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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Interview on Hollow Earth!


I'm still recovering from King Khan and his Shrines soul revival in Portland Monday night. If you're still recovering from having to drive down to Portland to see the bands that Sasquatch thieved from Seattle, have I got an activity for you! Hollow Earth's DJ Rachel invited me to her show last week for an interview, and to play some music I've been listening to and have coming out in on the Highfives and Handshakes imprint soon. At 5 o'clock today the show will replay, you'll have the chance to listen to us chat, fumble, and myself go on about bands and refuse to shit talk on air.

Listen online from 5-7pm today at Hollow Earth Radio Dot Com . Remember, get in the van.

Monday, May 18, 2009

DJ Pete Highfive Tonight!


I will be DJing tonight at Linda's on Capitol Hill (707 E. Pine, Pine x Bolyston). Set starts around 9pm and goes until they make me leave. Lelah Taco and or the mighty mighty Chris Totten will be assisting my still broken ass flip vinyl, press buttons, and cut my steak. Expect local hits, trashy punk pop, classic rock, quarter bin singles, and maybe some dancehall beatz. We'll take requests, but no promises.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

No Age Perform Original Music For SIFF


Since becoming mildly involved as a seasonal staffer at the Seattle International Film Festival three years ago, SIFF has never ceased to lure me back. The Festival, its wide range of attendees a, diverse assortment of local to international quirky film buffs; and surprising programming choices that oft bring unexpected delight. Among the delighted, LAs No Age who's been all over the fucking place this year after their 2008 release of Nouns on Sub Pop, will be performing original music to The Bear, a french film from 1989 with english subtitles. This is what SIFF has to say:

When a rockslide kills a mother bear, her cub Douce becomes an orphan in the threatening Canadian Rockies. Luckily, she encounters Bart, a full-grown male bear on the run from hunters after mauling their pack animals. Though the ill-tempered Bart initially rejects Douce’s companionship, the cub wins his affection by licking Bart’s gunshot wounds. Psychedelic mushroom trips and a rendezvous with Doc (the effeminate male bear who plays Bart’s love interest) are woodland fun at its finest, but the invasive fear of being hunted drives The Bear forward. Staged with trained bears and filmed in the Italian Dolomites, Jean-Jacques Annaud’s film seems like realism in drag as documentary.

This event is at the Triple Door in downtown Seattle, its 21+ and will run you a worthy $20. Happens on June 12th and there are two showings, at 7pm and 9:30pm.