Posts Tagged ‘seattle music’

Noise for the Needy Kickoff

Noise for the Needy

The Noise for the Needy Kickoff is next Saturday, April 17th.  Noise For The Needy (NftN) is a Seattle-based non-profit organization that raises money for charitable causes through the production of live music shows.

Funds raised from this kickoff event will cover expenses for the June festival. The more NftN raises, the bigger and better the festival will be. And that means more cash for this year’s beneficiary, Teen Feed.

Purchase tickets. Or check the Facebook event page.  Hope to see you there! Mostly Dimes is on the bill.

Mostly Dimes @ the Comet

Comet Flier

click to enlarge

Mostly Dimes is playing a show with some good friends in Seattle this Saturday, April 3rd.

The line-up goes like so: Final Spins + Mostly Dimes + Like Lightning + Lonesome Shack.

The show’s at the Comet Tavern.

Seven dollars, 21+

If you are in town, then I hope to see you there!

People Get Ready: Audio Documentary

The KEXP “Civil Rights” documentary on Curtis Mayfield’s classic, “People Get Ready,” is now in the archives, should you wish to give it a listen.  Below is a description, and there are more documentaries, including one on James Brown, coming soon!

“People Get Ready” was a song Curtis Mayfield wrote for the Impressions. And it would become one of Martin Luther King’s favorites and a standard used for demonstrations during the civil rights struggles in the 1960′s. Throngs of famous people would later record the song, including Bob Dylan, U2 and Aretha Franklin. Curtis shared a philosophy with Martin Luther King, Jr. – that what really mattered about people was not “the color of their skin but the content of their character”. And this song’s lyrics have the stamp of sincerity, intelligence and soul shared by both great men.

At KEXP Next Year!

ampslogoI’m happy to say that, during the winter quarter at the UW, I’ll be a research assistant at KEXP.

The internship is supported by the American Music Partnership of Seattle (AMPS), a collaboration among Experience Music Project, KEXP, and the University of Washington.  AMPS is funded by a grant from the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation and administered by the Simpson Center for the Humanities at the UW.

No doubt, I’m looking forward.  It’ll be good to discover how my dissertation work on sound intersects with conducting research for KEXP.  And I’m sure I’ll learn a lot in a short period of time.

Am I Really All The Things That Are Outside of Me?

kexp-documentaries-psychedelicsThe Animal Collective documentary for KEXP‘s Psychedelics series is now archived online.  Transmit it.  Participating in this was a lot of fun.  Hope you enjoy it, too.  Here’s a snippet description written by Michele Myers, who produces the KEXP documentaries:

“And our final episode was on Animal Collective. This is a band who people react to. Some people herald them as the most brilliant group in today’s alternative scene. Others just don’t seem to get it. I have to admit I was among those who didn’t get it. When I first heard Animal Collective I thought they sounded a lot like a group of kindergarteners sitting in a cardboard box humming and pounding on the sides. In this doc I actually find a clip that sounds EXACTLY like that. But I also talk to academics who say that Animal Collective embrace the spirit of punk. And the band themselves get to speak up as well. And some of the music is actually very sophisticated. What do you think?”

Mostly Dimes 2.0