2017 Festival dates set

Seaprog will be happening on first weekend of June, 2017. As usual, it will kick off with a night at the Royal Room – Friday, June 2. Then we’ll have two full days of music at the Columbia City Theater, Saturday June 3 and Sunday June 4. The festival will feature the established formula of nationally and internationally known artists and local Northwest performers.

As more information, like artists and times, becomes available, it will be announced here and on Facebook. We’re looking forward to another successful event!

2017 is only months away

We realize that it’s been rather quiet on the Seaprog front for a while now, but very happily, a crucial dependency has just fallen into place that ensures that Seaprog 2017 will indeed take place. Dates and details will remain fuzzy for a bit, but rest assured that planning has begun in earnest. (Do note that we are not yet ready to field submissions from hopefuls, though.) Greatly looking forward to another magic weekend!

First “Seaprog Presents” concert slated for 28 Jan 2016

Seaprog Presents 2016 event poster by Nat Damm
Seaprog Presents 2016 event poster by Nat Damm

In the first of a number of one-off events presented by Seaprog during the off-year before the festival returns in 2017, Seattle instrumental avant-rock stalwarts Moraine return to their favorite local venue in the company of two formidable festival favorites, Nosretep and Super Z Attack Team.

Join us at the Columbia City Theater on Thursday 28 January, 2016. And make sure you RSVP to the event on Facebook while you’re at it.

Of course, you’ll remember Moraine from their 2013 headlining slot. The other two groups played in the front room (Super Z Attack Team in 2014 and Nosretep in 2015), so they’ll get a chance to play the main stage this time.

Our friend Nat Damm has created a beautiful poster for the event, don’t you think?

So come join us for an evening of great music, the companionship of fellow musical pilgrims, and even the chance to pick some festival merchandise. You can see further details on the artist pages for their respective years — hint: click on the items under Events on the menu at the top of our site.

On the future of Seaprog

Not long ago we announced our intention to stage a Seaprog 2016, and to carry the event forward into the future for as long as it’s realistic to do so. While the Central Committee remains committed to extending Seaprog’s run, circumstances have arisen that have led to a decision to skip a year and stage the next Seaprog in 2017 instead. We apologize for the reversal, but please hear us out.

The decision was not made lightly, and is not an indicator of the festival’s overall health, which we feel is very robust indeed on an artistic level. The choice arises from two main reasons: First, we’ve come to realize that soliciting additional funding from a supporting organization is a lengthy process — likely too lengthy to yield material results in time for a summer 2016 event. Second, Seaprog is organized entirely by volunteers who are also musicians with busy lives, and 2016 is shaping up to be extremely busy (in a good way) for all of us. Dennis has been tapped to co-direct a major music project in Russia in fall 2016 that will consume all of his available time up to then; John’s new recording studio is nearing completion, with multiple sessions slated for production; and Jon is busily expanding his musical horizons with his projects Super Z Attack Team and Zhongyu. Such are the vagaries of all-volunteer undertakings like Seaprog, but based on past success, we’re all eager to mount the festival again in 2017, by which time we’ll have had time to strengthen its financial footing.

  • In the meanwhile, we plan on keeping Seaprog in public view by staging several single-day concert events at intervals throughout the coming year — stay tuned for details.
  • Obviously, we’re not going to be fielding submissions during this brief hiatus, so please hold off on making inquiries until the calendar approaches 2017.

We thank you profusely for your understanding and support, and pledge to be back in 2017 with the same high caliber of progressive music you’ve come to expect from Seaprog. We’ll keep you posted…

— Dennis, John, and Jon
Seaprog Central Committee

Seaprog seeks funding

Greetings Seaprog supporters,

The Central Committee has emerged from its post-festival swoon and would like to end the suspense: Yes, Virginia, there will be a Seaprog 2016!

We want to make the workings of Seaprog as transparent as possible to our audience, and to involve you in helping us shape a more sustainable future for this vital event, so please read on.

We couldn’t have been more pleased with the quality of this year’s truly spectacular musical performances, and with the community spirit embodied by all festival attendees. Attendance was up over the previous two editions, and there was a tangible feeling of gathering momentum. However, festival income still hasn’t crossed the threshold of what’s necessary to make the event truly sustainable, so we’re seeking your input on constructive solutions to strengthening the festival’s financial well-being and boosting its profile. With a few sensible adjustments, we hope to put Seaprog on a solid footing for years to come.

Until now we’ve financed Seaprog on a quixotically altruistic out-of-pocket basis, but sober reflection has led us to conclude that operating a festival at a personal loss simply isn’t sustainable in the long run. Building greater attendance is the obvious solution, but the catch-22 is that we need more prominent headline artists in order to achieve that, and artists with that level of recognition are currently beyond our means. Therefore we’d like to explore other strategies for building up the festival’s coffers. Crowdfunding is an admirable idea, but our experience is that it is not a practical way to meet operating expenses — at best, we see it as potentially helping us with a focused project related to the festival. A benefit concert is in the works for January, featuring some of our more illustrious local Seaprog alumni (details forthcoming soon). But at this point the most sensible solution seems to be to seek out assistance from local arts funding organizations. We have some ideas in that regard that we’ll be following up on, but we’d be extremely grateful for any suggestions or introductions that Seaprog enthusiasts might be able to offer — we’re all ears (survey forthcoming shortly).

On a related note, it’s been suggested that midsummer might not be the ideal time of year to hold a festival like Seaprog, due to vacation absences, benign weather, and a plethora of competing events. For that reason we’d like to take a straw poll among our audience to see what you think the optimal time of year would be to hold Seaprog. Look for a survey to be posted soon; your feedback will help us determine the optimal time of year to stage the festival.

Finally, we must admit that we’re finding ourselves locked in the perennial struggle over the “P word” (prog), as divisive a term as has ever afflicted a musical genre. By now, Seaprog supporters and detractors alike have noted that our bookings extend far beyond what is typically considered “prog” in orthodox progressive-rock circles. That’s just fine with us, as we’re all about ignoring artificial boundaries and exposing listeners to music outside their sphere of familiarity, but it does raise questions as to whether we’re doing our artists a disservice by saddling them with the P word, and whether the term has scared off significant numbers of potential audience members who we’re certain would love the music we’re presenting if they could just overcome their resistance fed by stereotypes. Consequently we’re contemplating a name change but would like to hear your input before taking such a plunge.

Heartfelt thanks for your support to date. Please keep a lookout for the follow-up survey — your comments and suggestions are most welcome!

— Dennis, John, and Jon
The Seaprog Central Committee