Tools
Speaking of DJ culture, you may have seen ads for a new club called Premier (on First Avenue, a block south of Safeco Field), which opened with little media buzz. Although so far they've only had large-scale DJ events and private functions (the club wasn't going to open until April but demand caused them to open early), they plan on expanding into punk, rock, and hiphop as well. Although I expected some complex Fenix Underground-style club mansion, Premier is a converted parking lot that's going for a stark industrial-chic vibe: brick walls, exposed pipes, concrete floors, with a walled-off bar/restaurant (complete with a huge chandelier) on the side. The capacity--1,500 people--is a step above places like the Showbox, but so far the place lacks the Showbox's warm, grand décor. The owner, the affable Mark Naficy, seems to be banking on his connections in the industry and his experience with quality sound equipment. He's been in the business for years, starting out as a sound guy for bands like Alice in Chains and Soundgarden and moving into renting out his own equipment to other clubs and owning a rave space called Naf. He says Premier has a million-dollar sound system that is among the best in the city, and he'll be using it for bands like NOFX, Berlin, and the Psychedelic Furs--who I saw in San Francisco a couple years ago and who are one of the few popular acts of the '80s who can still pull it off live.
More changes in the venue world: Joan Hiller, a former PR gal and current music writer who was the assistant booker at the Crocodile, has left that post to join the ranks of Sub Pop. Taking her place is a sweet Sonic Boom employee, Pete Greenberg.
Stranger Personals
And get ready, the American press' 10-years-after-grunge onslaught has started, with a cover story in the new issue of Fader kicking things off this month (look for a piece on the topic in the April issue of Spin by Stranger writer Hannah Levin). The cover image for Fader was taken by our own Charles Peterson, whose studio will be one of the stops for a BBC crew, here this week with a "grunge superfan" who's being taken around to Seattle "hotspots" for some kind of documentary. Be sure to wear your flannels if they come your way.








RSS
Comments (0)