Solar Ascent: SIX ORGANS OF ADMITTANCE Live at The Crocodile [Seattle]

October 10, 2012 in Global Destruction, Music, Reviews

SIX ORGANS OF ADMITTANCE
The Crocodile
Seattle, Wa
10/3/12

Sitting down to write about last week’s Six Organs of Admittance show at The Crocodile in Seattle, I tuned into an episode of Ancient Aliens as inspiration.  For nearly 15 years, Six Organs has primarily existed as a solo project for Ben Chasny, a versatile musician capable of capturing any style of music that his hands desire.  Meanwhile, he has continued to find time to collaborate with such artists as Will Oldham (aka Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy), Current 93, and Sir Richard Bishop of Sun City Girls, just to name a few.  The new Six Organs album, Ascent, is a multi-layered psychedelic explosion of wailing screams from outer space.  Featuring his band mates from Comets on Fire, the record operates as a reunion for the entire gang from the Bay Area heavy psych outfit.  By all accounts, Ascent is pretty much a Comets release–their first since 2006‘s Avatar.  If you favor the sounds of layered guitar solos, this is gonna be a hit for you.  It lacks the more quaint acoustic directions of a typical Six Organs neo-folk recording, but makes up for it in complete chaos of wah wah-infused guitar screams, layering each track like a Jackson Pollock painting.  Hopefully, this helps to paint it’s own picture about what would take place at their live show. Read the rest of this entry →

Bigger Than the Outside : A Conversation with BABY DEE

June 6, 2010 in Global Destruction, Interviews, Music, Politics, With Video

Baby Dee is a fascinating individual.  For some, there is a novelty in the fact that she’s transgender, which they’ve allowed to overshadow her work as an artist.  For others, her musicianship takes center stage over any personal identity that Baby Dee might have.  In reality, the work is far too revealing, honest, and personal to ever be completely separated from the person who created it.  In our approach to any interview conversation that we try and conduct on this site, there is a belief that the humanity of the artist and the exploration of them, their history, insights, and experiences as an individual on this planet should always remain a focus, beyond just the art that they create.  The “why” is more important for us than the “how”.  Even more important is the “who”, because from there the why will expose itself.  These concepts became especially relevant in our recent encounter with the Cleveland-born pianist/harpist.

It’s true that Dee continues to build a catalog of deeply engaging and beautiful music, and that is something that we, in no way, wish to discount.  We hope to open the door for you to explore her work further, but the sounds and feelings presented in her work are things that you can continue to discover slowly, in your own time.  I feel that our job in a piece like this is to attempt to truly help introduce you to the soul of  the person behind the work.  Baby Dee is a fascinating individual, but I think the point here is that, with or without her affiliations with various other artists, being transgender, or even her abilities as a musician, her unique character and quality as a person would still sustain her as such, regardless.  We trust that, after viewing our video interview below, you will see her in the same light as we do.  Her talents as an artist are undeniable, but music is little more than a simple medium to manifest and display the immense levels of truth and personal ideals which she holds inside. Read the rest of this entry →

Wild & Crazy COE Ed (David Allan Coe Live)

November 21, 2007 in Global Destruction, Music, PSA, Reviews

david-allan-coe.jpg

My friend Sean Prince was the one who told me about a performance by living Country legend, David Allan Coe at the grimey ass El Corazon here in Seattle as a suggestion for the site to cover.  My response to him was, “Looks like you’re our new writer“.
Coe, who is famous for such tracks as Long Haired Redneck and for writing such hits as Take This Job and Shove It for artists like Johnny Paycheck, has a bit of a checkered past.  He was born in 1939, has at least a handful of songs with the word “Nigger” actually in the title, and is an admitted murderer.  I was hesitant about the crowd mostly.  I’m Puerto Rican and Jewish so I took an educated guess that it probably wasn’t the best environment for me to show up in, however I would definitely try to set up some tickets for him and hopefully an interview.  Sean has Longhaired Redneck as his ringtone, plenty of Coe’s records, and can usually hold his own in over the top situations, so I figured he might fare better than I.  The tickets were no problem, but the interview didn’t seem too promising based on the letter that I recieved from the tour promoter, and I quote:
You have to direct that question to the tour manager at the gig. David rarely does interviews. But if hes in a good mood he might talk to you for 20 minutes before the show.”
The following is Sean Prince’s play by Play account of how it all went down.
-Dead C

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