The Thrown Ups (feat. Mudhoney’s Mark Arm & Steve Turner) played Seattle last night.
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Taiwan

seen from Sweden
seen from T1
seen from Taiwan

seen from Tunisia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Spain
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
The Thrown Ups (feat. Mudhoney’s Mark Arm & Steve Turner) played Seattle last night.
The Schmidtheads (an offshoot of the Thrown Ups) performed at last night’s 20th anniversary screening of Hype!.
—– 1989
Thrown Epps play 'Mohawk Man' live at the Central Tavern 7/24/2014
Mark on drums.
The re-birth of SCRUNGE
A very Thrown Ups Christmas...
In this very special holiday outtake from Everybody Loves Our Town: An Oral History of Grunge, Thrown Ups bassist Leighton Beezer tells the story of the grunge improvisers' last show before their 1991 breakup: "The Thrown Ups' last show was my favorite one, because it was so horribly misunderstood. This was '90, it was definitely Christmas. It was at the Off Ramp, and Ed [Fotheringham] was the baby Jesus, and the band was the Three Wise Men. I was pretty psyched about it, but to really do it right we needed a star and a manger and all this crap, and it became clear to me as we got closer to the show that none of that was actually happening. I was wondering how Ed was gonna pull that off. So I went to go get him, and we're talking maybe two hours before the show, and he's blitzed drunk and he doesn’t really have anything. And I'm like, Dude! But he was a master of the last minute. "So he goes, 'Oh, no, no, no, I got it all worked out.' So we go down to the basement and he starts grabbing sheets—he's gonna rip a hole in the middle of the sheet, pull it over our heads like a poncho, and that's our wise men outfit. And then he took butcher paper and wrapped it into little conehead hats. That made us wise men, I guess. For the sheep for the manger scene, he had these sawhorses. He had done some preparation—he'd got giant plastic bags full of cotton balls and he had spray mount. His plan was to spray the sawhorses and then stick the cotton balls on them. He did that to a couple of them, but the cotton balls didn’t really stick, and they certainly didn't look like sheep, but whatever. "We got there for the show and Ed was so drunk he couldn't stand up, so he was really leaning on one of the sheep as a crutch. And then the rest of us were wearing our outfits. I was used to people in the audience looking at us like we're idiots and leaving. But a lot of people seemed hostile—there seemed to be people stomping out like they were really offended—and afterwards, I asked someone about it: 'You know, I don’t think I’m too sensitive here, but I sensed some hostility.' And he goes, 'Well, maybe you shouldn’t have dressed up like Klansmen! And Ed—he was buttfucking a sheep!' It's like, What? Oh, okay, I can see how that came across—that wasn’t actually what we intended."
“You’re nobody until somebody thinks you suck.”
Leighton Beezer, as told to Stephen Tow, author of "The Strangest Tribe: How a group of Seattle bands invented grunge."