Events
Eels + Chelsea Wolfe
- 7:00pm Sunday, June 8, 2014
Doors: 7:00 pm / Show: 8:00 pm
Aladdin Theater
Portland, OR
$32.50 ADV/$35.00 DOS
This event is minors under 21 with parent or legal guardian
EELS have had one of the most consistently acclaimed careers in music. The ever-changing project of principal singer/songwriter Mark Oliver Everett, aka E, EELS have released nine studio albums since their 1996 debut, Beautiful Freak. Mojo Magazine calls Everett "a member of rock's very own League of Extraordinary Gentlemen," while legendary troubadour Tom Waits says he "eagerly awaits each new release." In 2008 Everett published his highly-acclaimed book Things the Grandchildren Should Know and starred in the award winning Parallel Worlds, Parallel Lives documentary about the search to understand his quantum physicist father, Hugh Everett III. In 2009 EELS began the release of an album trilogy: Hombre Lobo, End Times, and Tomorrow Morning.
It's fitting that Chelsea Wolfe's second album opens with a hair-raising,
animalistic snarl -- the sound of some beastly metamorphosis caught on
tape. Ἀποκάλυψις (pronounced "apokalypsis") finds the L.A.- based artist
perfecting her distinctly doom-drenched electric folk. Here she
graduates from mobile 8-track experimentation to an actual studio,
enlisting a few friends to help even as she maintains the strikingly
visceral elements of her powerful debut, The Grime & the Glow
(2010). The end result is a both a broader sprawl and a tighter
claustrophobia, a serious heaviness of sound and spirit prone to
unexpected moments of beauty and triumph. Rightly, the album's title is
Greek for both "apocalypse" and "revelation." Wolfe's gift for tense
beauty reigns supreme on "Tracks (Tall Bodies)," where warm guitar,
cavernous drums, and her beguiling voice engender an elemental feeling
of regret in tune with the words: It's a machine we're up against/Devoid
of reason, devoid of sense." The upbeat "Demons" follows, seemingly as
counterpoint, rolling forth on a damaged surf beat and becoming a
careening steam engine of scratchy thrash and tortured cries. Later,
"Moses" demonstrates what Wolfe may very well do best, cooing choral
over grinding Sabbathy guitars, somehow hinting at an odd ebullience
hidden in the dirging murk. Though Ἀποκάλυψις's tone is decidedly dark,
it's a dynamic album, evidenced by buzzing, organ-soaked soul of "The
Wasteland," the clanging blues of "Friedrichshain," and the haunted
ambience of "To the Forest, To the Sea," which feels like a field
recording from the bewitched woods of Wolfe's youth. The LP's undeniable
high point however, is the unforgettable "Pale on Pale." The
seven-minute song slowly bores its way into the listener's skull thanks
to Wolfe's ghostly moan -- which deals death at every lyrical turn --
and the thick black metal chords that push it along. Somewhere between
the blood-curdling scream and squalling feedback that close out the
track, transcendence is achieved, and Wolfe's transformation into a true
force of nature is complete.
California native Chelsea Wolfe has always embodied light and dark. Her
music is a raw, dirging doom-folk with hints of black metal, deep blues
and minimal synthesizer music, but it's as prone to triumph as it is
despair. Her voice is both haunting and seemingly haunted, though
whether by angels or demons is unclear. And her lyrics reflect an
obsession not only with life's murkier moments, but the unlikely truths
and beauty they so often reveal. It makes sense then that her influences
run from Nick Cave and Selda Bagcan to Ayn Rand and Ingmar Bergman, and
even more so that she hails from the wilder, woodsy northern part of
her state. Wolfe's hometown was a small unspecified burg amidst the
trees, idyllic by day and begging exploration, but forbidding once the
fog crept in. Her skewed romanticism began early. At 9, she started
sneaking into her father's home studio to record warped keyboard covers
and Gothy R&B originals. But growing up, she never shared these, and
it wasn't until 2009 that she considered making music for others to
hear.
After a three-month stint abroad with a nomadic performance troupe
playing cathedrals, basements and old nuclear plants, Wolfe returned
home inspired. She began toting around an 8-track and recording,
eventually winding up with the songs that would become her stunning 2010
debut, The Grime & the Glow. Described as both healing and
harrowing, enchanting and narcotic, the album established Wolfe as an
elemental force on the rise. Just as telling were a pair of cover songs
including the timeless "You Are My Sunshine" as well as a deep cut from
Norwegian metal icon Burzum that in her capable hands managed to sound
equally terrifying. Drawn to Los Angeles' unique mix of gloss and grit,
she moved to the city late last year and recorded her second album,
Ἀποκάλυψις (pronounced "apokalypsis"), out on Pendu Sound Recordings in
2011. Recently, Chelsea Wolfe's name exploded in the music world after
pop artist Richard Phillips used her song "Moses" in his newest art-film
starring Sasha Grey which premiered at the Venice Biennale in June
2011.