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Holocene
7:00pm Sunday, June 19, 2016

Sanctuary Sunday is Ambient/Experimental every third Sunday of the month at various Portland haunts. The monthly line-ups represent varying genres of electronic music, from Glitchy IDM to Ambient, Drone and coolly Experimental soundscapes.

A night filled with delicately blended electronic sounds, samples, and live instruments guaranteed to bring the electronic heads out of their basements and into this cozy sanctuary.

This month welcomes:

| Coastlands |
cathartic cinematic Post Rock 
https://coastlands.bandcamp.com/

| The OO-Ray |
Erik Satie meets My Bloody Valentine
https://ooray.bandcamp.com/

| Ant'lrd|
Sun-drenched swirls
https://antlrd.bandcamp.com/

DJ set by: Mike Jedlicka 

Sunday June 19th
7:00pm - 11:00pm
$5

Booking/Promotions:
Coco Madrid - djchachapdx@gmail.com

Ford Food & Drink
6:30pm Sunday, June 19, 2016

The Switch No. 35--CAConrad, fresh from Norway, and Singapore, and other world travels, along with David Buuck from Oakland, and Portland's own Emily Carr. More info: http://theswitchpdx.blogspot.com/

White Owl Social Club
8:00pm Saturday, June 18, 2016

Bridge Club presents, CLUB DESTINY

An adventure in futurism, CLUB DESTINY is an one-night-only Pride exclusive. 

CRUISING WANTED

Featuring:
Asmara aka MA DEE JAY (LA, Nguzunguzu, Fade to Mind)
https://soundcloud.com/ma-deejay/ma-mix-up-2015

Chanti Darling DJs
Hold My Hand
Troubled Youth
Casual Aztec
Prince$$ Dimebag

Visual Artists:
RAKEEM
Megan Holmes

Installation:
ANGEL THUG1 

Photography:
RAKEEM

8pm // $10 // 21+

** Brought to you by Bridge Club and Destiny **

Kenton Masonic Lodge No. 145
7:00pm Saturday, June 18, 2016

With- 

Jeph Nor

Science Patrol

Polly Dactyly
https://soundcloud.com/polly-dactyly

Høltech

LoFi Freq

Ciguatera 

Notingworld
https://nothingworldofficial.bandcamp.com/
---------------------------------------------
All age show
$5.00 donation at the door, 100% of the fund will go to the Kenton Masonic Educatinal Fund

Clackamas County Events Center, Canby, Oregon
10:00am Saturday, June 18, 201610:00pm Sunday, June 19, 2016

Experience the wide variety of entertainment available at Oregon Renaissance Faire. Jugglers, musicians, gypsies, bards, and magicians gather to entertain and amaze. Whatever you desire, find it in Dunrose!

For more information, visit http://oregonfaire.com/

The Liquor Store
9:00pm Friday, June 17, 2016

Spend The Night 1 Year Anniversary!!

w/ the Detroit legend:

DJ Stingray 313
(Drexcyia, Planet E, Urban Tribe) - Detroit
https://www.residentadvisor.net/dj/djstingray
https://www.facebook.com/DJ-Stingray-182977445069234/

+ Spend The Night residents

Ben Tactic & Graintable

Sherard Ingram aka DJ Stingray has been a strong presence in the world of techno for over twenty years. Growing up in Detroit, this school friend and DJ partner of Kenny Dixon Jr. realised his Urban Tribe project in 1991 with the now classic 'Covert Action', a track released on Retroactive's seminal 'Equinox' compilation, a milestone in the city's rich technosoul history. A couple of years later London's Mo'Wax label released his debut album 'The Collapse Of Modern Culture', which featured collaborations with friends and peers such as Anthony 'Shake' Shakir, Moodymann and Carl Craig. His most illustrious work might have been as part of Drexciya's live unit - he was named Stingray by Drexciya's James Stinson. Reppin' Detroit's 313 with masked performances around the world, and three dozen releases - including records on labels like Planet E and Mahogani Music as well as collaborations with Dopplereffekt's Heinrich Mueller (also known as the other half of Drexciya) - Ingram has since turned label head with Micron Audio Detroit to release the work of fresh, upcoming talent from across the globe.


21+
Funktion One sound

Roseland Theater
9:00pm Friday, June 17, 2016

The music of The Growlers is unmistakable.

Sure, you can hone in on some influences baked into the work of this California-bred band. Heck, even they’d cop to a few, like Ricky Nelson and The Clash. But once those same RIYL tags have been filtered through the minds and hands and voices of this five-piece, there’s simply nothing else like it.

The Growlers took the phrase “Beach Goth” as an apt descriptor of their music. Sunburned and salty, that term perfectly describes their distinctive melding of reverb heavy surf guitar and Bakersfield-style honky tonk with ‘80s post-punk.

This is especially true of Chinese Fountain, The Growlers’ fifth full-length set to be released on September 23rd via Everloving Records. The 11 songs found on it are some of the strongest that they’ve committed to tape yet; a byproduct not only of eight years in the trenches together, but finely honing their gypsy folk dirges and psychedelic sea shanties to fans at close to 150 shows each year. The connection between vocalist Brooks Nielsen and guitarist Matt Taylor (the principal songwriters of the group) has only grown deeper.

“The band played better than they’ve ever played,” says Nielsen. “We’ve got the process down now. There’s less screwing around to get the songs laid out and we weren’t waiting around for take after take. We knew it and we played without much time to spare.”
That confidence bleeds through every track on Chinese Fountain, with the band assured enough to layer in shades of many new influences: the loping ska beat of “Dull Boy” and “Going Gets Tuff,” the playful disco beat behind the title track, or the Teardrop Explodes-like agitation of “Good Advice.”

Not that the band left themselves much room to second-guess anything. The five spent about three weeks writing the tracks, and about half that time in the studio recording them. That may sound rushed, but it’s not as if you can hear any strain on the finished product; Chinese Fountain is as rock solid and watertight as anything in their still-growing discography.

There’s evolution to be heard in Chinese Fountain as well, courtesy of some of Nielsen’s most pointed and poignant lyrics to date. He takes our obsession with the online world to task on the funky title track. When he drops the bomb that obliterates that most famous of Beatles’ claims with "The internet is bigger than Jesus or John Lennon” he re-contextualizes Marshall McLuhan's "the medium is the message" in the same breath. He urges positivity no matter the obstacles (“Going Gets Tuff”). Too, he reveals a tattered heart to the world on tracks like “Rare Hearts” and “Love Test.”

“This is my chance to let it all out,” Nielsen says of these songs. “I kind of bottle things up and don’t really get emotional. But I think if I don’t open up, I’d be a really stale person.”


All Ages | Bar w/ ID

Mississippi Studios
8:00pm Friday, June 17, 2016

SONNY AND THE SUNSETS

The modern age sends love letters on yellowed, empty pages. It’s got telepathic advice gurus in its timeline and deep sea creatures washing up on its shores. It’s got plugs, buttons, and illusions, and a grocery store whose aisles correspond to Dante’s infernal circles, plus a nebulous sense of ephemeral weirdness. It’s got Moods Baby Moods and the existential angst it yields has Sonny Smith in a funk, but he’s turned it into funk.

On previous records, the Sunsets have plundered a wide spectrum of musical appropriation (garage-rock, forgotten AM radio fodder, Modern Lovers, late-era Clash, Doo-Wop, and the Velvet Underground, to name a few.) Mood Baby Moods follows suit, and on this outing we find the Sunsets, along with producer Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs,
repurposing early ‘80s funk and new wave with rap beats and collages from both sides of the ocean (be it Niles Rogers, Jah Wobble, The Gap Band, Orange Juice, Trans-era Neil Young or The Tom Tom Club.) These are songs that juxtapose the haze of today with a vibrant and colorful explosion of sounds and 180 degree turns.

Sonny’s gift for vivid storytelling is no secret. His last album with the Sunsets, Talent Night at the Ashram, was peopled by characters he’d created for scripts that never saw the light of day. He greeted 2016 with a solo LP (Sees All Knows All) that involved no singing at all — a winding tale of one musician’s quest to find himself set to music.

Moods Baby Moods is no less inventive and arguably more musically sophisticated than Smith’s previous records. “Death Cream Part 2” picks up a comic book tale started on 2009’s Tomorrow Is Alright, tracing that titular tube of heinous goop back to a grocery store/hell. “Modern Age” transfers from a party to a string quartet, with elements of
dub, while the narrator comes to grips with meaninglessness – ‘modern age/nothing to say.’ “Well but Strangely Hung Men” bridges a gap between Franz Kafka, Sigmund Freud and Richard Brautigan over a driving post disco beat.

The real life cast supporting Moods Baby Moods is fittingly rife with outsider talent. Garbus’ voice can be heard throughout. Shayde Sartin’s bass, Edmund Xavier’s drum machine beats and Smith’s guitar form the foundations, and regular Tahlia Harbour continues her back and forth banter with Smith. Cold Beat’s Hannah Lew brings a Kleenex/Young Marble Giants flavor to the songs. Shannon Shaw and Jibz Cameron drop by for a skit, and Kaznary Mutoh of Tokyo’s Boys Age lends guitars and garbles the outro of “Modern Age.”

Lyrically, Smith is playing with the grand themes of today. In his search for purpose in the cruel realities of the modern age, he’s trying to make sense out of chaos and suffering, and to find a way to live and be real. This is not an easy task in a time of synthetic feelings (“Moods”), computer created confusion (“Modern Age”), climate change
(“Dead Meat on the Beach”), civil rights abuse (“White Cops on Trial”), and the uneasy feeling of numbness in our chaotic world (“Check Out”).

But in the final moments of Moods Baby Moods, Sonny delivers a line that not only speaks truth to his philosophy as played out across his career, but to what it means to be human in any era, regardless of our relationships with technology, spirituality, authority, or art: “I’m full of love, and shit, all the time.”

SARAH BETHE NELSON

Sarah Bethe Nelson is the constant observer. Having spent the better part of her adult life tending bar at San Francisco's most well-loved watering holes, she has witnessed thousands of late night fights, early morning rants, blackouts, make-outs, and make-ups. Yet she seems to have an eye cast askance at the streetlights outside. For it's not the drama unfolding inside the bar that keeps her rapt; it's the possibility that one night a light will appear outside, a glowing orb with all the answers that she can levitate into, that will rescue her from love-worn ennui, from the violence of misspent youth. What stands out about the songs on her Burger Records debut Fast-Moving Clouds is this sense of waiting, waiting, hoping. 

Ms. Nelson doesn't exude the brassy confidence of a chanteuse; nor does she wear the mask of false naivete favored by some of her "indy" musical contemporaries. Rather, Nelson and her plaintive, unforced voice seem to hang in the balance, and the source of her songs seems a mix of genuine heartbreak and stark resolve. Her music is reflected in that not-extreme dichotomy; in it there is warmth and beauty, as well as a genuine mean streak, softened barely by her well-crafted melodies.
As a long-time member of San Francisco's close-knit rock and roll community, Nelson has obviously inherited her peers' sense of pensive melody. Most striking, though, is the seeming simplicity of the songs; the two-word chorus of "Impossible Love", repeated over and over, not to bore the listener, but to key us in to her sense of educated hopelessness, a "been-there, done-that" kind of boredom, followed by a gorgeous, unexpected chord-change turnaround, which paints a wholly different picture of elevation and release. The songs are simple, but they throw these great surprises at us. Recorded at the home studio of song wizard Kelley Stoltz there is a sense of sonic adventure creeping throughout the record. With a crack engineer and a who's who of great musicians giving life to Ms. Nelson's weary yet inspired observations Fast-Moving Clouds is a beautiful, mysterious journey to heartbreak and back. 
-Tim Cohen

GONZO

Indie Rock Band from Bend, Oregon. Doing our best to change minds about where the American music scene is heading.
High Water Mark
8:00pm Friday, June 17, 2016
The Austin-based dream-pop trio are releasing 'Narrow Birth' on June 3 via Manifesto Records. 
For fans of Cocteau Twins and Lush. 

Disjecta Contemporary Art Center
7:00pm Friday, June 17, 201611:00pm Saturday, June 18, 2016

Poetry Press Week aims to radically change the way poetry is presented, publicized, published, and perceived. 

There will be presented new works of poetry by established and emerging PNW poets to an audience of publishers, the press, and the general public. 

All work is available for publication the moment it is presented.

Doors: 7pm
Show: 7:30pm
Suggested Donation: $5

Service
6:00pm Thursday, June 16, 2016

Come align your chakras with the DUG fam at the first open mic//art mixer of our summer series @ Service. 

Snugsworth 
Open mic 
Closing with a ~ guided discussion ~

As always, sign ups upon arrival, so get in there before 7pm if you'd like to perform. 

Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall
8:00pm Wednesday, June 15, 2016

With his second non-soundtrack album, Lost Themes II, set for release in April, horror master John Carpenter will perform his first ever live shows this summer, including a date at Portland's Arlene Schnitzer Hall on June 15.

John Carpenter will be performing a musical retrospective of his work, his first solo record of non-soundtrack music Lost Themes, plus brand new compositions. The Horror Master will also be joined on stage by both his son Cody Carpenter, and his godson Daniel Davies (both of whom co-recorded Lost Themes), in addition to a full live band and spectacular stage production.

John Carpenter has been responsible for much of the horror genre's most striking soundtrack work in movies he's both directed and scored, such as Halloween (1978), Escape from New York (1981), Big Trouble in Little China (1986), Prince of Darkness (1987) and They Live (1988) to name a few.
Composers before him had used minimalism to create terror, whether it was two piano notes for a killer shark or the stabbing strings of a mother-obsessed psychopath, but it was Halloween's brilliantly interwoven synth melodies that truly took genre scoring to a new, more sinister level.

Carpenter’s first recording of non-soundtrack work achieved numerous international milestones, including NPR First Listen; features in dozens of press outlets including the Los Angeles Times, Vanity Fair, Rolling Stone, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times and The Guardian; three magazine covers; and Top 200 chart success in the U.S. and the U.K.
So widespread was the acclaim for Lost Themes, that the composer was moved to embark on something he had never before entertained – playing his music live in front of an audience.

Keep your eyes peeled for John and his co-writers to hit the road this summer performing both lost and newly found themes, in addition to retrospective work from Mr. Carpenter’s multi-generational career. Lost Themes II will be released on April 1st, 2016 on Sacred Bones Records.

Get Tickets: http://bit.ly/JCarpentPOR2016
Tickets on sale Friday 2/19 at 10am
All Ages • Reserved Seat show

LACUNA
7:00pm Wednesday, June 15, 2016

LEAD BY LORENE BOUBOUSHIAN

As an interdisciplinary, improvisational performer and workshop facilitator, I am captivated by the underlying motives for any action. In workshops and lab-based environments, often it is assumed that we should follow our “interests” or “intentions,” when in fact our in-the-moment actions are a result not of clear-cut decisions but our relationship to the organism of bodies, room and objects around us colliding with what’s inside us. What do we want and why? What if we derailed ourselves, worked with our own insincerity, faked ourselves out, played tricks? Is it possible to create a realm where all is valid and nothing is right? For anyone interested in performing, from any discipline. Bring objects you are interested in.

here is a more general description and some video of past classes. this refers to more sonic based stuff i've been doing with matthew gantt, but it's still nice to watch i think:
https://lorenebouboushian.org/teaching/

SUGGESTED DONATION (snackz provided!)

photo credit ying liu

Portland State University Art Building
5:00pm7:00pm Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Littman + White Galleries are pleased to present an artist talk by Aaron Flint Jamison.

The American artist Aaron Flint Jamison (b. Billings, MT, 1979) lives and works in Portland, OR. Jamison is represented by Air de Paris, Paris, and Miguel Abreu Gallery, New York and is Assistant Professor of Photography and Media in the School of Art, Art History, and Design at the University of Washington. Jamison is the co-founder and President of the Board of Directors of the art center Yale Union in Portland, OR (2008 present). He is the founding editor of Veneer Magazine and the co-founder of the artist-run center Department of Safety (2002 2010) in Anacortes, WA. Jamison has had major solo exhibitions at Cubitt, London (2013), Artists Space, New York (2013), Liverpool Biennial (2014), Miguel Abreu Gallery (2015), and Air de Paris (2015).

www.veneermagazine.com | www.yaleunion.org | www.airdeparis.com |www.migueabreugallery.com

Hollywood Theater
7:30am Wednesday, June 15, 2016

SONG OF LAHORE
Wednesday, June 15 at 7:30pm  |  $9  |  Buy advance tickets here

A soul-stirring profile of Pakistani jazz band Sachal Studios as they venture to New York City to perform their sitar-and-tabla reinterpretations of jazz standards with Wynton Marsalis at Lincoln Center. 

With its ancient palaces and stately gardens, the Lahore of Pakistan’s 1947 independence was a haven and a muse for musicians, artists, and poets. The city came alive to the beat of a tabla drum; with a musical culture passed down over centuries and a thriving film industry, opportunities were great for the legion of musicians that called Lahore home.

Today, this vision of Lahore exists only in myth. Islamization, ethnic divisions, war and corruption have torn apart the cultural fabric of Pakistan, and the sounds of the tabla no longer drift through the old city’s bazaar.

In 2004, Izzat Majeed founded Sachal Studios to create a space for traditional music in a nation that had rejected its musical roots. After convincing a number of master musicians to pick up their instruments again, they quietly released some classical and folk albums. But it is an experimental album fusing jazz and South Asian instruments that brings Sachal Studios worldwide acclaim. Their rendition of Dave Brubeck’s Take Five becomes a sensation, and Wynton Marsalis invites them to New York to perform with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. After a groundbreaking week of rehearsals fusing the orchestras from Lahore and New York, the musicians take to the stage for a remarkable concert.

Despite their rising international acclaim, Sachal Studios remains virtually unknown in Pakistan. The ensemble is faced with a daunting task; to reclaim and reinvigorate an art that has lost its space in Pakistan’s narrowing cultural sphere. Watch trailer here.

- See more at: http://hollywoodtheatre.org/sonic-cinema/#sthash.PIDsXw7a.dpuf


Song_of_Lahore-poster_sm

Jade Lounge
6:45pm Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Jade Tuesdays continues with a very special Pride week show! 
Featuring music from
Serena Elisheva
and
The Ragshakers

and readings from
Sara June Woods
Olivia Olivia
Phoenix Singer
Manuel Arturo Abreu
Prairie M. Faul
Jamie J. Mortara
Ines Falcö

This night will be ELECTRIC with a host of compelling, empowering, and brutally honest voices! You DO NOT want to miss it!

$5 suggested donation (or more! Feel free to give more!) to support the performers, but noone turned away for lack of funds! Some performers will have merchandise available, so make sure to bring cash for books and things as well! Camille will be behind the bar as usual to serve you up great food and drinks!

S1
6:00pm Monday, June 13, 2016

Course Description

This 3-part workshop will focus on the basic understandings of operating and manipulating turntables, mixers, and a power amplifier (PA) in the context of creating a live DJ mix.

We will begin by introducing the basics behind these pieces of gear, both individually and their relationship to each other. Next, our focus will turn to practical listening as we work to comprehend rhythms and the ways our records work together to create a momentum of sound. These two basic tools of DJing – electronic hardware and human intuition – will be reconciled in the final session as we identify systems for sequencing records in a live setting.

We will discuss ways of training our bodies to react to our ears and translate those reactions to the turntable & mixer. Core concepts touched on include beat-matching, identifying tempos, and developing an identity as a dj based on each individual’s tastes and strengths.

Each week, in addition to the guided session, there will be a day of open equipment hours to practice the concepts that were taught in each class.

Bio

John Kammerle is a DJ and producer based in Portland, Oregon. John received a BA in Audio Engineering from the Evergreen State College in 2009. He currently works as a teacher at Ethos Music Center in North Portland with a focus on digital music composition and beat making for middle school students. John performs regularly in and around the Pacific Northwest under the moniker, Rap Class.

Enrollment

Introduction to DJing is a 3 part series with open deck nights included in cost of class. There will be 3 different sessions, June, July, and August. Students are not required to bring any material, but are encouraged to bring their own music on vinyl. You must be at least 16 years old to enroll. If you are a minor, please contact us for further instructions: s1portlandinfo@gmail.com

June Session
Monday June 6
Monday June 13
Monday June 20
Open Deck Nights: Wednesday June 8th, 15th, and 22nd

All Classes are from 6:30pm-8:30pm & Open Deck nights 6:30-8:00pm

July & August Sessions also available 
Visit our website for more details www.s1portland.com/workshops

Lacuna (5040 SE Milwaukie Ave)
8:00pm Sunday, June 12, 2016

Ziemba is the performance moniker of René Kladzyk, a NYC-based artist and musician. She has performed original and collaborative work at art, music, and dance spaces throughout NYC, including: Issue Project Room, The Museum of Art & Design, Glasslands Gallery, Trans Pecos, Gina Gibney Dance, Panoply Performance Laboratory, Silent Barn, St. Marks Church, Secret Project Robot, and Momenta Art.  She was artist-in-residence at the French Institute and Culture Vultures in Fez, Morocco, and is curator of performance art series “Casings and Treatments.” She has composed original scores for Lisa Parra Dance and Karen Harvey Dances, and has recently had several songs featured on season 2 of Comedy Central’s Broad City. Her debut full- length Hope is Never is set for digital/tape/vinyl release via Lo & Behold records  on June 24th, 2016.

Hollywood Theater
7:00pm Sunday, June 12, 2016

AS I AM: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF DJ AM
Sunday, June 12 at 7:00pm | $9 | Buy advance tickets here.

A retrospective look at the life and work of influential electronic music DJ, Adam Goldstein, known as DJ AM.

DJ AM experience meteoric success through raw talent and sheer determination, overcoming what for others might have been staggering adversity, before tragically succumbing to the demons that dogged his life and career. The film’s pacing and style captures the frenetic speed and dynamism of DJ AM’s life as well as introspective moments of candor and insight. Watch trailer here.

- See more at: http://hollywoodtheatre.org/sonic-cinema/#sthash.PIDsXw7a.dpuf


Mamposter

S1
12:00pm Sunday, June 12, 2016

The history of tape music begins alongside the dawn of electroacoustic music and predates what we would recognize as the first electronic synthesizers. This class will lead students through a brief history of this groundbreaking musical artform, and allow students the opportunity to create their own tape loop. Students will be given a collection of prerecorded analog tape, cassette players, and splicing tools, and will be given time to cut, tape, and perform their tape loop. The basic mechanics and varieties of tape equipment will be presented so that students may continue to explore the materials later outside of the class.

David Chandler is a native Oregonian who has been making and organizing experimental dance music in Portland since the early 90’s as Solenoid and Mr Pharmacist. Chandler’s music is distributed internationally, and his expertise in sound and art have found him working in almost every facet of performance from film scoring and sound design to theater arts.

In 1995, Chandler released a hand-built series of 100 cassettes with spliced loops marked “open-source”. These tapes and their construction method became an underground secret-weapon among touring bands in the 90s, and were given the nickname, the “Chandler Loop”. The legacy of that tape among his many other accomplishments in the world of electronic music have made Chandler an authority on the art of the tape-loop.

Enrollment

The Tape Loop Workshop is a one day, 3 hour course. Cost for enrollment is $35, and includes components necessary to create a tape loop. No supplies are necessary for this course, however students may bring their own found sounds on cassette tape if they choose.

Sunday June 12th 12:00 pm – 3:00 pm

Please Visit www.s1portland.com/workshops to register

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