Bumbershoot Day 1
In the weeks leading up to the fest we tried as hard as we could to get my mom in for free - even applying for credentials for her under Not on the Guest List. The request was unsurprisingly denied, especially given that I submitted it past the deadline... After waiting in line behind Smoosh for my ticket we discovered that I'd received two tickets for all three days! Score! We promptly sold her ticket she'd bought for Saturday and booked it in. We got to Bumbershoot on Saturday as the Shins were taking the stage. We ran over to Menomena for a brief candid photo shoot, who even with phone calls to Justin and Brent, were nowhere to be found, so we high-tailed it over to mainstage to catch what was remaining of the Shins' set as I was supposed to shoot their last few songs side of the stage as arranged prior. Only no media escort could be found and they finished early, so that didn't happen. They did their Pink Floyd cover again - like they did at the Crystal Ballroom in February!
I have wanted to take candid photos of the Shins forever! Specifically eating strawberry poptarts as an ode to my favorite movie Can't Hardly Wait (Preston: "...the very same breakfast pastry I was consuming at that very moment. What was I to do? How was I to proceed?") And I finally did!
Uber blurry Marty (it was my first shot with my new polaroid and I'm used to my old one's focus abilities):

So yeah - it actually worked to my benefit I didn't get to shoot side of the stage and their exit to their dressing room as now I was able to shoot them chillaxing and beyond.
I am socially incompetent. Dave went to shake my hand and I screamed: "I love your wife!" Because I do, but I didn't need to literally scream it at him and a "hi" would've been sufficient. I spent their entire show at the Crystal talking to her - they live in Capitol Hill kinda by my mom in Seattle and previously lived in San Francisco, so we had chatted at length about that.
Jesse who self-admittedly mumbles and Marty were on the couch and GREAT company! We went on and on and on exclaiming the virtues of Alberta. I love when bands are unguarded, which based on the emails I traded with their publicist about their management days before, I wasn't assuming they'd be, but they were. In two minutes they had each told me unprompted, their addresses and where I can find them when not at home -- NE Portland-ers - think Alberta and think chicken wings, and no - Popeyes is on MLK.
We hung out for a bit with me snapping away then they got in a golf cart to go sign some autographs.
I thought we'd be disbanding, but their fangirl worthy tour manager Dave expected me to jump on and come along for the ride, so I did. They taped a segment for Fye TV. If you're familiar with the Shins' brand of humor, you can only imagine the fun they had with playing off of "fye."
I met my mom over at Bert Jansch's acoustic show in the Music Lounge where I gave him a copy of Jonathan Byerley's CD that I had ordered multiple copies of a couple days before through CD Baby. My mom thinks they sound similar, so I used the opportunity to pass it along and to take a photo to pass along to Jonathan, which I finally got around to doing a day ago.
I'm kind of in love with Jonathan Byerley's music. I want to marry it.
And speaking of "Marry Me," I cut some clothing silhouettes out of colored paper and booked it over to shoot some candids of St. Vincent. I had a very specific vision for the photos, so much so that I brought along clothing pins and a clothing line.
As we - my mom, her, and me - hung everything up we talked about Grizzly Bear's Ed Droste, Sasquatch, the fact that she really has eight other siblings which she attributed to her parents being uber Catholic, and Glasgow, where she'd be playing next. I kept skipping from topic to topic and back again. She is entirely too cute! I just love how fragile and delicate she looks.
'Paris Is Burning' St. Vincent MP3
Now it was time for Menomena to hit the stage. They had a choir! With brown burlap-esque robes!
Their publicist Ever told me the next day when I asked where the choir came from that is was comprised of Portland-ers. I had thought some looked familiar! Alicia J. Rose was one of them, and he started telling me about her before I cut him off with: "The booker for Doug Fir! And she did their publicity shots! And she plays accordion too!" He seemed somewhere between amused and maybe scared that I enthusiastically knew all this info at the drop of a hat.
Later we caught an acoustic Gogol Bordello performance at the Music Lounge. I wondered how the set would be seeing as it'd be taking place in a seated theatre. How would they dance on drums on top of the audience? They didn't, but that didn't take anything away from their set. They are like authentic!
I mean I knew they were of foreign origin, collected into a troupe in the US, but I thought all their soviet gypsy ties had faded away, alive on in their music and image. Not so. When speaking to each other, they don't speak English which I was happy to overhear them doing while waiting for them to start, I sat on my knees in front of the stage adjusting my camera.
If I ever get married - you know - to Jonathan Byerley's music and all, I want Gogol Bordello to play the reception!
I don't and have never listened to Denver's Devotchka, but they're number 1 in Jonathan Byerley's Top 8 and they share a manager, so I arranged to do candid photos with them in the hopes that we'd be able to gush about an assumed mutual love of him. It was kind of uncomfortable taking photos of them, which I very very rarely encounter. And our brief sentences about Jonathan Byerley didn't yield the results I wanted, such as the lead passing along a message: "There's a girl in Seattle who actually lives in Portland who is OBSESSED with you," ie judging by his demeanor he didn't seem like he'd be down for that so I kept myself in check.
"Let's get these teen hearts beating faster, faster..."
When people asked who I was most excited to see, I replied Panic! at the Disco. When people heard this, they assumed I was joking. Ummm... if you see me on the street on any given day, I often am wearing a Fall Out Boy T-shirt. I'm kind of in love with Fueled by Ramen. It was my third time seeing the Las Vegas quartet. My boyfriend Ryan Rossy Dust didn't wear any makeup, but was rocking a headband like he did a few days prior at Pete Wentz's bar when he turned 21. There were no dancing girls. And seriously - I LOVE them - I sing along with their songs at full volume, but their new songs did not solicit the same excitement from me. Is Brendan Urie writing the lyrics? I REFUSE to believe they're Ryan's! I went on about this on Monday to Barsuk's Ever. Where was the trademark wit? The ahead of their time hit-the-nail-on-the-head observations?
"Your eyes are as wide as the moon when it's nine in the afternoon."
Come now... really?
And the sound of them too - they were less cabaret - more barely-practiced-in-a-garage type sounding. They sounded like the songs you'd assume a band would release on their debut and the songs from their first album sounded like the songs they'd progress to on their second disc. Panic! notoriously suffer from bad sound live, but this was inexcusable.
My head hurts in fear for them.
Oh and I saw quite a few other bands I haven't bothered to mention in this post, but here's a pic of Gym Class Heroes who I last saw open for Fall Out Boy in January 2006 in Glasgow:




















Nilina. Jonathan Byerly? Really? Him and I used to ride the bus together and talk about linguistics (and I do/did the local show on our radio station so he's a friend)
Gah. Crazy. Oh and Nick is a dreamboat isn't he? Jeeze. Denvertime.
Posted by: patcollins | September 18, 2007 at 12:11 AM
oh nilina, you amaze me.
Posted by: meg | September 19, 2007 at 01:00 PM
This post made me crave pop-tarts :)
Posted by: Anna | September 26, 2007 at 11:54 PM