Photo Set: The Descendents @ The Neptune
Travis Trautt – Seminal California punk band The Descendents stopped by the Neptune Theatre in Seattle for two nights last month and shit was OUT. OF. CONTROL.
Travis Trautt – Seminal California punk band The Descendents stopped by the Neptune Theatre in Seattle for two nights last month and shit was OUT. OF. CONTROL.
Darren Selector – Thirty years ago the Beastie Boys released their debut album Licensed to Ill. At that time in my life, I don’t think I had heard any hip-hop. My pops was a fan of new wave so I knew Blondie’s “Rapture,” (which counts as hip-hop in my book, actually) and maybe I heard the Clash on some the mixtapes he recorded while listening to Seattle’s short-lived KYYX radio at work?
Andy Bookwalter – Friends, there’s a lot of ugliness in America right now. It’s easy to forget about what we do really well, better than anyone in the world. Besides overeating and missing the point, I’m talking about stripped down rock and roll, preferably the kind with punk rock washboard, wallet chains, and songs about pot roast.
Christian Klepac – To be an American, here in the darkening days of late 2016, is to understand perhaps a little too well what it might be like to be trapped inside an episode of The Dollop, a podcast where all the cruelties and stupidities of American history are dragged into the spotlight and laughed at, so as not to be cried about.
Tyson Lynn – For over a decade, Ritchie Young has delicately threaded his filigree voice through songs fanciful and expansive. Under the name Loch Lomond —sometimes solo, and often with an ever-evolving ensemble— Young has released five albums.