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Church
9:00pm Monday, May 2, 2016

Free night of passion w/ Snugsworth & Soul Ipsum
Special guest DJ Karmelloz

Bunk Bar
8:00pm Monday, May 2, 2016

This show is in support of Daniel's recent acclaimed studio album Golden Age, co-produced by My Morning Jacket's Jim James.  This new full-length effort, which The Wall Street Journal recently called "elegant and timeless," follows Daniel's previous acclaimed releases for Sub Pop Records and well-received full-length collaborations with both Ben Sollee and Joan Shelley. 

$8 advance, $10 day of show     

Doug Fir
8:00pm Sunday, May 1, 2016

It was the arrival of a Studer A80 master recorder at the front door of Sam Shepherd – otherwise known as Floating Points – that caused him to begin building the studio that led to the creation of his debut album, Elaenia (due out via Pluto in the UK and Luaka Bop in the US on 6 November). After a slight miscalculation meant that he could not physically get the thing inside his home, what happened next can only be described as a beautiful example of the butterfly effect. Breaking away from making electronic music on his laptop, the DJ, producer and composer spent the next five years engineering Elaenia, all the while deejaying in cities across the globe and working towards his PhD in neuroscience. An incredibly special album that draws inspiration from classical, jazz, electronic music, soul and even Brazilian popular music, Elaenia – named after the bird of the same name – is the epitome of the forward-thinking Floating Points vision in 2015.


From an early age, Shepherd's mind has always been musically inclined. As a chorister at Manchester Cathedral, he developed his musicianship through performing up to six services a week whilst at the same time studying piano and composition at Chetham's School of Music. There, he undertook lessons which not only improved his technical knowledge but developed his love of electronic and jazz music too. "That time was crazy – I was listening to Bill Evans and Morton Subotnick, Kenny Wheeler and Toru Takemitsu amongst many others all on the same day," Shepherd recalls. "These inspirations have stuck with me all the way through to making this record."

Growing up in Manchester, Shepherd was constantly upheaving his parents' house, turning it into a makeshift studio that allowed his highly curious mind to do as it pleased. There would be a drum kit in the living room – a cello in the kitchen – wires trailing every nook and cranny all the way up to his bedroom. When he eventually moved to London to attend university, he lost that creative freedom, yet refused to let the ensuing years of limitation affect his work by making idiosyncratic electronic music on his computer – a move that put him firmly on the radar with records like 'Vacuum' and 'Shadows'. "The first stuff I put out was around that time," he explains. "All this time, I wanted to be sharing my other, live music – but recording was prohibitively expensive."

It was these prohibitions (and a lack of space for his ever-growing collection of equipment) that led Shepherd to relocate to a London-based studio. Having more room allowed Shepherd's music to reach much grander and ambitious heights, his work with the Floating Points Ensemble paving the way for things to come. Shepherd's collection of equipment continued to bloom, and on Elaenia, the range of instruments he played himself is astounding: the Oberheim OB8, Arp Odyssey, piano, Fender Rhodes, vibraphone, marimba, Rhodes Chroma, Buchla 101, 200e and100 series modular synthesizers were all performed by him, resulting in a distinct and personable sound that echoes throughout the whole record. "I was lucky enough to spend some time in Vancouver with Richard Smith, who has the most formidable early origin Buchla setup," he says, 'For Marmish' came from there, but a lot of the noises that came out of the sessions ultimately bent my mind and served to refresh my use of electronics. The Mood Hut guys introduced us – spending a few days at his recording studio was a dream."

The more time he spent in London and DJing around the world, the more friends Shepherd made and recruited for the current incarnation of his band. On Elaenia, Tom Skinner and Leo Taylor contributed drums (Skinner playing on 'Silhouettes I', 'II' & 'III'), with Susumu Mukai taking up bass, Qian Wu and Edward Benton sporting violins, Matthew Kettle on the viola and Joe Zeitlin on the cello. Help was also on hand for vocals, with Rahel Debebe-Dessalegne and Layla Rutherford both lending their voices alongside Shepherd's own. Every moment on Elaenia is intricately and meticulously executed – every noise finely tweaked and tuned to perfection. "I got the Rhodes Chroma in the middle of recording," he remembers. "It's a funny machine, since it only works properly for thirty minutes every six months. When it's working though, it's phenomenal! I had bits on the record I was waiting months to record just because there was a particular sound I wanted from the Chroma."

Like his contemporaries and good friends Caribou and Four Tet, Shepherd has nurtured the Floating Points name into one renowned for ambitious and forward-thinking DJ sets, having performed all over the world at events and clubs such as Output NYC, Trouw, Sonar, Unit Tokyo, Panorama Bar and, of course, Nuits Sonores (which lent its name to his seminal track from summer 2014); as well as the much-missed Plastic People, where he held his monthly residency for five years. His love for digging through recordings from around the world is just as huge as the venues themselves – Shepherd has an ear for everything from Brazilian legends such as Jose Mauro, Gal Costa and Hareton Salvagnini right through to the 1970's Embryo Records band Air. Overall, influences on Elaenia run wide and deep and are charmingly eclectic – Shepherd names Laughing Stock by Talk Talk as a critical influence in the making of the record, for example, as well as the leftfield leanings of Circles by William S. Fischer.

For the past ten years, all roads Shepherd has followed have slowly been leading to Elaenia – an album with roots deep in his formative years that draw upon everything Shepherd has done to date. His debut album proper, Elaenia is the culmination of all things Sam Shepherd: the Eglo label boss, the ensemblist, the producer, scientist and visual artist – and that's only scraping the surface. He created the artwork for Elaenia himself by making a harmonograph from scratch, and set it to various light sources that responded to the album track 'For Marmish'. "I saw a harmonograph on display at the science museum in London a few years ago, as well as a couple of drawings produced by the machine," he explains. "The shame of it though was that you didn't get to see it actually in action. So I built one" Like much of Elaenia itself, the artwork is meticulously crafted – Shepherd used fibre optic cables, photograph paper, even a modular synthesizer to generate light pulses. He gave the same attention to detail to the artwork as he did every moment Elaenia, an album that is almost a hundred percent hand-crafted from compositions right down to its instruments.

The mesmerising ebbs and flows of Elaenia span moments of light and dark; rigidity and freedom; elegance and chaos. There is the lush, euphoric enlightenment of 'Silhouettes'', a three-part composition that acts as a testament to those early days Shepherd spent playing in various ensembles – complete with an immensely tight rhythm section that ends up providing a cathartic, blissful release. Elsewhere, Shepherd's knack for masterful late night sets bare fruition to the hypnotic, electronic pulse of 'Argenté', a welcome change of pace. "I certainly like pauses in DJing," he explains. "Especially in all night sets where I assume dancers would welcome moments of calm… why not! Plastic People taught me that. When I think of the forty or so minutes of this album, there are moments of dance, and moments of utter stillness. I've found that with my dancefloor productions, patience with build ups can make that release all the sweeter." Elaenia draws upon the many parts of Sam's life, from DJ to artist to inventor, and provides the clearest context of his musical skills to date – it's the end result of the direction he has always been moving in.

By the time the final track 'Peroration Six' comes around, that release is sweet indeed. Building euphoria upon layers of driving basslines, untamed drums and soaring electronics, the result is one of the biggest tension-and-release moments in music this year – a skyrocketing end to a mammoth five-year journey that sees Shepherd play all of his cards at once; eschewing spiritual 3am electronics with the jubilation of his previous dancefloor-ready singles and the intricate and highly ambitious essence of his DJ sets. Elaenia is a series of suites designed to be devoured in one sitting that has its own unique voice, with only one track – the title track – speaking a direct and tangible story, relating to a dream Shepherd had about a migrating elaenia's life being absorbed by a forest.

Ultimately, Elaenia packs performances that are at times delicate and intense – the first full-bodied, complete Floating Points work so far, and provides context to the music that Shepherd has been making to date. Every DJ set he's performed, every talent he has produced, every composition he has written are thought of as precursors to Elaenia – a dazzling score which puts Shepherd in the spotlight as a composer who has produced an album that bridges the gap between his rapturous dance music and formative classical roots.
LACUNA (5040 SE Milwaukie Ave)
7:00pm Sunday, May 1, 2016

Created and performed by Alex Romania

Description
This physically vulnerable choreography frames the male body between violence and pleasure -- a microphone is bound to the body and swung from the pelvis evoking forms in the realm of BDSM, pornography, athletics, games, and flagellation. Through genital hypnosis and rigorous discomfort, this is a dance of (narcissistic) pleasure and (quiet) longing, (self) mutilation and (self) care. A dance to flatten and complexify the male body, to tenderize the flesh, to move beyond and to newly inhabit — a phallic solo to recompose the phallus.

Bio: 
Alex Romania is a multidisciplinary performance-maker, organizer, and teacher based in NYC who has taught and shown work nationally and internationally. Besides creating performance work, Alex organizes events with dance and performance artists in NYC (such as the ‘Get Your A$$ in CLA$$’ class series at Abrons Arts Center), holds irregular discussions and events through his collective journalism platform INVISIBLE ARTISTS (a resource to approach sustainability in the arts), teaches teens how to devise original performance, video-documents live performance, and practices Thai Yoga. Alex has performed in works by Kathy Westwater, Catherine Galasso, Andy de Grout, Eddie Peake, Jacob Slominski, Ishmael Houston-Jones, Simone Forti, Steve Paxton and has collaborated with a handful of performance art collectives, amongst other artists. http://cargocollective.com/alexromania

Artistic Statement:
Humans engage in radical, normalized, spiritual, and institutionalized actions every day to exorcise dangerous and healthy demons from (their) bodies. We sweat, laugh, protest, screw to liberation, abuse, annihilate cultures, and systematically oppress. We shit, we piss, we cry. At the core of exorcism (not necessarily religious exorcism), is to purge, expel, and move. Fear causes exorcism of lives. Exorcism polarizes good/evil, pure/vile, light/dark. The same forces of cultural colonization that empires war over. Exorcism destroys cultures, saves lives, and builds identity. While functioning as a force to separate the evil from the good, it condones invisible evil under the guise of godwar. This polarization sanctions demagogues and lifts them to demigod status. It justifies culturally practiced vilification, which leads to mass distortions of ‘right’ and ‘wrong’, and spurs hysterical, insane, illogical, and fear driven violence.
My practice investigates the dangerous and functional role of value systems in relationship to social choreography (the choreography of systems - economies, isms, government's, gender... etc.) mutating systems through performance, movement, improvisation, action, pursuing alternative possibilities for cohabitating space. Performing my work is to navigate through a psychedelic constellation of scores. Thrust between the internal experience and external reality(?), it is negotiating what, why, how, and when we perform while performing scores that catapult the performer into intentional confusion and discomfort. My work pursues an altered inhabitancy of the the good/bad spectrum to liberate the governed body. Investigating a body possessed by cultural debris, overloaded with the invisible everyday and it’s social, global, and personal ingestions, reckoning with itself in a purging state, consuming and breaking apart. The multiple body in exorcism.

******
photo's are by Daniela Sanchez


FUTURE DEATH AGENCY 
http://futuredeath.agency/ 

isolation 

tech: 
1. use the 4-track, but (lack of) sight might make this a bit more difficult 
2. mic stand or two mic standz 
3. ulta violet led light (blinking)
4. processing text 

the dance: 
1. circle 
2. arm 
3. pelvis 
4. voice box 

tape loopz:
1. "people like you. you like people."
2. "there's something wrong with you, nobody likes you. you've got serious problems."
3. "you feel friendly towards people. you like to feel intimate with others. you can get along with people by being yourself. you feel neat and tidy. if you see paper on the floor, you pick it up."
4. "do you realize that you are a very hostile person? do you know that you are hostile with the nurses? do you know that you are hostile with the patients? why do you think you are so hostile? did you hate your mother? did you hate your father?"



http://lacuna.club/

Marylhurst University
12:00pm12:00am Sunday, May 1, 2016

2016 NW Handmade Musical Instrument Exhibit
April 30th – May 1st, 2016

Please mark your calendars for the next Northwest Handmade Musical Instrument Exhibit. It will again be held on the lovely campus of Marylhurst University, near Portland, Oregon.

The exhibition features musical instrument makers and performers of the Pacific Northwest.

The exhibition will be held in the Marylhurst Commons, with Concerts-Demonstrations held in the newly remodeled Wiegand Hall.

Admission is $3. Children under 12, free.

The Redd
9:30pm Saturday, April 30, 2016

We'll be wearing sparkles and our best dancing shoes and hope you do too.

DJ's:
II Trill (Twerk PDX)
Princess Dimebag
https://soundcloud.com/princessdimebag

B2B DJ Set By:
Troubled Youth (Judy on Duty, Bridge Club) + 
Daniela Karina (Women's Beat League)
https://soundcloud.com/danielakarina

Visuals: 
MSHR (Brenna Murphy + Birch Cooper)
http://mshr.info/

Photo Booth: 
Lauren Baker (Queen, She Shreds Magazine)
http://www.spexbakerx.com/

High & Low Drink Specials:
Champagne Bottle Service and VIP Lounge
$1 PBR pour hour & Blue Light drink specials 

Tacos Capillo foodcart in the backlot

This is presented in collaboration with Event Committee members: Chloe Alexandra Thompson, Daniela Karina, Coco Paradise, Megan Holmes, Coco Madrid, & Alley Frey

Tickets will be available at the door for $5.

Inner SE Portland, OR
6:30pm Saturday, April 30, 2016

THE WESTERLIES – (Brass quartet – 2 trumpets/2 trombones) 

The Westerlies (“prevailing winds from the West to the East”) are a New York based brass quartet comprised of four friends from Seattle, Washington: Riley Mulherkar and Zubin Hensler on trumpet, and Andy Clausen and Willem de Koch on trombone. Avid explorers of cross-genre territory, they are dedicated to the cultivation of a new brass quartet repertoire that exists in the ever-narrowing gap between American folk music, jazz, classical, and indie rock. Since their inception in 2011, The Westerlies have premiered over 40 original works for brass quartet, and crafted an approach that trumpeter Dave Douglas has described as “Swinging, grooving, clean and tricky playing. This is the group that, once you’ve heard them, you’ll realize they always needed to exist. Unique, original, exciting. And simply killing in the best sense.” Their music exudes the warmth of their longstanding friendships, and reflects the broad interests of its members. (w/ The Westerlies)

House Concert :: THE WESTERLIES
When :: SAT APRIL 30, 2016 (7:30 PM Performance / 6:30 Potluck)
Where :: Inner SE Portland. RSVP to abbiew@froggie.com for directions and to reserve! (You can also use the form on www.froggie.com).
Cost :: Suggested donation $15-20. All proceeds go to the artists!
Contact :: Abbie Weisenbloom, (503) : 233-4945 / abbiew@froggie.com /www.froggie.com

Also, we will be live streaming the show on Concert Window > https://www.concertwindow.com/abbiewpresents.
Tell your friends, where ever they may live. This is a great way to help support the artists & the venue while enjoying the show remotely!)
--------------------------------------------------
(www.westerliesmusic.com)

Wieden + Kennedy (224 NW 13th Ave)
5:00pm Saturday, April 30, 2016

Be Honest is the Portland State University Graphic Design annual student portfolio showcase. It’s not just for graduating seniors, but for all levels of graphic design students that want to participate and share their work.

It’s part portfolio show, part party, part open house, part alumni reunion, part awards, part lectures and ALL FUN. And we want you to join in with us! 

This year, our sophomores, juniors and seniors are excited to share their work and engage with Portland’s creative community. Be Honest serves as a valuable opportunity for students to gain experience presenting their work and we would love for your feedback and support.

After the showcase, there will be a variety show called Good Nervous, hosted by Adam Garcia at 8pm! 

MSG (1998 SW Sherwood Blvd)
3:00pm6:00pm Saturday, April 30, 2016

MSG is pleased to present new work, "The Pilman Radiant," by Chaz Stobbs, opening 30 April 2016. 

Reception from 3-6:00 pm

-------------

A picnic. Picture a forest, a country road, a meadow. 

A car drive off the country road into the meadow, a group of 

young people get out carrying bottles, baskets of food, 

transistor radios, and cameras. They light fires, pitch tents, 

turn on the music. In the morning they leave. The animals, 

birds, and insects that watched in horror through the long 

night creep out from their hiding places. And what do they 

see? Gas and oil spilled on the grass. Old spark plugs and 

old filters strewn around. Rags, burnt-out bulbs, and a 

monkey wrench left behind. Oil slicks on the pond. And of 

course, the usual mess—apple cores, candy wrappers, 

charred remains of the campfire, cans, bottles, somebody’s 

handkerchief, somebody’s penknife, torn newspapers, coins, 

faded flowers picked in another meadow.

Marylhurst University
12:00pm5:00pm Saturday, April 30, 2016

2016 NW Handmade Musical Instrument Exhibit
April 30th – May 1st, 2016

Please mark your calendars for the next Northwest Handmade Musical Instrument Exhibit. It will again be held on the lovely campus of Marylhurst University, near Portland, Oregon.

The exhibition features musical instrument makers and performers of the Pacific Northwest.

The exhibition will be held in the Marylhurst Commons, with Concerts-Demonstrations held in the newly remodeled Wiegand Hall.

Admission is $3. Children under 12, free.

Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall
7:30pm Friday, April 29, 2016

A celebration of one of the greatest film composers of all time, with music from Star Wars,Harry Potter, Indiana JonesSchindler’s List, and many more.

Paul Ghun Kim, conductor

Tickets are available exclusively from Oregon Symphony.

S1 (4148 NE Hancock St)
7:00pm Friday, April 29, 2016
Ornamental Hypergate Conglomerate is a generative electronic system that outputs light and sound. In this installation, conglomerations of digital logic gates being run as analog circuits in feedback systems comprise the score of a musical composition. The forms produced are spread across four loudspeakers in a structure that points to a square unfolding into a tesseract. Sound is used as a hyperspatial sculptural medium that reveals its form through iteration.

Birch Cooper is an artist, electronic musician and electronic instrument builder based in Portland, OR. His work centers around integrated systems and creative collaboration. He is a founding member of the art collectives MSHR and Oregon Painting Society as well as many other musical groups. Since 2007 Cooper has installed interactive and generative electronic systems extensively in Europe and the US with MSHR and OPS. Ornamental Hypergate Conglomerate is his first solo exhibition of a generative system. 

Opening reception of Ornamental Hypergate Conglomerate on April 29th from 7-10pm. 

-

This installation coincides with Birch's photo theremin workshop on May 1st. More information here: http://s1portland.com/workshops/photo-theremin-workshop/

Viewing hours are as follows:
Saturday April 30th 12-4pm
Saturday May 7th 12-4pm
Sunday May 8th 12-4pm
The Know
9:00pm Thursday, April 28, 2016

First off is the debut full-length from Acapulco Lips on the new label Killroom Records from Ben Jenkins and KEXP's Troy Nelson. If you're into '60s garage rock ala The Pleasure Seekers, or contemporary bands like Shannon & The Clams and Guantanamo Baywatch, you'll definitely enjoy their new record. 

Crystal Ballroom
8:00pm Thursday, April 28, 2016

Beach House is Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally. We have been a band for over a decade living and working in Baltimore, MD. Depression Cherry is our 5th full-length record. This record follows the release of our self-titled album in 2006, Devotion in 2008, Teen Dream in 2010 and Bloom in 2012. Depression Cherry was recorded at Studio in the Country in Bogalusa, Louisiana from November '14 through January '15. This time period crossed the anniversaries of both John Lennon's and Roy Orbison's death.

In general, this record shows a return to simplicity, with songs structured around a melody and a few instruments, with live drums playing a far lesser role. With the growing success of Teen Dream and Bloom, the larger stages and bigger rooms naturally drove us towards a louder, more aggressive place; a place farther from our natural tendencies. Here, we continue to let ourselves evolve while fully ignoring the commercial context in which we exist.

The feeling and themes of this record:

- "I'll never be able to be here again. As the minutes slide by, I move on. The flow of time is something I cannot stop. I haven't a choice. I go. One caravan has stopped, another starts up. There are people I have yet to meet, others I'll never see again. People who are gone before you know it, people who are just passing through. Even as we exchange hellos, they seem to grow transparent. I must keep living with the flowing river before my eyes." - from Kitchen by Banana Yoshimoto 
- "We inhabit a world in which the future promises endless possibilities and the past lies irretrievably behind us. The arrow of time... is the medium of creativity in terms of which life can be understood." - from The Arrow of Time by Peter Coveney and Roger Highfield
- "Mostly it is loss which teaches us about the worth of things." - from Parerga and Paralipomena by Arthur Schopenhauer
- "Hark, now hear the sailors cry, feel the air and see the sky, let your soul and spirit fly, into the mystic..........when the fog horn blows, I want to hear it, I don't have to fear it" - from "Into the Mystic" by Van Morrison

The track listing with selected lyrics.

1. Levitation - "The branches of the trees, they will hang lower now, you will grow too quick, then you will get over it"
2. Sparks - "It's a gift, taken from the lips, you live again"
3. Space Song - "What makes this fragile world go 'round, were you ever lost, was she ever found?"
4. Beyond Love - "They take the simple things inside you and put nightmares in your hands"
5. 10:37 - "Here she comes, all parts of everything, stars in the motherhand"
6. PPP - "Did you see it coming, it happened so fast, the timing was perfect, water on glass..."
7. Wildflower - "What's left you make something of it"
8. Bluebird - "I would not ever try to capture you"
9. Days of Candy - "I know it comes too soon, the universe is riding off with you...... I want to know you there, the universe is riding off with you."

Depression Cherry is a color, a place, a feeling, an energy... that describes the place you arrive as you move through the endlessly varied trips of existence...

Beach House will tour worldwide with the release of Depression Cherry.

Website:
http://www.beachhousebaltimore.com/

Mississippi Studios
8:00pm Thursday, April 28, 2016

BLACKBIRD BLACKBIRD

Blackbird Blackbird is the moniker of San Francisco-based wünderkind Mikey Maramag. His unique style of dreamy folktronica recalls influences from all ends of the musical spectrum; deeply textured, hypnotic songs pay homage to psychedelic pop the likes of Caribou and Washed Out, while the warmth of analogue instrumentation spliced with digital artifacts hints at contemporaries James Blake, Four Tet and Mount Kimbie.

Anthemic, dream-driven themes inspire Blackbird Blackbird's work, where layers of electronic texture drape over organic sounds and ghostly vocals. Within elongated song structures, Blackbird Blackbird harnesses thematic elements of dynamism and composition to create depth and complexity, while never losing sight of his pop sensibilities.

CHAD VALLEY

A product of Oxford’s prolific creative community, Chad Valley has a catalogue that spans three studio releases – 2010’s self-titled debut EP which was a bedroom exploration in swirling synths and sunburnt melodies. 2011’s Equatorial Ultravox expanded that recipe, giving his downtempo productions a decidedly more pop leaning twist. It was with Equatorial Ultravox that Chad Valley’s profile grew substantially, thanks in part to single
‘Shell Suite’ being used by Alex Patsavas in the major movie, Warm Bodies, and a string of key touring slots supporting the likes of Active Child, Chvrches, Erasure, Friendly Fires and Passion Pit. In 2013, Chad Valley released Young Hunger, his first proper album and one that saw him further embrace his pop ambitions. The material was a modern collage of 80’s freestyle jams and 90’s radio singles, featuring an impressive list of collaborators including El Perro Del Mar, Glasser, TEED and Twin Shadow. In support of the record, Chad Valley toured the world, winning over fans with his stellar voice and impassioned performances.

Now, two years later, Chad Valley’s Hugo Manuel is back with his sophomore album, Entirely New Blue. The record is an exploration in identify and a return to the places that comfort us, especially when we return to them a different person. The album was written between London, where he lived for years with his long-term girlfriend, and Oxford, the town that he came home to when their relationship ended. That painstaking transition is evident across the record’s nine tracks, perhaps mostly on slow-burners “Labasa” and “Seventeen”. The former of which is the namesake village in Fiji where his grandmother was born. Unlike previous material, and embodying the spirit of the music, Hugo’s voice appears higher in the mix and rinsed clean of effects on most tracks. Similarly, the production is more stark, providing Hugo the space to do more with less. Working with producer Joel Ford, the ethos of stripping away everything that’s not immediately useful is apparent.

Entirely New Blue will be released on October 2 via Chad Valley’s longtime label home, Cascine. North American and European tours have been routed for fall.
Holocene
7:00pm Thursday, April 28, 2016
Building a community around post-rock music. 
Featuring: 
Coastlands

Just over a year ago, Portland band Long Hallways set out to build a community around Post-Rock music. They found immediate connection with like-minded bands Coastlands and A Collective Subconscious . Together, the three bands formed the beginnings of the NW Post-Rock Collective. 

The NWPRC's network now includes bands, bookers, and listeners in Seattle, Tacoma, Salem, Eugene, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. The NWPRC has also been in contact with the Southwest Post-Rock Collective and has partnered on a compilation album with bands in Santiago, Chile.

This network of bands presents diverse and complex facets of instrumental music. Their unique soundscapes, accompanied by visual imagery, evoke a depth of provocative emotions that draw listeners in.

The NW Post-Rock Collective provides insight into a next generation of post-rock and and innovative adaptation to the music industry.

$7 Advance/Day of show

Cherry & Lucic (4077 NE 7th Ave)
6:30pm10:00pm Thursday, April 28, 2016
[COMMUNICATION]
4.13.16, 


For Henry Codax's exhibition at Cherry & Lucic, the artist will present three monochrome paintings in situ. This is the artist's first show in the Pacific Northwest following recent solo, co-solo and group exhibitions at, but not limited to Gavin Brown’s Enterprise (NYC), Martos Gallery (NYC), Carriage Trade (NYC), Brand New Gallery (NYC), Michael Thibault (LA), Office Baroque (Antwerp) and Galerie Susanna Kulli (Zurich). For his exhibition at Cherry & Lucic, a grouping of letter pressed monochromes will be available for viewing alongside the paintings.




















Codax: “And you said I made them.”

————

subscribe @ cherryandlucic.com/contact.html


Doug Fir
8:00pm Wednesday, April 27, 2016

WILD NOTHING

When Jack Tatum began work on Life of Pause, his third full-length to date, he had lofty ambitions: Don't just write another album; create another world. One with enough detail and texture and dimension that a listener could step inside, explore, and inhabit it as they see fit. "I desperately wanted for this to be the kind of record that would displace me," he says. "I'm terrified by the idea of being any one thing, or being of any one genre. And whether or not I accomplish that, I know that my only hope of getting there is to constantly reinvent. That reinvention doesn't need to be drastic, but every new record has to have its own identity, and it has to have a separate set of goals from what came before."

What came before: a rightfully acclaimed, much beloved display of singular pop craftsmanship. Tatum's dreamy, unexpected 2010 debut, Gemini, was written while he was still a student at Virginia Tech University. Its equally disarming follow-up, 2012's Nocturne, marked the first time he'd been able to bring his bedroom recordings into a studio, to be performed and fully realized with the help of other musicians. There has been a set of wonderfully expansive EPs in between—each hinting at new directions and punctuating previous ideas—but with Life of Pause, Tatum delivers what he describes as his most "honest" and "mature" work yet, an exquisitely arranged and beautifully recorded collection of songs that marry the immediate with the indefinable. "I allowed myself to go down every route I could imagine even if it ended up not working for me," he says. "I owe it to myself to take as many risks as possible. Songs are songs and you have to allow yourself to be open to everything."

After a prolonged period of writing and experimentation, recording took place over several weeks in both Los Angeles and Stockholm, with producer Thom Monahan (Devendra Banhart, Beachwood Sparks) helping Tatum in his search for a more natural and organically textured sound. In Sweden, in a studio once owned by ABBA, they enlisted Peter, Bjorn and John drummer John Ericsson and fellow Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra veteran TK, to contribute drums and marimba. In California, at Monahan's home, Tatum collaborated with Medicine guitarist Brad Laner and a crew of saxophonists. From the hypnotic polyrhythms of "Reichpop" to the sugary howl of "Japanese Alice" to the hallucinogenic R&B of "A Woman's Wisdom, the result is a complete, fully immersive listening environment. "I just kept things really simple, writing as ideas came to me," he says. "There's definitely a different kind of 'self' in the picture this time around. There's no real love lost, it's much more a record of coming to terms and defining what it is that you have—your place, your relationships. I view every record as an opportunity to write better songs. At the end of the day it still sounds like me, just new."

WHITNEY

Secretly Canadian and Lead Riders have teamed up to present vital new music from exciting newcomers Whitney who are offering a first glimpse of what's to come in 2016 with "No Woman." In spite of its own lost soul whistfulness, there's something immediately comforting and simple at the core of "No Woman," the latest sonic missive from Chicago's Whitney. It's as soothing to your musical memory as the first two bars of The Chordette's "Mr. Sandman." It's as unfettering and wind-through-your-hair of America's "Pacific Coast Highway"—albeit here in an edible-induced cruise control. Drummer/vocalist Julien Ehrlich's (ex-Unknown Mortal Orchestra) naked, soft-edged falsetto charmingly guides us through this breakup bender amid subdued strings and velveteen horn section bursts: "I left drinkin' on the city train to spend some time on the road/Then one morning I woke up in LA, caught my breath on the coast/I've been going through a change/I might never be sure/I'm just walking in a haze/I'm not ready to turn." With writing partnership of Ehrlich and Max Kakacek (guitar, ex-Smith Westerns), Whitney has given us an anthem for moseying on and forgiving yourself of your many fumbles. Julien explains, "'No Woman' started to take shape when I woke up on a friend's floor one morning. He was taking a shower and the chorus popped into my head while I was grabbing my stuff to go home. Later on Max and I sat down and wrote the chords and song structure in our apartment. It's about losing the love of your life and being thrown into an aimless journey because of it." This is a feeling that pervades the collection of songs the band has written and recorded over the last year, and has prepped for later in 2016.
Hawthorne Theater
8:00pm Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Skepta makes his PDX debut at the Hawthorne Theater. 

As a multi-faceted, quadruple threat artist, Skepta embodies a scene’s ability to shift on its own terms. The Tottenham-raised Londoner — a product of the area’s Meridian Estate after a move from east as a toddler— operated behind the scenes in grime’s early days with Meridian Crew in the early 2000s as a DJ and producer, providing a backbone for his Hackney-born younger brother JME to take the mic alongside legends of the industry during an era of lyrical war, with calls for clashes maintaining the raw energy. Behind the boards for 2002’s Wiley and Youngstar inspired Gun Shot Riddim and 2004’s Meridian Crew-affiliated classic Private Caller, Skepta helped define the culture for years to come. 

Spitting on hip-hop beats before he ever entered the booth in grime circles, Skepta unleashed his rapid flow in the mid 2000s. As the white label era shifted into flash video and digital downloads, he built a sizeable fan base. Shouting out Meridian Crew and Hackney’s Roll Deep he stepped to the forefront alongside his brother, in the era of pixelated video on Nokia devices, street DVDs and Akademiks sweatsuits. 

After his Boy Better Know collective emerged in 2005, Skepta’s 2006 classic Duppy was a crossover moment, as grime made its steps into the mainstream. His Stageshow Riddim was another beat that an entire scene hopped on before an array BBK bangers hit the mainstream. In addition to solo albums, he approached everything with a new hunger as a new decade approached. 

Even for an artist with veteran status, 2014-5 were breakthrough years. The self-produced That’s Not Me alongside JME embraced his legacy and beginnings in a track accompanied by an award-winning, appropriately micro budget video that homages the street DVD era. Having started his career deeply inspired by Wiley’s pioneering Eskibeats, Skepta produced another modern standard and return to raw form, On A Level, for him and stepped behind the camera to direct the video and style it too. 

A decade into his MC career, Skepta is bringing his worldview to a global audience in undiluted form. His fourth album Konnichawa is the sum total so far and the evolution of everything so far and, with a local and international slew of partners in 2016, the takeover is imminent.

8:00pm (doors open at 7pm). All Ages.
$16.00 advance tix from Cascade Tickets.
$20.00 at the door.

Mississippi Studios
8:00pm Tuesday, April 26, 2016

SHEER MAG

The mythos of Sheer Mag begins like so many other celebrated rock 'n roll bands of yore: with two brothers. Following in the tradition of The Bee Gees, Oasis and The Allman Brothers, the brothers Seely conspired to create a rock 'n roll band to end all rock bands. The sheer magnitude of the endeavor required the recruitment of a daring drummer, a fearless lyricist and a diva who could party good AND write the rent check. With the pantheon assembled, MAG quickly recorded and released their debut 7" to cosmic acclaim. The band now stands poised on the brink of world domination or complete destruction. Is it Punk? Is it Rock 'n Roll? We'll leave that to the music "critics." But it is punk.

'Fuck yuppies, fuck slumlords, fuck cops and the rich—make no mistake, this is the message Sheer Mag wants you to hear. It's coded into their lyrics and built into the young Philadelphia band's blown-out grooves, which match swaggering soul force with a defiant punk spirit. Sheer Mag might reference 1970s classic rock every time they holler and shred, but their gnarled, whiskey-fueled pop-in-miniature is of a singular breed: There aren't many contemporary bands you could imagine unironically covering "Sweet Home Alabama" while some bloody-lipped fan stage-dives. Such is the essence of Sheer Mag's raw power.' --Pitchfork

PUBLIC EYE

Post-punk band from Portland.

ANDY PLACE AND THE COOLHEADS

Andy Place, Amy Kay, Camden Tomomatsu, R.P Smith, Susana Sainz, Tai Faux, Ian Howe
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