Jason Traeger
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Anyone who knows me knows I've never been one to revel in the past. I'm the last one to cast a misty-eyed glance back at the "good old days". In my experience the people who take this angle are usually the ones who weren't there. Whatever mistakes, false starts and missed opportunities I've had the pleasure of having, I was wherever I was for better or worse.

This blog is not meant to romanticize any choices I made or any particular era. It's simply a place where I share stories and take stock of where I've been as a way to figure out where I might want to go next. I'll celebrate some people along the way, some of them you'll know or know of, others will be new to you. I'm glad to have known every one of them.

The posts are in no thematic or chronological order. The date at the end of the post's title refers to how the content of the post relates to me personally. I make no claim about the accuracy of my recollections I only promise that I'll be as honest and accurate as I can be. If you were there and you remember things differently than I do, or you find evidence that contradicts my memory (I wouldn't be surprised or upset) feel free to let me know.

Rather than editing the posts for historical accuracy, I'll put ( * ) next to any parts that have been challenged or updated for that reason.


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June 13, 2012
SAFEWAY CLUB CARD PHOTOBOOTH PHOTOS   OLYMPIA 1990’S
I am a card carrying member of the club are you? If you’re not hip to the scene, just go down to your local Safeway and sign up, it feels good to be a part of something bigger than yourself and the it feels great to save money every time you shop!
This is my first Safeway Club Card. I’ll never forget the day I got it…actually I have no idea when I got it. In fact all I remember about the card is that I resisted getting it through a few purchases at Safeway because it felt ridiculous and demeaning. I felt like I was being coerced to jump through a silly hoop by a huge corporation dangling the Pavlovian promise of “savings” in front of my face. Savings I could only get if I got the harmless little card.
I could almost hear the genial spokesvoice over the P.A.:
“Dear valued shopper, you don’t have to get the card or anything. No one is forcing you to get the card. If you really don’t want the card for some reason (we can’t imagine why) all you have to do is pay a little more for the things you’re buying today or go shop somewhere else, but why would you want to do that when you could simply join the club and get a nice new attractive card for your wallet? Won’t you join the club and be a part of our family of savings?”
Okay, okay. Lemme have the card. I don’t know what the card does. I don’t know what it’s for. I don’t know how it is that stores could survive for centuries without the card, but WTF, I’m here now, buying this salsa and I want to save a dollar so I’ll take the card. 
Fast forward 15 years…
I shopped at Safeway yesterday, as I do occasionally, and I used my current Club Card to save $3.33 which was 12% of the cost of my total purchase. Imagine how much I’ve saved since getting my first Club Card back in the 1990’s! I’ve probably saved enough to buy a plane ticket to an exotic vacation destination. All because I took the leap and joined the club. Thank you Safeway!
Speaking of clubs, there once was a club in Olympia called the North Shore Surf Club where bands used to play. I saw a couple shows there when it was the NSSC but its heyday was before my time in Olympia. I saw more shows in the room when it was called Thekla.  I won’t go on too much about the venue because I’m not especially qualified to, I’ll just say it hosted tons of great bands over the years. Bands like Black Flag(*), Nirvana, The White Stripes, Beat Happening, Bikini Kill, Bad Brains, on and on.
My most vivid memories of the place are not of shows at all but rather they’re of the ordinary weeknights when the place was just a bar where different friends of mine and I would hang out and have a good time. Thekla was home to a really fun Karaoke night. Jared Warren of KARP, The Whip, Big Business, The Melvins fame was sometimes the KJ for those nights. Was Kathleen Hanna a KJ there too? My memories are a little foggy. Who worked there? Did Brian Boswell? Vern Rumsey comes to mind (*). Why am I asking you?
The Karaoke scene was a blast. I remember Chris Smith from KARP doing his spot-on Brian Johnson on “You Shook Me All Night Long”, then there was that one guy who always did “Friends in Low Places” by Garth Brooks, I myself pretty much always did, and still do, Journey or GnR. I remember one time when Ad-Rock was in town, he got up and did “U Can’t Touch This” by M.C. Hammer. As he stumbled through the track I was standing next to a hippie fella who turned his open-mouthed gaze from the stage to a friend standing beside him and said “That dude sounds like the guy from the Beastie Boys” It was true, in fact he sounded exactly like him. 
Thekla was home to another import from Japan as well: one of those new-fangled digital photobooths with the silly caption and border options. This is the place in the story where the the Safeway Club and local night club meet because I used my Club Card as a wallet gallery of my friend’s sticker portraits.
Looking at the card today I see a nice little snapshot of the time as I knew it. This snapshot has a particular poignance because Scott Jernigan (top center) isn’t here to read this post and make a funny comment about his funny face. To say Scott was one of the most talented (really talented as in world class, drum-hero drummer), sweetest, and funniest people I’ve known still feels like I’m selling the guy short somehow. I guess it’s the past tense phrasing that gets me: he’s gone but on the other hand, he isn’t really gone at all.
Maybe it’s the Facebook effect, where everyone we’ve ever known seems to be out there somewhere doing their thing or maybe it’s just that his energy is too near and vital to the many people who love him, myself included. It just doesn’t feel appropriate to use the past tense when talking about him so I won’t. It’s not a cliche, it’s a fact that Scott lives on in all the people who love him and hold his memory and his music dear.
I’ll leave it to you to figure out who else is who on the card (consult the tags for the answer key). I’ll close by saying that that happy looking, attractive couple in the bottom right hand corner, Casey Lynn McKee and Noah Herlocker, are now married and have two of the coolest, funniest kids ever. Those kids are almost as funny as Scott Jernigan!
I don’t mean to sound glib about it, it’s just that as you get older and you say goodbye to more members of your family it is very heartening to meet fresh new additions to the human family that have a spark that makes you believe there is hope for us all in this crazy crap-shoot.
 Hakuna matata, that beat up old circle of life bounces along.
*Sarah Utter says: “Jared was the KJ at the ‘new thekla’ and Kathleen was the KJ at the original. good times. employees were Brian Boswell, Vern Rumsey, Mike Elvin, Jennifer Hukee, myself (new thekla) and countless other weirdo punks. Joe Preston checked id’s for a while!”
*Tobi Vail says: “Before it was the North Shore Surf Club it was just The Surf Club a teen disco for 80’s new wave kids. Their 80’s night was weird because they often played the same songs as they did in the 80’s to the same audience who were in their 30’s. Black Flag played The Tropicana not Surf Club!
A very surreal moment for me was watching Alec Mackaye dance to Styx Mr Roboto at Thekla’s 80’s night in 1996 after Berzerk covered Minor Threat opening for the Warmers in the building where the Trop used to be….which is called Jake’s now…I can’t’ remember what it used to be called though?”
R.I.P. and hilarity Scott Jernigan.
(Safeway Club Card from my personal archives)

SAFEWAY CLUB CARD PHOTOBOOTH PHOTOS   OLYMPIA 1990’S

I am a card carrying member of the club are you? If you’re not hip to the scene, just go down to your local Safeway and sign up, it feels good to be a part of something bigger than yourself and the it feels great to save money every time you shop!

This is my first Safeway Club Card. I’ll never forget the day I got it…actually I have no idea when I got it. In fact all I remember about the card is that I resisted getting it through a few purchases at Safeway because it felt ridiculous and demeaning. I felt like I was being coerced to jump through a silly hoop by a huge corporation dangling the Pavlovian promise of “savings” in front of my face. Savings I could only get if I got the harmless little card.

I could almost hear the genial spokesvoice over the P.A.:

“Dear valued shopper, you don’t have to get the card or anything. No one is forcing you to get the card. If you really don’t want the card for some reason (we can’t imagine why) all you have to do is pay a little more for the things you’re buying today or go shop somewhere else, but why would you want to do that when you could simply join the club and get a nice new attractive card for your wallet? Won’t you join the club and be a part of our family of savings?”

Okay, okay. Lemme have the card. I don’t know what the card does. I don’t know what it’s for. I don’t know how it is that stores could survive for centuries without the card, but WTF, I’m here now, buying this salsa and I want to save a dollar so I’ll take the card. 

Fast forward 15 years…

I shopped at Safeway yesterday, as I do occasionally, and I used my current Club Card to save $3.33 which was 12% of the cost of my total purchase. Imagine how much I’ve saved since getting my first Club Card back in the 1990’s! I’ve probably saved enough to buy a plane ticket to an exotic vacation destination. All because I took the leap and joined the club. Thank you Safeway!

Speaking of clubs, there once was a club in Olympia called the North Shore Surf Club where bands used to play. I saw a couple shows there when it was the NSSC but its heyday was before my time in Olympia. I saw more shows in the room when it was called Thekla.  I won’t go on too much about the venue because I’m not especially qualified to, I’ll just say it hosted tons of great bands over the years. Bands like Black Flag(*), Nirvana, The White Stripes, Beat Happening, Bikini Kill, Bad Brains, on and on.

My most vivid memories of the place are not of shows at all but rather they’re of the ordinary weeknights when the place was just a bar where different friends of mine and I would hang out and have a good time. Thekla was home to a really fun Karaoke night. Jared Warren of KARP, The Whip, Big Business, The Melvins fame was sometimes the KJ for those nights. Was Kathleen Hanna a KJ there too? My memories are a little foggy. Who worked there? Did Brian Boswell? Vern Rumsey comes to mind (*). Why am I asking you?

The Karaoke scene was a blast. I remember Chris Smith from KARP doing his spot-on Brian Johnson on “You Shook Me All Night Long”, then there was that one guy who always did “Friends in Low Places” by Garth Brooks, I myself pretty much always did, and still do, Journey or GnR. I remember one time when Ad-Rock was in town, he got up and did “U Can’t Touch This” by M.C. Hammer. As he stumbled through the track I was standing next to a hippie fella who turned his open-mouthed gaze from the stage to a friend standing beside him and said “That dude sounds like the guy from the Beastie Boys” It was true, in fact he sounded exactly like him. 

Thekla was home to another import from Japan as well: one of those new-fangled digital photobooths with the silly caption and border options. This is the place in the story where the the Safeway Club and local night club meet because I used my Club Card as a wallet gallery of my friend’s sticker portraits.

Looking at the card today I see a nice little snapshot of the time as I knew it. This snapshot has a particular poignance because Scott Jernigan (top center) isn’t here to read this post and make a funny comment about his funny face. To say Scott was one of the most talented (really talented as in world class, drum-hero drummer), sweetest, and funniest people I’ve known still feels like I’m selling the guy short somehow. I guess it’s the past tense phrasing that gets me: he’s gone but on the other hand, he isn’t really gone at all.

Maybe it’s the Facebook effect, where everyone we’ve ever known seems to be out there somewhere doing their thing or maybe it’s just that his energy is too near and vital to the many people who love him, myself included. It just doesn’t feel appropriate to use the past tense when talking about him so I won’t. It’s not a cliche, it’s a fact that Scott lives on in all the people who love him and hold his memory and his music dear.

I’ll leave it to you to figure out who else is who on the card (consult the tags for the answer key). I’ll close by saying that that happy looking, attractive couple in the bottom right hand corner, Casey Lynn McKee and Noah Herlocker, are now married and have two of the coolest, funniest kids ever. Those kids are almost as funny as Scott Jernigan!

I don’t mean to sound glib about it, it’s just that as you get older and you say goodbye to more members of your family it is very heartening to meet fresh new additions to the human family that have a spark that makes you believe there is hope for us all in this crazy crap-shoot.

Hakuna matata, that beat up old circle of life bounces along.

*Sarah Utter says: “Jared was the KJ at the ‘new thekla’ and Kathleen was the KJ at the original. good times. employees were Brian Boswell, Vern Rumsey, Mike Elvin, Jennifer Hukee, myself (new thekla) and countless other weirdo punks. Joe Preston checked id’s for a while!”

*Tobi Vail says: “Before it was the North Shore Surf Club it was just The Surf Club a teen disco for 80’s new wave kids. Their 80’s night was weird because they often played the same songs as they did in the 80’s to the same audience who were in their 30’s. Black Flag played The Tropicana not Surf Club!

A very surreal moment for me was watching Alec Mackaye dance to Styx Mr Roboto at Thekla’s 80’s night in 1996 after Berzerk covered Minor Threat opening for the Warmers in the building where the Trop used to be….which is called Jake’s now…I can’t’ remember what it used to be called though?”

R.I.P. and hilarity Scott Jernigan.

(Safeway Club Card from my personal archives)

11:33am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zl8DhvNKADug
(Notes: 10)
  
Filed under: ad rock beastie boys brian boswell carrie brownstein casey mckee chris smith corin tucker digital photobooth enemymine jenny rose karp kathleen hanna laura and gretchen melvins nirvana noah herlocker northshore surf club olympia pete chramiec photobooth ryan baldoz safeway sara lund sarah utter scott jernigan sleater kinney thekla unwound ursala verbal assault 
May 1, 2012

PUNK IS AN ATTITUDE  THE WRECKS  BESSIE OAKLEY  RENO 1984

I don’t have a clue what goes on behind the scenes of incarnate reality aside from what I’ve gleaned from the countless glimpses behind the veil  I’ve secured through close encounters of the trippy kind with minor to massive doses of psychedelic substances over the years. These psycho-spiritual excursions may have provided me with some very useful modeling of the post death/pre-birth state but they sure didn’t leave anything resembling a neat little cosmic answer tied up with string on my doorstep!

I’m compelled then by observation and experience to take a rather agnostic view of the realms beyond. It seems like the only sensible position to take, after all, if these bardos were well understood they wouldn’t be the realms beyond. Instead they’d be a Subway Sandwich location or something. My position on these matters means I can’t honestly say I believe in reincarnation, but I’m also able to say I don’t not believe in it either. 

That said, there are certain people I’ve known who, without my even immediately recognizing it, are subtly related in my mind with another semi-specific place and time. My old friend Bessie Oakley is one of those people. As long as I’ve known her I’ve always associated her presence with that of a frontier woman of The Old West.

If you knew her you’d agree it wouldn’t take a great leap of imagination to see why I made that connection. It’s not rooted in bunch of metaphysical b.s. that’s for sure. Heck, all you have to do is say her name out loud…(   )…. If that isn’t the name of a heroine from the out of cowboy days dag blammit, I’ll eat mah hat!

It also doesn’t hurt that Bessie’s from Reno, NV. (or was it Sparks that she grew up in?) Not to mention her look. She is very beautiful but not in a overly delicate or super girly way. Even though I knew her well as a young lady there was a flinty edge to her appearance and demeanor that gave her good-natured summery glow a formidable quality.

She wasn’t too tall, she wasn’t too small, she had a frame that would’ve served her well splitting a cord of wood or tearing up the dance floor in town at the saloon. If she wore make-up at all she never wore much of it. When she thought hard about something her clear blue eyes would get squinty and I could just picture her surveying a stranger riding up on his horse toward the porch of her homestead from across a sun bitten prairie.

Her personal style did nothing to place her squarely in the times we lived through together as friends either. All through the Punk/Hardcore days she wore her blonde hair down past her shoulders and often in braids. She wore denim, long skirts and sensible shoes and with only a minor tweak here and there she could’ve strolled onto the set of a Western movie and straight into the camera’s eye without anyone having to shout “cut!”

Her personality was right at home in her person too. She was and still is funny as hell with a sense of humor that reflected her love of John Waters and which could make even the guys blush. She is tender hearted and warm but she didn’t take any sh-t from creeps. I always knew her to be patient and very open minded but she didn’t put up with nonsense or suffer fools gladly.

She also happens to be the very definition of a maverick pioneer, if not in terms of settling the land and breaking ponies, then at least culturally speaking. She and her all-girl Hardcore band The Wrecks were matter-of-fact Riot Grrrl before the first people to call themselves “Riot Grrrls” were out of grade school! I might be forgetting one but I can’t think of another all-girl, or even girl-centric band, in that early American Hardcore era. 

The Wrecks were a not-at-all-distant memory by the time I met Bessie in 1984 and soon afterwards, another Wreck, Jone Stebbins, who immediately became one of my dear friends as well. Bessie and Jone weren’t only known for being Wrecks either. They were equally well regarded and probably just as well known for their work as the co-editors of one of the most engaging and well loved fanzines of the time, a brilliant,  funny, and charming off-the-cuff serial work of art known as Paranoia ”the magazine for blind and illiterate punks”.

As fate would have it, a few years later in San Francisco I came to be friends with the band’s drummer Lynn Perko. She and I even played music together a few times when her band Sister Double Happiness was on a hiatus. I sucked, she was great, our jams didn’t leave the practice place. I was an acquaintance of The Wrecks’ singer Helen in S.F. as well. At the time I knew her she was working at the old Hard Rock Cafe location over on Van Ness and we’d all hang out together with the likes of Gary Floyd, Debbie Gordon, Phillip Gilbeau, Roddy Bottum and that whole Texas/S.F. Dicks/ Faith No More /later to become Imperial Teen scene. 

Even though most Punks, myself included, only got to experience The Wrecks’ music from their legendary cassette releases, I also had the good fortune of feeling the impact of their energy in my life as personal friends. It has to be said though that you didn’t have to know them personally or even know their songs to be touched by their influence. The fact is, if you were involved in the American Punk scene in that era you likely were affected by them whether you knew it or not.

I say this because they were hugely important individuals in the compact but very vital and widely influential Reno punk scene, a scene known by its nickname Skeeno. That city’s motto the “Biggest Little City in the World”  could’ve very accurately been applied to its Punk scene alter ego as well in terms of the disproportionate size of its footprint on the national scene. All the touring bands played Reno back then. For instance if you lived there you probably saw Minor Threat, I lived in the much bigger city of Seattle and  never had the chance to see them live.

Of course Reno didn’t just import the great bands they exported some too. By far the most well known of these exports is the mighty 7SECONDS. If you follow my blog you know I was great friends with 7 SECONDS (who I met through Bessie) and that as a teenager I had the life-altering experience of seeing the country as a roadie for the band. I also shared a place with Kevin, his girlfriend Angie, and some other folks in Reno for a while around the time of that tour.

When I said earlier that you didn’t have to know The Wrecks or have even heard them to be touched by their broader influence, I’m thinking primarily about how their presence was felt nationally through the gender inclusive, proto Punk Rock-feminist message woven into 7 SECONDS’ songs and aura. It may seem strange that in a politically radical scene like American Hardcore there were very few bands singing about gender equality but it’s true.

7 SECONDS weren’t just any band either. They were one of the most popular bands around and they toured a lot. Everywhere they went they made a point to address women’s and girl-centered issues head on from the stage. Kevin’s lyrics also spoke specifically about defending and promoting women’s roles and rights in Punk Scene itself.

Like I said, this was a very rare message to hear before 7 SECONDS but it was more common after they delivered it to the scene. So it was no small thing. I knew a lot of girls and guys, myself included, who deeply appreciated this strong pro-woman perspective being voiced in the very dude-centric, too often very macho wilderness of the scene at that time.

I’ve read many interviews, and I’ve heard Kevin talk on stage very clearly about how his gender inclusive perspective was influenced by the big role women played in the Reno scene. Bessie and Jone, The Wrecks, he and his brother Steve Youth’s sister Cari and other women helped shaped that scene into the special one it was. It should also be noted that the 7 SECONDS brothers were raised by a strong mother who was known to the scene, and thanked on every one of the band’s releases, as Ma Seconds.

That’s what I mean about the ripple effect Bessie, Jone, Lynn and Helen’s music has had and continues to have on the world. It’s also worth mentioning that I was urged several times to write this post by a woman who herself has long been a prolific and inspirational progenitor of The Wrecks’ motto “Punk is an Attitude”, none other than Bikini Kill/Jigsaw/3rd wave feminist icon, artist, and activist Tobi Vail. 

So all you Tumblring teenage Riot Grrrls out there who have had your lives changed by  Kathleen and Tobi’s shouts, wails, singing, playing, pounding and professing, you might want to Google ”Wrecks Reno Punk” sometime. You’ll be glad you did.

I’ll close on a personal note…

I can say this now over 25 years after the fact without a hint of embarrassment because it wasn’t a secret then, it’s no secret now, and it only shows what exceptionally good taste I have, and had in human beings even as a young Punk.

Bessie Oakley was my first true love. I hoped then that I wasn’t shooting too far out of my league as a 15 year old in my feelings for her, even if I was I couldn’t help it! My love for Bessie transcended the realm of being a mere crush on some older, unapproachable, scene queen that I could only admire from afar. Yes, she was and will always be, a total Punk Rock hero of mine but she was also one of my closest, most beloved friends and she was someone I (and half the guys in the scene, I’d imagine) simply adored. Like so many other people, I still adore her to this day! 

…and I love Jone, Kev, Lynn, Steve, Troy, and all those Reno people who meant so much to me and taught me so many good things about life. Thanks guys!

I’d like to dedicate this post to all of you and to Tobi Vail.

R.I.P. Phillip Gilbeau.

The Wrecks, Bessie Oakley and Jone Stebbins photos by Cari L. Marvelli. Birthday collage made for me from Bessie Oakley (featuring Tim Yohannon, Jone, Silvio from Italy, Barry from Christ on Parade, Martin Sprouse and many more) from my personal archives. Thanks to Cari L. Marvelli.


2:44pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zl8DhvKiBY6h
(Notes: 10)
  
Filed under: 7 seconds bessie oakley bikini kill blondies pizza christ on parade faith no more gary floyd hardcore imperial teen jone stebbins kathleen hanna kevin seconds lynn perko truell minor threat paranoia phillip gilbeau psychdelics punk reno roddy bottum sister double happiness skeeno steve youth the dicks the wrecks tim yohannon tobi vail riot grrrl angie whitworth troy mowatt 
April 13, 2012

SOUTH CAPITOL PLAYERS  X-MAS: THE MUSICAL  OLYMPIA 1990’s

Today I was listening to an interview with Carrie Brownstein on Marc Maron’s wonderful WTF Podcast. When Maron asked her about her experiences in acting and comedy prior to her work on Portlandia she mentioned a few high school classes and summer camp productions she was a part of before picking up the guitar but she failed to mention her first  (very) semi-professional comedic acting experience after she started rocking. That would be her time as a member of The South Capitol Players in Olympia in the 90’s.

WTF indeed!

Her time with the SCP’s may have simply slipped her mind or it could be that she was hoping to forget the image of herself dressed as the quintessential suburban holiday housewife the night the troupe staged X-Mas:The Musical at the Midnight Sun in downtown Olympia. I personally thought she looked amazing and hilarious with her bob haircut, stirrup pants, patent leather shoes and applique Christmas sweatshirt. A comedic star was born!

The South Capitol Players troupe was the brainchild of Lois Maffeo, Star Seifert, Calvin Johnson , Carrie, and myself. We’d have additional actors from the community join us to round out the cast here and there. On this particular production we were joined by our friends Steve Dore, Brian Boswell, Pete Chramiec, Sarah Dougher, and Pat Castaldo. 

I can’t recall exactly how the troupe came to be or even how many shows we did as the SCP’s. I wouldn’t be surprised if Lois was the ringleader of the whole thing as she always had a special ability to wrangle together the elements that needed wrangling in order to make good things happen in town at that time.

It’s worth noting that these kinds of D.I.Y comedy, musicals, and performance art events were not an uncommon part of the scene back then. Though that era in Olympia is defined in many people’s minds by the music it produced and exported to the world, I think the thing that made that place and time so vital was that it was such a well-rounded creative community that produced and nurtured all sorts of creative modes and producers.

It was not unusual in that era to see a performance art experience by Miranda July one week, a Riot Grrrl-centric show with bands, political ranters, and poetry readings the next, followed by a film festival, a punk-rock triple bill, or a sketch comedy show by The South Capitol Players! Looking back I feel like these sorts of community made events might have reached an apex with the ultra-realized, futuristic, gender f-cked, out-queer, heavy-metal punk-rock musical blow-out The Transfused written by Nomy Lamm, starring The Need and a cast far too big to name. When The Transfused hit the stage at The Capitol Theater in front of a packed house everyone knew they were seeing something really special produced by a scene that was really special. It was mind-blowing!

(Where’s the Wikipedia for The Transfused? Maybe it’ll be my first foray into writing one!?)

We may not have been the apex of anything, but oh well… back to The South Capitol Players…

Judging by the program I’d say we did at least three productions, maybe more. I do recall putting on a sketch show one time upstairs at the Capitol Theater that was quite amusing. At that show I did a heavy metal clinic as guitar god Lazer St. Germain where I taught the audience the “funda-metals” of playing histrionic solos while Sean Kelly made my guitar sounds with mouth noises into a mic from offstage.

I remember that among the thirty or so people there that night was Ad-Rock from The Beasties who was in town visiting his then girlfriend, now wife Kathleen Hanna. I probably only remember that detail because, well…he’s Ad-Rock from The Beasties for f’s sake…

…and because he was cracking up hard at the South Capitol Players.

South Capitol Players Present X-Mas: The Musical Program from my personal archives.


(Source: jasonotraeger)

8:49pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zl8DhvJdanRX
(Notes: 15)
  
Filed under: south capitol players carrie brownstein lois maffeo calvin johnson buy olympia sean kelly ad-rock the transfused nomy lamm the need miranda july olympia marc maron portlandia star seifert steve dore riot grrl kathleen hanna 
March 26, 2012
BIKINI KILL SLEATER-KINNEY WESTERN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY BELLINGHAM 1997
This boring looking little thing is a backstage pass sticker from a show that wasn’t boring at all because that evening in Bellingham the stage was shared by two of the most dynamic, important, and rocking bands of that era: the equally mighty Bikini Kill and Sleater-Kinney.
 I have no idea if I got the year of this show right but it’s probably not off by much.
At the risk of coming off as a bit full-of-it, I’m going to say this show might represent a notable turning point in the Riot Grrrl movement and by extrapolation maybe even of Third Wave Feminism generally. I will now defend this thesis.
This show took place in a good-sized, if character-free, box of room on the WSU campus and came at a time toward the end of Bikini Kill’s run as the premier standard bearer of the Riot Grrrl (two “r” ‘s or three…I always forget.) movement. They were the vanguard at the forefront who were essential in elbowing, scraping, and carving out a space for the Riot Grrrl tree to take root and blossom. They not only did this in the sometimes conservative (sounds strange but it’s true), often macho punk scene but in the definitely conservative, regressive, paternalistic culture at large.
This moment also happened to be the point that Sleater-Kinney’s ascendency within  that movement was picking up some serious steam. In the next few years they would chug their way no less deeply but also more widely into the popular culture’s consciousness as a critically lauded and wildly successful rock band. As they did so they would carry with them the same fire, passion, and meaning associated with Bikini Kill and their own lesser known previous incarnations that were integral with Riot Grrl’s development and promulgation as well Heavens to Betsy and Excuse 17.
This is why I believe this show could be seen as a place where the torch was being passed between these two brilliant revolutionary sets of hands. There is a distinct possibility I’m full of sh-t though.
If you follow my blog you know I lived in Olympia in the 90’s and was friends with S-K. I was also friends with BK but to a lesser degree. I admired the hell out of all these women (and Billy!) and I’ll write later about what Riot Grrrl meant to me and about the time and place I encountered the movement in a future post.
I’ll conclude this post by saying, and this IS bragging I’m very comfortable with admitting: I sang on stage with Bikini Kill at this show! Actually I flubbed the words to Reject All-American, jumped around, made fool of myself and that was about it, but still…
That detail of the story doesn’t change the FACT that backstage before the show Kathleen invited me (ME  I tell ya!)to sing with Bikini Kill at the very show upon which, as I have proposed in this post, the wheels of history were spinning new myths and attitudes for future generations of human beings to embrace in their pursuit of sexual, political and SPIRITUAL LIBERATION and I did sing! 
…whew. Glad I got that off my chest.
Of all the many stupid-dumb-lucky places (and just plain dumb places) I’ve found myself on this crazy journey that is my life, this one place and time I just shared with you is a particularly bright feather in my cap and it is one I will treasure and wear proudly until my dying day. Thanks Kathleen!!!
Backstage pass from my personal archives.

BIKINI KILL SLEATER-KINNEY WESTERN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY BELLINGHAM 1997

This boring looking little thing is a backstage pass sticker from a show that wasn’t boring at all because that evening in Bellingham the stage was shared by two of the most dynamic, important, and rocking bands of that era: the equally mighty Bikini Kill and Sleater-Kinney.

 I have no idea if I got the year of this show right but it’s probably not off by much.

At the risk of coming off as a bit full-of-it, I’m going to say this show might represent a notable turning point in the Riot Grrrl movement and by extrapolation maybe even of Third Wave Feminism generally. I will now defend this thesis.

This show took place in a good-sized, if character-free, box of room on the WSU campus and came at a time toward the end of Bikini Kill’s run as the premier standard bearer of the Riot Grrrl (two “r” ‘s or three…I always forget.) movement. They were the vanguard at the forefront who were essential in elbowing, scraping, and carving out a space for the Riot Grrrl tree to take root and blossom. They not only did this in the sometimes conservative (sounds strange but it’s true), often macho punk scene but in the definitely conservative, regressive, paternalistic culture at large.

This moment also happened to be the point that Sleater-Kinney’s ascendency within  that movement was picking up some serious steam. In the next few years they would chug their way no less deeply but also more widely into the popular culture’s consciousness as a critically lauded and wildly successful rock band. As they did so they would carry with them the same fire, passion, and meaning associated with Bikini Kill and their own lesser known previous incarnations that were integral with Riot Grrl’s development and promulgation as well Heavens to Betsy and Excuse 17.

This is why I believe this show could be seen as a place where the torch was being passed between these two brilliant revolutionary sets of hands. There is a distinct possibility I’m full of sh-t though.

If you follow my blog you know I lived in Olympia in the 90’s and was friends with S-K. I was also friends with BK but to a lesser degree. I admired the hell out of all these women (and Billy!) and I’ll write later about what Riot Grrrl meant to me and about the time and place I encountered the movement in a future post.

I’ll conclude this post by saying, and this IS bragging I’m very comfortable with admitting: I sang on stage with Bikini Kill at this show! Actually I flubbed the words to Reject All-American, jumped around, made fool of myself and that was about it, but still…

That detail of the story doesn’t change the FACT that backstage before the show Kathleen invited me (ME  I tell ya!)to sing with Bikini Kill at the very show upon which, as I have proposed in this post, the wheels of history were spinning new myths and attitudes for future generations of human beings to embrace in their pursuit of sexual, political and SPIRITUAL LIBERATION and I did sing! 

…whew. Glad I got that off my chest.

Of all the many stupid-dumb-lucky places (and just plain dumb places) I’ve found myself on this crazy journey that is my life, this one place and time I just shared with you is a particularly bright feather in my cap and it is one I will treasure and wear proudly until my dying day. Thanks Kathleen!!!

Backstage pass from my personal archives.

12:24pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zl8DhvIby22F
(Notes: 6)
  
Filed under: bikini kill sleater-kinney wsu bellingham western washington university riot grrl riot girl kathleen hanna tobi vail carrie brownstein corin tucker 
March 25, 2012
DUB NARCOTIC SVS MIRANDA JULY JASON TRAEGER DUMBA WAREHOUSE BROOKLYN 1997
Weird, I remember Le Tigre, or Julie Ruin playing this show. Have I stumbled on one of memory lane’s loose cobblestones? Maybe so.* 
This show was awesome. The DUMBA warehouse was awesome. Located under the Manhattan Bridge in Brooklyn, it was a big sturdy old building full of cool activist-artist types who couldn’t have been nicer. We played and performed in the middle of the warehouse floor with no stage and everyone gathered all around which gave a wonderfully intimate feeling to the spacious setting.
The show brought out tons of people and I remember seeing a bunch of old friends at this one. It’s always great when you’re on a punk/indy tour and you get to a cool, intentional scene like this in a city like New York. It makes all the trials and challenges of the road worth any of the trouble.
After the show we partied and had a good time and went to sleep at the venue. In the morning one member of our entourage, who shall remain nameless, was sleeping as the rest of us got up, ate breakfast, and began packing to leave for the next stop on the tour.
We decided to wake up said person so he’d have time to eat and pack. We called his name…but he was in a deep sleep. So we gave him a nudge…Snore, Snore… Then we upped our efforts to a push and a LOUD VOICE…Nothing. Then we tried prolonged shaking, YELLING, prodding and JABBING and SHOUTING until he could finally  be roused all bleary-eyed and very well rested. 
He said, “Man…I was really out of it…I took some sleeping pills and drank a bunch of whiskey…I guess I took too many and drank too much!”
Yeah. I’m really glad our next stop was a show in New Jersey and not the Brooklyn morgue!!!
Oh man. I’ll write about that New Jersey experience one of these days. What a crazy scene that was.
(* I wasn’t losing it. Le Tigre played their first ever show at Dumba and I was there. That’s why I was confused. I still got it.)
Flyer from my personal archives.

DUB NARCOTIC SVS MIRANDA JULY JASON TRAEGER DUMBA WAREHOUSE BROOKLYN 1997

Weird, I remember Le Tigre, or Julie Ruin playing this show. Have I stumbled on one of memory lane’s loose cobblestones? Maybe so.* 

This show was awesome. The DUMBA warehouse was awesome. Located under the Manhattan Bridge in Brooklyn, it was a big sturdy old building full of cool activist-artist types who couldn’t have been nicer. We played and performed in the middle of the warehouse floor with no stage and everyone gathered all around which gave a wonderfully intimate feeling to the spacious setting.

The show brought out tons of people and I remember seeing a bunch of old friends at this one. It’s always great when you’re on a punk/indy tour and you get to a cool, intentional scene like this in a city like New York. It makes all the trials and challenges of the road worth any of the trouble.

After the show we partied and had a good time and went to sleep at the venue. In the morning one member of our entourage, who shall remain nameless, was sleeping as the rest of us got up, ate breakfast, and began packing to leave for the next stop on the tour.

We decided to wake up said person so he’d have time to eat and pack. We called his name…but he was in a deep sleep. So we gave him a nudge…Snore, Snore… Then we upped our efforts to a push and a LOUD VOICE…Nothing. Then we tried prolonged shaking, YELLING, prodding and JABBING and SHOUTING until he could finally  be roused all bleary-eyed and very well rested. 

He said, “Man…I was really out of it…I took some sleeping pills and drank a bunch of whiskey…I guess I took too many and drank too much!”

Yeah. I’m really glad our next stop was a show in New Jersey and not the Brooklyn morgue!!!

Oh man. I’ll write about that New Jersey experience one of these days. What a crazy scene that was.

(* I wasn’t losing it. Le Tigre played their first ever show at Dumba and I was there. That’s why I was confused. I still got it.)

Flyer from my personal archives.

5:03pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zl8DhvIZd6c9
(Notes: 6)
  
Filed under: Miranda July Calvin Johnson dub narcotic sound system dumba some velvet sidewalk le tigre julie ruin k records kathleen hanna jason traeger 
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