forYoungModerns

The Official Tumblr for the West Coast Living website, forYoungModerns.com

Representing Seattle, Los Angeles, San Francisco, FYM showcases original artwork, thoughtful well-written feature stories about our favorites in art, music, and culture on the West Coast.

Please Visit our website:

forYoungModerns.com

FYM PRESS PLAY EXCLUSIVE: ARCADE FIRE SITTING ON TOP OF THE WORLD 2011

For Young Moderns senior writer and Los Angeles correspondent Will Sellers braved the streets of Echo Park in Los Angeles overnight this past weekend in order to catch Arcade Fire play a ‘secret’ show. Here’s his story:

There was not much unique about the evening of Thursday February 10. I had known all day that Arcade Fire was in Los Angles prepping for their performances at the Grammys on Sunday and that they were planning a “secret” concert somewhere in LA for Friday night. I also already knew that tickets for this concert would go on sale at three separate locations around LA at noon on Friday. Throughout the day on Thursday, I had been theorizing with friends as to where exactly the tickets would go on sale; my guesses being Amoeba Records in Hollywood, Origami Vinyl in Echo Park, and possibly Rhino Records in Claremont (The Glass House in Pomona near Rhino Records was a leading possible venue for the concert). 

I had happened to be having a few drinks with a friend at a bar (Gold Room) in Echo Park about two blocks away from Origami Vinyl on Thursday night. We parted ways just before 9:00pm and, with the idea that Origami might be a location that could sell Arcade Fire tickets kicking around in my head, I decided to walk over to Origami just to browse records. When I walked up to the store on Sunset, they had just closed shop and locked the door. Literally the instant the doors were locked, I received a text from my friend Cesar stating that Arcade Fire had just dropped huge, blatant hints that Origami would be selling tickets to their secret show at noon the next day (along with Fingerprints Records in Long Beach and The El Rey Theater in Los Angeles). 

Since I was the only person standing in front of Origami Vinyl at the moment Arcade Fire let it be known where tickets would be going on sale, I realized I would be the very first person in line if I chose to stay. I just happened to be at the right place at the right time and knew this was such a huge and rare opportunity and that I should probably stick around for at least a little while to gauge what the situation was going to be. Sure enough, within minutes, Echo Park locals started flocking to Origami’s storefront. People who lived within a few blocks of Origami were there very quickly, some managed to bring a chair, others were prompt to gather a few blankets. 

By 10:15pm or so, approximately twenty to thirty people were already lined up behind me.

(Click on any image to enlarge it)

(The line in front of Origami Vinyl at 10:15pm Thursday)

Some people came alone, others came in groups. Before long, everyone was making new friends, conversing about everything from bands they’ve seen live, bands they’re in, school, Egypt, jobs, anything. There was constant talk regarding theories about the show. Are we all even at the right place? Did Arcade Fire mean Origami Vinyl or Dangerbird Records over in Silverlake? Where would the concert be? The Glass House? The Sex? Or the Ukrainian Cultural Center where Dirty Projectors played a show a while back? (Yes, someone guessed correctly). Whiskey was being passed around and people offered to bring some food and blankets for others. Everyone was in good spirits and bonded quite well.

Due to my light clothing and general unpreparedness, I knew I would have to make a trip home, so it was important that I got friendly with the fellow fans directly around me so I could ask them if I could run home for a bit to put on some heavier clothing and bring blankets and cash and a chair among other things. I got the go-ahead that they would save my spot, and I didn’t tell them that I lived about twenty-five to thirty minutes away and that it would actually be a little while. I raced home across LA, got money, a folding chair, multiple layers of clothes and blankets, a pillow, Keith Richard’s Life, phone charger, water bottles, and even a few guitars. I made it back to Origami at midnight and stayed up until about 3:00am chatting with people and explaining to many concertgoers exiting The Echo next door what we dozens upon dozens of people are camped out for. Journalists from local indie blogs and publications came by just to take pictures and interviews of us on the sidewalk, including famed Los Angeles music writer Kevin Bronson of Buzzbands.la (who gave me a shoutout on his Twitter account, which you can click HERE to read).

Even though I moved my car to the sidewalk next to the line of people trying to sleep, I chose to sleep on the Sunset Blvd sidewalk.

(One night of sleeping on the hard sidewalk reinforced the fact I never want to be homeless)

I, of course, struggled to actually get some sleep in the cold night, probably only getting ninety minutes or so of actual sleep before waking up around 6:00am. Most others were already awake by then, and I was able to watch the sunrise over Chavez Ravine, home of the Los Angeles Dodgers, just beyond Sunset Blvd:

(Sunrise over Sunset)

People were clearly started to get energized and exciting the longer the morning went on. We at the front of the line made trips to Lucy’s Laundromat and Burger King for coffee and restroom purposes. Rumors about the location of that night’s big concert were running wild. People were constantly texting friends who waited all night at the other sale locations to see if they had any new info. On his Twitter, Origami chief Neil Schield said he was surprised and excited that so many people camped out overnight in front of his store. He showed up with boxes of doughnuts for the loyal fans and assured us that the tickets would go on sale right at noon, as promised.

(The front of the line the morning after a cold night)

(The line at Origami not long before noon Friday)

Employees of Origami gathered inside the store roughly an hour before tickets went on sale, presumably doing some last minute organization and doughnut consumption. By 11:30am, word had been essentially confirmed that the concert would take place that night at the Ukrainian Cultural Center in Los Angeles, on Melrose near the 101 Freeway and Vermont. At noon came the moment all us exhausted, temporarily homeless people had been waiting for. The store’s doors opened, and I was one of the very first people to purchase a pair of tickets for this Arcade Fire concert. In an attempt to prevent scalping, there were no hard tickets, but rather names were placed on a list and a photo ID had to be brought to the venue later that night in order to confirm your rightful entry.

(The “ticket”)

Once names were put down on the list, it was back to home for a much-needed meal, shower, and nap. Before I knew it, it was already time to head back out again and go to the Ukrainian Cultural Center on the east side of Los Angeles where, despite the rules stated on the ticket stating no lineups before 7:00pm, people were presumably camped outside of since just past noon. The UCC is an old concert venue hidden around some residential streets that hasn’t hosted many concerts in decades. Despite this, the interior of the building looked like it was a regularly-used concert venue, decorated and lit up perfectly for concert use for any night of the week. 

(Exterior of the Ukrainian Cultural Center)

Once inside the venue, I looked around and gave nods of recognition to some of the people I had waited in line with for about fifteen hours. The friend I took to the concert and I got inside the venue at around 8:30pm and still managed to get a pretty decent spot. People were still trickling in when the band took the stage at 9:00pm sharp amongst a frenzied and incredibly excited crowd of true diehard Arcade Fire fans. 


(Arcade Fire hit the stage)

Arcade Fire completely floored the crowd with their thrilling two-part opener of The Suburbs track “Month of May” flowing right into Funeral classic “Rebellion (Lies)”. Back when I saw them at The Shine in October, Win Butler seemed unsure what Los Angeles thought of his band and seemed to have a kind of beleaguered attitude toward LA. But Friday night, with the assurance that he was playing in front of true fans, Butler seemed extra relaxed, friendlier, and even a bit playful with the crowd. Their set equally favored their already-classic 2004 debut album Funeral and soon-to-be-named Grammy Album of the Year The Suburbs equally, and they did throw in a couple of songs from Neon Bible.

Highlights from the show, just like at any other Arcade Fire show, included the rousing, danceable  Regine Chassagne-fronted numbers “Haiti” and “Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)” (which they ended on), along with the intense “Suburban War” from The Suburbs and Funeral’s stirring opener “Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)”. 

Of course, the biggest sing-a-long moment of the night came when the band played “Wake Up”. It was definitely during the triumphant chorus of the song where I realized how glad I was to have braved the night and score tickets to what could become a legendary concert. I captured that moment on my cell phone:


Lyrics from the concert’s closing song, “Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)”, include “I need the darkness, someone please cut the lights”. So, appropriately, during an extended outro, Win Butler repeatedly yelled at the lighting technician from the stage to cut every single light in the venue as they played. After a long while, the technician finally obliged, and the band literally played in complete darkness (aside from flashes of cameras) for a few minutes to end the show. I also captured a little bit of that magic on video, as well:



(The satisfied, presumably tired masses exiting the venue)

And the whole point of Arcade Fire being in Los Angeles for this show was, of course, them being nominated for Album of the Year, the ceremony’s biggest award. It was miraculous enough that the Grammys, who have notoriously and painfully awarded awful music almost exclusively for decades, even nominated The Suburbs for Album of the Year (against behemoths Lady Gaga, Katy Perry, Eminem, and country music giants Lady Antebellum). So when Barbara Streisand sputtered out the words “The….. Suburbs…” as she read the name of the winning album, it truly felt like a historic, game-changing moment for the music industry as a whole. Hopefully, in hindsight in a few years, this victory for an album that has sold a half million copies will be seen as the start of recognizing truly great music and not as a weird bump in the Grammy’s road of awarding undeserving acts. 

If Arcade Fire winning this award sparks a new era of mainstream acceptance of good music, or just the skyrocketing of Arcade Fire’s career, this tiny little “secret” concert could very well go down in history as the beginning of some kind of great new era. Bands like Arcade Fire come around only once per generation, and camping out overnight to see them at such an intimate venue is something that I would do all over again in a heartbeat.

Check out this humorous video of the clearly shocked and thrilled band as they thank various people moments after closing out the Grammys and stepping off stage: 


— 



FYM SPORTS! SPOTLIGHT: IVY ENVY- SPRING TRAINING, 2011 CHICAGO CUBS BASEBALL


FYM SPORTS! February 17th marks the start of FYM’s 10-day Chicago Cubs Spring Training Countdown. Today FYM is featuring our favorite Chicago Cubs resource: IvyEnvy.com- A tremendously engaging/passionate blog devoted to “Strong Opinions & Marginal Analysis of the Chicago Cubs.”

We recently contacted founder Corey Fineran, who was kind enough to share his insight on IvyEnvy’s quick-witted success. 

FYM: Could you give us a little background on why IvyEnvy.com was started?

Fineran: Ivy Envy is… a Chicago Cubs blog based out of the Quad Cities (Midwest IA/IL). I started the blog because I would talk with my friends that are Cubs fans and felt that there should be somewhere for normal fans to voice their opinions about the team they live and die with daily. 

FYM: Now in the blogging community, devotion and persistence count! How long has the site been around?

Fineran: We are entering the 4th season of blogging, and 3rd season of podcasting about the Cubs. The podcast is a roundtable format during the season with whichever of our writers are available for the podcast, which usually ends up being 3 or 4 of us. During the off-season the main three writers record weekly podcast episodes through Skype. The podcast is available on our website, or it can be downloaded for free in iTunes. 

FYM: Part of enjoying baseball is the people you surround yourself with while watching it. Does IvyEnvy.com ever hold live events?


Fineran: In addition to the blog and podcast, we host live events at Twenty Sports Grille and Nightclub in Moline. We record our podcast live at Twenty twice a season and we do monthly gamewatches. We have our first two events of the season at Twenty scheduled for April 2nd and May 2nd. During our first event, we will have a tailgating game-watch at Twenty. The tailgating theme will consist of games like bags, washers, etc. during the Cubs game. Prior to that, we’ll record our weekly podcast episode. On the evening of May 2nd, we will have a public viewing of the documentary “We Believe.” This documentary was created by the people that did “The United States vs. John Lennon” and focuses on the Cubs and Cubs fans.

FYM: Are you excited about spring training coming up?

Fineran: Yes! What we are most excited about, is our upcoming coverage of Spring Training 2011. We’ll be heading West March 18-25 to cover Spring Training for the very first time. We will have daily blog posts, live Twitter updates during games and podcasts while we are out in Mesa, Arizona. We will also have interviews and other extras for our readers and listeners. We also plan to provide some coverage of the Cubs minor league system with the Peoria Chiefs and the Iowa Cubs during the 2011 season.

FYM: What’s the best part about running this site?

Fineran: For those of us involved with the site, Ivy Envy provides us a great opportunity to express our feelings and emotions about a team that hasn’t won a championship in over a century. When it comes down to it, the blog and podcast are probably a little closer to therapy than we’d like to admit. 


We would like to thank IvyEnvy.com’s founder Corey Fineran for taking the time to sit down with us. And in honor of the upcoming 2011 Chicago Cubs Baseball season we leave you with the anthem Go! Cubs GO:





FYM REWIND: OSCAR MOMENTS & 2011 HOPES


As our Oscar countdown begins for The 83rd Annual Academy Awards, we are reminded of FYM’s favorite Oscar moment in recent years, which also serves as a nice closer to FYM’s Black History Month Celebration.


In 2006, the Memphis Tennessee rap crew Three Six Mafia performed during The 78th Annual Academy Awards, and subsequently, much to their surprise, also won the Best Original Song Oscar for It’s Hard Out Here For A Pimp off the Hustle and Flow film soundtrack! It was a stunning and triumphant moment for hip-hop, forever silencing critics on the validity of the music as a medium.

FYM hopes the Oscars can get it right this year. (If The Grammy’s did it, so can the Academy!) It would be nice to see movies like True Grit or The Fighter get their moment in the sun. We can’t stop listening to the gossip about a particular film (The Social Network) upsetting The King’s Speech for Best Picture. And Really? Toy Story 3 was that good? (to be nominated…)



As heard above, FYM’s greatest hope is to see Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross win for Best Original Score. It would be another triumphant upset outside the mainstream, finally giving Reznor the recognition he deserves, for being one of the most diverse, inspiring sonic visionaries of this modern day. Sound off, and give us your Oscar picks for this year’s 83rd Annual Academy Awards through facebook HERE.


L.A. Senior Writer, W.K. Sellers Oscar Picks: 

Best Picture
Who Will Win: Oscar bait movies are almost always great films. And The King’s Speech is the ultimate Oscar bait, and it shouldn’t be a surprise to hear its name called at the end of the night.

Who Should Win: The King’s Speech is, no doubt, an excellent movie, and would be worth of the top prize this year or any other. But the hyper-modern relevance and flash of The Social Network really needs to be recognized. If the Academy wants to shock everybody and award Best Picture to Black Swan, that would be pretty neat, too.

Best Director
Who Will Win: Se7enFight Club, and Benjamin Button director David Fincher will finally get the recognition he’s long deserved for his dizzying and marvelous work on The Social Network.

Who Should Win: Speaking of dizzying and marvelous, Darren Aronofsky’s incredible work on Black Swan left audiences stunned across the world. This was understated and groundbreaking direction.

Best Actress
Who Will Win: It would be criminal for anyone else to steal Natalie Portman’s Oscar away from her. No one else comes close to her work in Black Swan.

Who Should Win: Natalie Portman will win this one for Black Swan, and definitely deserves it, too.

Best Actor
Who Will Win: One FYM staff writer knows first-hand that Colin Firth extremely realistically nailed what it is like to be a stutterer. Firth absolutely knocked it out of the park in The King’s Speech and will take Best Actor.

Who Should Win: All five leading actors really deserve this one, but Colin Firth definitely put on the best male acting performance of 2010 for The King’s Speech. This is one of those years where you can’t go wrong no matter who you give it to.

Best Supporting Actress
Who Will Win: As matriarch of the Ward family of boxers, Melissa Leo has her sights set on the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for The Fighter.

Who Should Win: Even though her part was definitely more of a leading role, Hailee Steinfeld was a revelation in True Grit, and came out of nowhere to become one of the finest young actors in Hollywood today.

Best Supporting Actor
Who Will Win: Christian Bale has this all but locked up for The Fighter

Who Should Win: Christian Bale once again transforms himself physically for a role and is long overdue for an Oscar. Geoffrey Rush as a quirky speech therapist in The King’s Speech is also very deserving too.

Best Documentary
Who Will Win: Exit Through the Gift Shop may confuse or annoy older members of the Academy, so a safer bet would be the more Oscar-friendly Inside Job.

Who Should Win: For the first time since the heyday of Michael Moore and, um, Al Gore, a documentary is setting the Academy’s world ablaze: Banksy’s brilliant Exit Through the Gift Shop.

Best Original Screenplay
Who Will Win: The King’s Speech’s great yet Oscar-baity screenplay will take Best Original Screenplay this year.

Who Should Win: The spiraling, complex screenplay of Inception by Christopher Nolan is a work of art and deserves this honor.

Best Adapted Screenplay
Who Will Win: The Social Network’s revelatory screenplay by Aaron Sorkin turns a billion dollar story into an Oscar gold winning screenplay.

Who Should Win: The Social Network has one of the most brilliant screenplays of any movie in many years.

Best Original Score
Who Will Win: The Social Network’s dark electronic score might not go over well with more conservative voters. In that case, The King’s Speech will probably take this.

Who Should Win: As stated above, FYM is really pushing for Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross to steal this one for The Social Network.

Best Animated Feature
Who Will Win: Toy Story 3. Duh.

Who Should Win: Toy Story 3. How long until the Academy renames this award “The Pixar Award for Best Animated Feature”?

Cheers,

Oscar Picks Commentary: W.K. Sellers 
Thoughts/Graphic: j. Thomas Codling



FYM PRESS PLAY: OUR CRISP CULL.TV LATE NITE AUTUMN ESCAPADES -VIDEO PLAYLIST


This week FYM is proud to present a crisp new video playlist for the month of October over at the forYoungModerns Channel featured on Cull.TV. Click the image above to check out our Top 20 music videos handpicked for your late night Autumn escapades. We’ve even decided to pepper-in a few of our favorite campy TV commercials and classic movie trailers to give our channel a more authentic viewing sensation. Below we spotlight just a taste of what to expect from our October forYoungModerns Video Playlist: It’s the spirit of indie-pop San Francisco (our sister city) with an early in their career showstopper by Girls Lust for Life.



ABOUT THE PLAYLIST: As a part of the original MTV generation -our hearts remain in the 1980’s with visuals from: Lita Ford, Erasure and Kate Bush. We’ve also dedicated a large portion of our video mix to the latest contemporary wonders -our favorite sonic mainstays on HEAVY ROTATION at FYM HQ with jams from: The Late Great Fitzcarraldos, SBTRKT, Girls and Lana Del Rey. And of course we had to included a few music videos for sheer spectacle like: Frankie Smith (Double Dutch Bus), Mayer Hawthorne (A Long Time) and the PS22 Chorus (performing an incredible cover of Under the Milky Way -by The Church).


The FYM Channel on Cull.TV, gives you all the music we are into: new, old, and just amazing in the form of video playlists (fully equipped with classic commercial interruptions). Click HERE to party! Think 120 minutes for the late-twenties too hip to be square generation. It’s not for everyone, it’s music forYoungModerns. Cheers, FYM



FYM FREE DOWNLOAD: ITUNES ‘TRAILERS’ APP

It’s a forYoungModerns must have App for the iPhone, iPad, or iPod Touch-  FYM recently discovered the iTunes Movie Trialers App while scoping out new films via Apple’s trailer site online. After choosing the FREE App download, we were enlightened on the extent to which this program sorts out what you want- it feels almost endless.

Leave it to Apple to create the most desirable/user-friendly interface to stay up-to-date on all of your favorite upcoming releases (sorry Flixster). Download the iTunes Movie Trialers App HERE. One of the many features we love is the sleek calendar function, which allows users to see when movies are going to hit theaters. 


When you click on a preview for a movie that’s currently out, you’re able to see the closest theater playing the film near you. Once you find the closest theater the iTunes Movie Trialers App features- film format (digital, 3D, standard), showtimes and ticket purchasing options, available from the comfort of your favorite mobile device.


To give more insight and motivation, the top 25 most popular trailers, box office runs, and reviewed movies via rottentomatoes.com are available also. But the sweetest highlight in our book of the iTunes Movie Trialers App -is that you can FAVORITE movies, keeping track of release dates (even 7 months from now). With all this movie talk, FYM’s publicist Nick ‘I just bought a new Google TV’ Codling wanted to drop some knowledge on films he can’t wait to see! Cheers, FYM.



Being Elmo: A Puppeteer’s Journey is a 2011 documentary film directed by Constance Marks about Kevin Clash, the puppeteer behind Elmo, the widely beloved Sesame Street character. Now Playing!



21 Jump Street is an upcoming 2012 action-comedy film based off the TV series of the same name. The film is written by Jonah Hill and directed by Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller. Epected Release- March 16, 2012



The Dark Knight Rises is an upcoming epic that will take place eight years after the events of the previous- The Dark Knight and will introduce the characters of Selina Kyle and Bane—portrayed by Anne Hathaway and Tom Hardy—two villains from the Batman mythology. The film will be the third and final installment in Christopher Nolan’s Batman film series. Expected Release- July 20, 2012



FYM FREE DOWNLOAD: ITUNES ‘TRAILERS’ APP

It’s a forYoungModerns must have App for the iPhone, iPad, or iPod Touch-  FYM recently discovered the iTunes Movie Trialers App while scoping out new films via Apple’s trailer site online. After choosing the FREE App download, we were enlightened on the extent to which this program sorts out what you want- it feels almost endless.

Leave it to Apple to create the most desirable/user-friendly interface to stay up-to-date on all of your favorite upcoming releases (sorry Flixster). Download the iTunes Movie Trialers App HERE. One of the many features we love is the sleek calendar function, which allows users to see when movies are going to hit theaters. 


When you click on a preview for a movie that’s currently out, you’re able to see the closest theater playing the film near you. Once you find the closest theater the iTunes Movie Trialers App features- film format (digital, 3D, standard), showtimes and ticket purchasing options, available from the comfort of your favorite mobile device.


To give more insight and motivation, the top 25 most popular trailers, box office runs, and reviewed movies via rottentomatoes.com are available also. But the sweetest highlight in our book of the iTunes Movie Trialers App -is that you can FAVORITE movies, keeping track of release dates (even 7 months from now). With all this movie talk, FYM’s publicist Nick ‘I just bought a new Google TV’ Codling wanted to drop some knowledge on films he can’t wait to see! Cheers, FYM.



Being Elmo: A Puppeteer’s Journey is a 2011 documentary film directed by Constance Marks about Kevin Clash, the puppeteer behind Elmo, the widely beloved Sesame Street character. Now Playing!



21 Jump Street is an upcoming 2012 action-comedy film based off the TV series of the same name. The film is written by Jonah Hill and directed by Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller. Epected Release- March 16, 2012



The Dark Knight Rises is an upcoming epic that will take place eight years after the events of the previous- The Dark Knight and will introduce the characters of Selina Kyle and Bane—portrayed by Anne Hathaway and Tom Hardy—two villains from the Batman mythology. The film will be the third and final installment in Christopher Nolan’s Batman film series. Expected Release- July 20, 2012



FYM PRESS PLAY: SUCKERS • NEW ALBUM • CANDY SALAD • OUT 4.24.12


In 2010 buzzworthy Brooklyn indie rockers -SUCKERS released a record that at first listen FYM immediately connected with- Wild Smile. The album is a complete artistic statement, filled with soul-crushing sonic magnetism, refreshing approaches to double-edged vocal power and spine-tingling songwriting skills. FYM Seattle continues to keep Wild Smile in our weekly rotation, it never tires of simply being brilliant.


Out of respect to just how much we continue to love Wild Smile- FYM didn’t take writing a review of the SUCKERS follow-up lightly. Thanks to cool publicists we’ve been listening to Candy Salad in various states of consciousness over the past two weeks in order to really explore their latest release- out tomorrow, April 24th 2012.


The opening track -Nowhere is an expansive introduction into the world of Candy Salad. The jam is rich in soaring vocal harmonies, paired with whirling production flourishes (perfect for headphones) creating a digital-lantern lighting the way throughout the rest of our musical journey.

One thing that did standout to us at first listen -Candy Salad contains less raw, wailing falsetto vocal theatrics (which we absolutely loved on Wild Smile). Instead focusing on more reflective slow-burners, ideal for sun-squinting car rides on introspective Sundays.

But there’s still a nice variety of emotions explored throughout. For instance, Track 2 -Figure It Out, delivers a straight forward foot-stomping pop tune. Other album highlights include Turn On The Sunshine -a sexually-charged island rhythm goldmine, Chinese Braille’s soulful falsetto, the maze-like meditation that is Charmaine and Lydia (stay high). As a whole SUCKERS prove once again they have the ability to manifest a complete record worth listening to (over and over again).



This album isn’t better or worse than Wild Smile, instead it sits confidently beside -perhaps a little more stoned and heart-broken this time around, but still surrounded with refreshing music perspectives perfect for summer road-trips and late-night conversations contemplating past mistakes. SUCKERS play live in Seattle at Neumos via Capitol Hill -Sunday May 13th, 2012 -buy tickets HERE. They Live, Cheers FYM.



FYM SEATTLE: EMILY C & GRUNGE ICON TAD • INSTAGRAM PHOTO OF THE WEEK


Today FYM’s Emily C. had the pleasure of hanging with Seattle rock icon TAD (a personal favorite of ours). For those of you not in the know, -TAD was one of the first to be singed to Sub Pop Records in the late 80’s, and is regarded as one of the pioneers of ‘grunge’ -look his ruthless jams up (and watch Wood Goblins below).



Emily C. designed his wife’s wedding ring, and we are stoked she asked to get a photo with him as an archive. Which makes this shot our Instagram photo of the week. Cheers, FYM.



FYM: ‘SUMMER NIGHTS’ SPOTIFY PLAYLIST

It’s music for Young Moderns. This week FYM launches a weekly Spotify playlist feature, to deliver some insight as to what we actually listen to in Seattle, San Francisco and Los Angeles. This weeks playlist is a theme titled ‘FYM SUMMER NIGHTS’ -curated by our Art Director J Thomas Codling. It’s a mix of midnight mood-setters, ideal for closing-time, and late-night conversations amongst friends and lovers. Listen to our Art Director’s picks here: FYM SUMMER NIGHTS

TRACK LISTING:
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds: Red Right Hand
Violent Femmes: Out The Window
Depeche Mode: But Not Tonight
The Suzan: Devils
College & Electric Youth: A Real Hero
Beirut: Vagabond
Francoise Hardy: La rue des coeurs perdus
Destroyer: Savage Night At The Opera
Coconut Records: Bored To Death
David Bowie: A New Career in a New Town
Soft Black: I Am An Animal 
Paleo: Holly Would 
Sleep With All Your Friends: I Drink, I Fight
Dennis Wilson: River Song
Cheap Freaks: Naked In The Sun
Dominant Legs: Take A Bow
Del Shannon: Runaway
The Coasters: Down In Mexico
Dion and the Belmonts: Runaround Sue
Macklemore: The Town
Mother Love Bone: Chole Dancer/Crown of Thorns 



FYM ON THE LIST: OUTSIDE LANDS DAY 2


Massive crowds overtook day two at Outside Lands 2012. Luckily Golden Gate Park is an expansive setting to navigate, lending a mildly comfortable journey from stage to stage on foot.


San Francisco-based Thee Oh Sees dominated a foggy afternoon at the park, with their energetic brand of garage rock psychedelia. Frontman John Dwyer’s howling vocals paired with up-tempo spazz-out jams like The Dream, create a commanding presence live.


Passion Pit’s leading man Michael Angelakos may have canceled a string of shows this year due to battling depression and bi-polar disorder, but on day two of Outside Lands his performance was aces. New tracks from Passion Pitt’s July release Gossamer, went over extremely well with the Twin Peaks stage audience.


The coolest thing FYM saw all day, was the photo taken above. While Passion Pitt rocked out their foot-stomping keyboard electro prowess, fans hoisted a man in a wheelchair up to see better. Possibly the greatest crowd surfing scenario we’ve ever witnessed.


Dr. Dog’s roots-driven sonic eccentricity, is astounding to see LIVE. Their latest record Be The Void (Anti-Records), is an album of the year contender in our book. Dr. Dog continue to tour the U.S. through November, click HERE for tour dates.


Metallica closed out FYM’s day two at Outside Lands. It was everything you would expect: pyrotechnics, juiced-up metal, circle pits, and a whole lot of negative energy. But that’s what is great about going to festivals, sometimes you get to see bands perform live, that you wouldn’t dare pay to see solo. Cheers, FYM.

OUTSIDE LANDS BONUS PHOTOS: