose Windows, Lesbian, and Master Musicians of Bukkake, Shitty Person evoke the bleak, methodical song stylings of post-â80s Swans and Neurosis. This show is the release party for Shitty Person's debut LP, Judgement, which Thomas-Kennedy says was inspired by âthe desperation and self-hatredâ he heard in Spacemen 3 and Monster Magnet records. Dirt Face feature several members of Master Musicians of Bukkake working in a more traditional rock format. The 10 minutes of their set that I caught at a recent house show revealed a keen knack for the spectral dirge, exemplified by their wondrous cover of Skip Spence's âDiana.â DAVE SEGAL
SUNDAY
CLASSICAL/OPERAMusic of Remembrance: Gaman
"Never forget" was the refrain the world adopted in response to the horrors of the Holocaust. Music of Remembrance takes that charge seriously, using symphonic music's ability to transcend time and create emotional connections between an audience and those touched by the Shoah and other tragedies. This spring, they mark their 20th season with "Gaman," a piece by Seattle-based composer Christophe Chagnard about the Japanese interment camps. To tell the story, Chagnard uses Japanese and Western instruments, as well as testimony and visual art from poets and artists who were imprisoned in the camps. RICH SMITH
Customs x TR Present: Lone
The halcyon days of 1990s rave culture are a bottomless fount of inspiration for producers from the UK, regardless of whether they actually lived through them. Matt Cutler did, and his work as Lone bears it out: ecstatic samples, squelchy acid synths, and breaks galore. This isnât pastiche, though. Cutler has developed a personal sonic vocabulary where garage and hardcore mingle with boom-bap hiphop and new age. Lately, with his Ambivert Tools series, Lone has been churning out unabashed dance-floor bangersâthe drums less manic, the grooves tighter, the melodies stronger, but the nostalgia still palpable. ANDREW GOSPE
Sofi Tukker, Kah-Lo, LP Giobbi
Sofi Tukker, the New Yorkâbased duo best known for their track âBest Friendâ in Appleâs unveiling of the iPhone X, are ready to give you something else to remember them by. Hot off the April release of their debut album, Tree House, Sofi Tukker will soon begin their worldwide tour with stops in Madrid, Berlin, Paris, and, of course, Seattle. The driving beats and richly contrasting musical textures on songs like âBaby Iâm a Queenâ and âFuck Theyâ are here to show their stuff, whether youâre there or not to see it. SOPHIA STEPHENS
Yonatan Gat, Darto, Bad Luck, Geist & the Sacred Ensemble
Mad props to some folks who managedâwithout hate speech, without directed violenceâto get banned from most of the venues in their home country. No, not the Sex Pistols in the UKâYonatan Gatâs old ensemble Monotonix in Israel. Under his own name, Gat hasnât given up trying to turn every show into a party just up to the line of a riot, so attend at your own risk. But heâs wild and passionate, replete with funny noises, stuttering samples, and ferocious garage/surf guitar. Heâs trying to remind us that being alive, in the best sense of the term, is a little dangerous. ANDREW HAMLIN
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