Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Seattle jazz scene included Jelly Roll Morton for several years in the early part of the century, as well as Vic Meyers, a local performer and nightclub owner who became Lieutenant Governor in 1932. [6] E. Russell "Noodles" Smith, founder of the Dumas Club and the Entertainers Club, was another important name in the Seattle Jazz scene of ...
While the Seattle music scene in the late 1980s and early 1990s in actuality consisted of various styles and genres of music, its representation in the media "served to depict Seattle as a music 'community' in which the focus was upon the ongoing exploration of one musical idiom, namely grunge". [219]
Alice in Chains guitarist Jerry Cantrell is the latest guest on the SPIN Presents Lipps Service podcast..
Liar's Club, pop music band; Lil Mosey, hip hop/trap rapper; Limp Richerds, hardcore punk band; Little Champions, indie rock band; Living Daylights, jazz-jamband trio; Loaded, hard rock band; The Long Winters, indie rock band; Loni Rose, pop music singer-songwriter; Love Battery, grunge band; The Lovemongers, acoustic side project of Ann ...
Climbing to ascendancy (while the Seattle city and police were stomping on the Black music scene). Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic skylarking with Nirvana, 1991. (Credit: Gie Knaeps via Getty Images)
Washington State has had a jazz scene since the early 20th century, primarily centered in Seattle. In the early years, there was an African-American jazz scene on Seattle's Jackson Street, led by the Whangdoodle Entertainers, featuring, amongst others, Frank D. Waldron (trumpet/alto saxophone). Waldron later joined the Odean Jazz Orchestra, one ...
Charles R. Cross, a Seattle-based music journalist who edited the city’s preeminent alt-weekly, the Rocket, and penned bestselling biographies of Kurt Cobain, Jimi Hendrix and other major rock ...
Freakout Festival was founded in 2013 by Seattle musician Guy Keltner (of Acid Tongue), and was originally referred to as The Psychedelic Holiday Freakout. [15] The first edition was held in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Seattle, featuring 39 rock and hip hop artists from around the United States, including Jared James Nichols. [16]