Guerrilla Candy’s 2010 local music gift guide

Shop local is a common phrase heard this time of year to encourage holiday shoppers to support local businesses. While you’re supporting local businesses you might also want to consider supporting local artists, especially if you’re picking up something for the music lover on your shopping list.

Since it’s no secret that Seattle’s music community is stacked with an abundance of talent here are some recommendations of records released by locals in 2010 to help you get going if you’re looking to live out that shop local mantra to its fullest.

The city’s youthful hip-hop scene continued to grow this year with several excellent albums any hip-hop head would appreciate. For starters there’s Jake One and Freeway’s The Stimulus Package which pairs local producer extraordinaire Jake One with Philadelphia underground rapper Freeway resulting in some of the best hip-hop of the year. You also can’t go wrong with Macklemore’s reissue of his Vs EP. The reissue includes the original EP along with remixes and unreleased tracks. You can legally download the original for free here if you want a sampling of what the reissue has to offer. Another choice for the more aggressive and bratty hip-hop fan is Mad Rad’s The Youth Die Young. Think License to Ill era Beastie Boys with more sexually explicit lyrics. Parents be warned, there is quite a bit of objectionable language on the Mad Rad record.

The city’s folk scene is picking up steam too and it spawned several amazing albums. The band that made the biggest splash in the scene this year was the Head and the Heart, which made its debut this year. There’s plenty of local hype behind these guys (not every new band gets a massive feature in the Seattle Times) and big things are expected from these Sub Pop signees. Another artist expected to have a big 2011 is Chris Mansfield, aka Fences, who has drawn comparisons to Elliott Smith with Fences’ self-titled debut. Also of note from the folk scene is Tidelands, the sophomore effort from the Moondoggies. The campfire rock featured on that album is some of the best music Seattle had to offer in 2010.

If there is a punk rock fan on your list there is a trio of albums you should be on the lookout for at the record store. First there’s Unnatural Helpers’ Cracked Love and Other Drugs which boasts a track list of 15 blazing songs that play out in a fiery 27 minutes. The band is a modern day punk rock Mudhoney. On the more experimental side of the punk spectrum is The Lights’ Failed Graves, an album that mishmashes rock subgenres and blends them into an excellent stew of punk rock potpourri. Somewhere in the middle of those two lay The Cute Lepers and their album Smart Accessories which at times comes across as a new-wavey Ramones record.

Of course it wouldn’t be a listing of local music recommendations without mentioning grunge. If you’re shopping for someone whose radio dial is still tuned to the 90s the reunited Soundgarden released a career retrospective called Telephantasm complete with one new track, “Black Rain,” that serves as a reminder of just how good these icons can be. There were also new albums released by Brad and Satchel with both bands featuring vocalist Shawn Smith. Brad’s Best Friends? showcases Smith’s softer side along with some great lead guitar licks by Pearl Jam’s Stone Gossard and Satchel’s Heartache and Honey is a more direct and loud hard rock album. Also, 90s power-poppers The Posies released one of the best albums of their career in Blood/Candy, and while it’s not grunge per se it will likely make any 90s rock fan smile.

Speaking of local icons, three excellent releases for the classic rock lover went relatively under the radar. First there’s Heart’s Red Velvet Car. The Wilson sisters continue to age gracefully on their latest album which is their best effort in years. For Hendrix fans there’s West Coast Seattle Boy: The Jimi Hendrix Anthology and Valleys of Neptune. The latter is a record of previously unreleased Hendrix material including a finished version of the title track. The former is a four-disc box set of Hendrix’s work spanning his early days when he recorded with the likes of Little Richard and the Isley Brothers as well as more familiar Hendrix fare like “Fire” and “Castles Made of Sand.”

In case you want to give something music-related that isn’t a record by a local artist but still want to keep that shop local mentality, here are a few recommendations that will set you back a bit more than the cost of an album download on iTunes but are sure to make any music fan happy.

EMPSFM membership: It’s going to be a big year for Paul Allen’s Jimi Hendrix shrine. In April the museum will open the world’s largest Nirvana-themed exhibit and in June the science-fiction portion of the museum will premier Avatar: the Exhibit which explores James Cameron’s 2009 3-D epic. There are multiple membership levels that range in price from $50 for an individual to $85 for a family. Memberships are good for one year and all provide unlimited visits to the museum during the membership period.

Sasquatch! Music Festival tickets: Tickets for the annual Memorial Day weekend event went on sale late last month in the form of a special package deal. For one flat price ($285) you get one ticket to every day of the festival, which takes place between May 27-30 at the Gorge Amphitheatre. The complete lineup for the festival has yet to be announced (Foo Fighters are the only confirmed act), but typically Sasquatch! is a trend-setting event that showcases more than 75 artists big and small. The ticket price also includes camping passes for the weekend. In past years the festival has featured the likes of Arcade Fire, Beastie Boys, Coldplay, Kanye West, Pixies, R.E.M. and many other impressive names so chances are there will be something at the Gorge to please most every music fan.

The Showbox VIP Club: Want to make sure your favorite live music lover gets special treatment at both Showbox at the Market and its counterpart Showbox SoDo for an entire year? Then a Showbox VIP club membership is what you’re looking for. For $499 you get guaranteed seating at every event at either Showbox for a year (the Showboxes have very limited seating), you never have to wait in line to get into a show, you get first dibs on purchasing tickets to every Showbox event (including secret shows), free coat check and the ability to buy tickets to sold-out shows all year long. For $799 the VIP membership is transferable.

About Travis Hay

Travis Hay is a music journalist who has spent the past 20 years documenting and enjoying Seattle's music scene. He's written for various outlets including MSN Music, the Seattle-Post Intelligencer, Seattle Weekly, Pearl Jam's Ten Club, Crosscut.com and others.

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