Are you primarily going to Bumbershoot to see Aurora? Were you obsessed with Kate Bush before âRunning Up That Hillâ was on Stranger Things? Do you wish Pink Slip from Freaky Friday (2001) were a real band? If you answered âyesâ to any of these questions, go see SPELLLING at the Mural stage on Sunday.Â
In 2019, I was desperately looking for something similar to Solangeâs masterpiece, A Seat at the Table, which I had been listening to nonstop for three years. While I found that Solangeâs sound is not replicable, the mission led me to SPELLLINGâs sophomore album, Mazy Fly. There are a few songs on the album that could be compared to Solangeâs fluid, hushed vocals and reggae-inspired beats (âHard to Please (Reprise)â and âUnder the Sunâ), but the bulk of the album brings to mind experimental artists of the â80s and â90s. The albumâs opening track, âRed,â sounds like a Portishead instrumental. The song âHaunted Waterâ is a freaky ballad in the style of BjĂśrk. âSecret Threadâ could fit in on Broadcastâs debut album, Noise Made By People. And, not to mention, like Bumbershoot headliner Aurora, Spellling, too, has the vocal range of Kate Bush.
Although SPELLLINGâs influences are clear, she is far from a copy. Her music is a unique potion that allows her to shapeshift into various genres without losing her own sense of self. The shape she takes on her newest album, Portrait of My Heart, is that of the â90s indie rock, nu metal, and shoegaze bands she loved as a teenager. The albumâs title track pulls the line âI donât belong hereâ from Radioheadâs sad boy anthem, âCreep,â but her experience as a self-described âBlack-Mexican mixed kid weirdo in a suburbâ adds actual meaning to these words. White men, after all, are made to feel like they belong everywhere.Â
Portrait of my Heart glimmers with an emotionally stirring rhythm section (Ă la Jeff Buckleyâs Grace) while remaining playful. The upbeat and delightfully sassy âAlibiâ sounds like an unreleased track from the movie-made band Pink Slip. Each track is angsty, timeless, and whimsical, reworking tired rock tropes into something vibrant and new. This is perhaps best displayed on the albumâs closing track, a cover of My Bloody Valentineâs âSometimes.â The cover stays true to the meditative spirit of the original while bringing the lyrics to the forefront, erupting into the emotional closing lines âyou can hide, oh, now, the way I do / you can see, oh now, the way I do.â Itâs a perfect conclusion to an album that reveals one individualâs experience as an outsider.Â
I canât wait to see how the album translates live, as I can envision a gentle mosh pit of people dancing in the style of Kate Bush. I, however, will be sitting in the grass watching from a distance while devouring a Dingleberryâ˘, because thatâs self-care!
Bumbershoot is Saturday, August 30 & Sunday, August 31 at the Seattle Center. Tickets are available at bumbershoot.com. We're counting down to Bumbershoot 2025 by featuring a different participating musician or artist every day for the two weeks leading up to the festivalâsee all our picks here.








