Jump to content

Sounds Outside 2009 August 15


porter_esq

Recommended Posts

Friends & Neighbors:

Monktail Creative Music Concern presents

SOUNDS OUTSIDE

A Celebration of Adventurous Music & Community

Saturday, August 15

Cal Anderson Park, 1635 11th Ave (between E. Denny & E. Pine)

Music 1 - 8 pm

FREE

1:00 Melbatones

2:30 Figeater

4:00 Greg Sinibaldi

5:30 Syncopated Taint Horn Quartet

7:00 Bert Wilson

featuring special between set performances by Jabon

Melbatones

David Milford - violin

Craig Flory - tenor saxophone

Steven Fandrich - piano

John Seman - bass

Mark Ostrowski - drums

Figeater

Beth Fleenor - clarinet, bass clarinet, beth boxing

Paris Hurley - violin

Samantha Boshnack - trumpet

Stephen Fandrich - piano

Jeff Huston - electronics

Stephen Parris - guitar

John Seman - bass

Mark Ostrowski - drums

Greg Sinibaldi

Greg Sinibaldi - tenor

Mark Taylor - alto

Zach Stewart - guitar

Geoff Harper - bass

Byron Vannoy - drums

Syncopated Taint Horn Quartet

Skerik, Craig Flory, Dave Carter and Hans Teuber

Bert Wilson

Bert Wilson - saxophones

Nancy Curtis - flute

Craig Hoyer - piano

Mike Barnett - bass

Greg Campbell - drums

For more information please visit: www.soundsoutside.com

http://www.seattleweekly.com/events/sounds-outside-739302/

Sounds Outside Saturday, August 15 Mark D. Fefer

Players in Seattle’s creative-music scene can most often be heard in two types of venues: austere, low-budget rooms like Gallery 1412, or high-minded, august recital halls like the Good Shepherd Center. That’s why the Sounds Outside festival is such a welcome antidote. For once, you get to enjoy some of Seattle’s most remarkable musicians while stretched out the lawn with a breeze between your toes. And it’s free! This second and final concert of the fest features several players from Monktail, the collective that spearheads the event—including a strange and beautiful trio led by clarinetist Beth Fleenor. Other woodwind innovators on the bill include Greg Sinabaldi, who’ll have a quintet of top Seattle jazz partisans, and the indomitable Skerik, leading a saxophone quartet. The day closes with a 7 p.m. show from Bert Wilson, the wheelchair-riding alto-sax legend from Olympia, who rarely resurfaces, and whose performance at the Bellevue Jazz Festival almost thirty years ago is burned into my memory. If Coltrane’s Live in Seattle was one of the most creatively scary things ever to happen in this city, then Wilson’s show that day was likewise for Bellevue. Frankly, this lineup would be essential listening even if you had to pay money to spend the afternoon in a metal folding chair in an airless cube. The fact that you don’t makes it unmissable. All ages.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...