- This event has passed.
MATTHEW DEAR (Live) with Tiny Deaths & DJ Sharlese
November 11, 2018 @ 8:00 pm - 2:00 am
Freakout Records presents the Pre-Festival Kickoff Party
11.11 Sunday with:
Matthew Dear (Live)
tiny deaths
DJ Sharlese
$20adv
8pm, 21+
One of our favorite artists, Matthew Dear is putting out his first solo record in six years and Freakout is thrilled to be hosting his Seattle show as a kickoff party to the sixth annual Freakout Festival. The show will take place on 11/11 at Nectar Lounge with Support from Tiny Deaths from Minneapolis and local Seattle DJ Sharlese.
MATTHEW DEAR
Bandcamp: https://matthewdear.bandcamp.com/
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2GLf7iaOOujAem5R87xwto
Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/matthewdear
Depending on whom you ask, Matthew Dear is a DJ, a dance-music producer, an experimental pop artist, a bandleader. He co-founded both Ghostly International and its dancefloor offshoot, Spectral Sound. Hes had remixes commissioned by The XX, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Spoon, Hot Chip, The Postal Service, and Chemical Brothers; hes made mixes for Get Physicals Body Language and Fabric mix series. He maintains four aliases (Audion, False, Jabberjaw, and Matthew Dear), each with its own style and distinct visual identity. He straddles multiple musical worlds and belongs to noneand hes just hitting his stride.
Matthew Dears 2003 full-length debut, Leave Luck to Heaven, is a suite of sparse, wickedly funky house laced with Dear’s deep, distinctive vocals, and includes the much-loved single Dog Days (voted one of Pitchforks Top 100 Songs of the Decade). The record was met with rapturous acclaim from both the dance-music establishment and the critical press, including a four-star review in Rolling Stone. The 2007 follow-up, Asa Breed, is a considerable departure from Heavens dancefloor excursions, incorporating the polyrhythms of Afrobeat, the irreverent pop sensibilities of Brian Eno, and the austere beauty of Krautrock. More four-stars reviews followed, and Dear subsequently began touring with a live three-piece band, Matthew Dears Big Hands, in which Dear acted as frontman, commanding the stage with a Bryan Ferry-like swagger and a gentlemans grace.
2010 saw the release of Dears watershed third album, Black City, a darkly playful sound-world that envelops the listener like the arms of a malevolent lover. Black City was met with near-unanimous critical praise, earning top marks from Mojo, Uncut, Q, URB, and the Village Voice, ending up on countless year-end lists, and earning Pitchfork’s coveted Best New Music nod. A worldwide tour followed, in which Dear and a newly expanded band continued to hone their live chops with vicious focus.
Matthew Dears latest full-length, 2012’s Beams, is both a drastic departure from and worthy successor to _Black City_s gothic masterwork. A suite of weird, wild, and queasily optimistic rhythm-driven pop songs, Beams is the latest chapter in the continuing evolution of one of music’s most fascinating minds. After over a decade of exploring pops outer limits, Matthew Dear now inhabits a rarified corner of the musical universe: no longer tethered to any one genre, respected by his peers, and blessed with a bottomless well of creative energy. Now is Matthew Dears moment, and it sounds like nothing else.
On stage, Matthew Dear performs with a multi-pieced live band, unraveling the tightly wound album tracks into kaleidoscopic walls of sound. They have supported Interpol, Hot Chip and Depeche Mode on their world tours, and have performed sold-out shows from London to New York City.
https://www.facebook.com/events/322927755142936/
Leave a Reply