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CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS

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Weekend Picks!

Faeries v Tikis! Air thick! Helium, Pop Now!

(Gibberish decoded below.)

Tufawning

Tu Fawning will perform at PDX Pop Now!
Though they’d look just as good at Faerieworlds.

PDX Pop Now!
All weekend. All ages. Free. Need we say more? Very well, here’s much more.

Make The Air Thick
If this dance event were not recommended by the personal charm of its choreographer, Danielle Ross, and by the musical contribution of post-pop maestro Jordan Dykstra (Dykeritz), Culturephile might dismiss it as flimflam. The press release promises that the work will “examine how structure, control, consistency, inconsistency, lust, progress, approval, and more have seeped into our shared understanding of what we need to feel full.” Hmmm. Let me rephrase that: “This work will attempt to express through music and dance, what cannot succinctly be said in words.” Go find out what these guys are trying to say.

Helium Comedy
Wanna lighten the aforementioned thick air? This weekend, new comedy club Helium, a franchise of a Philly operation that books a large roster of nationally-acclaimed laugh-inducers, opens its doors in Southeast Portland. Acerbic local Auggie Smith will be the first featured performer for this, the opening weekend—not to be confused with the upcoming Grand Opening, to feature Maria Bamford. Watch this space for more details.

Tiki Kon
Totem statuary. Fruity colada cocktails. Eye-popping island print fabric; burlap, thatch, and bamboo. This. Is. TIKI. Well, technically, it’s not; the word actually originates in Māori mythology. But in modern parlance, “Tiki” has become a buzzword for “60s retro island kitsch.” Though that aesthetic may seem festive enough on its own terms, it’s been allocated a special weekend of celebration—complete with a Tiki tour, swanky musical guests, and an art show.

Faerieworlds
Only serious sylphs and nymphs need apply for this subculture spectacle, a convergence of some 10,000 pairs of gossamer wings, just a flutter down I-5 near Eugene. With Celtic and whimsical musical acts like Faun and Trickie Pixie, and vendors of all manner of fairy finery, this event promises to mobilize the fey fringe to new flights of mischief and mayhem.

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Tags: Comedy, Events, Weekend Plans, Live Music

phile under: music festival

PDX POP NOW: What Pops Out

Culturephile’s culls PDX POP NOW!’s catalogue for variety, excellence, momentum—and full disclosure.

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Iconic cardboard sign by John Bacone.

Music nerds, could PDX POP NOW! make your life any easier? This weekend, for the seventh year running, the tireless festival collective will throw an eclectic, carefully curated, conveniently located, three-day, all-ages, concert. For FREE. Portland Monthly Culturephile has perused the program, and offers the following ten recommendations:

Tu Fawning

Friday, 11:30pm With the tortured-yet-indomitable alto of Corrina Repp at the helm, and the punishing rhythms of Joe Haege (31 Knots) tending to the stern, Tu Fawning parts the same dark waters as PJ Harvey and My Brightest Diamond.

AgesAndAges

Friday, 8pm Can you tell anything about a band, by the people who go see them? Without naming names, some of the consummate chamber-indie connoisseurs of Portland music, go on and on about AgesAndAges. A six-piece act that includes piano and strings and in which, the band declares, “everybody sings,” invites this sort of interest—but only one with musical merit, can actually capture it. Further investigation reveals heavily layered arrangements with jubilant harmonies, and lyrics that bespeak a near-militant positivity.

Hockey

Saturday, after midnight Hockey sojourned in this burg just long enough to play a few riotous house-shows and meet the right people, then they flew on to bigger things, including mainstream radio play and upcoming calendar dates at Lollapalooza and Austin City Limits. Quick studies, they seem to have mastered—and then one-upped—the “hipster” philosophy, with lyrics that are not merely postmodern, but POST-postmodern—exposing the fraud and insecurity of people who make fun of stuff, while acknowledging themselves as the ultimate culprits. But you don’t have to notice their lyrics. To appease the masses (or maybe to mock them), Hockey packages its jaded cynicism in a radio-friendly style that hits somewhere below The Strokes’ belt, and above Interpol’s oft-gazed-on shoes.

Lewi Longmire

Saturday, 3:30pm Memorandum to Lewi Longmire’s Myspace page: “psychedelic” seems a complete misnomer. Lewi Longmire sounds, to Culturephile, like some good ol’ country, with here and there a dash of Cajun spice. There’s minimal reverb, a consistent display of studio-player-style chops, and for the most part, you can clap on the twos and fours, without missing a beat. That’s not to say that Longmire wouldn’t mix okay with psychedelics—he’s got an upcoming gig at Horning’s Hideout, after all. But the inclusion of acts as straightforward and classic as Mr. Longmire, alongside some of the brazenly experimental styles PPN! has been known to host, testifies to the festival’s something-for-everyone curation.

Rollerball

Friday, 8:30pm Once you get a headful of the slow, swirling, disorienting stylings of Rollerball, you’re bound to say, “Okay, this is what ‘psychedelic’ sounds like.” And also, “where am I?” and “who is playing that saxophone?” and “how does this hurt and feel good at the same time?”

Billygoat

Sunday, 5:30pm Much has already been said about Billygoat, on Culturephile and elsewhere. but never too much. Billygoat is gentle, with plucked harps and wistful whistling. Billygoat is heavy, with pancreas-vibrating bass and deep industrial drum machine. As if the sonic textures weren’t enough to suffuse your senses, Billygoat delivers visuals as well, performing before a backdrop of stunning stop-motion film depicting fantastical otherworlds, and mysterious humanoid icons. Imagine your mother’s a goddess and your father’s a satyr, and they’re serving you a magical feast and telling you stories.

Typhoon

Sunday, 11:30pm “How many people are in that band, anyway?” is the FAQ, with regard to Typhoon. The Kyle-Morton-fronted phenomenon that seems to sweep any musician under 25 into its mighty swell, maintains surprising brilliance and clarity. Deep beneath the ever-shifting instrumental flotsam, and ever-changing cast of cute faces bobbing along, lies the irresistible pull of true-blue, heart-felt song.

Krebsic Orkestar

Sunday, 4pm This just in: Eastern Europe! Seriously, though—eastern-bloc band sounds seem to be chipping further than ever into the mainstream pop-music milieu. Featuring members of the Oregon Symphony and Portland Opera, Krebsic Orkestar brings it Balkan-style.

Wampire

Saturday, 8pm Wampire will play at Burgerville. Wampire will play in ponchos and no pants. The fearless duo’s aesthetic is simultaneously hipster-kitsch, and populist all-ages aw-shucks. Their music, though, is a hard-to-describe ambient, harmonic, fuzzy electro fusion that the kids go mad for.

Grey Anne

Saturday, 4pm Come election day, politicians very publicly punch a ballot in their own favor, and, as cameras click, slip it in the slot. This seems tacky, but it would be equally ridiculous, I suppose, if they donned baseball caps and dark glasses, and escaped to the racetrack to evade the attention. The writer of this post is playing a set at PDX Pop Now!, but does not feel at liberty to review her own work. So here’s what PPN has to say: “Grey Anne is the one-woman vocal orchestra of Anne Adams (formerly Per Se). Adams has spent years perfecting her unique brand of folk, and it is easy to tell that she’s at the top of her game. She has [a] mastery over the loop pedal that very few can match, making for a creative and fascinating use of her stunning voice.” Wow, that girl sounds like she’ll be good! But I’ve already put a hundred on Typhoon.

NOTE: PPN runs a jam-packed schedule. Set times have been rounded down to the closest prior half-hour, to give your memory and your parking skills a fighting chance.

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Tags: Live Music

phile under: traditional folk music

Great Big Sea

Portland, meet Newfoundland.

Crossing_the_reach__etching__7x11

Newfoundland Artist David Blackwood’s Crossing The Reach.

I first discovered Great Big Sea while web-searching “Cod Liver Oil.” It wasn’t a food supplement I sought, but a song—an old folk tune that my dad, a third-generation Newfoundlander, used to have on tape. I didn’t expect to find the lyrics; it was a long shot—but hey, why not try?

Cue my surprise when the search immediately yielded lyrics, as well as the bio of an internationally-touring, long-running band (18 years and counting) that had obviously staked its claim on the kooky old tune. Tonight, as part of the Zoo Summer Concert Series, Great Big Sea brings Newfoundland’s traditional chanteys, ballads, and doggerel to Port.

Newfoundland*, an archipelago of cold islands off Canada’s east coast, rarely exports its culture even as far as Canada’s mainland, let alone the world stage. Notable exceptions include novel-turned-movie The Shipping News, the stark black-and-white etchings of

800px-great_big_sea

Great Big Sea brings Newfoundland’s maritime stylings to the Zoo tonight!

David Blackwood (some of which have found their way into the British Royal Family’s private collection), and of course the cold-climate-compatible Newfoundland Dog. Well, it seems Great Big Sea has also earned a spot on the A-list.

For Portland’s Newfie few, tonight promises a reverie of nostalgia. But even if Newfoundland’s music is new to you, the family-friendly jig-and-reel arrangements, with Irish overtones and twists of caustic humor, should draw you closer to this quirky province’s icy shores.

*Pronounced “NEW-fun-land,” by those who know

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Tags: Live Music

phile under: weekend

Weekend Picks!

Ballet dance, barn dance. Opera film, phantom film. And a few tasteful nudes.

Uprising! of OBT
Sat-Sun 7pm Chamber-folk veterans Weinland and Laura Gibson will fuse their reedy croons with the swoops and leaps of ballet dancers from OBT, to elevate both art forms into a swoon-inducing crescendo. While these folk-fusion events are myriad lately in Portland—in the world, they are relatively rare. Get over to The Aladdin Theater and catch one while you can.

Here’s soom footage of a prior Uprising! event, which featured the music of Horsefeathers:

Sauvie Island Barn Dance
Sat 5:30pm If the aforementioned ballet-folk-fusion proves too “cityfied” for your down-home style, take a short scenic drive to Sauvie Island, for the Annual Barn Dance. This time-honored summer event provides a live hootenany band (think fiddles, banjos, possibly some washboard/jug-type claptrap) and all the hay-bale authenticity you can handle. Can’t dance? Not to worry. They’ll have a competent square-dance caller, to help you do-si-do it.

Filmusik: Gulliver’s Travels
Fri 7pm The cheeky opera-kitschfilm collab is back, this time syncing not only song, but also voice acting and Foley (aka, film noisemaking) to the 1930’s animated feature film. Originally penned as a parable about bureaucracy and small-mindedness, this story has taken on a more whimsical life as a fairy tale. Filmusik will likely lighten it up even further.

Backspace Gallery
Through July 31 There doesn’t have to be good art on the walls, for me to enjoy my coffee. Coffee shops know this, and so often when they see me coming, they whisk all the good art off the walls and tack up something unremarkable. However: yesterday as I happened into Backspace, I noticed several starkly beautiful pieces by Alexandra Becker-Black. Large expanses of white space, with delicate splashes of monochromatic watercolor, combined for surprisingly fresh depictions of the most classic subject: the female nude. Part of a show that will disappear at the close of July, these works seem worth visiting, even if you aren’t looking for a latte.

Fred?
Sun, 11:30am According to its creator, brand-new stop-motion film Fred will premiere at the Living Room Theaters this Sunday at 11:30 am. But when reached by phone, the box office could not confirm the screening. LAIKA (Coraline) alum Misha Klein, whose credits also include Celebrity Deathmatch and Robot Chicken, spent 10 years tinkering with the film, but wrapped it in at Portland’s Studio 13 last winter, and then allegedly took a long-deserved nap on the floor. The lead puppet, Fred, is a reluctant stage performer, harried by an angry boss and riddled with his own self-doubt. With the comic pathos of a hobo clown, Fred anguishes over his stage-fright and awaits his cue. Will the show go on?

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Tags: Art, Theater, Dance, Weekend Plans, Film

phile under: music

TONIGHT! Pop vs Classical!

A war-room briefing.

Classicalrevolutionpdx

Classical Revolution marshals its arsenal.

POP* is about to take City Hall**. An all-ages army, led into battle by Sting-like singer Nick Jaina, will put the stronghold under siege, effectively taking Portland before nightfall.

This coup has sent Classical Revolution PDX*** into retreat. They’ll reassemble their ranks, rumored to be 200 strong**** in The Woods***** to the Southeast, to honor their fallen heroes****** and plan the next foray.





*as broadly defined by PDX POP NOW!

Nickj2

Local POP star Nick Jaina prepares to lead the charge.

**with an all-ages concert on the steps, featuring Nick Jaina, Atole, Kelli Schaefer and the Andrew Oliver Quartet.

***actual group name


****via the event’s oblique web writeup

*****actual venue name

******The event will showcase composers who’ve died of syphilis.

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Tags: Music

phile under: comic con 2010

5 Questions for Brandon Seifert

On the cusp of Comic Con, the writer of Witch Doctor discusses his series’ new-found bargaining power.

Bspic

Prepping for his Comic Con coup, Brandon Seifert is all pinstripes and smiles.

Brandon Seifert writes a comic book series called Witch Doctor, which has been billed, succinctly, as House meets Fringe. This might be the first you’ve heard of it, but it probably won’t be the last, as he and illustrator Lukas Ketner have recently signed on with big-league comics-industry financiers, Skybound. (Read more about that in this recent New York Times Article)

Tomorrow, the pair will premiere Witch Doctor at Comic Con in San Diego. Today, Culturephile catches Seifert in a state of giddy anticipation, ready to don a new suit and take the geek world by storm. Without further ado, five questions:

How did you react when you first heard from Kirkman/Skybound?

We first heard from Robert Kirkman one year ago today, just before last year’s Comic Con. It was an email out of the blue, asking if we had a publisher and saying, “Book looks really solid.” That was all.

I was terribly excited, and also startled. We’d gotten a lot of attention for the book, but not from anyone of Kirkman’s stature.

My reaction was also, “It’s a shame we have to turn this down.” At the time Robert was contacting us on behalf of Image Comics proper, and Image pays on the back-end — you get royalties based on sales, but you never get an advance on royalties. And my collaborator Lukas can’t afford to produce multiple issues of a comic unless he’s getting paid up front. It was only after a couple months of back-and-forth that Robert revealed he had his own imprint in the works, specifically designed to accommodate creators like Lukas.

2010-07-18_21-sdcccover

This medical/metaphysical horror comic will break out at Comic Con tomorrow!

What has the partnership done for you financially so far? What bills have they footed? How many of your books have they printed?

I can’t really go into details on the financial stuff. I won’t be quitting my day job any time soon — unless the comic is a HUGE hit or we get a Hollywood deal sooner rather than later. (And considering I got my first inquiry about TV/film rights less than 24 hours after Monday’s New York Times came out… that’s not outside the realm of possibility.) Meanwhile, my collaborator gets to pay his rent while he works on our first miniseries, and we get a comic published, distributed — and heavily promoted, which is rare in comics and is a big deal.

What’s your strategy going into Comic Con?

My strategy is NOT TO DIE. I leave Portland at 6:40 in the morning tomorrow, get to San Diego around 9, and then it’s meetings, panels, signings, parties… and then I spend the night in the airport and fly out Friday morning, exactly 24 hours after I left Portland.

DON’T DIE is Job #1.

HAVE FUN is Job #2.

What are you and Lukas gonna wear? This seems like a frivolous question, but costuming’s big at Comic Con, and I know you care ;)

Ha. :-) I went out and bought a Victory Suit for the occasion. It’s a pin-striped black three-piece. I told my editor I bought a suit, and he went, “… Why?” So that might have been a mistake. But still — VICTORY SUIT!

What is your absolute best-case-scenario biggest dream for Witch Doctor?

A long and successful run on my own creation, a la the success Mike Mignola’s had with Hellboy. Accompanied by a WITCH DOCTOR TV show written and directed by Joss Whedon, with effects by a creature house run by Guillermo Del Toro.

Also, a solid-gold minivan and a castle on the moon.

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Tags: Interviews

phile under: weekend picks

Weekend Picks

Sand, strippers, pastry, and playwrights!

Sand

Dude, sand castles are so 1954. We can do better.

Sand In The City

There may be no better symbol of summer than the sand castle. Whimsical, natural, golden, and temporary, the sand castle is a classic metaphor for momentary splendor. Your kids will be inspired when they see Pioneer Courthouse Square transformed into a summer wonderland by 450 tons of sand, expertly shaped into sculptures. Your $3 donation benefits Impact Northwest.

Live Girls, Gypsy

Perhaps you want your stripteases a little more theatrical than Sassy’s. Maybe you want your theater sexier than Pericles in the park. Well, this weekend you get lucky, because two theaters offer stripper-themed plays that promise to be provocative in every sense of the word. Coho Theater’s Live Girls bills itself as an expose of the psyches and motivations of the modern pole-straddler. For more classic burlesque ooh-la-la, The Lakewood Theater presents Gypsy, a wink-and-smile musical that will peddle you a flash of flesh, and leave you wanting more.

JAW: A Playwrights Festival

JAW” used to stand for “Just Add Water,” but these days, it just stands on its own as a hotly anticipated preview of new plays in their rawest form. Seasoned playwrights get to jaw about their process. New playwrights get to cut their teeth. And audiences get to chew over new content, before it hits a more formal stage. This weekend features readings by Oregon playwrights Ebbe Roe Smith and Sara Jean Accuardi, which deal with, respectively, male and female latter-life anxieties.

The Big Busk

If you set foot downtown on Saturday, odds are you’ll stumble over some busker toes. The Big Busk, a coordinated effort to bring 30-odd musical acts to downtown locations, will be staging a curbside cacophony on almost every close-in Southwest block. Although these acts are part of a curated event, the usual protocols prevail. If you like what you hear, stay and pay. If you don’t, walk on by, because there’s a new musical surprise around every corner.

Bastille Day Block Party

Portlanders, I know this day is tremendously relevant to us all. While Pix Patisserie lets us enjoy a jubilant clamor of local bands, devour a decadent puff-pastry tower, and stumble through wine-addled lawn-sports— surely we all go to show solidarity for a free France. In exchange for as much free France as a Portlander could possibly handle, Pix asks that you bring two canned food items to donate to the Oregon Food Bank. (Seems only fair while you’re stuffing pastry in your face, to share the wealth.)

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Tags: Theater, Events, Weekend Plans, Music

phile under: pop policymaker

Cary Clarke’s First Official Summer

Former PDX Popper makes local music a municipal matter.

Pdxpopnow

PDX Pop Now! is—well, very soon! There’s the City Hall showcase on the 22, and a week later, a three-day onslaught of all-ages music will blast industrial Southeast like a midsummer super-soaker. But all that will get plenty of press.

Meanwhile, former Pop-eratti Cary Clarke is making his own splash in local government. A founding member of PPN *, as well as a longtime local musician, rock journalist, and all-ages scene supporter, Clarke signed on this April with Mayor Sam Adams as the City Of Portland’s Arts & Policy Coordinator, parlaying several summer flings with the arts, into a year-round commitment.

“‘I work on policy in the mayor’s office’ definitely sounds better to my grandparents than ‘I help run an all-volunteer local music nonprofit,’” he laughs. But despite his new, more official role, Clarke’s original goal remains: to make the Portland metro area an environment where arts—and perhaps especially music—can survive and thrive.

For those of you keeping score at home, here are five things Clarke has already helped change:

• The Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC), under Clarke’s and others’ prompting in ’07 and ’08, revised its rules to allow more performing arts facilities to admit people under 21.

• The Portland metro area has attained a partnership with the Kennedy Center’s Any Given Child program, which will help build an arts education plan for every K-8 student in the area.

• Portland’s municipal on-hold music is now a hand-picked selection of 15 top-notch indie rock songs by local bands.

• Clarke has partnered with the Right Brain Initiative, a program of the Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC), to bring working artists into K-8 classrooms for curriculum-integrated arts learning.

• The city is working closely with the Creative Advocacy Network (CAN) to bring a measure to the ballot that would create a $15-20 million annual dedicated public fund for arts and culture in the region.

*alongside your Culturephile

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Tags: Music

phile under: weekend

Weekend Picks

Culturephile presents two blushing performance-art quinceañeras, a far-out Gypsy excursion, and a lawn-chair space odyssey

Ocf05_15

We still haven’t found the 4-H tent at the Oregon Country Fair.

PICA Turns 15
A woman in stylish safety goggles, calmly and methodically breaking glass. Children cutting adults’ hair. Beat-boxers, light-boxes, ukelele-wielding trannies—these are some of the many-spirited spectacles that have been brought to us in the last 15 years by PICA (Portland Institute for Contemporary Art) most notably at its annual Time-Based Art Festival (aka, “TBA”). Tonight at Holocene, with the hotly anticipated TBA a mere two months away, double-drum electronica duo Deelay Ceelay help celebrate this arts brainchild’s coming-of-age.

Conduit Dance
Look out, PICA—you’re not the only arts organization playing quinces princess. Conduit Dance also celebrates the big 15 this weekend, with a showcase of local luminaries including Conduit founder Linda K. Johnson, Oregon Biennial 2010 artist Tahni Holt, and former OBT dancer Gavin Larsen*. Conduit Benefit Performances: 15 hopes to help top off the coffers, so Conduit can continue moving contemporary dance forward.

Oregon Country Fair
Though Oregon Country Fair is held in the country (in Veneta, Oregon, outside Eugene) you can dispel any notions of country fare. Nowhere a 4-H ribbon, nary a cow or plow. It’s actually more like visiting a Gypsy enclave, where dusty paths wind through shady woodlands, dotted by makeshift curio shops and traversed by troubadours and elaborately-dressed denizens of various fairytale kingdoms.

Trek In The Park
You’ve probably heard of Shakespeare In the Park. And you may have caught wind of the odd Star Trek Convention. But have you ever thought of a grand convergence of the two? Never fear; Portland’s Atomic Arts is on it. As if beamed in by teleporter, Kirk, Spock and company will materialize in the Woodlawn Park amphitheater and perform the classic Trek episode “Space Seed,” best known for introducing Trek supervillian Khan and seeding the soil for future blockbuster The Wrath Of Khan. In this story, the Enterprise discovers a ship containing hibernating human specimens, and wakes their leader, Khan, who then seduces one of the Enterprise’s bouffanted crew beauties and attempts to kill Captain Kirk.

Portland Piano International
Pianists, if you can pry your eyes off the sheet music for a moment, heads up! Portland Piano International kicks off its week-long intensive, with performances, films, dinners, and master classes that promise to explore the whole dynamic expanse of ebony and ivory.

*According to one of my ballet sources, Gavin Larsen has some of the most beautiful hand positioning ever witnessed on stage or in studio. “When she makes a gesture, it’s like she’s balancing God on her fingertips.”

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Tags: Theater, Dance, Events, Weekend Plans, Music

phile under: leisure studies

Date Night

Sightseeing, sushi, and cinema

Slug

A stunning example of Forest Park wildlife—the elusive banana slug.

With apologies to Steve Carell and Tina Fey, we’re rolling out our recurring blog feature (which could show up in any blog at any time) called Date Night. Our hopelessly romantic staffers have pooled their knowledge to come up with a choice assortment of low-cost cultural itineraries that should make for a very memorable night on the town.

“Can you tell us how to get to Forest Park?” “You mean Washington Park?” “Um, no… Forest Park.”

For some yet-to-be-determined reason, many Portlanders remain blissfully unaware of the existence of Forest Park. How one fails to notice a 5,000+-acre patch of land in the middle of the greenest city on Earth is anyone’s guess, but the guy who pumped our gas at a station around PGE Park was one of these people. My boyfriend and I may not have known exactly how to get to Forest Park, but at least we knew it existed.


Following the clueless pump jockey’s directions to Washington Park, or “those trees over there,” only got us lost. Naturally. After winding up in Sylvan and hopping onto Highway 26, we decided to trust our own intuitions: we headed over to NW and followed some bike signs, eventually winding our way up to the end of NW Thurman St, where Leif Erikson Drive begins. In case you weren’t aware (I wasn’t), Leif Erikson Drive is a blocked off section of road that winds through Forest Park and includes about a dozen trailheads.

After about a third of a mile on the partially paved road, I decided that Leif Erikson Drive wasn’t really “hiking,” so at the first opportunity (Wild Cherry Trail), we diverged from civilization. My only complaint about Forest Park lies in the fact that it really is just a little too much “park.” On level of fun alone, I find just about every trail in the Gorge far superior. But driving out to the Gorge takes time and money, so on a budget, Forest Park will do. Which is probably what all the other people on the trail, mostly joggers, tripping hippies, and dog walkers, thought too.

Regardless, my boyfriend and I seemed to catch the Wild Cherry Trail at the perfect time (about 3 pm): the lighting was wonderfull and the heat was manageable. The trail itself is about two miles total, in and out, which is perfect for a short afternoon hike. To top it all off, we made a couple of animal friends: a fatty little banana slug and a neurotic millipede.

Sushi2

The Alaskan Roll: the perfect antidote for the post-hike hungries.

Post-hike, the boyfriend and I headed downtown for some grub. With our minds set on food carts, we parked at SW Third and Stark and perused the area, which, as usual, is stocked mostly with Thai and Mexican options. Another burrito? Groan!

A little off the beaten path, however, we found PFE Sushi on Stark between Second and Third, cozying right up next to Mother’s Bistro. I was hesitant at first (raw fish from a street cart? Can anyone say food poisoning? Hmm), but after swallowing my anxiety, it turned out to be some of the best sushi I have ever had in my life—and I’m from Hawaii, so that’s really saying something. I mean, I’m drooling right now at the thought of it. So. Good. I ordered the Kung Pao Chicken Steamed Rice Bento Bowl ($3.99), which my boyfriend and I split, and he ordered two 8pc rolls of sushi, which we also split ($4.99 each). Everything was made-to-order with the freshest ingredients by a friendly, slightly hard to understand Japanese man. By far the best of what we ordered, though it was all excellent, was the Alaskan Roll: cream cheese, avocado, and ever so lightly cooked salmon Uramaki-style (“inside-out roll”), seasoned with some sort of Furikake I have never seen before, which was beyond amazing.

Laurel1

To round out our Date Night, it was only right that we catch a movie at the Laurelhurst Theater. The movie selection is sometimes iffy, but tickets are only $3—so even if the movie sucks, at least you didn’t spend $20 dollars to find out. The 7 pm showing of The Ghost Writer was packed with dinnertime patrons who decided to kill two birds with one stone: grabbing a slice of pizza and a pint ($2.75-3.50 and $4.75, respectively). Having already had our fill of fishy deliciousness, my boyfriend and I decided to forgo the Laurelhurst and settled in to watch the movie: a Roman Polanski film about a man (Ewan McGregor) hired as ghost writer for an ex-Prime Minister (Pierce Brosnan), who discovers a mystery that absolutely must be solved. Cue semi-suspenseful plot devices. The boyfriend loved it, I thought it was mediocre. For $3, it wasn’t bad. Now if the Laurelhurst would just install a sushi bar…

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Tags: Cheap Date

phile under: three days off

Weekend Picks

Independence-themed

Taj1

A slightly older version of Taj Mahal will wail at the Blues Festival this weekend.

FRIDAY

Safeway Waterfront Blues Festival
Starring a lineup of legends (Taj Mahal, Little Feat, Booker T, among others.) and supporting the Oregon Food Bank, the Blues Festival promises to deliver on the crunchy riffs and soulful squawks that groove so deep and hurt so good.

SATURDAY

Charles A. Hartman Fine Art

What better symbol of independence, than the bicycle? An elegant, free-wheeling machine that squeezes easily through bottlenecks, swerves past pedestrians, and steers completely clear of the gas pump? This month, Charles A. Hartman Fine Art celebrates the bicycle with Pedaling: Bicycle Photographs from Then to Now, a collection of photos from the 1800s to the present, cataloging the many adventures of our spindly steed. 11 AM-6 PM.

Someday Lounge

Nothing to do the day before blastoff? No worries; Someday Lounge has your pre-func all planned. They’ll start a barbecue at 3 PM while the sun’s still high, segue into live soul music from 7-9 with the Mothership Band, and then kick into reggae jams with Wakaman. The price? Free as democracy.

SUNDAY

Chamber Music Northwest Protégé Project

OK, countrymen, lend me your ears:

Now imagine that epic tableau, distilled into a simple ensemble performance by one violin, a piano, and a clarinet. The Protégé Project—promoted as the “young, hip” part of Chamber Music Northwest’s Summer Festival, presents the Atria ensemble—Sunmi Chang, violin; Romie de Guise-Langlois, clarinet; Hye-Yeon Park, piano; with selected all-American pieces sure to ignite patriotic fireworks. At The Woods in Sellwood; $12 in advance, $15 day of show. Click here to purchase advance tickets.

Your Friend’s Yard

Your friend called to say, “Don’t make too many extravagant plans.” Bring over some beer and cheer, and celebrate your independence unconstrained by schedules and hassles. And your Culturephile will do some of the same.

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Tags: Galleries, Weekend Plans, Live Music

phile under: first thursday

First Thursday Picks

Gallery openings explore many dimensions, and indie cult faves close the evening.

Bluesky

GALLERY OPENINGS

Blue Sky Gallery
From the Studio of Roy Lichtenstein
by Laurie Lambrecht. Artist Talk at 6:30pm.
Photographer Laurie Lambrecht served a stint assisting the iconic Roy Lichtenstein, and photo-documented his preparation for an exhibition at the Guggenheim (pictured). The result is an “art-within-art” series of photographs that expose the processes and postures of one of the 20th-century greats, in his element.

Laura Russo Gallery
Mel Katz: New Wall Sculptures
Responsible for enough Portland sculptures to be considered a fixture himself, Mel Katz continues his exploration of shape and contour.

Group Exhibition of Gallery Artists: Paintings, Sculpture, Textiles, Works on Paper
Culturephile favorite:
Tom Fawkes and Judith Poxson Fawkes. Between Tom’s photorealistic acrylic paintings of Mediterranean gardens and architecture, and Judith’s massive, intricate, tapestries, this Portland married couple displays mind-boggling mastery of detail and deft, skilled execution. The work of each of these shrewd, crafty Fawkeses will be on display.
Other contributors include:
Betty Merken and Lucinda Parker—Bold, blocky abstracts
Mary Josephson and Gregory Grennon—Naïve folk intensity, hints of Kahlo
Kim Osgood and Henk Pander—Unique slants on still life.
Anne Siems Sherrie Wolfe—Renaissance riffing.
Erik Stotik and Jay Backstrand—Sensory overload iconoclasm.

3-D Center of Art & Photography
Digital Stereo Paintings by Theo Prins
Fourteen digital paintings produced using a graphics tablet, inspired by the bustling marketplaces of Seoul, Saigon, Hanoi, Bangkok, and Chiang Mai.

The Caretaker 3D, starring Dick Van Dyke
In this 3D film, which debuted earlier this year at the Malibu Film Festival, Van Dyke portrays the legendary 1930’s handyman tasked with maintenance and repair of the famous “HOLLYWOOD” sign (which, at the time, read “HOLLYWOODLAND.”)

MUSIC

Mississippi Studios
Ioa & Alan Singley
Amanda Spring, erstwhile known as the pink-haired, pitch-perfect singer and intricate math drummer of the indie-rock combo Point Juncture Washington (a band, not a town) has jumped front and center for Ioa, a lush 7-member lineup supporting her unwavering alto croon and utterly unique songcraft. And if you’re not careful, Alan Singley, affable bandleader of Pants Machine and longtime all-ages house-show hero, will ride his bike right into your heart.

Ground Kontrol Barcade
DJ Diabetic (aka Shepard Fairey)
If rumors—and posters—are true, then Ground Kontrol’s usual lineup of video-game-beep-drowning DJ’s will feature an extra-special guest: guerrilla graphic-art god Shepard Fairey. Think you don’t know who that is? You do. Trust and obey. Even if he’s hunched under a hoody, avoiding everyone’s gaze and spinning terrible tunes, you can boast later about being in the same room.

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Tags: Portland Art, First Thursday, Music

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