Enjoy local bands, beer at Saturday’s 10 Below Show

The Everett Music Initiative and Everett’s Scuttlebutt Brewing are teaming up for a third time, this time to promote some great local bands and Scuttlebutt’s flagship winter beer, 10 Below.

Saturday night’s 10 Below Show features Seattle band The Hollers, and Everett’s I Will Keep Your Ghost and Hot! Donna at 8 p.m. at the Benevolent Protective Order of Elks.

“Scuttlebutt is one of the really great anchor brands in our community,” said Steven Graham, of Everett Music Initiative, which teamed up with Scuttlebutt for the Ming the Merciless release party in February and the Rock the Boat festival this past summer. “We love the opportunity to partner with them. This is really a celebration of what we think is one of the finest beers around.”

Scuttlebutt’s 10 Below is an imperial dunkelweiss that is made with Mt. Hood and American Sazz hops and clocks in at 22 IBUs and 7.4-percent ABV. It’s a medium body winter ale with a rich chocolate finish, according to the Scuttlebutt website. Along with 10 Below, Scuttlebutt will be pouring Transistor IPA.

As for the music, Graham said that The Hollers, fronted by Trevor Boone, is an up-and-coming band that recently sold out the Tractor Tavern in Seattle.

“To have them coming up to Everett is great,” Graham said.

For I Will Keep Your Ghost, which is fronted by Bryan Bradley with Doug Evans playing synths, this will be the first time it has played a show in its hometown since The Fishermen’s Village Festival in 2014. Recently they played the Capitol Hill Block Party and debuted a new song on The End.

“They’ve taken a ton of time off to write some new material and they’re ready to play a hometown show,” Graham said. “The set list is going to be 90 percent new stuff.”

While IWKYG is playing Everett for the first time in a while, Hot! Donna may be playing for the last time.

“They’re not sure what is going on in the future, so this will be their last show for the foreseeable future,” Graham said of the post-punk band.

With The Cannery recently shuttered, Graham and Ryan Crowther, of Everett Music Initiative, were happy to secure a show at the Elks. The space holds about 300 people, close to 100 more than The Cannery, which was at capacity for the Scuttlebutt release party of Ming the Merciless in February.

“We’ve talked about doing an event at the Elks and this really was the right event to do it,” Graham said. “I think a lot of people will come away from this show really impressed.”

Aaron Swaney: 425-339-3430; aswaney@heraldnet.com.

Twitter: @swaney_aaron79. Follow the Hops and Sips blog at www.heraldnet.com/hopsandsips.

If you go

Scuttlebutt Brewing and the Everett Music Initiative will celebrate the release of Scuttlebutt’s winter ale, 10 Below, with a live music show Nov. 28 at the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, 2802 Hoyt Ave, Everett. Music will be provided by The Hollers, I Will Keep Your Ghost and a special guest. Advance tickets are $10 or $15 at the door. The show is 21-and-over. For more information, visit Everett Music Initiative’s Facebook page. Tickets are sold at Brown Paper Tickets.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Life

Sarah Jean Muncey-Gordon puts on some BITCHSTIX lip oil at Bandbox Beauty Supply on Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024, in Langley, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Bandbox Beauty was made for Whidbey Island locals, by an island local

Founder Sarah Muncey-Gordon said Langley is in a renaissance, and she’s proud to be a part of it.

A stroll on Rome's ancient Appian Way is a kind of time travel. (Cameron Hewitt)
Rick Steves on the Appian Way, Rome’s ancient superhighway

Twenty-nine highways fanned out from Rome, but this one was the first and remains the most legendary.

Byrds co-founder Roger McGuinn, seen here in 2013, will perform April 20 in Edmonds. (Associated Press)
Music, theater and more: What’s happening in Snohomish County

R0ck ‘n’ Roll Hall of Famer Roger McGuinn, frontman of The Byrds, plans a gig in Edmonds in April.

Mother giving in to the manipulation her daughter fake crying for candy
Can children be bribed into good behavior?

Only in the short term. What we want to do is promote good habits over the course of the child’s life.

Speech Bubble Puzzle and Discussion
When conflict flares, keep calm and stand your ground

Most adults don’t like dissension. They avoid it, try to get around it, under it, or over it.

The colorful Nyhavn neighborhood is the place to moor on a sunny day in Copenhagen. (Cameron Hewitt)
Rick Steves: Embrace hygge and save cash in Copenhagen

Where else would Hans Christian Andersen, a mermaid statue and lovingly decorated open-face sandwiches be the icons of a major capital?

Last Call is a festured artist at the 2024 DeMiero Jazz Festival: in Edmonds. (Photo provided by DeMiero Jazz Festival)
Music, theater and more: What’s happening in Snohomish County

Jazz ensemble Last Call is one of the featured artists at the DeMiero Jazz Festival on March 7-9 in Edmonds.

Kim Helleren
Local children’s author to read at Edmonds Bookshop

Kim Helleren will read from one of her books for kids at the next monthly Story Time at Edmonds Bookshop on March 29.

Chris Elliott
Lyft surprises traveler with a $150 cleaning charge

Jared Hakimi finds a $150 charge on his credit card after a Lyft ride. Is that allowed? And will the charge stick?

Inside Elle Marie Hair Studio in Smokey Point. (Provided by Acacia Delzer)
The best hair salon in Snohomish County

You voted, we tallied. Here are the results.

The 2024 Kia EV9 electric SUV has room for up to six or seven passengers, depending on seat configuration. (Photo provided by Kia)
Kia’s all-new EV9 electric SUV occupies rarified air

Roomy three-row electric SUVs priced below 60 grand are scarce.

2023 Toyota RAV4 Prime XSE Premium AWD (Photo provided by Toyota)
2023 Toyota RAV4 Prime XSE Premium AWD

The compact SUV electric vehicle offers customers the ultimate flexibility for getting around town in zero emission EV mode or road-tripping in hybrid mode with a range of 440 miles and 42 mile per gallon fuel economy.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.