Saturday, November 4, 2006 - Page updated at 12:00 AM
Concert Review
New WaMu concert venue not fancy, but functional
Seattle Times staff reporter

ERIKA SCHULTZ / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Qwest Field Event Center morphed into the WaMu Theater Friday. The venue is built for efficiency, with easy entry and exit.
Qwesto-chango!
Qwest Field Event Center morphed into something laughingly called a "theater" Friday night, transforming the bland, hangarlike exhibit space into a charmless but servicable concert venue.
If it were music, WaMu Theater would be industrial rock. The high ceiling is crisscrossed with huge pipes, thick wires and long metal beams. The floor is hard concrete. In a city full of aesthetically-pleasing theaters – the Paramount, McCaw Hall, Benaroya, The 5th Avenue, even the tawdry Moore – WaMu has a lot of nerve calling itself a theater. Performance space is more like it.
Just days before, a car show was held at the Event Center. The WaMu Theater area was created by hanging heavy curtains and setting up rows of cushy folding chairs on the flat floor, with some raked bleachers in the back. The portable theater can seat from 3,300 to 7,000.
Sightlines from the floor seats are not good after the first 20 rows or so, due to the flat floor. Because of that, the space needs video screens. Big ones. There weren't any for this opening concert, but other tours may bring them along. Ideally, the space should have built-in ones.
The "lobby" is a very large open area with four bars (beers are $8), a hat check and a souvenir stand. A big bar, high-end food booths and restrooms occupy another big space beyond the lobby.
The highly anticipated debut of Paul Allen as a guitar-wielding rock star did not take place as advertised. The opening band, an amateur group called The Predicaments, said he was sick. First & Goal, one of Allen's companies, is partners with AEG LIVE, the world's second-largest concert promoter, in the WaMu venture.
Rock 'n' roll artifacts from another of Allen's local playthings, Experience Music Project, were on display in the lobby, including a motorcycle jacket Elvis Presley wore and a guitar Kurt Cobain smashed.
The Seahawks did make their advertised appearance – 28 of them, standing in a row across the stage, which gives you an idea of how big it is.
The star of WaMu's opening night was Seal, the international pop star, backed by his five-piece band.
As a singer, Seal is a very handsome fantasy lover. He encouraged the audience to sing along with him, which was only fair, because most everybody in the audience could sing as well as he could.
His pop songs, invariably romantic, were strings of predictable cliches. At least the ones I heard. Deadline pressure prevented me from seeing the whole show. Not that I minded.
Did I mention he's sexy? A woman behind me said to a female companion, in a tone of both admiration and jealousy, "Heidi Klum is so lucky!" The supermodel, known for hosting TV's 'Project Runway," is Seal's wife.
Yeah, a sexy male pop star married to a supermodel. Seal's whole life is a cliché!
Patrick MacDonald: pmacdonald@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company
![]()

nwjobs

Post a comment

Michelle Goodman blogs about work/life balance.
How to tell your office you're gravely ill
Post a comment
nwautos

Choosing a new car? Weigh the impact of your choice on your wallet and on the planet.
Post a comment
- 'The Road' takes Viggo Mortensen to Mount St. Helens and Astoria, Ore.
- Tugboat sinks at Seattle waterfront pier
- Child-support error costs nearly $21,000
- Craigslist adoption ad: A plea by young mother-to-be? A scam?
- Chase shrugs off loss of CD investors
- Vikings easily beat the Seahawks
- Denny Triangle gains skyline, but tenants slow to come
- Snow piles up on Cascade slopes
- Woman stabbed by stranger in North Seattle
- Husky Men's Basketball Blog | Saturday's Pac-10 games in review
- Senate vote clears hurdle
239 - Vikings easily beat the Seahawks
136 - Child-support error costs nearly $21,000
129 - Palin excitement builds in Tri-Cities
124 - Tight Senate vote launches health care over hurdle
122 - Cutting through breast-cancer confusion
90 - Historic health care bill clears Senate hurdle
89 - Game thread
70 - New York terror trials will restore faith in rule of law
65 - Chase shrugs off loss of CD investors
54
- 'The Road' takes Viggo Mortensen to Mount St. Helens and Astoria, Ore.
- Child-support error costs nearly $21,000
- It's possible to recover a life lost to hoarding
- Washington state wines make annual best-of list
- Banff: powder, peaks & purity
- Chase shrugs off loss of CD investors
- Protect yourself from baggage loss
- Rediscovering Moab, 'the most beautiful place on Earth'
- Denny Triangle gains skyline, but tenants slow to come
- Northwest Living | On Whidbey, a unified home from multiple recycled parts






