Update: Due to The Rocksport double-booking, the focuspoint show this Saturday is cancelled.
Don't worry! We're playing the High Dive in Fremont Saturday, Aug. 18, the day after Nina's wedding! See ya there.
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Update: Due to The Rocksport double-booking, the focuspoint show this Saturday is cancelled.
Don't worry! We're playing the High Dive in Fremont Saturday, Aug. 18, the day after Nina's wedding! See ya there.




Yes, I'm still taking photos. In fact, I worked on post-processing and resizing so late last night that I slept through my alarm this morning. Kudos to Moos for waking me so that I got to work on time today. See more photos here.
Did I go to the Capitol Hill Block Party this weekend? Well, yeah. Duh. I'd recap, but really, Three Imaginary Girls wrote a better review than I could, so read that instead.
I will say that the standout band at the show was Penn.-based The Shackeltons. Both (Sm)Ashley and I thought they were so great that we ditched the Block Party a little early to catch them again at The High Dive that night. You can check out their MySpace page, but most of The Shackelton's appeal is their live show. The lead singer is incredibly dramatic and engaging, and they've got an AMAZING 16-year-old drummer that makes his small, 7-piece drum kit sound like a warzone.
Speaking of The High Dive, guess who's playing there Saturday, August 18?
On this, my 500th blog post, Iโd like to talk about food. Italian food. Salumi.
I first came across Salumi, an artisan cured meats delicatessen, upon walking back to my office from lunch in Pioneer Square a couple months ago. As I walked toward Salumi's hole in the wall location on 3rd and Main, a line around the block to its entrance unfolded. Its window was filled with consecutive โBest Ofโ awards from every major Northwest publication for several recent years. This place had to be something special.
But my attention was claimed when I witnessed a coworker eat a Salumi sandwich. I watched the sandwich tease her into a near culinary orgasm as she breathed heavily, sighed, squirmed, moaned and, after the meal was finished, demand a cigarette.
Once in the doorway, I saw a menu to my right, which stated an abbreviated sandwich selection and extensive cured meats list, priced by the pound and reminiscing a wine list in its grandeur. A sink and cutting table was pushed up against the store window, where Marilyn makes gnocchi by hand on Tuesdays.
The experience continued when I was greeted by my sandwich architect. She, like everyone else behind the counter, looked Italian, but was also the Capitol Hill type โ tattooed arms, wild piercings, hipster glasses and a chunk of her otherwise auburn hair bleached. While she made my sandwich, she asked about my day, my job and my weekend, but not in that shallow, hair stylist kind of way. She wanted to know details, and was completely engaged in our conversation while she simultaneously and efficiently built my sandwich. I could now understand why the line took so long. They donโt rush you through the line at Salumi โ they welcome you, converse, and get to know you. You feel like youโre in that sliver of the city that maintains the Old Country sense of time where no oneโs in a hurry, which is obviously so appreciated by a clientele of corporate 9 to 5ers who seek escape from their hurried, intense work environments.