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Wedding Wednesday

In Love with Love Songs

Inspiration for the first song of the rest of your life

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Pink Martini

In honor of your approaching big day, we’re using this Wedding Wednesday to share the first dance and otherwise special, sacred, and, in a few cases, silly songs that trademarked the nuptials of some of Seattle’s leading celebration specialists as well as a few of our past Real Weddings couples.

Enjoy.

-Amanda Brotman, designer, Amanda Pearl Amado Mio by Pink Martini

-Daniela Faget, designer, Bella Signature Design: We both love reggae so when we got married with 20 friends at our favorite sailing spot in the Caribbean we danced to One Love by Bob Marley.

-Tes de Luna, owner, Velouria: When we get married on March 27 our song will be La La Love You by the Pixies.

-Michelle Mansfield Loretta, cofounder, Sage Wedding Pros: We love Brazil, and I always thought it was nice that I was marrying someone that I could samba with, so ours was So Nice (Summer Samba) by Astrud Gilberto (more recently done by Bebel Gilberto). It’s a beautiful bossa nova song that goes: So nice, life would be so nice / If one day I’d find / Someone who would take my hand / And samba through life with me.

-Cindi Brooks, designer, Brass Paperclip: Frank Sinatra’s I Love Paris because we were engaged in Paris! On a kooky side note, I was once in a wedding where the entire bridal party was asked to join the bride and groom on the dance floor for this first dance; there was an uneven number of guys and girls, so they picked something fun we could all dance to together.

-Nick and Aleah Valley, founders/designers, The Good Life Event Specialists and Fine Line Management and Events: At Last by Etta James.

-Sally Brock, owner, Fancy: The Ship Song by Nick Cave; we weren’t exactly dancing.

-Katie Hanchinamani, featured in Real Weddings: Your Everything by Keith Urban! I am country fan and I have loved that song since high school!

-Liesl Elson, featured in Real Weddings: La Vie En Rose, sung by a good friend of mine, the opera singer Noah Baetge; he was accompanied by our klezmer band, Shawn’s Kugel.

-Michelle Jensen, marketing and public relations, Rosanna, Inc.: Chasing Cars by Snow Patrol.

-Jennifer Shea, founder, Trophy Cupcakes: We did not have a first dance because we eloped! But when we finally do have our reception, our first dance will be Northern Sky by Nick Drake.

-Eliza Truitt, photographer, Eliza Truitt Photography: We didn’t have a first dance but Steve and I walked down the aisle to Mitch and Mickey’s When You’re Next to Me from A Mighty Wind. It’s incredibly sweet and if you’ve seen the movie it’s also pretty funny. Hearing it still gets to me.

-Catherine McCadden, designer, Grace Gow: Rod Stewart’s You’re in My Heart

-Natalie Fobes, photographer, Natalie Fobes Photography: We didn’t have a first dance because we got married on the Schooner Zodiac. We had a first sail instead. However, during the ceremony my husband’s niece sang Someone to Watch Over Me. The best song from our wedding was our recessional, though. 76 Trombones from The Music Man. My husband surprised me with it.

-Megan Smith, featured in Real Weddings: Flower of Scotland; our band Ockham’s Razor played it for us.

-Gayle O’Donnell, cofounder, All About Weddings and Celebrations: The most beautiful song I’ve heard at a wedding this past year for a first dance, as far as lyrics go, is The Luckiest by Ben Folds.

-Allison Foreman, featured in Real Weddings: You Are The Love of My Life by Jim Brickman

-Aimee Palacios, featured in Real Weddings: We didn’t have a first dance, but did walk into Tonight Tonight by the Smashing Pumpkins. I’d always envisioned it as our first dance song, but it meant so much to us that we placed it as our processional.

-Marianne Graham, designer, Marianne Graham Designs: My husband choose the first, Kenny Loggin’s Danny’s Song, and as we danced we started signing along to each other. Before we knew it we realized that our guests had joined in too—still gives me chills thinking about it. We followed it up with Stevie Wonder’s Signed, Sealed, Delivered and twirled, laughed, and danced as our friends joined in. Good times!

-Erin Green, founder, Moms Maids and More: At our reception, we danced to Peter Gabriel’s In Your Eyes – you don’t realize how long that song is until all your wedding guests are standing in a circle and staring at you for five minutes.

-LaRae Lobdell, photographer, Lifework Images: Cory and I first danced to (drum roll please): It’s Oh So Quiet by Bjork. We were married in Spokane when the music scene there was still very, um, traditional? Only our close friends had ever heard of Bjork. The song cued, we did our own rendition of a waltz to the soft beginning, then when the beat broke into a fast tempo we had fun with it! as our parents got the slow waltz feel and our friends got the alternative feel of the music so it worked well.

-Sean Flanigan, photographer, Sean Flanigan Photography: Scientist by Coldplay

-Nancy Kramer, co-owner, Bella Bridesmaid: My husband and I had our first dance to Cheeseburger in Paradise by Jimmy Buffet. We just got married last May and did a fully choreographed dance! We decided that was our song early in our relationship because of our mutual love of cheeseburgers and the sun.

-Joe Ross, Joe Ross and the Bird Watchers: My wife Laura and I danced to Side By Side a classic from the ’20s but most famously sang by Kay Starr in the ’50s. We had a live band at the Georgetown Ballroom comprised of members of the Jukehouse Hounds and my own band, the Bird Watchers. It was really swinging.

-Jenny Jimenez, photographer, Jenny Jimenez Photography: First Day of My Life by Bright Eyes

- Annette Lefebvre, designer, Luxe Wedding Design We had live and recorded music the pre-ceremony music had all of our favorite old romantic standards from Billie Holiday’s version of As Time Goes By to Nick Cave’s The Ship Song. Henry Mancini’s Moon River was a part of our candle lighting and I walked down the aisle to the 1930’s French chanson by Charles Trenet, La Mer. Our recessional song was David Bowie’s Heroes. Seems dated now, but we thought that was the greatest. It still makes me smile thinking about that triumphant feeling in that moment with the music. But the greatest part for us was our first dance, Herb Alpert’s 1968 hit, This Guy’s in Love With You. Back in 1994, when we first started dating, I put that cheesy, overly sentimental song on our very first mixed tape… and loved it like nobody’s business. In less than a year that song had become “our song.” By the time we got married five years later it had become so imbued with meaning that by the time we were dancing to it at our wedding, Herb Alpert had become an old friend and the song was our anthem of alchemy, love and magic.

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And what about you, what’ll you be dancing to? Let us know!

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Tags: music, Weddings, Venues, Valentine's Day, Seattle Real Weddings, vendors

Retail News

More Fun in the New World

Brand new Damaged Goods carries good, old music and fashion, and some new stuff that’s “actually good”

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Slideshow: Alt-psych songwriter/mid-90s Big Deal Mark Pickerel opens Damaged Goods in Belltown

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Slideshow: Alt-psych songwriter/mid-90s Big Deal Mark Pickerel opens Damaged Goods in Belltown

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Looking for a broken-in 70s-era Levi jacket, something to spin at your go-go themed dinner party, and a Motown biography to read over the weekend? I know just the spot.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

I expect there’ll be tie-ins, promotions, and good shelf space for products from local labels like Sub Pop and Light in the Attic.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Pickerel got hooked on selling vintage clothing in Ellensburg, where he ran Rodeo Records and became the hero of countless Central Washington University Japanese foreign exchange students as they discovered Americana via Lee Hazelwood and deadstock Lee jeans.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Mark Pickerel

Outsiders think they’ve spotted a grunge comeback when Marc Jacobs puts short pants over leggings on the runway and a new generation of 15-year-olds discovers Doc Martens, but Seattleites will note a familiar and distinctly 90s refrain when they pass by the brand spanking new Damaged Goods on Second Avenue next store to Roq La Rue.

They ought to also recognize shop owner Mark Pickerel as the original drummer of the Screaming Trees, and the guy who has played with the likes of Kurt Cobain and Neko Case — but from here on out, he’ll be the their source for vintage psych rock vinyl, Vampire Weekend LPs, art-pop box sets cutely packaged in lunch pails, handpicked noir DVDs and paperback jazz memoirs, oversize art books, and salvaged moto jackets and snap-front cowboy shirts.

Pretty gutsy move, opening what is more or less a record store as even Pandora-plugged-in 63-year-olds begin to settle into the fact that they can probably get away with never paying for music again. But Pickerel figures he’ll buy new releases with an ear for the feverish, culty, collectible indie and outre stuff that tends to be needed – the “recent stuff that’s actually good” (check the slideshow image of the vinyl bins for new ways to classify genres; “rock,” “pop,” “punk,” and “folk” are out) and curate the kinds of essential odd-ball stuff collections that just can’t be downloaded or otherwise digitally transmitted. And, in this town and a few others, vinyl will never go out of style - especially not the kind of stuff that Pickerel saves from backwoods thrift shops and down home estate sales.

And speaking of curating; Pickerel plans to party with his art gallery neighbors on second-Friday art walks beginning February 11. With a few tweaks and updates here and there, he’ll reinvent his inventory to reflect and spin themes and concepts from the show next door. Pickerel will also, of course, show art distinct from the gallery’s exhibitions; upcoming this spring, portraits by alt-rock/country hero Jon Langford.

The music business isn’t the only thing alive and well on Second Ave as of last Friday.

Damaged Goods collaborator Jan Dikkers published, edited, and art directed one of the art world’s fav fashion, music, and culture rags, Issue. Now locally based and currently reimagining the fashion initiatives of a certain online retailer, Dikkers plans to relaunch his magazine.

So take that, New York. Spinning discs are not dead yet, and neither is print.

Damaged Goods, where 80s LA rockers X soundtrack the random discoveries of dusted-off ephemera and shrink-wrapped reissues, puts me in the mind of Spencer Moody’s Anne Bonny - though the former Murder City Devil doesn’t focus on music the way Pickerel does. There’s just something about a strong personality – an already trusted point of view and a reverence for the things that used to matter (not to mention a sort of comeback kid/nostalgic Belltown vibe)- that makes arguments about consumer habits and downward spirals feel downright null, void, boring, and mute.

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Tags: music, Belltown, new, Seattle Vintage, Grunge

Great People, Links

Behind the Scenes: Blogger’s Blogs

Style Counselor Taylor Kieburtz shows us her links (and then I show you mine)

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If you read the fine type in the print edition of this month’s Style Counsel page, you’ve been expecting a post wherein Hipsters with Kids blogger Taylor Kieburtz and I trade the morning shuffle – a.k.a. a selection of favorite blog links.

So here goes.

Says Taylor, who works by day crafting creative branding, visual solutions, and the like, ‘I mostly read design / graphics, art and music blogsfashion is always evident throughout.’

Taylor’s list:

Design You Trust
Which feels like the universe’s collective junk drawer (in a good way) o’ ideas

Purple Diary
The not-very-secret life of art arbiter Olivier Zahm and company

Planet Awesome Kid
Just what the name implies

Fashion Gone Rogue
Editorials, ad campaigns, and other painfully awesome images

and the friends and family plan:

Metaphorical Child
One woman’s ultra-modern online art museum

Wolves vs. Lions

Black Books

Hunter/Gatherer
Gorgeous textiles and far eastern-feeling minimalist design

And, a handful of my favs; a just-so mix of style, fashion (yes, two different things), design, and my own inner circle of the blogosphere:

Common People
Like Flickr with a special moody / dreamy filter

Ready Set Fashion
Fashion magazine librarian pits 80s ad campaigns and 90s editorials against current spreads

Backyard Bill
Mostly men’s style, all amazing portraiture

An Ambitious Project Collapsing
The world gets bigger and bigger and more thoughtful, and this site becomes more essential every time

Friends:

Remember Me
What it misses in every-day updates it makes up for in the perfect balance of chaos and order

Picture of the Day
A proto-blog by an experimental, obsessive mind

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Hope you found something you like enough to bookmark yourself.

Now it’s your turn. What’s on your daily must-read list?

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Tags: links, Seattle Toys, Design, hipsters, music, Style Counsel, Link Trader

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