This intimate documentary delves into the Seattle music scene from the late 1990s into the 2000s, capturing a transformative era through photography and personal stories as the world shifted from celluloid to digital, grunge to indie.
It serves as a pilgrimage back in time—a nostalgic journey for anyone who remembers their twenties, cherishes music, or longs for a time when no one texted or carried a camera in their pocket. Holler's personal story unfolds as a young artist in her twenties, photographing little-known bands that would later define a decade in music history. Her lens captured raw live gigs, candid portraits, and the remnants and landscapes of a scene that shaped iconic groups like Death Cab for Cutie, Fleet Foxes, Interpol, Macklemore, Modest Mouse, The Gossip, and Yeah Yeah Yeahs, as well as legends like Beck, Foo Fighters' Dave Grohl, Moby, Pearl Jam, The Posies, and R.E.M.
Bootsy Holler is an American artist best known for her photographic work as a portraitist, starting with intimate depictions of herself and her friends at the heart of Seattle's influential music scene during the early 1990s and 2000s.