Advertisement

CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS

Posts tagged with: music

Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation
culture cheat-sheet

15 Giftable Portland Albums

Email

The fact that Portland’s got a lot of great music is now so widely reported and often cited that for those who live here, it’s practically become boring. But among your farther-flung friends and family, the scuttlebutt is likely still spreading. As they hear the name of your town being touted on Letterman, or read mentions of your scene on Pitchfork or in Spin, they may look to you, their personal Portlander, as a beacon of musical taste-making. If you have visions of returning to your home town bearing armfuls of albums, but haven’t really done your 2011 homework—fear not.

Here’s a roundup of winning possibilities, starting with the fail-safe Oregon Symphony, then including the latest local Letterman featurees, the band that just toured with the Flaming Lips, and that one electronic act that’s massive in Europe. Just to make you look really savvy, we’ve included a couple of limited-run comps and lesser-knowns that are equally sure to please. Tell your loved ones, “Yes, everybody in Portland is a music expert. Especially me!”

Instrumental

Orsymph

Oregon Symphony, Music for a Time of War
The gold standard of Portland’s symphonic side presents stirring renditions of classical works that soundtrack the severity of the modern political environment.






Marchfourth

MarchFourth, Magnificent Beast

Portland’s brassiest marching band is internationally renowned for musicianship and pageantry. Their syncopated fits and starts conjure burlesque dancers popping parasols and stilt-walkers doing the splits.




Talkdemonic_ruins

Talkdemonic, Ruins

Making the most of a drumkit and a viola, this duo’s deep-pocket symphonic jams resemble DJ-produced electronica—but they’re actually making the “samples” themselves.




Ash_black_bufflo

Ash Black Bufflo, Andasol

The 5-years-in-the-making masterpiece of obsessive introvert Jay Clarke has found its way into film soundtracks and more than a few modern dance performances. It’s a wordless, original adventure over varied sonic terrain. Read More…




Instant Classics

Dirty_radio

Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside, Dirty Radio

A hornrim-sporting young blood belts gutsy, bright vocals over sock-hoppin’ bebop arrangements. It takes you back. Read More…





Bison-rouge

Ashia Grzesik, Bison Rouge

This Polish cellist and neo-Victorian chanteuse writes, plays and sings with a dramatic womanly swoon. Watch video…





Holcombewaller

Holcombe Waller, Into The Dark Unknown

This Yale-educated, theatrical troubadour’s golden throat and intimate songcraft have garnered generous arts grants and an elite cadre of enthusiastic fans. Think of him as a local Rufus Wainwright who can do no wrong.




Epic Ensembles

Typhoon

Typhoon, A New Kind of House

13 strong young souls from Salem build a swirling wall of sound around the earnest murmurings of lead singer Kyle Morton. Watch their Letterman set!





Loch-lomond

Loch Lomond, Little Me Will Start a Storm

With elfin choir boy Ritchie Young at the helm, this ensemble delves deep into bleak, beautiful waltzes with pensive choruses that evoke cold, foggy moors.




Pop

Viva_voce

Viva Voce, The Future Will Destroy You

A husband-wife duo home-makes lush pop-scapes with irresistible hooks that grapple with the dueling impulses of cynicism and hope.




Ppn2011

PDX Pop Now! 2011 Compilation

Since they put on a 3-day music festival every summer, do outreach in schools, and advocate for all-ages acts to have more places to play, PPN tends to hear the best new music first. This two-disc 41-track sampler is bound to have something you’ll like.




Tlefriends

Tender Loving Empire, Friends and Friends of Friends

The label that reps Typhoon, Loch Lomond, and Boy Eats Drum Machine takes taste-making beyond the bounds of the signed talent, piling whatever local tunes strike their fancy into a double-disc comp with a pop-up art feature. Read More…




Dance

Boyeatsdrummachine

Boy Eats Drum Machine, Hoop & Wire

Sax-and-drum dynamo John Ragel sings catchy tracks punctuated by old-skool record scratching.






Logan-lynn

Logan Lynn, I Killed Tomorrow Yesterday

Electronica maestro and local queer hero Logan Lynn sometimes pushes the envelope, but ultimately pleases the ear. Watch video…






Strfkr-reptilians_240

STRFKR, Reptilians

Sparkly soundscapes and ultra-smooth pop vox have made STRFKR one of Portland’s most widely-accepted exports. The pronunciation of the name is the sole sticking point.




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, overview

culture cheat-sheet

Pinchas Zukerman Plays Schumann

Email

In this vintage clip, Oregon Symphony ’s next guest proves himself a master of rubato, gently tugging the tempo faster and slower to imbue the violin melody with a voice-like expressiveness. The Schumann piece itself vascillates unpredictably between major and minor, conjuring the emotional complexity that defines the “romantic” genre: sweet-yet-painful pangs of longing, reveries of remembrance, and swoons of surrender. Zukerman will play a Schumann piece this weekend, as well as works by Haydn, Tchaikovsky, and Rossini. Resistance is futile; go ahead and get swept away.

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, Oregon Symphony, classical, symphony

culture cheat-sheet

Gomyo Plays Beethoven

Oregon Symphony’s upcoming guest has a coveted instrument and laudable credentials.

Email
Gomyo

Karen Gomyo: The face of a model, and the touch of a maestro.

Is there such a thing as a “violin model?” If so, the casual observer might mistake Oregon Symphony’s next featured soloist, Karen Gomyo, for one. With her mahogany hair and refined features, she looks like a violin personified—but it’s no mere pose. The Tokyo native has played her genuine Stradivarius alongside the New York, Los Angeles, and Hong Kong Philharmonics; the Cleveland, Philadelphia, and Minnesota Orchestras; the San Francisco, Saint Louis, Cincinnati, Dallas, Houston, Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver, and Tokyo Symphonies; and the National Symphony of Washington, D.C!

[Pause for breath.]

In Europe, she’s performed with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Orchestre National de Lille, Scottish Chamber Orchestra, the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, Bergen Philharmonic, Norwegian Opera Orchestra, Norköpping Symphony and Den Haag Residentie Orkest.

Her experience being plenty to recommend her, we still suggest that you perk your ears to her artistry in the following too-short clip of a prior performance of Beethoven’s violin concerto, in which Gomyo coaxes a lively, high melody from her nimble Strad.

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, Oregon Symphony, classical, symphony

Live Music

Slideshow: MusicFest NW

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

Email
Ironandwinemfnw_copy
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

View Slideshow » Illustration:

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.

View Slideshow » Photo: Kate Degenhardt

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)

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, Festivals, MFNW, concert

bounce!

TBA 2011: Vockah Redu

Email
Vockahredu_isabeltheriot_2
Photo: Isabel Theriot

“They say, ‘Donte, he’s sissybounce, he preach, he’s Andre 3000, he’s Jimi Hendrix….’ But you can’t put a label on art!” exclaims Donte Brown from front-and-center stage, flanked on both sides by dancers in silver boots. “You put Versace on me, and it’s not Versace anymore—it’s me. Can’t nobody rock a party like I do!”

Vockah Redu’s frontman is not modest, nor should he be, judging by his crew’s ability to overtake a room. Representing for the burgeoning “bounce” genre, the group booty-shook and swaggered through their opening-night set with a haughty ghetto flair that Portland rarely gets to see—and we imagine the crowd’s wild delight was due as much to the novelty of it all, as to the actual bumpin’ beats. At the set’s zenith, some audience members erupted into ecstatic fits of krumping, seeming to surprise even themselves.

Last year, few musical moments were made the most of. Extreme Animals seemed like B-grade versions of the white-guy ironic snark that Portland already does best, and the half-hearted machinations of Wonderlust failed to deliver their promised Eastern-Bloc exoticism. (Meanwhile, great acts like Tender Forever and the Art Party lineup played half-empty rooms.) But with Redu’s packed crowd and inimitable energy, and novel new sound kicking off 2011, it looks like we might get more satisfaction.

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: Dance, music, TBA, tba2011, concert

ear witness

Fire In The Canyon: An Insider Diary

Jon Ragel from one-man band Boy Eats Drum Machine explores the bucolic Horning’s Hideout and beat-heavy new music fest Fire In The Canyon.

Email
Bedm-cars_trains

Me and Cars & Trains filmed an episode of “Jackass” on the back of a golf cart.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Me and Cars & Trains filmed an episode of “Jackass” on the back of a golf cart.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Horning’s Hideout: There was a rich, green pond and peacocks roamed the hills.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

The beautiful stage 2 tent and lights took on an other-worldly quality.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Roaming folk MC, Ceschi used the massive stage as a gorgeous backdrop for a righteous house party.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Ceschi got down in the dirt and folked the party up old school.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Busdriver got wacky and lyrical on the ones and twos.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Delta Brave were chunky and singable.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Eddie Vallant tipped their cups to the sweet people of Fire In The Canyon. Also pictured: delicious ale from Two Kilts Brewing.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

School of Rock pumped up the jam, playing every 90’s dance anthem but Pump Up The Jam.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Sexbot: any questions?

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Witch Mountain’s singer broke a few hearts, and may have stolen the drummers shirt to boot.

Horning’s Hideout: Luscious woods. Serene pond. Roaming peacocks.
But last Saturday was no bible camp, dudes; it was Fire In The Canyon, a hiphop-heavy, family-friendly music festival. For the smallish crowd that assembled, the scenic setting brought an air of discovery, which was quickly filled with the boom of underground hip hop. Eddie Vallant brought the beat via a live band, while several solo MC’s used a combo of recorded mix/live vox. Sapient and Half Man Half worked their lyrical wiles over laptop beats and DJ scratches, Busdriver spazzed the stage, wowed the crowd, and outrageously twisted the knobs on his music console, and Connecticut’s Ceschi got down in the dirt in front of the main stage and worked the circle of onlookers into a folked-up frenzy:

Have you heard the one about the one-man band?
The one-man band?
The one-man band?
Have you heard the one about the one-man band?
I heard he cried like a baby when he hung.

The current incarnation of Portland’s School Of Rock played what I like to think of as their ‘pump up the jam’ set, energetically recreating funky pop classics like “Groove Is In The Heart” and “Bust A Move”, all the while changing instruments and making yours truly feel that his childhood between the ages of eight and eighteen was not nearly rad enough.

Meanwhile, an update from the local metal front: Witch Mountain’s drummer doesn’t take his shirt off—he doesn’t even bother putting one on in the first place. His band’s glorious riff attack doesn’t even need a minute to get from 0-60. I can respect that. Delta Brave filled the grounds surrounding the main stage with chunks of fun, singable pop, and I barely caught a glimpse of Cooked & the Raw’s jangly, drinkable-sounding tunes, and Sexbot’s the-name-pretty-much-says-it-all music lingerie show. Dang, they both seemed really nice—but there’s always next year.

The event also featured some great masters of ceremony between acts. Fogatron’s world-class beat-boxing warmed my heart, while the hilarious Vera Mysteria staggered and slinked around stage in a heavily permed wig, little white socks, big cat-print slippers, and a pink fifth-trimester mumu. Meanwhile, the second stage’s FM-morning-guy-style MC promoted Mercy Corps raffle tickets thusly: “you can show your beautiful girlfriend you care about starving children in Africa, and sh*t.” Nice.

I also ate a good sandwich, played a set on the main stage, drank several excellent pale ales courtesy of Portland’s new Two Kilts Brewery, posed with my homie Cars & Trains for a ‘Myface’ profile pic (above), then co-piloted a golf cart filled to the brim with my music gear over the hills, between the peacocks, and far away.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Jon Ragel has modestly glossed over his own contributions to the fest, but they probably looked a little something like this:

Rock on, Mr. Ragel.

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, festival, video

wig out

Monday Fun: Hedwig

Email

This past Saturday, while bluegrass bloomed at Pickathon and Fire in the Canyon ignited Horning’s Hideout, one John Cameron Mitchell kept Portland proper rocking with a DJ/dance party at Mississippi Studios. Hence, we dedicate our Monday Fun to Hedwig, Mitchell’s alter-ego.

There are two kinds of people in this world: those who’ve seen Hedwig and the Angry Inch, and those who should. The 1998 musical/2001 film centers around a blonde German drag-queen debutante—but whether or not that’s your “thing,” the story has a wealth to offer. Immigrant politics, mentor/protegee tension, the nature of public identity, and even The Origin of Love are covered, while wickedly catchy rock opera tunes (like this one) command audiences to sing along.

Ever since I first saw this movie in theaters, I’ve been waiting for Rocky Horror to cede its midnight tranny sing-along tiara. Hedwig begs for the kind of repeat screenings and cultish party scene that Horror has long held, and we suspect that its popularity, more than an appetite for dance DJ’s, is what packed Mississippi Studios on Saturday. Happy Monday! Put on your makeup.

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, monday fun, musical, video

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

tune in

Viva Voce’s New Album

Perk up your ears for a few sounds from The Future Will Destroy You, the latest from Portland psych-pop maestros Viva Voce.

Email
Vivacover

Those of you who read regularly may remember that we made Viva Voce the subject of our usual Monday Fun just a couple weeks ago—little realizing that they were on the cusp of a new release. Vanguard records was quick on the tip, following up with a sneak preview of the beloved husband-and-wife band’s latest work, and reminding us of their upcoming free show at Music Millennium at 6pm on June 21.

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, album, Radio, tune in

game-changer

Aceyalone at The Crown Room

Stop dismissing hiphop, and let this veteran emcee “school” you.

Email

“I don’t like hiphop.”
How was your weekend? I spent mine inviting friends to see Aceyalone tonight at the Crown Room—and being repeatedly turned down cold. “No thanks; I don’t like hiphop,” several have said. Now, before you jump to conclusions about the company I keep *, let’s admit that in Portland, this is a familiar if regrettable refrain. But why? In a town that’s so inherently rebellious and articulate, you’d think hiphop would be the coin of the realm. After all, a good MC can cram more incendiary ideas and clever wordplay into a three-minute “flow,” than Arlo Guthrie could eek out in 18 minutes of Alice’s Restaurant. What’s not to love?

You haven’t met Aceyalone.
Detractors are quick to point out that hiphop doesn’t always deliver. Too often, hustlers, ho’s, and club-compatible, dumbed-down dance beats drown out what should be a sophisticated showcase of the spoken word. But discerning listeners need to stop throwing the proverbial babies out with the endless flood of industry bathwater. After all, if you said you didn’t like country music, you’d miss out on Willie Nelson**. If you claimed you couldn’t stand folk, you’d exclude game-changers like Bob Dylan and Paul Simon. And if you broadly wave away rap and hiphop, you’ll never lend your ear to brilliant MC’s like Aceyalone.

Here are a couple tracks Acey put out in 1995, that still sounded brand-new and brilliant when I first heard them in 2007 via friends at local animation studio LAIKA. Animators—typically obsessed with creativity, novelty and craftsmanship—unsurprisingly connected with Acey’s album All Balls Don’t Bounce.

Listen up as Acey takes on the role of a teacher, patiently orienting us to basic “hip-hology,” using a mind-bending hybrid of the words “arithmetic,” “meticulous,” and “rhythm,” (and possibly even “arrhythmia”) as a manifesto for his calculating, challenging rhymes.
Now, here’s a track with more hooks than velcro. Between a piquant vibraphone loop and a soulful “uh-huh,” Acey explains how his angst propels him helplessly into the life of a poet. Deliberately departing from gangsta-thug clichés, he firmly defines himself as scholar-before-baller.

Okay, okay. This concludes the lecture. These days, the prolific Acey seems to have pulled back a bit on his pedantic rants and made peace with his place on the scene. Though he’s no household name, he’s still captured enough insider clout and attracted enough great collaborators to back up the boast that he’s “automatic at it.” Hence, let’s close with this slick submission.

Aceyalone will be at The Crown Room with Rashaan Ahmad, Theory Hazit, and the Reva Devito Band. The show starts at 9pm for a ridiculously reasonable 5 dollars. Erstwhile hiphop haters, it’s past time you came out of your comfort zone and into the flow.

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!

*Most of the company I keep is over 25 years of age, while younger PDX intellectuals seem way more open to hiphop acts like Tyler The Creator or Lupe Fiasco.
**Don’t miss Willie Nelson. He’ll be at McMenamins at the end of July.

Add a Comment »

Tags: music, hiphop, Aceyalone

music

Sasquatch 2011 Slideshow!

Portland Monthly was at Sasquatch this past Memorial day weekend—and we have the pictures to prove it!

Email
Typhoon-sasquatch-silouette
Photo: Julie Reposa

Portland’s own Typhoon opened up day three with the full band packed onto the Bigfoot stage. The band is fresh off a triumphant showing at SXSW in Austin and made quick work of wowing the crowd with their lively cathartic performance.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

The crowd starts to gather at the Yeti stage on day two as they wait for Seattle band The Globes to start their set.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

The Secret Sisters opened the Yeti stage on day two with their old-time country harmonies, including covers by Hank Williams and Willie Nelson to name a few.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

The Head & The Heart giving an inspired performance on the Main stage. Their set was a definite highlight of the festival.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

The Head & The Heart sing a song off of their infectious self-titled debut album, release this spring on Sub Pop.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

L.A. Band Local Natives playing a song off of last year’s stellar debut album, Gorilla Manor on the main stage at Sasquatch.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Rebecca Gates with her band The Consortium on the Yeti stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Crowd gathered at the Yeti stage to watch Baltimore band Wye Oak perform.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Sharon Van Etten was another festival highlight, charming the crowd in between songs from her 2010 release Epic.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Andy Dwyer with his band Mouse Rat.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Wait my bad, it’s actually Canadian folkster Dan Mangan (But he does kind of look like Andy from Parks & Recreation right?)

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Jenny Lewis (The “Jenny” half of the band Jenny and Johnny)

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Johnathan Rice (The “Johnny” of Jenny and Johnny)

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Jenny & Johnny crooning their sun washed indie pop songs to the crowd on the Bigfoot stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

The Thermals tearing up the Yeti stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Kathy, bassist for Portland favorites The Thermals, rocking out on the Yeti stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Portland’s own Typhoon opened up day three with the full band packed onto the Bigfoot stage. The band is fresh off a triumphant showing at SXSW in Austin and made quick work of wowing the crowd with their lively cathartic performance.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Typhoon singer/guitarist Kyle Morton.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Black Joe Lewis & The Honeybears perform on day three at the Yeti stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Swedish dance-pop queen, Robyn made the very excited crowd wait 30 minutes before taking the Bigfoot stage Saturday night on day two of the fest.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Sasquatch always has more than its fair share of colorful characters in attendance (literally) and this year was no exception.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Jonathan Pierce, lead singer of New York indie band The Drums, doing his best Morrissey impression on the Main stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Victoria Legrand of Beach House playing on the Main stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Fitz & The Tantrums were a crowd favorite on day three as they brought their Motown theatrics to the Main stage at Sasquatch.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Noelle Scaggs of Fitz & The Tantrums.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Michael Fitzpatrick, lead singer of Fitz & The Tantrums.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Yeasayer playing Sunday night on the Bigfoot stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

The Flaming Lips performed the entirety of their acclaimed 1999 album, The Soft Bulletin on the second night of the festival. Yes, that is a choir of Dorothy’s you see.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

The Flaming Lips, one of the day three headliners, takes the stage as Wayne Coyne does his obligatory roll around on the crowd in a giant hampster ball.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Wavves opening up the last day of the festival with an early morning set at 11:30 AM on the Main stage. I suspect this may have been the earliest lead singer Nathan Williams has been up in quite a while.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Looking handsome and dapper, UK lads Noah & the Whale try not to wrinkle their suits while playing day four of Sasquatch on the Bigfoot stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Austin rockers White Denim on the Yeti stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Louisiana band Givers, on the Bigfoot stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Mark Foster of Foster the People performing to a massive crowd on the Yeti stage (Yes that’s the small one) on the last day of the Sasquatch Music Festival.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Foster the People attracted a sea of fans as well as a cluster of media types trying to get a shot of the LA buzz band. The band’s star is quickly rising due to the release of their first full legth album Torches which includes the catchy, destined-to-be-a-summer-hit-song, “Pumped Up Kicks”.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa
Seattle rapper Macklemore took the Bigfoot stage to rapturous applause from his throng of fans on day four.
View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Macklemore showing off his old school fringed jean jacket to the crowd.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

Surfer Blood on the Bigfoot stage.

View Slideshow » Photo: Julie Reposa

The sun sets on Sasquatch until next year.

This past Memorial day weekend, the Gorge Amphitheater in Quincy, Washington played host to the biggest annual music festival in the Pacific Northwest, namely Sasquatch, which was celebrating its 10th anniversary. Portland Monthly was lucky enough to snag some press passes from the nice folks at Live Nation (Thanks Ashley and Brian!) which, among other things, meant we didn’t have to use a honeybucket once all weekend. It also meant that we were able to take some awesome pictures for you, our beloved readers, so please sit back, have your morning coffee and scone and watch this slideshow of the bands we saw and the weird people in costume we took sneaky photos of.

Were you at the Gorge this weekend? What bands rocked your socks off? Were you in the pit when The Flaming Lips threw Sasquatch birthday cake into the audience? How many of those pricey-yet-delicious frozen Strawberry Daiquiris served in tall plastic guitar cups did you have? Share your comments below!

Add a Comment »

Tags: music

music

Interview: Sallie Ford

Sallie Ford talks about writing, singing, and the hometown she gradually grew to love.

Email
Sallieford9

Sallie Ford with bandmates Jeffrey Munger, Tyler Tornfelt, and Ford Tennis.

Last Tuesday Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside welcomed a respectable crowd to east-side record hub Music Millenium, playing a short set and signing copies of their debut full-length release, Dirty Radio. Despite their undeniably tight playing, the juke-rock revivalists kept a casual vibe. “I’m the boss!” Sallie blurted as the group debated song selection. Guitarist Jeff Munger snatched off his trucker cap and playfully swatted her.

But she has a point: Rising quickly from South Carolinian obscurity to Portland name-recognition, and now taking flight for international fame, Sallie Ford has become the master of her domain. Culturephile checks in with her on the cusp of a two-night stint at Doug Fir that will kick off her North American tour.

Three years ago, you were working as a server at a Thai restaurant on Hawthorne and having a hard time getting local bands to return your emails. Since then, you’ve acquired a tight band (The Sound Outside), a great label (Partisan), and the chance to tour the world. How does that feel? It was a Vietnamese restaurant, and I’m very glad I’m not working there anymore! It’s great that music is my job now, but that also means it can be a lot of work. Any unexpected challenges? Some unexpected challenges have been learning about the business side of things and learning to be patient and make good choices.

Your music has been described a few different ways. I’m inclined to call it “Rockabilly,” because that’s a classic form and a fun word—but what do you call it? My easy answer about how to describe my music is: “Rock n Roll.”

Fair enough. Tell us about your songwriting process. Lately, I usually will come up with a melody, and then lyrics, and then I add guitar chords. But I’ve also written guitar chords, then a melody, then lyrics. And occasionally I’ve written lyrics, then fit them to music. I mostly like to just see what comes out, and I never overthink things….I hope that makes sense.

You were already singing in South Carolina before you moved here. How did Portland influence your musicianship (or did it?) I had done some singing in North Carolina before I moved to Portland, but I didn’t start writing my own music ’til i moved to portland. I think it was nice to have a fresh start and not know anyone in Portland.

When you sing, “You may think I’m a clown/ Who gives a sh- t about this town,” which town are you singing about? “Who gives a sh-t about this town” was somewhat about how frustrated I was initially with the music scene in Portland, but I wrote that song because I dreamt about it. I woke up with the melody and words still in my head. Looking back, maybe it was a prayer to find my own “scene.”
Now that I have met more people in the music scene here (and there are many many bands as you know) I have a totally different view on that. I think people are very supportive here and it feels like a great scene to be in. So, which town were you thinking of when you wrote, “I kinda like it here?” The “I like it here” song is called “This Crew,” and it’s the counterpart to “This Town.” It’s about my love of Portland, and of course no city is perfect. That song is mostly about the things I’ve seen and people I’ve met on Hawthorne Boulevard, which has been my “hood” for a while now.

What do you think is most unique/essential to your act: your voice, your songs, or your instrumentation?
I guess my voice is the most important. I love singing more than writing or playing music.

Tell us about your semi-famous freelance puppeteer dad. What great inside tips has he given you about how to manage a creative project?
Puppeteer Hobey Ford is my dad. He definitely has been my hero and role model. He has done a lot of touring with his puppet shows and gives great advice for performers on the road. He never finished college and has always been supportive and inspired me to be self-employed.

You’re (22? 23?) and, obviously, a woman. Do people ever tell you you’re "great for a girl,” or better than they thought you’d be? Do you think the pop music climate, and the touring circuit, are getting more female-friendly? I’m 23. I haven’t heard that before, but I guess maybe I have heard people be surprised that my music is more rockin’ then they expected. I think people are very supportive to touring women musicians, but I don’t have much to compare that to.

Where are you most excited to travel and why?
I’m excited to go to Charleston, SC because we’re gonna go to the beach while we’re there. I grew up going to Folly Beach, and it’s nice to have a paid vacation there! I’m also excited to go to New Orleans and Montreal. I’ve wanted to go to both those places for a while.

Sallie Ford and The Sound Outside will be at the Doug Fir Lounge June 3 and 4, promoting new album Dirty Radio. Sneak a listen here:


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, album, Radio, tune in

Advertisement