Advertisement

CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS

Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation
tune in

Two Local Bands Hit Letterman!

Email

Lettermansandwich

Uncle Dave spent his week in a Portland band-wich.


If you want to keep up with the Portland music scene, you’re going to have to pull a couple Late Nights. Last week, David Letterman hosted back-to-back shows from hometown heroes Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside and Typhoon.

In case you missed it, here are both bands’ network TV debuts:

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

read up

Portland Zine Reader’s Guide

Just in time for Zine Symposium, Floating World Comics owner Jason Leivian shares a few favorite titles.

Email
Jason-reading-floatingworld

This weekend, Refuge PDX (SE 1st and Yamhill) will host Zine Symposium, a convention for self-publishers and small publishers who produce the old-fashioned kind of hand-held reading devices.

What happens when just anyone can publish their own book or magazine? As you might imagine, many elements slip into the mix. Content that would normally get nixed by a publisher becomes fair game for the printed page: incendiary rants, unauthorized cut-and-pastes of copyrighted content, and a barrage of unedited, indulgent diary confessionals. On the other hand, with little economic incentive and no third-party directives, many zine-makers feel free to create something more wonderful than the market demands. Handmade touches emerge, like letterpress impressions, screen-print, hand-coloring, and crafty binding. Illustrations abound. Still other small publishers, like last summer’s Culturephile featuree Brandon Seifert, writer of Witch Doctor, self-publish with one eye on the prize of a mainstream deal. They bring slick, shelf-ready books to the zine scene.

The choices are daunting, but luckily, small press aficianado and Floating World Comics owner Jason Leivian showed us some titles, and we’ve summarized their content below. Fair warning: young Jason admits he has slightly deviant taste. “I don’t really like ‘safe’ stuff,” he says. So…read at your own risk.

ANTHOLOGIES

Papercutter
Each issue features three graphic artists; different every time.
Read time: 30mins | $4

Stumptown Underground
More than 20 contributors per issue, and each has a featured theme—like “Pedal Power,” “Slumber Party,” and “Ego.”
Read time: 40mins | $5

GRAPHIC NOVELS

Invincible Summer
This title is sold in two thick-bound collections of what were originally shorter individual zines by Nicole Georges. A pen-and-ink rendering of Georges in twee granny glasses narrates coffeeshop culture with High Fidelity-style list-making, casual diary storytelling, and plenty of adorably irrelevant drawings of cute animals.
Read time: 2hrs | $12-14

Capacity
With scaled and feathered monsters and boundary-blurring odysseys, Theo Ellsworth’s dense black-and-white work evokes Sendak’s Where The Wild Things Are. It might take some time to interpret some of the bizarre images in this hefty hardbound tome.
Read time: 2.5 hrs | $20

Clutch
A master of his efficient, un-shaded style, Greg Means is able to communicate plenty—both verbally and graphically—in just a few lines. Flat-mouthed protagonists bemoan life’s minor scrapes (brought on by bike crashes and other accidents) with casual profanity and sparse, sardonic dialogue.
Read time: 30mins | $2

Anya’s Ghost
Rendered in rounded lines and muted hues, this coming-of-age ghost story is a recent release from Vera Brosgol, who’s currently helping storyboard local film company LAIKA’s latest feature, Paranorman. Though his bias for girl ghost fiction begs a grain of salt, Neil Gaiman has called this book “a masterpiece.”
Read time: 40mins | $20

QUICKIES

XOX
Jesse Mcmanus unleashes a barrage of nonverbal Ren & Stimpy-esque drawings that emote, explode, and unravel while onomatopoeias zap and zoom overhead. Floating World will publish his next title. 15mins | $3

Round Room Funnies Ian Sundahl infuses his one-panel comics with obtuse humor that usually has a sexual thrust. 5mins | $2

Tigard Force For Amriel Simpson, a ride on a Tigard Transit bus quickly melts into a paranoid funhouse hallucination. “So weird but so good,” says Leivian. 5mins | $0.60

Feedback John Isaacson moshes around the underground concert scene and reports his findings: “X”-eyed puking punk-rockers, house shows being stymied by cop calls and leaky basement pipes, and absurd overheard crowd comments. 10mins | $2

Peach Dreams Karissa Sakamoto’s take on Little Red Riding Hood is not nearly as sweet as it sounds, revealing toilet terrors ala South Park’s Mr. Hanky. “I think we’ll see more from her,” Leivian predicts. 5mins | $2

Too Dark To See A dark, scribbly specter intrudes on a young cohabitating couple in Julia Gfrörer’s short story. Is it a ghost, a demon, an ex girlfriend—or all three? 10mins | $5

Miami, You’ve Got Style! Whether or not he’s serious, Joshua Chapman pays detailed tribute to the Golden Girls’ many mumus, peignoirs, and cardigans in this hardbound captioned picture-book. 0-2hrs | $10

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

bull and bear

Slideshow: First Thursday

Four safe bets for First Thursday browsing, and a slide show of one of August’s wildest offerings.

Email
Bar2337_bullmanlaughs_web

The exhilarating (and mildly terrifying) Taurus in Rick Bartow’s Bull Man Laughs seems to sport a human ribcage, teeth, and hands.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

The exhilarating (and mildly terrifying) Taurus in Rick Bartow’s Bull Man Laughs seems to sport a human ribcage, teeth, and hands.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

A prickled bear and a set of daintily varied hand silhouettes unite human with animal in Rick Bartow’s Bear Mother Dancing.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Again, man and beast are melded in Laughing Bear.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Slightly reminiscent of Chagal’s Floating Goat, a lone coyote seems to ride toward us on a cloud. Dog Approaching, the title warns.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

This Kneeling Cat rises up like a desert specter, leaving a trail of fire in its wake.

Well, friends, it’s another sunny First Thursday, positively perfect for traipsing the art-walk. Here are a few exhibits we can’t wait to lay eyes on—and for those who absolutely can’t wait, a sneak peek at one of them.

Froelick Gallery Rick Bartow’s halcion hallucinations of man-beasts in Coyote’s Road would make fabulous dust jackets for Alan Ginsberg’s Howl. Bulls, bears, and coyotes emerge amid sweeps of color and wavering shapes. (See slide show, left.)

PDX Contemporary Paying tribute to beloved Portland photog Terry Toedtemeier, the gallery hosts Unfinished Business, a collection of his unique black-and-white landscape and architecture shots.

Laura Russo This month, Russo remembers Early Northwest Artists, including Louis Bunce, James Castle, Sally Haley, Charles Heaney, Frederick Heidel, Michele Russo, and Carl Morris.

Elizabeth Leach continues to explore The Shape of the Problem in a special 30th Anniversary exhibition.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

Tags: galleries, overview

rey of light

Album Release: Rachel Taylor Brown

The relatively obscure but undeniably excellent local songstress finally reveals her seventh album, World So Sweet.

Email

The name “Rachel Taylor Brown” may ring a bell from our March issue, or from our prior posting of this video:


Well, the singer’s hotly anticipated seventh album, World So Sweet, is finally here. Adorned by a mysterious black-light mantarey, the album features the foreshadowed 50-piano salute, the engineering talents of Jeff Stuart Saltzman (who’s also worked with regional heavies like Death Cab, Malkmus, and the Decemberists) and instrumental cameos from members of Menomena.

Taylor Brown will unveil her latest masterpiece at Mississippi Studios this Friday, alongside Michael the Blind and the Brothers Young. Based on her prior performances, you can safely expect a commanding presence and a thrilling tableau of texture and skill.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

"from toothpaste to orange juice"

Slideshow: PDX Pop Now! 2011

Despite a new venue and a few new fashions, the Portland institution held true to form, promoting new acts and old favorites across genre and generation.

Email
Lovers_pdx_pop_now
Photo: McKenna Johnson

Caroline “Cubby” Berk of Portland’s all-girl electro-pop band, Lovers, brought emotional, synth-heavy jams to the indoor stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Caroline “Cubby” Berk of Portland’s all-girl electro-pop band, Lovers, brought emotional, synth-heavy jams to the indoor stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Minders frontman Martyn Leaper demonstrated his vocal power pop prowess.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

The shimmering shoe-gaze inspired pop of BLOUSE constructs a soundtrack of sultry vocals and rippling textures that would be right at home with a vacant, emotionally devoid Bret Easton Ellis novel.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Native Malian Ibrahim Kelly, front man of the energetic genre-crossing band Dusu Mali, had the crowd writhing and dancing to the fusion of cross-cultural sounds.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Justin Leon Johnson, one half of Portland electro-dance duo Purple & Green, gave a relentlessly effervescent performance including eye catching dance moves and captivating beats.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson
Musee Mecaniques’ Sean Ogilvie douses the sea of wayfarers and tank tops with folk tunes at the sun drenched outdoor stage.
View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Portland singer/songwriter Kelly Schaefer delivering emotion filled hollers . Her performance also featured the only shovel used as an instrument at PDX Pop Now.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Ian Anderson during his last show as Guidance Counselor.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Before moving to San Francisco to focus on his new project, Feelings, Ian Anderson gave a farewell performance as Guidance Counselor on Sunday night.

As Lovers had just finished their set on Friday, a girl in a floral print romper and a boy with a Jedi rat-tail and jorts strode by holding hands. A woman whose pants might best be described as “mom jeans” commented to her friend: “It’s just interesting to see what the kids are wearing these days.”

Like the many fleeting fashion trends it hosted, the 8th annual PDX Pop Now came and went. The all-ages crowd (estimated to be mostly under the age of 24, and reportedly numbering more than 5,000) enjoyed 44 local acts spread across three days and two stages. Almost unbelievably, they got it all for free, thanks to dedicated PPN volunteerism, donated performances from bands, and sponsorship from the likes of RACC, KNRK, and OPB. Portlandia’s own Fred Armisen even made a cameo, respectfully taking pictures with fans before ducking away into the background.

The all-volunteer PDX Pop Now festival first graced the city in 2004, and became a qualifying non-profit in 2008. Since its inception, PDX Pop Now has grown to include an outreach program which works with Portland schools, its compilation CD has picked up enough cred to receive an astounding 790 submissions this year, and the festival itself just finished up its 8th year with a whirlwind of color and noise. Media Coordinator Benna Gottfried sums up the journey, “Our goal is to promote the local music community, and represent as many genres as possible.”

This admirable, ambitious creed can result in some jarring juxtapositions. Listening to classical and metal back-to-back, for instance, can feel like going straight from toothpaste to orange juice.“This whole festival is like an iPod shuffle," said one attendee, "But that’s why I come. The randomness.” Gottfried agreed, saying her favorite part of PPN is being surprised by bands she doesn’t know.

When PPN started, rolled-up jeans, white belts, tight tee shirts and thick glasses were de rigueur, whereas these days “the kids" are apparently sporting rompers, tights and tunics, name-checking a supposedly new genre dubbed “chillwave,” and thinking people who say “hipsters” sound old. But one trademark aspect of the festival remains the same: an eager crowd dances until they’re drenched with sweat to infectious anthems from Portland’s prolific music scene.

Check out McKenna Johnson’s slideshow of the event, featuring Guidance Counselor’s celebretory final performance, the African drumming of Dusu Mali, and the newly-minted punk bravado of erstwhile torch singer Kelli Schaefer.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

kitsch-you!

Review: Trek in the Park

Intrepid Portland Monthly intern Griffin Funk takes a Trek to Woodlawn Park to see what all the buzz is about.

Email
Trekinpark

Mirror, Mirror on the lawn. After next weekend, it’ll be gone.

In Woodlawn Park last Saturday afternoon, Trekkies laid down blankets, read books and discussed the use of the Moog Theremin. A woman playing a Star Trek themed version of “Uno” slapped down a card and exclaimed, “Uno! I’m a doctor!” referring to a character catchphrase from the series. My clumsy attempts to converse by name-dropping Yoda, Chewy and Darth Vader were immediately quashed. In the words of one bystander, “That topic is taboo here.” At any moment, I worried that our whole crew might be ambushed and noogied into submission by a gang of jocks—but I’d gladly risk it to catch Atomic Arts’ Trek in The Park, a live, outdoor, lo-fi re-enactment of a classic 60’s Trek episode, “Mirror Mirror.”

The episode, which the man standing next to me in a Starship Enterprise t-shirt referred to as “beloved," first aired in 1967, depicting the “interdimensional transfer” of Captain Kirk, Dr. McCoy, Scotty and Lt. Uhura to an evil version of the Enterprise where assassination, torture and brutal murder are the norm. Captain Kirk eloquently sums up the situation when he states, “It’s our Enterprise… but it isn’t.” This tale of moral contingency proves ripe for a self-aware and adoring retelling from the Atomic Arts crew.

Adam Rosko, who also directs the show, plays Kirk. In the spirit of William Shatner, Rosko portrays a confident, swaggering Captain, but there’s a key difference: Rosko’s Kirk is fully aware that some of his lines will induce wild laughter from the all-ages Trekkie crowd. To accomodate this, he “milks” certain lines and takes longer pauses. Jesse Graff, meanwhile, acts appropriately stoic as Vulcan Mr. Spock, refusing to crack even when the crowd comes unglued. Intergalactic soundscapes from Peter Dean and Isopod help mentally transport the audience from the verdant, sunlit Woodlawn Park amphitheater to the dark, sparkly realm of space travel. Meanwhile, Steven Schmucker provides impeccably timed sound effects which successfully create props and objects that are not physically there. Of course, the park atmosphere does its best to encroach, with honking cars, planes flying overhead and babies crying. Taking these interruptions in stride, the group dramatically pauses and gazes skyward until the noise subsides.

Since the original script was written for television and not the stage, some modifications have been made. Moments that would typically usher in a commercial break, usually signified by a Captain Kirk voice over starting with “Captain’s log: Star Date unknown…” are played straight through. Also, in lieu of “beam-me-up” special effects, four women called the “Magnetic Storm Girls” parade around in shimmery gold sequined dresses as synthesized space noises stream through the amplifier. These live action alterations add to the quirky, lighthearted character of the performance.

The nearly hour-long show features several athletic, gut-busting fight scenes, and actors brandish plenty of hilarious homemade knives and phaser guns. This playful violence elicits plenty of cheers, whistles, and laughter—especially when Captain Kirk defeats Evil Mr. Spock.

The popularity of the show has clearly outgrown the confines of Woodlawn Park; the small amphitheater has been filled to capacity throughout the play’s run, forcing many to stand, and even more to sit down on the lawn where dialogue is hard to hear. This is an issue that Rosko has addressed, but he maintains that the troupe will finish out the third season of Trek in the Park at Woodlawn. So, if you are planning on catching the closing weekend (July 30-31), Spock ears and a homemade phaser gun are optional—but early arrival is mandatory.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

Tags: Theater, Review, kitsch

indier-than-thou

7 PDX Pop Picks

Email

The 8th Annual PDX POP NOW festival is poised to take the weekend by storm (though hopefully in some sunshine), with a nonstop onslaught of free, all-ages shows from some of the best local bands.*

Show up—or drop off your hip kids—at Refuge PDX (SE 1st and Yamhill) anytime after 6pm on Friday, or between noon and midnight on Saturday and Sunday, and you’re bound to encounter a pretty cool show. But if you crave a little more structure, we’ll help you navigate by vouching for a few choice acts. Here’s a short list of can’t-miss bands in order of their scheduled appearance:

Loverspdx

Lovers
Friday, 9:25
Cubby, Kerby, and Emily share a history, harmonies, and a flair for South American style they picked up on forays to São Paulo. Percussive, soulful songs, heavy on synths and toms, bring Cubby’s neverending vision quest to light.

Minderspdx

The Minders

Friday, 10:15
Power-pop trio The Minders are back while keyboardist Rebecca Cole takes a break from emerging super-group Wild Flag. Frontman Martyn Leaper’s devotion to British Invasion melodies, ala Zombies and Kinks, consistently delivers clever, catchy songs.

Lochlomondpdx

Loch Lomond
Saturday, 4:10
Part choir boy and part elf, Richie Young remains the central figure of this eerily beautiful folk combo with Euro flourishes. Young’s voice is as ageless as his name; as cool, wavery, and portent with deep secrets as Loch Ness.


Purple_greenpdx

Purple & Green
Saturday, 10:30
If your idea of “playing” includes pushing “play” and inciting a dance riot, then you’re ripe for Purple & Green. Electro-wizard Adam Forkner (aka White Rainbow) teams up with flamboyant singer and prodigious booty-shaker Justin Leon Johnson, with “Don’t stop groovin’, boogie on down,” as a rallying cry.

Museemecaniquepdx

Musée Mecanique
Sunday, 8:20
These guys are such fine craftsmen, they may as well leave wood shavings on the floor. A softly beating heart and beautiful harmonies are enveloped by musicianship as nuanced, blended, and “tasteful” as gourmet.

Kellischaeferpdx

Kelli Schaefer
Sunday, 9:00
Don’t you dare dismiss Kelli Schaefer just because she’s an earnest songwriter/torch singer type; torches this bright have burned down whole towns. Sure, she has a pretty voice—but she also conjures a fierce, deadly duende, commanding her audience to suffer by her side.

Brainstormpdx

Brainstorm
Sunday, 9:40
It’s hard to find hooky head-bob music that’s not at all stupid, but PDX Pop sniffs some out every time. This duo is the latest incarnation of an upbeat, texturally adventurous pop sound that we most closely associate with the 8-year-old fest. In other words, it’s the “PDX-Poppiest.” Trust us: that’s a compliment.



*Too good to be true? Almost. We’re very lucky.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

gallery

A Movable Metal Menagerie

Werks Gallery hosts intricate, interactive animal sculptures hewn from spare parts.

Email

Check out local gearhead Chris Cole ‘s kinetic sculptures (below). If you visit Werks Gallery, they’ll let you turn the hand-crank yourself, allowing these metal monsters to spring to life.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

My Mind Is Like an Open Meadow

See for yourself: it’s as stunning as everyone says.

Email

Erin Leddy’s solo performance art piece, premiered by Hand2Mouth Theatre and reprised last weekend at Headwaters Theater, had already been widely praised but can scarcely be over-sold. Interspersing original songs with recordings of her actress grandmother speaking, Leddy delivers what countless other performance artists attempt: an intimate examination of human fragility, memory, and loss.

For our money, Meadow has struck some of the hardest balances: It manages to be sentimental without being saccharine, universal without being reductive, and intimate without being indulgent. In case you missed it, check out this video of a prior performance and see if you agree.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

promo pile gold

Jay Clarke’s Instrumental Impulses

The man who plays with Dolorean and Grails and records as “Ash Black Bufflo,” waxes philosophical about an epic record that took him 5 years to make.

Email
Ashblackbufffinal-web-300x200

Jay Clarke’s press photo—like his mysterious music—leaves plenty to the imagination.

UPDATE: We’ve just learned that Jay’s music is included in Erin Leddy’s award-winning My Mind Is Like an Open Meadow, just reprised at the 1 Festival, a solo artist showcase coordinated by July’s magazine featuree Mizu Desierto. (Small world.)

The Culturephile promo pile—an ever-growing and periodically reshuffled mound of CD’s, books and postcards—sometimes yields a rare treasure. This was certainly the case with Ash Black Bufflo’s Andasol. Mysterious, moving, and worthy of several spins, this album compelled us to learn more about its origins. Luckily, local musician and mad studio scientist Jay Clarke expresses himself almost as well in words as he does in his resplendent soundscapes, so we’ll go ahead and let him explain.


What are some things that Andasol sounds like? Not in terms of band or genre names, but in terms of atmospheric noises.
Lots of stuff! I’ll go back a bit though….when I started recording the album, I had no great plan, so I settled on the idea of using everything—even things that were a bit nasty or destructive in my personality or past. One of the first tracks I did was a song my wife sang called “Summer Night with Silverware” that sounded a lot like what my great-grandmother sang on her porch in Kentucky (no running water, no electricity etc…). I added a field recording of crickets from that area, and it all came together after that. I realized at that point that I wasn’t going to make an album of songs, but of what it felt like to be in certain parts of the country—and to be honest, a damaged country.

That said, there are a lot of things that Andasol sounds like—the aforementioned crickets at night, the city din, crowds, footsteps in snow, car radios, some laughing girls, a bit of Finnish counting, my wife speaking Spanish, old how-to language tapes, a street performer…. Listed out like this, it reads like the bad abstract poetry I wrote in college—but hopefully it all makes sense in context. I’m not really impressed with field recordings on an album; you hear that a lot. But if it serves the purpose of the song, then I think you can use whatever you need.

This album is a soundtrack, right? How did that collaboration come about? Were you able to see the footage and use it as inspiration to create the music, or not?
Well, that’s not necessarily true. I scored a documentary called Marwencol and a song from Andasol is in the movie for a bit, but everything else on the album stands on its own. There’ve been a few reviews that have said they didn’t like the album until they saw the movie, at which point they really enjoyed Andasol because they could match up the music with the film. Unfortunately, that’s a bit of brain trickery on their part. And yet, Marwencol had a big effect on the album, for sure.

The short genesis story is, I did a documentary called Red, White Black and Blue awhile ago. Jeff Malmberg, future director of Marwencol, edited that movie. I was on tour in Los Angeles and saw him not long after RWBB and we started talking about what he was up to. He started to tell me Mark’s story and about Marwencol, and halfway through I told him that I’d do the score for free (though he ended up paying me out of his own pocket). That was that, really. Over the next four years I sent him about 150 tracks, and the majority of the movie was cut to that music. I scored to film later in the process, but I’d say 80% of the movie was cut to the music I sent along the way.

Can you give a brief account of your band resumé? What bands have you been in, and roughly when?
I was in the Standard from 1999 to 2006 or so, and we never broke up, just stopped. When the dollar amount is right, we’ll re-form and tour the world! Dolorean since 2000, Holy Sons for the last two years, Grails for about the last year and a half. In there are too many other bands to count for single shows or six-month jaunts, where I wasn’t in the band necessarily, but acted as an honorary member to help out friends and get free beer.

You recorded Andasol mostly on your own, right?
That’s right, I did it on my own—though my wife, who is a very good violinist, played a huge role.

What sort of headspace were you in?
It took about five years to complete, so I was in just about every possible headspace you can imagine. I think the primary headspace was what you might call “roiling abject failure,” if that’s a headspace, punctuated by moments of real joy. There is no greater fun than living inside your own world: moving the trees around, picking up the train station and moving it south of town, annihilating the town drunk in a car accident….It is a world of your making so the responsibility lies on your shoulders. At the end of the day, it’s your baby—or your town drunk, if you will. The problem arises when you realize that other people will be critiquing the hell out of your town drunk, so you better make sure his breath smells of the cheapest wine and his clothes are shabby in all the right places.

How many hours do you think you spent, over those years?
In those five years, I really couldn’t say how many hours I spent. A lot.

How many different instruments are incorporated in your album, and what’s the largest number of simultaneous tracks in a single song?
It’s hard to say—some stuff is actually sampled note by note, laid out on a keyboard and then played that way. It would be faster to just learn how to play the banjo, but I figured it made for more interesting sounds if I stuck a pencil under the strings and sampled that and screwed with it a bit. There’s an urban legend that Paul Bowles told his novelist wife Jane to just “use the hammer and nails of fictional technique,” to which she replied, “but I have to make my own hammer and nails.” I can identify with that brand of masochism.

Explain a little more about the mystic/composer Joaquim Laakso-Risti. How did you come across his work, and what aspects of your album were inspired by it?
This is a bit of a touchy subject. I have to tread lightly for copyright reasons, incredibly enough, but my wife and I spend a good amount of time in Taos, NM and came across Laakso-Risti there—actually in a town outside of Taos in the Sangre de Cristo mountains. Long dead now, but he travelled in the Southwest quite a bit in the 1940s, spreading the gospel of community music-making. He’d go into a town, get the people instruments (or invite them to make their own) and then they’d adapt some of his own music so that everyone could play a part, and I mean everyone. It can be a bit hard to listen to sometimes (Laakso-Risti’s neo-romantic tics can make your eyes squirm), but gradually an amazing process takes over where the community begins to right itself and, flat notes and tempo problems galore, they start making this very beautiful, hive-mind music. Folks that know Laakso-Risti’s philosophies can speak more to this phenomenon, but it inspired me to make music that was rough around the edges, more community-minded though from a singular place, eccentric-sounding maybe. I’d say three songs on the album are directly linked to his work. However, the music on Andasol is in no way lifted from Laakso-Risti’s folk operas (what he brought into these small towns to play) but is instead inspired by them, their intentions and their spirit. If you think this sounds like lawyer-speak, you’re damn right.

What, in your opinion, are some advantages of making or listening to instrumental music over pop songs with words?
First, if I could write songs with lyrics and singing, I would. It’s a more direct way of making your point. That said, the advantage of making and listening to instrumental music is that (to totally mangle Emily Dickinson’s fine phrase) it “tells it better slant.” There’s enough gap for one’s meaning to be a little bit more slippery in purely instrumental music.

Say I want to write a pop song about a developmentally disabled man who is walking through the snow and somehow becomes a part of the cosmic whole (and therefore saintly) by his mere existing. Well, I’d need to have the right words and the right voice to get that across, and to be honest, I don’t have those words and I certainly don’t have that voice. If I want to do this same thing in an instrumental, I have heavy steps in snow, the sound of my wife and her niece singing and harmonizing what sounds like the word NO, church bells, a distorted guitar feeding back, heavy breathing and a big portentous title like “Greatness Strikes Where it Pleases,” and then it’s up to you to fill in the gaps. I’m not so delusional that I think someone will listen to the track and say “Hey, that sounds like a mute achieving sainthood,” but that’s the point: I don’t think you need everything laid out in front of you. Those sounds add up to what I’m shooting for, and for the purpose of that song, maybe it is even more what I’m shooting for than if I had lyrics. I’m not totally sure. Sometimes I give myself the puzzle of writing lyrics to the ideas of some of these songs, and it ends up making me laugh. I wouldn’t want to know me if I made that album.

How did you choose the few words that are included in the album, and what do they mean to you?
Great question, because it all matters in the end though it might not to the listener. The stuff that’s chosen is purposefully mundane in spots. In order to make room for the music, some words end up as instruments. I’m not so married to how deep they are. In some tracks, the words carry the entire load and lay out the album’s intentions. I love hip-hop albums that start off with a spoken track that lays out what is about to happen: “I’m a bad mother,” “I’m about to destroy”…I like the confidence in that. The problem for me is that even though you use the language and the subjects of your life, you can’t go home again. That place and time is a kind of hell, and yet, it’s your hell. So use hell, just make it interesting. Andasol ended up a being a way to lie about things that actually happened—it’s my life, but it has nothing to do with me.

Lastly, the counting in “Finnish” halfway through “Go ’way Old Ghosts” is for my wife, who is half-Finnish and who has saved my life, so you ask me what the words mean to me—that little nod to her means everything.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

Tags: music, Interview

gallery review

Slideshow: July Gallery Goods

A poignant comment on Lady Liberty, art nouveau made new again, and a water-snake lies in wait.

Email
Thewavers_gretapratt

Photographer Greta Pratt’s The Wavers manages to be witty, satirical, personal, and socio-economically sympathetic, all at once. Her premise? Detail-rich, arresting portraits of the people Liberty Tax hires to wave on street corners dressed as the famous statue. Pictured: Ramone Williams

Blue Sky Gallery

View Slideshow » Photo: Greta Pratt

Photographer Greta Pratt’s The Wavers manages to be witty, satirical, personal, and socio-economically sympathetic, all at once. Her premise? Detail-rich, arresting portraits of the people Liberty Tax hires to wave on street corners dressed as the famous statue. Pictured: Ramone Williams

Blue Sky Gallery

View Slideshow » Illustration:

There’s a lot going on in Thomas Wood ‘s idiosyncratic, whimsical Marine Bouquet, and this screen image doesn’t do it justice. An actual glimpse at the gallery piece reveals chitons, anemones, a slumbering octopus, and a skiff at sea. If you love marine life but are unmoved by the usual washy wave-scapes, you’ll enjoy the way this piece brings the ocean’s bounty forth in crisp detail.

Augen Gallery

View Slideshow » Illustration:

We can’t help noticing that this painting, Hibiki Miyazaki ‘s Last Day of Summer, is oddly compatible with the cryptic fantasy writings of the artist’s near-namesake Haruki Murakami (Wind-Up Bird Chronicle) and also Gothcore superband The Cure’s single, “Last Days of Summer.” Free association rarely works this well—nor do seemingly “unfinished” paintings usually satisfy the way this one does.

Augen Gallery

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Is there such a thing as art nouveau, nouveau ? If so, we’re looking at it in Joshua Mays. His masterful use of swirling floral 2-D shapes earns a Mucha comparison, even as his nuanced, golden 3-D shading evokes another classic: Maxfield Parrish. And somehow, it all comes together with a postmodern rock-poster flair. We hope these gorgeous underground—and underpriced—works, currently on display at Backspace, will hit another gallery wall soon, where they’ll get the attention they deserve free from the danger of coffee spatter.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

AJ Power ‘s Naga lurks in the farthest corner of Compound Gallery , looking as though she were waiting to swallow Waterhouse’s Lady of Shalott . A beautifully large canvas from the Seattle artist better known for his small-scale winsomely weird human-bird hybrids.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Since we opted not to brave the line that curled around the block beside Upper Playground, we can’t know which, if any, of Alex Pardee ‘s graphic pen-and-ink pieces were on-view. What we do know is that he was hosting a book release for his latest, Awful/Resilient (cover pictured), and the kid’s got a following.


Last week, Culturephile suggested some works you might go see at first Thursday. Today, we offer a recap, with a few snapshots of works we did see, that stood out.

Click through the slideshow (left) for some of the Pearl’s current gallery gems.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

Tags: galleries, overview

Festival Photos

Slideshow: Mississippi Street Fair

Eats, arts, and musical mayhem

Email
2011_july_10_mississippi_street_fair_band

Local folkster Nick Jaina and band played the Courtyard stage while eager onlookers sipped New Belgium Brews under the coveted umbrellas.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Local folkster Nick Jaina and band played the Courtyard stage while eager onlookers sipped New Belgium Brews under the coveted umbrellas.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Mississippi Avenue was jam-packed with local artists, musicians, food carts, restaurants, and breweries for the 10th annual street fair. Last year’s fair drew over 30,000 people, and from the looks of it, this year’s event met (if not exceeded) that number as hordes of people hit the streets on July 9.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

B-Line, a sustainable delivery company, took to the overcrowded street, selling organic yerba matte tea from a delivery cart pulled by a bicycle and manned by an actual fairy princess.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

From Left: Cassandra Matthews, McKenzie Kinden, 6, and Juwuan Poke, 6 dawn painting shirts as they transform a boring car into a work of art, donations went to helping CHAP, Children’s Healing Art Project. The organization is striving to fund art programs for children in hospitals.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

A friendly apartment representative on Mississippi Avenue hands out balloons to passersby, filling the street with even more color—not that the Mississippi Street Fair needed any extra.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

As temperatures soared and brows began to boil, anything served with ice became a popular stop for fairgoers.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Space was limited at the overcrowded street fair, but people still found room to set up and jam out.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Local taqueria Por Que No? was extremely busy due to its proximity to the dance stage and its serving of refreshing pomegranate margaritas.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Singer Sara Hernandez of The Angry Orts gave an energetic, hip-thrust inducing performance on the main stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

A fairgoer contemplates the window paintings of one of the many art vendors. Every medium of art known to mankind seemed to be available for purchase along the avenue.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Demonstrating their hula-hoop skills, two fairgoers feverishly work their hoops into a multi-colored vortex.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

The sweet and savory smells of kettle-corn, a street fair staple, wafted throughout the air as samples were generously doled out.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

The infamous pink Voodoo Donut truck made an appearance serving up wacky donut creations to fair goers.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

The street fair drew an all-ages crowd with many children taking to the crows nest of a parent’s shoulders for a better view and a rest for tiny, Croc-shod feet.

View Slideshow » Photo: McKenna Johnson

Over 250 vendors brought their finest funky wares to the Mississippi sidewalk between Fremont and Skidmore streets.

It was hot on Saturday. Melting gum on the sidewalk, shirtless-guy-who-probably-shouldn’t-be-going-shirtless kind of hot.

It was also the 10th annual Mississippi Street Fair. And if you happened to shuffle your way down Mississippi Avenue between Fremont and Skidmore streets, weaving through the train of baby strollers (or possibly pushing one yourself) and dodging the adorable-yet-slobbery pooches, well, Portland Monthly was right there with you.

Big Dawn Blackwood got things started around 10 AM and Mississippi Studios wrapped things up by hosting shows late into the night, culminating in a midnight concert from local heroes Dolorean. Between these two happenings, 36 regional bands, the likes of Dirty Mittens, agesandages and The Angry Orts (to name a few), strutted their stuff on six different stages.

Over 250 vendors brought unique merchandise for fairgoers to “ooo and ahh” over; everything from locally crafted jewelry to independently produced soap to deep fried mac n’ cheese balls to sketchy looking caramel apples were represented.

The gentrified North Portland neighborhood experienced an influx of thousands of Portlanders. If last weekend’s Waterfront Blues Festival was a sea of people, the Mississippi Street Fair was undoubtedly a slow-moving shoulder-to-shoulder river of humanity.

Photographer McKenna Johnson captured some of the street fair’s highlights, including the pescado tacos from Por Que No, the irreverent Pollock-esque painting of an automobile by children, and a toddler with a Batman mask painted on his face. It (finally) feels like summer out there—so, in the words of DJ Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh Prince’s “Summertime”, “sit back and unwind,” and enjoy the slideshow!

Were you there? Let us know what you liked.

For more about Portland arts events, visit PoMo’s Arts & Entertainment Calendar, stream content with an RSS feed, or sign up for our weekly On The Town Newsletter!

Add a Comment »

Advertisement