Concert Calendar

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Generation decline talks tour and the new album.

I caught up with Generation Decline's Andy and Angel, about their new album and the tour they're starting tomorrow.

We did this interview over the phone. I slept in; and Sarah, my wife, came home for lunch which I didn't expect. The interview actually took place an hour later than we expected, but they were ready for it to happen, and understanding of the delays.

In the spirit of getting ready for the podcast, I decide to just go ahead and share this interview as an MP3.  You can hear it on our SoundCloud, shown below.



I cleared it with them to put this out as MP3. Just so you know, they don't still think this in print.

Also, good to note that I didn't edit this at all.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Ten Pole Drunk talk their beginnings, the new album, and the upcoming tour.



I met with Ten Pole Drunk at Le Voyeur about a week ago in hopes of getting some insight into their new album and their upcoming tour. It was a fitting location. We've both played their before, more than once. Probably together. It kind of just seemed like meeting some great friends for lunch. That's actually exactly what it was.

Despite the time stamp being 1 PM, I was still really groggy when I showed up. I was kind of surprised to see everyone there. Damien, the vocalist. Raquel, the drummer. James, the guitarist. Ricky, the bassist. Even Joi, the band's "babysitter." All of them bright eyed, full of smiles, and ready to tell their story. At least, to tell some jokes, thinly veiled by their story. It was comforting to see that they were already eating fries and drinking beer. They certainly didn't waste any time making themselves at home. That's what I've always loved about Ten Pole, they're at home wherever they are.

It's kind of hard coming up with questions for your friends. People you've played with a lot, shared beers with, and probably punched in the face before, generally have already told you what you need to know. It was tempting to just have a beer with them and catch up, to forget about my obligation to this blog or my commitments to them, and to just hang out. The good news was, once we got to talking, it was easy to stay on topic, even though we honestly were just kickin' it.

I started where you would expect: Asking about the origins. I asked how long they'd been playing. Raquel informed me, "It's been about a year and half since we started playing shows."

Damien sat there with a smug look, slowly nodding and added, "Dead Baby Bikes, two years ago."

"Our first show was at Dead Baby Downhill. So, that's like our band anniversary," James tried to clarify.

I was as confused as you are. Apparently Seattle is home to a bicycle club known as Dead Baby Bikes. Once a year, they do the Dead Baby Downhill. Ten Pole played their first show the same night at Studio Seven. This all sounded pretty great. I had to ask. "There's a bicycle club in Seattle called Dead Baby Bikes. They do a downhill race every year that turns into this major event afterwards. There's a couple thousand people in the streets. They do bike jousting on tall bikes, and they build stages in the street. They take over downtown. There's no cops." James is apparently an expert.

Thanks to the fact that I was pretty stoned, this conversation led to some confusion. I thought these guys were called "Dead Baby Box" when they first played that show. I was wrong. However, TPD seemed pretty impressed with that name, "Maybe we should have been Dead Baby Box." I guess it's a weekly thing for them to "try to change the band name," I was glad to contribute to the tradition.

Their real name, Ten Pole Drunk, is a reference to an old public intoxication test, where the suspect would have to walk the length of ten telephone poles without falling over. James admits he stole it. Saying, "To be really honest I stole it from someone else, Tyler, from American Dischord (AMDX). He used to be a member of [unintelligible band name] out here and that was a contender that they didn't use, and I wasn't going to let that go to waste!"

With the name out of the way, that left the question of how these guys started working together. Damien volunteered to spill the beans, "I moved up here after living in Portland for about a year. I meet this ass-hole [James] a year into school. We started jamming at our buddy's house. He had a bunch of drums and guitars. So, we just get drunk. He allowed us to get drunk and stoned and shit, but it kept us in a safe area. So, we ended up meeting her [Raquel] and were Dead Peasants. Ricky gave us our first show. We decided to kill Dead Peasants and started this band."

James added, "Our bass player left us and Ricky kind of stepped in to get us back on our feet, it just turned into this. I think it was a good move for us, because before we were just playing a really generic, straight forward form of punk rock. This changed our sound for the better."

Hearing that got me gushing about how great their style is. It's like good old-school hardcore: Still punk. Not metallic. Devoid of machismo. I asked them if that was working for or against them. A lot of the punk going on around here either has a really melodic sound, or heavy elements of metal and thrash crossing over. It didn't surprise me to hear that it did work out for them, and James was more than stoked to tell me all about it. "We used to be on this circuit, where we played the 2 Bit a lot, and there'd always be these old guys drinking beer. It made my day every time it would happen; they'd all just migrate into the pit and go out of their way afterward to say, 'I haven't seen punk rock or hardcore like this since I was a kid,' and we get that reaction all the time. People that were there in the 80's for that kind of hardcore. We played with Fang at the Chuck [Charleston] and their singer went out his way to super compliment us. Like, 'You guys remind me of when we were starting out.' It's really worked in our favor."

The other side of that, as Damien pointed out, were the shows where everyone would go outside. "When we were first starting out, there were a couple shows where it was abysmal. We had people go outside. I had an extra long cable. So, I just went outside and started yelling at the kids. I guess they were all straight-edge or something. They just went out there and mad-dogged us. Except a few crazies, out there smoking cigarettes, that just started a circle pit outside. We were doing 'Crucified.' I was just out there yelling, 'crucified for your sins!' So I sound super crazy."

I was excited to hear about how their distinct sound and old-school style would shape the new album. I heard their old demo and it didn't do them justice. I got a teaser track before the interview, a rough mix of "Godzilla." It was fairly amazing. One of the lines in it was "keeping hardcore alive," which I honestly believe they're doing.

Upon bringing up their old demo tracks, everyone laughed and assured me this new album would "blow them out of the water." The new album will consist of nine tracks, recorded with Scott, at the Boiler Room. They're shooting for a release at the end of May. There's going to be release parties in Everett and Olympia, and they're taking copies on tour with them. I think that's a big selling point for this tour. Everyone who shows up can get the new album, and most recent run of merchandise before the die-hard fans at home. Unless, the die-hards want to get out and catch an out-of-town date.

Being their first real release, you can expect all of their old songs. Everything written since October is gonna have to wait for the next album. This release has classics like, "More Chicks in the Pit," "Godzilla," "Due Process," "Are You Having Fun Yet?" and "Tacoma Low Lives." They say it's pretty much an even split between political songs and party anthems.

Which lead us to talk of tour. They've planned an awesome journey through Oregon and California to promote the album. It will take place over the first ten days in May, with a bonus "homecoming" show in Olympia on the eleventh. This is their second tour, with the first being a trek through eastern Washington, on over to Idaho. Despite that trip being full of good performances, nice bands, and great crowd response, it was kind of miserable. "Our van overheated non-stop. I think it overheated eight to ten times. So, the whole trip, in eastern Washington, while it's over a hundred degrees, we're stuck in this van where we had to have the heat blaring the whole time," James lamented. "We're going to drive at night. That's what we learned."

A common practice with touring bands is to try to play places where they have friends, especially to ensure a place to sleep. When I brought that up, they had a laundry list of people they were stoked to see on the road, but it also sounded like the were going to wing it a bit. "We harass people," Damien assured me, "That usually works out."

The thing that excites me about this tour is the new merch. James gave me the run-down, saying "We've been busting our asses on merch. I'm so goddamn tired of screen printing. We did something a little off the beaten path with our CD's, as far as packaging goes. I don't want to give too much away, you'll have to wait for that... but, we've also got patches, stickers for the first time, a run of buttons, and shirts. We're just finishing up the last of the Godzilla shirts." I got some details about the packaging, but was sworn to secrecy. I also got a sheet of five patches and one of those fabled Godzilla shirts. I sport both regularly, now.

 The CD's are 100% DIY! Once again, James acted as band spokesperson, and excitedly laid-it-out, "We're doing it all ourselves. We're putting the labels on the CD's. we're printing the packages. We have 200 sheets of cardboard at home right now. It's a two color screen print, so it takes about ten minutes for each one, just to get the color on it. Then we still have to glue them up and do all that. Plus, there's even more than that, because there's bonuses going into each one." Everyone loves bonuses, Joi assured me that they would be different. "If you buy two CD's, you'll probably get different prizes."

At this point we decided to take a smoke break. After we got back to it, I got a lot of awesome stories about the legend of naked Damien, more stories of hot vans, a little glimpse into bringing your rowdy friends into the studio and letting them drink while recording gang vocals, and a great story about an out-of-town gig that somehow ended in drunks shitting out of a third story window. The world of Ten Pole drunk is a magical place.

You're going to have to wait for the podcast to hear anymore about it, or you can just catch them next week. Either way, be sure to tell your friends about the tour and see the band as soon as possible. Their fun, antagonistic stage show will be everything you ever hoped punk could be... and you might get hit with Damien's dong.






Sunday, April 27, 2014

Oly Pyrate Punx Brought in the Secretions! Are you paying attention yet?

I'm starting to get really pissed off at the number of awesome conversations my phone loses. The newest and most precious was my conversation with Mickie Rat and Paul Filthy of Sacramento band, the Secretions. I remember them talking about the long standing the Secretions have had, Paul still being the new guy after logging eight years in the band, and being able to enjoy their friends bringing their offspring to shows.

I remember them telling me that this was near their first experience in Olympia, that this tour was awesome, and that, thanks to punks all over, this tour was not at all an uncommon success.

I first heard the Secretions (almost by accident) when I was 15. I was cruising MySpace for "socialist punk bands." I found the Socialfucks and quickly stumbled onto the Secretions by way of Ashtray. The Secretions are a punk band that pull influence from horror, pop, street, and the 50's (even if they don't realize that.) It's a fresh sound that brings back memories of security. Grandma's rocking-chair was a lot like this. That is, if Grandma sang about boners or fucking in a cemetery.

The show was everything I've been waiting for. It's been a decade since I found their music, and they held up to my idealizations. They were tight, fought technical difficulties with an iron fist, hit every song perfectly with only a 1.5 second break, and still managed a nice comedy break in the middle.

Mickie and Paul are employees of the State of California, and Danny is a fourth grade teacher. If you ever thought your dreams of being a punk rock star were out of reach, these guys are here to slap you in the mouth, in a fatherly way. They may be the most supportive and positive old-timers I've encountered thus far. Their biggest praise of Washington was the tight-knit scene, and the fact that we don't "try too hard to be punk."

They even went out to McCoy's with us after show. You know, the black bar straight down from the Track house. They have cheap shots and local scene-heads around every corner.

Either way, these guys should be familiar to you. If not, you probably know at least one band on the roster that night. Ain't Got Time to Bleed. Red White and Die. The Deceptives...

It was an amazing show. Those guys really made my night, though I found out (in a conversation that wasn't deleted) that Paul joined the band not too long after they played the first live show he'd ever seen. That's what childhood dreams are made of. That... and getting to drunk with your heroes after their fans slam you against a low ceiling.


Generation Decline - Battle Anthems

If you've never seen Generation Decline, I pity you. You haven't heard any of their recordings? Well, there's no hope for your mortal soul.

Unless, of course, you remedy this immediately.

Gen. Decline gave me the blessing of receiving their new CD before anyone else had it. It's an amazing showcase of what the Bremerton punk scene has to offer. It's full of crusty, Bay-area style. The female fronts and male back-ups are reminiscent of Nausea and half of F-minus. You can hear some of Seattle's Skarp in Angel's vocals. Generation Decline is another great example of Washingtonians knowing their roots and having a thorough plan for the future.

At a whopping seven songs, this isn't even close to the longest release Fringe Music has handled, but it  may be the most important. Generation Decline manages to meld street punk, hardcore, and metal in the coolest way this author has ever experienced. Take an amazing rhythm section, meld it with a lead guitar that out-does Black Flag's Greg Ginn, and it manages to stand out above the rest of this year's guitar heroes and does so without ever sounding pretentious. Make sure they stay punk-as-fuck; and add an amazing female lead.

The Distillers wanted to be this band.

Star Fucking Hipsters wanted to be this band.

The Washington underground is blessed to have the real McCoy.

Nothing on this CD feels forced. You can savor the members' every last sweat-drop as you venture through. No holds are barred. No prisoners are taken. If you can manage to make it through this without devoting your entire life to music or destroying the system, you're a fucking cyborg. This is the new soundtrack for sedition.

Since this isn't out yet, and I didn't get an official release, I don't have the lyrics. As such, I can only give you what I picked out:

These people hate the powers that be.

They want you to help bring it down.

They also want you to make this tour a success.

They especially want you to read their interview with Fringe Music. It will be published shortly after it takes place on Tuesday, April 29th, 2014.

This album gets a 4.5 out of 5.

BUY THAT SHIT!!!

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Burial Suit - 2014 Demo


Hardcore isn't something I think of when I think of Olympia music. Even long term Olympia institutions, like GAG, have their roots in something else. I find Olympia hardcore to be incredibly old-school, maybe with some outside element to bring it forward, but Blank Boys and Kill Shot sounded like they were birthed in California in the early eighties.

Burial Suit doesn't fit into this model. Their music is still undeniably formed from a serious foundation of punk rock, but in the tradition of bands like Last Lights and Gallows, there's some palpable noise influence, and the metallic edge is gleaming for all to see.

This demo is a breath of fresh air, not just for Olympia, but for the world of hardcore at large. Kicking off with a discordant, watery ambiance piece may be an over-done approach, but showing their ability to keep it down and build mood while approaching the inevitable slowdown and feedback ring-out, really grabbed me. Doing a musical intro on a demo might seem like a risky endeavor. I personally think it conjured ideas of the future. It really showcases the band's ability to create a scene, musically. Engaging the listener. Perhaps they could even employ this tactic and give us an album that flows better than something by Pink Floyd or Nine Inch Nails; gods of the concept album.

The first actual song on this demo is a the break-neck, "Broken." It's short and brutal. The drums are demanding. The guitars blast through, with punk-like simplicity, and metal-like precision. Chanting back-ups once again stir thoughts of classic punk in cramped back rooms, while the powerful growls of the leader hearken to a simpler time of brutal death metal. It reminds me of Trash Talk in that way.

The second actual song starts out like something from Comeback Kid, but the second you hear the vocals it loses that. There's no whiny kid leading this outfit. The guy who's in charge here sounds like he ate that guy from CBK for breakfast. The conviction from the entire band really make this track stand out. There are some amazing starts and stops. Most of all, the lyrical content of, "Salesman! Bastard Salesman!' is really relatable. Who hasn't felt like screaming for hours on end after an annoying run-in with some douche at a Verizon Counter? ...or even worse, a car lot? This track really demonstrates the versatility these guys can bring to one song. Just how variable their sound is. How quickly they can glide through that shit.

The last track has a melancholy guitar intro that breeds a feeling of loneliness, then blows straight into intense blast beats. It's fucking unsettling... Then comes the noise break. I think you get where I'm going. It's another master piece hidden right in plain sight.

The demo as a whole is very minor key, dark, diverse, tight as a drum, fast as fuck, and full of the kind of power that could put these guys on the circuit with some of the biggest names in the industry. If you missed them at Bleak Outlook, you'll have to start stalking their Facebook. These guys aren't slated to play Capital City Punk and Core Fest, or Rain Fest. Which was a mistake by the bookers in both cases.

Friday, April 18, 2014

Punk Rock Karaoke at the China Clipper 4/28/14

Olympia's seven-day-a-week karaoke bar, the China Clipper, is known to locals as "the Crippler." It's a dimly lit throw-back, with a large back room that sports another bar, ample seating, dance floor, stage, the best karaoke set up in town, and around 300 punk rock songs in the books. Perry Ornorio, long time member of the punk scene and several downtown activist groups, including the Downtown Association, dug them all up after being frustrated by the lack of punk available at the bar. The collection includes everything from the Ramones to the Unseen. Green Day to Dead Kenedys. The only problem is that most punks don't want to sit in room full of bros singing Robin Thicke just to get a chance to scream a Germs song.

Perry saw a touring band that knew tons of punk songs and played what audience members wanted sing. Recalling the experience with several friends, including Oly Pyrate Punx captain; Brandy Rage, led to the idea of organizing a one night event. A chance to fill the Clipper with a bunch of rowdy, drunk punk kids. Flooding the song que with titles that contain the word "fuck" is a very appealing prospect.

Through lots of begging and pleading the bar finally agreed to a punk karaoke take-over. Really, the only thing they did was give permission for fliers advertising the event to be posted, and special black "Jello Biafra Shots" to be sold. Since they started doing karaoke every night, the Clipper has adimately insisted on alienating no one. They're going to stick by that. If some random wants to do Celine Dion, they'll get their chance.

Sounds like the Clipper was insistent on it happening on their slowest day, a Monday, under the understanding that it would be "just this once." The good news here is, we're actually going to have a night full of drunken punk. There's a better chance of people showing up if it won't be happening again.

I would love to see all my readers show up. Load up your car with all of your insane friends and head for the Clipper, Monday, April 28th. Practice your favorite punk song, as long as it's not by Black Flag. There's no fucking Black Flag.

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Adam! France talks tour, solo work, and sad times


Adam! France (that's the way he writes it. I swear to God,) is quite talented, quite sweet, and quite handsome. As if swinging around that beautiful guitar in Burn Burn Burn, or hollering in Violent Occurrence weren't enough to get your lady's panties wet; the man also busts out some amazingly heartfelt acoustic work. Trust me, if it was good enough to get me feeling like a rainy October day, it'll melt your lady in seconds.

He recently released three tracks of this gloomy singer-songwriter business on a split shared with Old Growth. To spread the word about this amazing collection of acoustic punk fare, both parties decided to embark on a short tour through the western United States. This was Adam's first tour without a band behind him. In fact, it was the first time he'd taken his solo act out of WA. With the exception of a few little sets on the Burn tour, trying to kill time. According to him, it couldn't have gone better. It was a big gamble. Going out on the road as a solo acoustic act. An unknown, solo acoustic act at that. The risk seemed to be compounded by the fact he was touring with another acoustic project. Playing all acoustic shows. Adam had never played anything but opening sets for punk and hardcore bands... How could it ever work?

Very simply, seemed to be the answer. To hear him tell it, there was one iffy show at the beginning, and everything just got better from there.  Luckily, every show took place where Adam had friends. There was always a floor to crash on. Always a shower to clean up in. They even got to cook on few occasions, which is quite rare on the road. If you didn't know. They always made enough money to pay gas to the next gig. From what I heard, it was a old road-dog's dream.

Funnily enough, there were no old road-dogs on the tour. Adam has toured before in Burn, but he's only been with them for a year and a half. The guy's is only just turning 24. The other guys were younger than him. Adam sounded like he had a good time advising these guys. Being the older, more experienced one of the group. Which is fitting, considering the split they were touring behind was considerably more mature than any of his earlier releases.

Adam started this solo project in February of 2012. He kind of fell apart after his long-term girlfriend left him. You can hear the hurt in his voice when he talks about it to this day. Not a fresh hurt, but an old, scarred wound that has created strength and growth. I'm sure the scar runs deeper and the growth was more profound, thanks to losing his childhood dog at the same time. The pain is there for all to hear on the "Losing" EP. Those songs were some of Adam's favorites. More straight forward and angry. They really lay the groundwork for his career. Recorded alone, in his bedroom, the whole thing comes off like a heart-crushing, coming of age story, told in the most sincere way. The natural environment of heart break is one's bedroom. You can tell that's where this was made. It worked. That's probably why he kept doing it.

His "Learning and Leaving" EP came next and carried the same vibe. Maybe a little more confidence. He'd already done it once. Experience and dedication where very apparent. By that time he had already been encouraged by Drew Smith, of Burn Burn Burn, to open a few shows and really get those heartbreak anthems out there.

As far as I know, the new split was also a bedroom composition. The lyrics aren't so much about terrible women. He's still frustrated, to be sure. It was the initial listen to this EP that gave me insight into Adam's melancholy approach to acoustic punk. That being the case, the rest of his catalog confirmed what he told me. That he's trying to leave that behind. Be a cry-baby no more.

No matter what you feel about acoustic music, singer-songwriters, or Adam's other projects you should get into his solo stuff. It's different. It's touching. It never, ever, sounds like Bright Eyes. It definitely seems like Adam's number one priority. I'm personally a big fan, because it gives a moving look into a massive talent, keen intellect, and deeply sensitive heart. All the while remaining uncompromising, vicious, and honest.

Friday, April 4, 2014

Fools Rush, What a Bunch of Fucking Professionals

Portland, Oregon based punks, Fools Rush, finished up a Washington tour last week. I caught up with them at the Track House last Sunday. I couldn't believe how great they were. The energy was amazing. There was an edgy, gritty feeling to their entire set. The vocals were melodic and beautiful but heartfelt and on the verge of screams, the guitars were graceful and elegant, but still noisy and aggressive... and OH MY GOD that drummer! It was like mathy pop-punk for a gilded gutter. I had never heard them before, and simply showed up expecting to cover another lack-luster punk show, put on by bands I've seen twenty times. It was an amazingly gob-smacking happenstance. They set up quick, spent minimal time talking, and still managed to look effortless and laid-back. The two seconds between songs were filled with awesome one-liners, that off-set the massive sound perfectly.

After the set, I caught up with these guys hoping to get a little insight into the band and what they were doing at a house show in Olympia. I was pleased to find the members of Fools Rush were warm and comical. Humble and gracious. Something often missing from touring bands. Especially ones with this much command over their demanding material. I found out that Drew Smith of Burn Burn Burn had hooked them up with OPP. Damn, Olympia Pyrate Punx, you always do this. Great bands in town, simply because your organization exists.

I found out that Fools Rush was founded by guitarist/ lead singer, Alden, as an acoustic project. He carried the name through many states, got to Portland, and started up a band. None of those guys are in the band anymore. The current incarnation had played about a dozen shows before this tour, with the drummer having been around a lot longer. They started out in Richland, went up to Seattle, got detained on the Canadian border and weren't allowed in due to a lack of work visas, played (and scored free pizza) in Bellingham two nights in row, and finished up in humble Olympia at the Track House. From what it sounds like, every stop was great. The crowd was always awesome and someone even handed them a Benjamin in Bellingham to get a hotel room. Once again, touring WA proved to be an awesome time to people who had no idea what to expect.

As we parted ways, Fools Rush made sure I had copies all of their CD's (DIY beauties in recycled packaging. One cover was printed on a Mike's Hard Cider box.), a hand screened shirt, hand screened (and I believe hand sewn) beer coozy, and some sick squid stickers. When I got home proudly wearing my new t-shirt, I took a listen and the recordings were every bit as awesome as the live show. Something I'm learning to be extremely surprised by. All of their shit is available for free download on Bandcamp. If you couldn't make any of the dates on this tour, do yourself a favor and go get this stuff ASAP.

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Enemy Combatants - Ignorant Bliss

If you're a fan of Punkcore Records bands like, a Global Threat, or Clit 45; and enjoy the heavy breakdowns of hardcore bands like Backtrack, there's no reason not to love Enemy Combatants. Not unless, adding "fucking" to the middle of  word to ensure the proper amount of syllables will ruin a song for you.

Their Ignorant Bliss EP is straight punk. From the cover art that I can only assume is Rush Limbaugh slamming pain-killers and puffing a huge cigar, to the total run time of ten minutes and two seconds. Looking at the cover, I expected the tracks themselves to come off a lot more lo-fi. Enemy Combatants is a very DIY band, but you might not guess that from the recordings. The guitars are powerfully defined, the vocals are crispy, and the bass is present without sounding like a down-tuned guitar. The drums seem to have fallen prey to a lack of competent mics, however. The snare is kinda dull and low in the mix, but it still carries the band adequately. The most impressive thing is, I can't tell whether the guys practiced eight hours a day for a month prior, did a million takes, had amazing post production, or are just fucking machines. I couldn't find a single weak or misplaced note on the whole thing. I never got that cut-and-paste feeling that comes from heavy post production, either.

These four cuts give a telling cross section of what Enemy Combatants have to offer. From a typical street anthem about uniting and fighting back, to a low, metal-tinged intro on a song depicting the frustration that comes with a stagnant and abusive political system. The title track really stands out as an amalgam of hardcore and street. Tying together expertly delivered vocals, gang choruses, metallic hardcore breakdowns, and intricate guitar leads. The final track is a crowd pleasing sing-along. "Fuck You" isn't eloquent, it's repetitive, and it's everything that got me into punk in the first place. Telling the world that you refuse to conform, be led, or live within a superficial construct of what it means to be a person. Turning the anger that comes from constantly being forced into a position unfitting of a rat, into something positive. A joyful little ditty to get the kids up and moving.

If you're a lyric listener, and expect a certain level of articulate mastery in your verse/ chorus journey, you probably shouldn't bother. These messages weren't meant for you. The points made here are simple, but heartfelt. If you can look past choruses like, "The time is right, so u-fucking-nite," and "Fuck you, That's what we say. We don't need you. Hey! Hey!" or that happens to be what you're into, then the musicianship is really going to be worth your time.

4 out of 5

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

City Bear Designs - Seattle Musician Still Contributes Locally Despite Move to East Coast

Garrett Griebel used to play guitar in Burn Burn Burn. He recently moved to the east coast, but he's still contributing to the local music scene by doing graphic design with his company, City Bear Designs.

Of course, he's done things for Burn x 3, including the cover for their upcoming split with Stabbed in Back. He's also worked with locals like, Silent Oposition, On the Ground, and the Whorewoods. The results of which have all kind of blown me away.

I was recently asking for someone to help me with a logo for Fringe Music, on my personal Facebook. Garrett messaged me and offered to work something up, as he was in between projects. I really didn't know what I was looking for, but I mentioned that, "ferocious animals are cool," and "I like big cats." He came back with the two logos below in less than 48 hours. I may not have known what to ask for, but I definitely got exactly what I wanted. I couldn't stop grinning like an idiot for the rest of the night.

Garrett and I aren't really close friends, but I know him well enough to say that he's a sweetheart, very professional, and damn good at what he does. If you ever find yourself in need of some graphic design work, I'd highly recommend City Bear. Don't just take my word for it, head over to www.facebook.com/citybeardesigns and take a look for yourself.