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TBA Picks: Thursday

Catch as Catch can

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I’m not usually such a fan of sampler shows—too often they remind me of the most frustrating experiences at thrift stores, when you spend what seems like an eternity pawing through items that don’t smell quite right and never find anything in your size.

But. I do like Catch. It’s a multidisciplinary, Brooklyn-based performance laboratory organized by Andrew Dinwiddie and Jeff Larson, the men behind Get Mad at Sin! … somehow there’s a spirit and generosity about it; even when I don’t like what Andrew and Jeff choose, I get the sense every element was hand-picked with particular care.

Catch is coming to the Works tonight. The lineup includes artists whose work I know and love and those I’ve never seen but am intrigued by. I’m pretty sure something will fit.

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review

TBA 2011: On Sight

“We must be brave and look directly at what they have made.”

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Photo: Benjamin Sutton

One of the things I love about the readymade art spaces at WHS is what isn’t in them: guided audio tours.

Another thing: exhaustive, explain-everything-away wall texts.

The Works is a social hub as much as an art destination during TBA, and for some people the art will never be more than a colorful backdrop. And that’s fine; it makes the building feel lived in, in a really particular way. But if you do choose to spend time with the many ideas housed in each classroom, if you come in the middle of the day, for instance, when it’s quieter and slower, and you can feel the show’s low, cumulative hum—well, then it’s just you, and the art and the conversations that swirl around it.

I got a blissful does of that yesterday when Kristan Kennedy, PICA’s visual art curator, and I spent an hour or so walking through the repurposed classrooms and chatting about which artists she chose to invite to tba this year, and why.

“There’s not a lot of didactics,” she said of the setup. “I just want people to experience.”

And, of course, to think. Evidence of Bricks, as Kristan is calling the show, swirls around questions of resistance and revolution, including, in Kristan’s words, “the instinct to defy the world with artistic practice.”

That instinct creates its own world, a white room full of possibilities. It’s a particular way of being political. Walking through the Works yesterday, I thought of something the choreographer Ivana Müller said to me a few months ago about what it means to be a political artist in our time:

Being political, she said, “means we don’t employ the same ways, the representation of the political—it doesn’t really work to scream slogans anymore, because the publicity industry does this already. Every single advertisement on television screams slogans. I think we have to be in some way like smooth operators. The physical engagement in this event, creating a community, that is already a political statement."

Time-based art, indeed.

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We Recommend

TBA Picks: Wednesday

A little quiet time

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Festivals like TBA encourage people to go into overdrive: see more, do more, run around and try to catch everything before it disappears.

This can be lots of fun, but it’s also exhausting, and maybe not the best way to take in art. Allowing yourself to slow down creates a certain space, like an adult quiet time. Today seems like a good day for it. And Rite of Spring, the enchantingly understated and powerful film by Mona Vatamanu and Florin Tudor on view at The Works, provides the perfect excuse for lingering.

“This pieces, I know I’ll be hearing about in two years,” Kristan Kennedy, PICA’s visual art curator, told me yesterday during a thoughtful tour through some of her choices at this year’s festival. “Some of the ones that are more immediate, I won’t. And there’s room for both.”

Indeed there is (it’s one of the strengths of Kristan’s curatorial structure). This afternoon, I hope to make some room for Rite, and its many ruminations—on political and social legacies, the beauty within violence, how history haunts our present. Maybe I’ll see you there.

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for the birds

TBA 2011: Whispering Pines

Moulton and Hallett go exploring…but end up back at square one.

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Cynthia rolls out of bed in the morning into a comical Pee-Wee’s Playhouse-style virtual environment full of bric-a-brac and birdhouses, little knowing that her life’s about to permanently change. As she goes about her daily routine—which includes exercise on a yoga ball and an exaggeratedly luxurious bath—silly singing spirit guides emerge, eventually coaxing her to climb to the top of a giant redwood tree, plumb the depths of the cosmos, and return to her own world with a new sense of purpose.

The visual vocabulary remains absurd and lighthearted throughout: the universe is a default purple star-field Macintosh screen-saver, onscreen “props” respond to Cynthia’s hands with a “click and drag” motion, and each item in the backdrop looks deliberately foreshortened and fake. However, the philosophical challenge posed by “Butterfly,” a Feist-like singer in tye dye, is all too real: how will Cynthia push beyond her mundane day-to-day existence and self-actualize?

The profundity of this premise buoys the whimsy to a point, but starts to deflate when we realize that Cynthia’s big epiphany is shaping up to be, “I should totally feed more birds.” After all that adventure, we find we’ve only actually travelled a few strip-mall yards from the Pottery Barn to the Garden Center.

It’s almost impossible to see this piece without comparing it to a local work, Erin Leddy’s My Mind Is Like An Open Meadow. Both are one-woman shows with contemporary original scores. Both performers sport shapeless blue housedresses and generic graying lady-wigs. But where Leddy takes audiences to unusually honest and personal places, Shana Moulton (“Cynthia”) seems to skim the surface. Even the topics of infirmity, death, and self-sacrifice are translated into such goofy iconography, that they’re effectively trivialized. If this is the intention—bravo. Winking dismissiveness is certainly a contemporary tradition, despite the fact that it’s not this reviewer’s preference.

We can’t deny that this journey is comical, innovative, and idiosyncratic. It’s a showcase of cool digital tricks and techniques, and a forum for some sweet-sounding songs, both pop and opera. But if, like Cynthia, you’re seeking meaningful answers—then you’ll need to look further.

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Tags: Theater, Review, performance, TBA, contemporary, tba2011

collective review

TBA 2011: Jesse Sugarmann

Sometimes Nothing (everything) Happens

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Oh, you guys. I blew it.

For those of us (lunatics) who try to see everything at these cluster**** smorgasbords, there are always at least two festivals. The first is the ideal one, the one we see in our mind’s eye, when every event we intend to catch has been laid out neatly on paper and, because things like nerves, exhaustion, afternoon drinking binges and the like do not exist on paper, seems totally doable.

The second is the actual, where all of those things and their like exist with a vengeance, and prevent us from even approaching the ideal.

And, so: I didn’t make it to the Jesse Sugarmann performances. In my ideal festival, see, I managed to be in two places at once.

Well, whatever. What’s done is done. I don’t get to see that slo-mo walrus ballet of minivans and mattresses. The actual has to live in the ideal.

But.

Last night I was in only one place, and it was grand (ideal and actual): Barry Sanders’ writing class at PNCA. Barry is marvelous. His students are marvelous. I just tried to keep up.

We spent awhile workshopping some of the writing about tba they’ve been doing. And, as luck would have it, some of them chose to write about Sugarmann. And how:

“Negative space between the stacks of mattresses shrinks and you’re almost sure that something is going to happen. One of the vans is going to slip off and topple to the ground. One of the mattresses is going to burst. It is going to be violent, you’re sure. You want it to happen because if it doesn’t, you won’t be satisfied.” – Rebecca

“The beads trickle along the folds and angles of my positioned self; I am enjoying my sweat now. The lifeless chunks of sheet metal slowly move toward the sky in the escalating moment.” – Travis

“I too share this type of admiration for the car & yet, I am the first to admit the lunacy of the attraction as well. Those old cars, some with ridiculously useless twelve cylinder engines, others with quirky hand tooled bodies, the types of cars in which you don’t care if they break down daily, because you’ve given them a name.” -Jeremy

I wouldn’t have said it that way. I wouldn’t have said it better.

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Tags: Art, galleries, contemporary, tba2011

We Recommend

TBA Picks: Tuesday

Lone Wolves

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Here’s what you should do tonight:

First Get Mad at Sin! with Andrew Dinwiddie.

Then get healed with The Realest MC, Kyle Abraham.

Dinwiddie and Abraham are both luscious and charismatic performers. They’re also super-smart thinkers when it comes to playing with tradition and form. What’s not to be excited about? I’ll be at both.

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review

TBA 2011: Rude Mechs

“Because of course it’s fake.”

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The first thing I thought when I sat down in the Imago Theatre last night to see the Rude Mechs show The Method Gun was how completely familiar the aesthetic is. The ill-fitting clothes, the thrift-store vintage chic, the stripped stage and restless, faux-casual movements of the actors as the crowd filtered in: it’s so much a part of what contemporary performance (and especially theater) looks like these days.

The same goes for the meta-self-conscious structure of the play, in which five actors (there is also a recurring tiger motif; what IS it with animal mascots in recent years?) portray themselves and characters who are also actors laboring to fulfill the dictates of their legendary, disappeared director-guru. They have been rehearsing for years. Their task is to reimagine A Streetcar Named Desire, sans any of the main characters.

“Help us be emotionally honest—at least in little bursts,” one of the performers proclaims to whatever gods she honors. Is she talking to herself, herself playing herself, or whatever is behind door number three?

In any case, she is speaking an absolutely conventional language. This isn’t a bad thing; I only wish we could stop calling work like this experimental or boundary-pushing or whatever. It’s simply contemporary and as much a part of a tradition as the ballet or landscape painting.

I wish we could do this because I think it would allow us to be clearer eyed about our responses to it. We couldn’t hide behind dismissive (whether admiring or irritated) phrases like “Oh it’s just so weird and out there and blah blah blah.” We’d have to do better than that, work harder. And so would the artists. (I feel the same when certain artists get lionized as geniuses … what does that word even mean?)

I was thinking about working harder (well, I guess this is a theme of mine at tba11) during and after The Method Gun, which had some witty and lovely moments but all-in-all left me feeling rather deflated. It was all so easy in its manic, loosely spun thoughts on what it is to try at creating, to try and to sometimes fail or maybe always fail but to go after that glittering thing you don’t yet know how to describe. That’s a big and a gorgeous and a worthy subject, and it’s one that a company might well fail at. I just …want them to fail better.

There was a gun. True to Chekhov’s dictate it was fired. It fired blanks.

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Tags: tba2011

Live Music

Slideshow: MusicFest NW

Our intrepid reporters relive their favorite sights and sounds from Portland’s most all-encompassing annual music festival.

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Photo: Kate Degenhardt

Iron and Wine’s Sam Beam emotes.

View Slideshow » Photo: Kate Degenhardt

Iron and Wine’s Sam Beam emotes.

View Slideshow » Photo: Kate Degenhardt

The sun sets on the Friday night crowd as Iron and Wine sets to jamming.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Black Cobra frontman Jason Landrian at Dante’s

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Marketa Irglova at Pioneer Courthouse Square

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Fans at Pioneer Courthouse Square await further stimulation.

View Slideshow » Photo: Rebecca Waits

Sharon Van Etten at Crystal Ballroom.

View Slideshow » Photo: Rebecca Waits

Kathy of the Thermals at Backspace

View Slideshow » Photo: Kate Degenhardt

Cult members or rock band? It’s the Stepkids!

View Slideshow » Photo: Kate Degenhardt

The Horrors at Dante’s.

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The Horrors at Dante’s.

View Slideshow » Photo: Rebecca Waits

Kelli Schafer at Bunk Bar.

View Slideshow » Photo: Kate Degenhardt

YACHT brings the space-funk to a very packed Branx.

View Slideshow » Photo: Rebecca Waits

Dangerous Boys Club has landed…at Rotture!

View Slideshow » Photo: Rebecca Waits

Big Freedia finishes a sweaty “sissy bounce” set with a sit-down rap to cool off the crowd.


Click through the slideshow (left) to see accompanying images.


THURSDAY, 9/8
Witch Mountain
Dante’s, 10pm
[SLUDGE METAL]

“When was the last time you swung your hips at a metal show?”, I ask you. Never. I had never swung my hips at a metal show, either—not until Thursday night at MusicFest NW, when I pedaled through early drunk-traffic toward Dante’s, like a bat into Hell, to catch local sludge/doom/stoner metal staple Witch Mountain. Lead singer Uta Plotkin first grabbed my attention a couple years when I saw Aranya, her other earth-loving/pagan-metal band. (Talk about a gal with a full datebook. “What? Dinner this Friday? Sorry, love, I can’t, I’m playing a gig with my other amazing metal band”.)

Around since 1997, Witch Mountain was already a solid and original act, but adding Plotkin in 2009 has clearly turned these metal gods golden. Live, she can shift from a rich, soothing voice that dances with hints of bluesy-gospel, then kick into a throttling, shrill incantation over sandpaper guitar riffs that cut so deep through the floorboards it’s like being dragged through jagged ice. Truly, this is metal that sticks to your ribs, and possibly other bones. Support their local shows, buy their album, then go see your naturopath to get all the toxins sucked out. (REW)

Black Cobra
Dante’s, 11pm
[SHRED METAL]

With all the concentrated focus of a 15-year-old Metallica fan getting the rhythm part of “Enter Sandman” just right for the first time, lead singer Jason Landrian of hard-shredding duo Black Cobra did not disappoint. If you thought it was hard to get people to dance in Portland, try being a death-metal band, where the most you can get from even a steadfast, dedicated audience is some loosely energetic head-bangs. These guys are truly thrash-worthy, though, and in a crowd of predictably long hair, tight black pants, and scruffy neck-beards, many a devil’s horn was thrown into the air on this unholy night, including my own—even though I had to leave a couple songs before the end because it was, as our mothers would put it, “a little too much.” Lacking an encyclopedic knowledge of metal (you could probably place me at “beginner-intermediate”) it’s hard to say how original these guys are…they’ve got the hair, and they’ve got the drive, but can it propel us all the way to Valhalla? Time will tell. (REW)

EMA
Holocene, Midnight

[OUTSIDER POP]

In a loosely-packed room of dorky thirty-somethings, the crowd appears simultaneously awed like they’re looking at a Rothko painting for the first time and terrified like they’ve just bumped into the gorgeous punk girl who scared everyone in high school. That woman grew up, evidently had an early-twenties misadventure in California, and became the untouchable Erika M. Anderson, frontwoman for EMA, a project that developed after splitting ways with former drone-folk trio Gowns. Ranging from hushed, sultry whispers to a heroic war cry, many place Anderson’s voice and presence somewhere in between Kim Gordon and Kim Deal—if you left them out in the sun for a while and gave their bandmates 12 effects pedals and a handful of quaaludes (do people still do those?).

Seriously, the band’s range is all over the place. Between Anderson’s own pounding guitar style, the psychedelic leads of another lady guitarist, an intuitive drummer, and requisite nerdy guy alternating seamlessly between an electric violin and a keyboard, the moment you realize there’s no bassist is the same moment you realize there’s no need for one. Hollow, droning-but-psyched-out distortion couches many of their songs like decorative noise pillows, which are then decimated by sharp, danceable choruses that come quite close to kicking you in the face (literally).

My hope is that the crowd was merely stunned into a familiar Portland silence rather than unimpressed, because her funny, engaging stage presence and banter definitely seemed to fall a little flat with the room—that is, of course, until she won everyone back with a masterful, raw cover of The Violent Femmes’ classic, “Add It Up”. One of my absolute favorite performances of the weekend, EMA is one keep your eye on in the next year. (REW)

FRIDAY, 9/9
Sallie Ford and the Sound Outside
Pioneer Courthouse Square, 5pm,
[SWING ROCK]

Sallie Ford and her band aren’t folking around—on Friday they proved once again that they could wail the blues and pick the guitar with the best of ‘em during their stint as the opening act for one of MFNW’s most anticipated line-ups. The audience couldn’t quite match their energy—a herd of concertgoers milled about the square or lounged on the steps, grazing on snack-stand chow and guzzling Heinekens. There was a group of fans that clumped around the stage and even danced a bit, but for the most part people failed to offer anything but polite engagement. The venue felt too vast for the local band, and they must have lost some of their regulars due to the show’s 32 dollar ticket price and the fact that the standard red MFNW wristband wouldn’t get you past the laughably large security presence at the Square’s entrance. The band’s performance seemed to transcend their environment. They were earnest yet distant, warm yet stirring. And what could serve as better backdrop for the Sound Outside than a balmy summer sky over an open-air stage in the heart of their city? (KD)

Markéta Irglová
Pioneer Courthouse Square 6pm
[INDIE SONGSTRESS]

Czech singer/actress Irglová knows how to charm an audience. The Academy Award winner (Best Original Song, “Falling Slowly,” from the film Once) introduces her songs in a soft accented voice and a hush comes over the crowd. When she sings, the Square becomes an intimate courtyard. Accompanying her is the hypnotizing Persian-influenced Aida Shahghasemi playing a traditional Daf drum. Irglová’s deft piano playing and delicate warbling voice soothes and enchants everyone present, from the well-dressed couple who look like they strolled over from their loft in the Pearl, to the swaying hippies who came to mellow out. "This song is about falling in love,” says Irglová, and a woman lies down on the bricks and closes her eyes, taking in the melodies while someone nearby in the audience murmurs, “This music is putting me to sleep,” and smiles. Irglová’s music is serene and peaceful, but it is also sincere and mesmerizing. She is simply pleasant to listen to, and her fans know it. (KD)

Iron and Wine
Pioneer Courthouse Square, 7:30pm
[INDIE DARLING]

It’s twilight and Pioneer Courthouse Square is brimming over with audience members, many of whom have been drinking in the beer gardens since 5. Sam Beam of Iron and Wine steps out in a tailored suit and takes the stage with… surprise guest M. Ward?! The crowd proceeds to freak out as the indie power duo picks up their instruments. The stage lights flush purple and the fog machine billows smoke as the bearded Beam starts to play to an enraptured crowd. But, then, another surprise to onlookers unfamiliar with Iron and Wine’s recent direction—Beam and company start to play funky, rhythmic songs, some of which are even danceable (whoa!). During “Wolves (Song of The Shepherd’s Dog)” the band is positively jamming out, and sounds of feverish sax and synth fill the air. But what was the most memorable moment of the show? When, after starting to play his own take on “Freebird,” Beam smiles mischievously into the microphone and spits, “You asked for it, bitches!” at a cheering, laughing crowd of very happy Portlanders. (KD )

Sharon Van Etten
Crystal Ballroom, 10:00pm
[ELECTRIC FOLK]

By this point in the weekend, I figured out why MFNW shows are so expensive: all of the venues were doubling as saunas. Throw in a groupon for mirodermabrasion-facial-homeopathic-doggie-daycare-wine-tasting, and the ticket prices would make so much more sense. This show was packed. A line wrapped around the corner of 14th street as folks struggled to make it in early to see Blitzen Trapper. Downstairs in Lola’s Room, stragglers in glittery ponytail get-ups trotted into “80s Night”. I took my place in the sweat-lodge of Crystal’s main room. It seemed like most of Portland was there, including several handfuls of grumpy older businessmen-types who gave me the stinkeye for edging forward with my camera. The room was enthusiastic and responsive; teenagers spinning around madly in the middle of the room and snapping pictures of each other’s moves.These factors combined to create a mildly stressful and overwhelming environment (which could also be said for the whole of the festival). But with all the sweetness and grit of a leftover apple pie, Van Etten’s vocals quickly soothed my heat-stroked nerves and reminded me why I was there. Her warm personality and doleful, soulful singing reek pleasantly of a fine-tuned heartache, and her backing band has developed a knack for Americana comfort songs that served as the perfect speed and mood for a steamy summer night.
(REW)

The Thermals
Backspace, 10:45pm

[POP-PUNK]

If I had to pick a venue to see the Thermals in, it would most decidedly not be Backspace. What with the sixty-ish person capacity, the load-bearing column in front of the stage, obscuring the performers from sight for about half the room, and an awkward lack of danceable space, it seemed like a much more suitable environment for any number of quieter, sit-down-and-sway indie folk darlings on the MFNW roster; not a hugely popular local dance-punk trio like The Thermals. That being said, dang if they didn’t make the best of the evening and put on a lively, fist-pumping show. The spot filled up with eager fans of all ages moments after “opening” the door, and everyone from teenyboppers to craft-beer-drinking dads to punky-cute style mavens (ahem) were rocking out to familiar, raucous numbers and the spastic pitchman voice of lead singer Hutch Harris (“He’s dreamy!” I would swoon, if I were 15 and still naive enough to dig rock stars.) No doubt about it, people love these guys, and why shouldn’t they? There was kind of a mosh pit, and their latest video stars Carrie Brownstein. Howd’ya like them apples? (REW)

RTX
Mississippi Studios, 11pm
[HAIR METAL]

It’s rare to find a hair metal band with a female vocalist, especially one that snarls with as much feral primacy as former Royal Trux singer Jennifer Herrema. The crowd at Mississippi studios perks up when RTX starts to shred and Herrema, shrouded by a wild mess of blonde hair and animal furs, growls into the microphone and stomps her cowboy boots to heavy drums. The audience is barely moving except for two head-banging hip-swiveling girls with hair similar to Herrema’s standing next to the stage. The set is over too quickly and the band storms away. It’s times like these when I wish MFNW didn’t have to stick to a tight schedule and Portland audiences were more comfortable with rocking out. (KD)

The Stepkids
Dante’s, 11:30pm
[FUNK ROCK]

OK, so if you were wondering where Devendra Banhart has been lately, I have your answer: someone shot him into space, where he landed on the moon and started a math-rock disco band. He’s not literally in the band, but his freak-folk spirit lingers close in their nervy, artless vocals. These guys are effing bizarre! At first glance, I thought I had accidentally stumbled into a TBA event: dressed head to toe in pure white outfits, they are accompanied by psychy, swirly light projections against a white backdrop. Although they possess a Mars Volta level of insane energy, it was chaotic to the point of confusion and hard to keep up much less tap a foot to. At the end of the day, it was a little too space-jammy for my taste. It fell a beat too short to be palatable experimental rock, and lacked the confidence to be performance art. Hopefully these guys will fall through the right crack and find their niche. (REW)

The Horrors,
Midnight, Dante’s

[NU-GAZE]

Who knew experimental psychedelic goth could be so darn catchy? The Horrors’ punk roots come through in their frenzied performance and tight black uniforms, but their movements look almost choreographed. Every hair flip and boot kick is as stylish and tailored as their look, and boy, do they look great. They are modish without being dated and macabre without being contrived. Years after starting out as a three-chord garage-rock outfit, these dandy fops ripped a hole in the space-time continuum and drove their Vespas into a shoegaze dimension which may or may not contain new lifeforms. Particularly dashing was bassist Rhys Webb, who somehow managed to sashay energetically across the stage while glaring like he had a grudge against the audience. Despite the somber facials, his expert playing added a funky, fluid level to the din. If you can catch a glimpse behind their sweaty mops of hair, you can feel these dreamy Londoners staring right into your soul. Besides an obnoxiously unnecessary strobe light and minor technical difficulties, this was a riveting show that left a packed room of fans dancing and gasping for more. Is it weird that I want to wear an ascot now? (KD & REW)

SATURDAY, 9/10

Kelli Schaefer
Bunk Bar, 10pm
[SINGER-SONGWRITER]

Where has this band been all my life? Portland-based Schaefer’s voice was like a slap across the face as I walked into a medium-sized crowd of upscale patrons, politely nodding with mixed drinks in hand. Her wrenching vocals glide from smooth to brain-defying, but are always classy, falling somewhere on the rock continuum between Regina Spektor, Fiona Apple, and the Raveonettes’ Sharin Foo .The stage presence of Shaefer and her comparably-astounding bassist combine to form the punch of a punk act with the eloquence of a fierce, unsentimental singer-songwriter. While the other three band members provide a scope of individual talent, it’s obvious that they go by her name for a reason; this woman is, in a word, phenomenal. If you want to get a feel for her aesthetic, watch the video Black Dog off her new album Ghost of the Beast, which feels like being stuck inside the pages of every manic-depressive teenage girl’s sketchbook. In a good way. (REW)

YACHT
Branx, 11pm
[DANCE PARTY DUO]

Confession time: before this show, I hadn’t listened to much YACHT, and had never been to any of their frequent, much-heralded local shows. I’m so glad I jumped at the opportunity to see one of the craziest, passionate, and fanatical shows of the festival. Somewhere between the body of Annie Lennox, the posturing of Grace Jones and the manic skittishness of Karen O, co-lead singer Claire L. Evans takes the stage in her hands and wrings it to life. Talking Heads? The Cars? I struggle to think of anyone this synth-funk-portable-dance-party-collective sounds like. If the No Wave movement from the early 80s could resuscitate itself into a better-organized and less broodingly wanky conceptual performance troupe, it would still only sound half as good as these guys. (REW)

Dangerous Boys Club
Rotture, 11pm
[NU-GOTH]

The aliens have landed, and they sound a lot like if Joy Division had been around long enough to get into circuit-bending. With music as disorienting as their laser-lights-show-fog-party performance, these guys are definitely not for the epileptic or those with virulently anti-goth sensibilities. In other words, a pretty straightforward shoegaze-tinged goth-electronica act with heavy, kooky synths and kickin’ rad drum machine beats. Say what you will about dudes who still rock the industrial look into their thirties; they know how to command a stage in a way that draws every audience member in—even the quizzical-looking ones—to hover near the stage and stare into a near-lethal combination of fog and sweat-mist—as though Voyager had just landed in the backyard. It should also be noted that their Facebook page describes their genre as “romance” and their interests as “GUNS, GIRLS AND ESPIONAGE”. Too cool for grad school? Yes. (REW)

Big Freedia
Dante’s, 1am
[SISSYBOUNCE/RAP]

Big Freedia, The Queen Diva, The Heart Eater, you betta’ believe ‘er. Who’s that? Oh, just a queer rapper from the projects of New Orleans who’s been dominating the world of “bounce” music over the past 15 years, laying it down by the fire and turning it into sissy bounce, an intensely queer(ed), sexual exaggeration (and extension) of the genre. A powerhouse of the stage, Freedia plays about six days out of the week in her hometown, and even more when she’s on tour. Adored by our dance-hungry, booty-starved youth, she graced Portland once again with her glammed-out dance theatrics.

Having gained popularity from frequent touring and word of mouth, the crowd seems to get bigger and more diverse at every show. Dante’ s on a Saturday night was no exception. As per usual on Burnside, stumbling club floozies, backwards-cap-bros, and homeless dudes with chihuahuas cold-shouldered drunkenly past the massive line that built up an hour before the doors opened. After much waiting and obnoxious entry/wristband politics, the gates opened to let the flood of eager people converge from one sweaty mass into another. Those who knew what they were in for at a Big Freedia show seemed to possess sly, anxious grins, and everyone else just seemed drunk. The two “Dolls” from “CJ and the Dolls” were in attendance, clad only in facepaint and what I think you would refer to as “lace body stockings”. Mercifully, I ran into friends to dance with, and was not left alone to be uncomfortably back-straddled by strangers. Within the first two songs, the whole room was grinding like crazy.

Onstage, Big Freedia has a performance style every bit as explosive as her in-your-face persona. With baggy jeans, sneakers, and a flashy side-do, it only makes sense that the Queen runs her own successful interior decorating business when she’s not performing. While you can feel from her energy that she’s dedicated to delivering an individualized performance every time, I almost feel like my experience was more enhanced by the surrounding audience than by the performance itself. The environment created by Freedia’s presence alone—the nature of who she is and what she represents—is a brief, set-long taste of awesome, nasty sexual freedom that I’ve rarely experienced outside of half-naked living-room dance parties. She gathers up audience members to join her on stage, then hand-picks people for ol’ fashioned bounce-style booty shakin’ competitions, which adds some much needed audience participation to her short sets that usually cap out at 25 minutes.

Wrapped up in the all-inclusive dancing, there’s an unspoken feeling at her shows that inspires being free to be whoever you want: queer, straight, andro, butch, femme, bro, whatever. And while these categories don’t magically disappear, they do go by the wayside a little when a safe space is implied by the performer’s weirdness, queerness, and generally all-accepting veneer. While I’m sure many attendees didn’t know much about Big Freedia before the show, it was clear that the majority of the audience knew who they were there for, and were pumped to see her. Still can’t believe a Dante’s staffer made me put my shirt back on—how Un-American! (REW)

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Tags: music, Festivals, MFNW, concert

review

TBA 2011: Michel Groisman

Time in the company of others

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What purpose does it serve for a crowd of strangers and not-strangers to gather in a former high school classroom on a sweltering Sunday afternoon in late summer to sit in the almost-darkness and watch a man from another country strap candles to his body and smoothly, methodically noodle his honed body through pretzled poses so as to light these candles one tip to the next, only to extinguish them by blowing through a system of tubing as he goes?

How can it be that at one point most of the people in this crowd are smoothly and methodically spooning mint chocolate chip ice cream into their mouths as their eyes devour the ridiculously specific and arduous task this man has set for himself?

“What is this? What is he?” a little boy whispered from the floor, corkscrewing his body around to stare up at the older woman he was with. If she answered, I didn’t catch it.

The what was Michel Groisman’s Transference performance. It was in some ways utterly mundane and straightforward. Dressed only in shorts and occupying a low wooden platform, his body festooned by a homemade-cyborg-like system of leather straps and tubing and headgear, his bare skin soon speckled with wax, he cycled through repetitive positions, knotting and unwinding his body in order to serve the long white tapers affixed to his feet, arms, knees. He paused at times to catch his breath, and gave himself (or maybe only us) one long break in the middle (he encouraged the ice cream procurement). And though he sometimes progressed into more difficult phrases, he largely stayed away from the circus-trick expectation in which the feats must keep getting bigger, harder, more dangerous in order for the show to go on. He allowed for boredom, for space.

I was with Sheila Lewandowski, the dynamic driving-force behind the Chocolate Factory theater. We each had cups of ice water, and were touching them to our own wrists, necks, shoulders, knees; I didn’t even realize at first that we were doing what he was doing. Both acts served to bring us into our bodies, only we were trying to give ourselves relief, he to test himself.

I sat there, feeling sleepy and half-drugged by the heat and unlit room, and thought of all the things we do and don’t do in a day, all of the myriad, often internal ways in which we become ingenious and impotent. Sisyphus rolling the bolder. Kate Gilmore destroying the block of clay. Our love affair with and deep ambivalence toward technology, the idea of progress—how this has played out in art over the centuries. The Futurist sculpture manifesto.

I thought, at the end, how good it must feel for him to loosen and unbuckle those straps, what relief. And already the knowledge that they will soon enough be strapped back on.

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Tags: Review, performance, TBA, tba2011

review

TBA 2011: Ten Tiny Dances 25

Three ’bots, two even pairs, one last-year redux, a couple junkies, and some impulsive nudity.

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No TBA event is more popularized than Ten Tiny Dances, a curated showcase that confines its artists to a 4′ × 4′ space, but otherwise gives them very free rein. On Saturday, people turned out in the expected droves. Those who got in craned to catch every twitch of the action, while come-latelies moped on the sidewalk, wondering what they were missing.

Here’s what:

1. De/Construction
Breaking glass, spooky railyard sounds, and pitch-darkness pierced by green lazers left intrepid adventurer Danielle Ross undaunted. Creeping in from the wings with a flashlight, she stepped into contrasting violet light to confront the criscrossing emerald threads one at a time with stilted robotic gestures. Each time a beam hit her head or neck, it diffused into a glowing puddle on her skin, accompanied by a glass-crash. As the piece progressed, she sank closer and closer to the floor—and all of a sudden, she was gone.

2. Snag
Carla Mann and Jim McGinn joined forces for a mature, gender-equal pas de deux, characterized by more his-and-hers parallel poses than lifts or spins. Mann even took a turn dipping and spotting McGinn. Their saffron-colored costumes, along with strains of sitar in the music, lent the piece a slight (though likely unintentional) Hare Krishna tone.

3. Fanmail

Part 1/The Fall Raja Feather Kelly took the stage in a Warhol Wig, white-face, and sunglasses. With a letter clasped between his teeth (and though our notes don’t reflect it, we think we remember another one clinging to his butt), he gyrated slowly and jaggedly to Connie Francis’ Fallin’, inspiring in this watcher only one question: “Heroin?”

Part 2/The Past “Warhol” returned, joined by a boozy-looking Marilyn Monroe. Haphazardly, the two lounged around a table and held up cue cards that said things like “IMAGINE A HALF-BLOWN BUBBLE” and “OK GO.” The music? “Time’s A-Wastin.’” And so it seemed.

Part 3/The Attempt Actual choreographed dancing separated this from the prior two parts. Marilyn and Andy performed a sort of laconic bunny-hop, firing “finger-gun” gestures at the crowd, then collapsing.

4. Wicked
Ten Tiny Founder Mike Barber and Cydney Wilkes are the pair who pulled off a tongue-in-cheek 60’s trophy tableau in 2010 . This time, they took their absurdity to the next level, romping around in matching tube dresses, up-ending the stage to play a version of “king of the mountain,” flashing their boobies and underpanties, molting a few colorful feathers, and wrassling in a puppyish pile.

5. No Nukes
Kemumaki Yoko, of upcoming Offsite Dance Project, “awoke” to a pulsing white light. In an awkwardly shoulderpadded white blouse, a tattered black skirt and a sleek bob that would almost pass Japan’s stringent standards for business attire, she seemed to be impersonating one of the increasingly humanoid female robots that Japanese scientists are working tirelessly to perfect. Her automaton gestures kept time with various mechanical blips and tones. As these became more insistent and alarming, intermingled with what sounded like schoolyard shrieks, her gestures gradually became more lifelike. She touched her crotch, crouched, reeled, and fell to the floor. Standing, she gazed into the crowd, pushed back her hair, pounded her heart. Miming a silent scream, she fell down again. The pulsing light resumed, but this time it was blood red.

6. Phillippe Bronchtein
Backed by his own composition, a juxtoposition of legato clarinet and a somewhat industrial beat, the big-bearded Bronchtein seemed to be trying to split the difference between fluid and mechanical movement.

7. Evanescere
Returning from last year’s Offsite Dance Project, Yukio Suzuki seemed to reprise last season’s character: a crazed conductor of a secret inner symphony, posessed and strained to the brink of breaking by his own personal demons—to the point of smashing his head against the floor. An eerie trip-hop rendition of I Will Survive pulled him through his closed-eyed reverie.

8. Slipping Through My Fingers Portland Taiko performances tend to always feel the same, which is to say: traditional, invigorating, exotic and well-paced. This piece, with Michelle Fujii at the helm, was no exception.

9. Taylor Mac
The artist that TimeOut New York called “one of the most exciting theater artists of our time” brought an engaging stage presence as he rapidly peeled off clothes and duct tape to reveal his penis.

10. Splinter
Carla Mann (dancing double duty, see item # 2) emerged as a bathing-capped and suited mutant, making strange noises and strained facial contortions, laughing dementedly while autistically air-humping. Jessie Berdine, shirtless and resembling Wolverine, attacked the stage with an axe and chopped it to smithereens, leaving just enough in-tact to give Mann a leg to stand on, marooned like a polar bear on a melted berg. As circus music swelled, she croaked along to the melody, arms spasming and face twitching a series of tics.

All in all, this didn’t seem like one of TTD’s stronger sets. 1, 5, and 6 were all solo riffs on “the robot”—fine on their own, but too samey when presented together. 2 and 4 also echoed each other as “equal partner” pas de deux, though 4 was undeniably more playful. 3 was a wild card, but rather than being refreshing, it came off as a half-baked nuisance, constantly resurfacing but barely lifting a limb to contribute. When contrasted with last year’s irreverent, high-energy Culture Machine, it further pales. Taiko and tEEth proved the most memorable, and were also the most and least traditional pieces, respectively. Taylor Mac showed moxie, for sure, but his piece seemed rushed, both in conception and execution. (Put on the spot? Quick: Take off your clothes!) At its best, TTD is full of surprises, but this installment was rife with redundancies. So if you got stuck on the sidewalk—don’t beat yourself up.

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Tags: tba2011

static clings

TBA 2011: The Radio Show

Kyle Abraham’s hit parade leaves space for provocative bursts of static.

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Stick your radio on “scan,” and you unleash a gamut of personal and universal emotions. Motown makes you swagger and smile, AM soft-rock leaves you longing for a lost lover. Hiphop hits inspire you to front, or get low, or get jiggy. Then the talk shows come on. Some caller makes a fool of herself, and you laugh. Some host makes a sexist remark, and you’re offended.

But between all that “something,” there is ever the static—the incomprehensible fuzz of nothingness that fills the crevices, and when it’s not carrying words and songs, it rasps unbound into the empty frequencies between the receivable stations.

When he’s not responding to the bursts of Top-40 and talk, Kyle Abraham wears the static with a trembling hand, a troubled brow, and a searching gaze that breaches the crowd’s comfortable detachment. And then, mercifully, the next frequency is found, and Abraham and his dancers bound back into action, shrugging the next song onto their soulful shoulders and manifesting its mood through their innovative choreography. But the naked urgency of the static isn’t easily suppressed. It resurfaces from time to time, adding challenging layers of anxiety and suspense to the Radio Show playlist.

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Tags: Dance, Radio, TBA, modern, tba2011

review

TBA 2011: tEEth

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I’m not sure what the capacity of The mOuth at Zoomtopia is, but I’m pretty sure we were way beyond it for tEEth’s Home Made last night. And I can’t even tell you how long the lines were to get into Ten Tiny Dances. Well, I probably don’t have to; chances are, you were there along with everyone else in the city. It was a lovely night at The Works.

One of the things I love about tba is how much excitement PICA seems to build around this festival each year. “Community outreach” and “engagement” and all those terms always make me throw up a little bit in my mouth. But tba and Portland seem to have (and correct me if I’m wrong, I’m just a tourist here) a really good, unforced relationship going—especially compared to a city like New York, where the density of cultural offerings tends to lead to stratified audiences.

So, well … I’m sure lots of the folks crammed into The mOuth for tEEth (is there some strange oral/capitalization fixation happening in Portland?) loved it.

I was not one of those folks. I’ve been hearing a lot of buzz about this troupe in recent months, including a positive prior review from Anne Adams on this very blog. This was my first time seeing the work, and I felt utterly shut down by it. The duet was dishearteningly cliché-laden in its depiction of the paradoxical thickets of emotions and impulses individuals must navigate within intimate relationships. Manipulation, vulnerability, tenderness, violence, silliness, alienation … check check check. Nudity. More nudity. Yelling and screaming and nonsense talk and a little more nudity. Messing around with microphones. And then some polished dance technique.

This is an utterly reductive encapsulation. It is not a happy thing to write. The only thing I can say is that Home Made struck me as utterly reductive in its encapsulations of the human experience. It was not a happy thing to watch.

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Tags: tba2011

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