Review by Clare McGrane, DJ assistant for Wo'Pop on KEXP
At an A-Wa show, audience participation is not optional. From the moment the trio of Israeli sisters took to the stage at their recent show at the Crocodile, it was clear they weren’t performing for an audience — they were throwing a jubilant party, one that goes long and becomes surprisingly intimate, and we were all invited. You can tell the group cut their teeth as a regular wedding act. There was hardly a moment when the crowd stopped moving. It jumped in as a backing chorus and percussion section, prompted or unprompted, and even sprouted clusters of Yemeni dancing. The sisters called back and forth with fans in Hebrew and English alike, even stopping the show to have a conversation with Noshin, a woman who was attending her second A-Wa show in two days. She let the sisters borrow her fan for some dramatic dance numbers.
It’s hard to describe A-Wa’s stage presence. Mesmerizing is one word that comes to mind, like snake charmers swaying before an unsuspecting beast. There is a subtle, understated confidence in how they move. But they’re also vibrant, barely containing grins as they dance with each other and sidle around the stage. More than anything, they have fun, and they hope you do too.
Review by Emily Slider, DJ assistant for Wo'Pop on KEXP
The last time I saw Sylvan Esso was over two years ago, in a much smaller room about 2,500 miles away. It was a cold January night in Charlotte, North Carolina (my hometown), about three hours outside of Sylvan Esso’s hometown of Durham. It was just a few months after the release of their debut sel…
Tonight The Paramount is filled with Northwest pride, a sense of growing up, and “WOOOOOO”s. Seattle band Sloucher is first to take the stage. They are quite the classic take on a Northwest pastime of mixing grunge with alternative rock and singer-songwriter vibes. Sparklehorse, Ben Kweller, and Sw…
Review by Clare McGrane, DJ assistant for Wo'Pop on KEXP