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Beacon Sound
7:00pm Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Galaxy My Dear & Beacon Sound present Finnish Songstress/Composer Lau Nau. with support from (Visible) Cloaks and DJ Galaxy My Dear.


Laura Naukkarinen, aka Lau Nau is one of the more interesting names in the Finnish music scene - a singer-songwriter, producer and film music composer. Her songs are imbued with a cinematic breadth of vision and her idiosyncratic, finely honed soundworld builds on fragile, spectral otherness. Her fourth album ”HEM. Någonstans” (Fonal records 2015) takes us to the fleeting borderline between contemporary classical and experimental music.


Lau Nau’s first solo albums were released in the US (Locust music 2005 & 2008). She has been touring around world ever since both solo and withher band that includes such Finnish musicians as Pekko Käppi, Jaakko & Antti Tolvi and Niko Karlsson. Lau Nau has opened for Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Lee Ranaldo in Helsinki on the bands' request, and played dates in New York and San Francisco, Super Deluxe in Tokyo, and Shanghai Expo in China to name a few. 


The debut album, ‘Kuutarha’, won acclaim from the likes of Pitchfork and Dusted, with The Wire naming the LP in their top 50 albums of 2005, and citing her Philadelphia show of that year amongst “60 concerts that shook the world”. Lau Nau’s third album ‘Valohiukkanen’ (Fonal records 2012), was nominated for a series of prestigious music prizes in Finland like the Teosto prize. 


During the past years, Naukkarinen has been composing music for films, theatre, dance and sound installations. She accompanies silent films live and composes music for feature films. Her original music score for Jan Forsström’s feature film ”Princess of Egypt” was nominated for the Jussi movie prize in Finland 2014.
Holocene
9:00pm Monday, May 30, 2016

A.E.P. Presents:

TORO Y MOI (dj)
B2B
NOSAJ THING (dj)

+ Nathan Detroit

9pm / 21+ / $15 
Tickets 
http://abstractearthproject.com/

The Hollywood Theatre
7:00pm Monday, May 30, 2016

Pulsar and The Hollywood Theatre present Jesse Sugarmann as part of our free public artist talk series at the theatre, FutureForum. 

Jesse Sugarmann is an interdisciplinary artist working in video, photography, performance, and sculpture. His work engages the automotive industry as a manufacturer of human identity, accessing automotive history as an index of both cultural progress and social development. Sugarmann has exhibited work both nationally and internationally in venues such as the Getty Institute, Los Angeles; el Museo Tamayo, Mexico City; the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, Oregon; the Banff Center, Canada; Filmbase, Ireland; Human Resources, Los Angeles; Michael Strogoff, Marfa; el Museo de Arte Moderno de Santander, Spain; Drift Station, Omaha; Spirit Abuse, Albuquerque; Fugitive Projects, Nashville; the Bakersfield Museum of Art, California; the 21c Museum, Louisville; the Knockdown Center, New York; High Desert Test Sites, Joshua Tree; Space 538, Maine; Southern Exposure, San Francisco; the True/False Festival, Missouri; and both the Paris and Berlin exhibitions of Les Recontres Internationales. Sugarmann’s work has been written about in publications including ArtForum, Art Papers, the Atlantic, Hyperallergic, Art Fag City, Frieze Magazine, the Huffington Post and The New York Times. He lives and works in Bakersfield, CA and is represented in Portland by Fourteen30 Contemporary.

Euphoria Nightclub
10:00pm Sunday, May 29, 2016

Red Cube & AEP present Kaytranada.

Born in Haiti and raised in the city of Montreal, Canadian artist Kaytranada has experienced an explosive rise in the past couple of years with his irresistible production and live sets. Before touring the globe and amassing millions of hits online with his series of beloved tracks and mixes, the young man came up as a true disciple, absorbing hip hop and RnB culture since his childhood and finding ways to make the music his own. 

Doors Open @ 10pm 
21+ w/ Valid I.D.

Wonder Ballroom
8:00pm Sunday, May 29, 2016
Amen & Goodbye (out April 1 on Mute) is the follow up to 2012's Fragrant World. Moving away from a digital-heavy approach, Yeasayer recorded Amen & Goodbye to tape at Outlier Inn Studio in upstate New York, then brought on board Joey Waronker (drummer – Atoms For Peace / Beck) to deconstruct everything to make the final document.Amen & Goodbye features Yeasayer's trademark sound without sounding like anything the band has done before. They have created a collection of strange fables from the Bible of a universe that does not yet exist.

The beginnings of Young Magic's new album, Still Life, coincided with singer Melati Malay revisiting her own, in her birthplace of Indonesia. Having lost her father the previous year, she returned to the island of Java to reconnect with her family, dig up stories, and begin work on a new collection of music.

"My father had been somewhat of a mystery to me," Melati says. "How did a boy from the Midwest end up in the jungles of Borneo during the 60s, trading his watch and a carton of cigarettes for the gravestones of the indigenous headhunters?"

The search led Melati deep into her family history. She rented a small shack by the water for a month, and with just a backpack and microphone, began recording - unraveling a past of superstition, black magic, and ties to the Javanese royal family.

"I've always felt torn, like some kind of hybrid existing between two worlds," Melati says. "Born to a Catholic father and a Muslim mother, growing up bilingual, attending an international school in Jakarta where all my friends were from different countries...in a city of 30 million people where the clash between poverty and affluence is extreme."

Still Life is a deeply personal and idiosyncratic record, somewhere close to the enchanted electronic pop realms occupied by Björk and Broadcast, yet unique to Young Magic. Found sounds and textures feature prominently across Still Life, including the Javanese gamelan, blossoming into ecstatic bursts during the climax of "Lucien." Melati grounds the textured sonic world with arrows direct to the heart, like the arresting "How Wonderful" where the singer overflows with regret for "all those things I never said." This is as deeply personal as the group has ever been.

"In a way, Still Life became a kind of antithesis to a world where people tell you who to pray to, what to buy into, and who your enemies should be. It's my reaction. Still Life is my way to celebrate music from all corners...my home without borders."

Upon returning to New York, her home of 10 years, Melati put together a group of musicians and began reimagining these new musical works inspired by her personal metamorphosis. She enlisted NYC-based cellist and composer Kelsey Lu McJunkins, Detroit producer Erin Rioux, Bolivian percussionist Daniel Alejandro Siles Mendoza, and Australian producer/songwriter Isaac Emmanuel, her longtime collaborator.

Still Life inhabits a gorgeous, kaleidoscopic world, as delicate and intricate, as it is expansive and immersive. It walks the line between organic and mechanic, where dusty field recordings weave between warm Moogs and Prophets, where jazz breaks bump next to broken drum machines. It's meticulously crafted outsider pop, made by obsessives, for obsessives.


Valentine's
5:00pm Sunday, May 29, 2016

À reading is a reading.

Let's all hang out at Valentine's on the last Sunday of May to enjoy performances by Amy LamJamondria Marnice HarrisA.M. O'Malley, Elizabeth Hall, and Robert Torres.

Portland, OR
10:00pm Saturday, May 28, 2016

a standard uptown toodeloo 

Post Moves is releasing new tunage to unsuspecting groovers - join 4 fun times; either in a basement setting or backyard BBQ jamboree...confirmed locale will be confirmed closer to date

joined by homies providing success to eardrums, Philip Grass --->> https://droppinggems.bandcamp.com/album/find

Mystery World Science Show, said album, will be available in following legitimate, commercial formats :

TAPE CASSETTE
12" VINYL RECORD

For more information + updates: https://www.facebook.com/events/567492913414138/


Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall
8:00pm Saturday, May 28, 2016

The river of soul music flows on deep and strong, and 25-year-old Leon Bridges is immersed in its life-giving current. The Forth Worth, Texas native and Columbia Records artist released his debut album, Coming Home, in the summer of 2015. "I'm not saying I can hold a candle to any soul musician from the '50s and '60s," Bridges says, "but I want to carry the torch."

Humility aside, Bridges' light is burning bright. Following the October 2014 release of two tunes that set the on-line world aflame, and accompanied by intimate solo shows from London to Los Angeles and Nashville to New York, the singer and songwriter has proved himself a rare talent who can do smoldering ballads and elemental rock'n'roll with equal aplomb. While he appears to have emerged cut from the cloth and fully formed, Bridges explains in his dulcet voice how he came to be here now.

"As a kid I grew fascinated with modern R&B. In high school I'd try singing songs by Ginuwine and Usher," he explains, "and I thought well, maybe they weren't in my range." Instead, a lithe, nimble physicality led Leon to study dance at Tarrant County College in Fort Worth. "I'd been doing hip-hop dance since I was 11 years old," he says. "I knew there was a dance program there, and I started diving into ballet and jazz and modern technique and learning choreography. I thought that's what I wanted to do."

Native inspiration soon diverted his path. "A friend of mine brought his keyboard to school every day, and we'd have these little jam sessions, improvising, and I started to find my voice." One day a female friend asked Bridges to look after her guitar while she went to class. "I asked her to show me a couple chords first. And she did: A-minor and E-minor. I fell in love with their sound, and that's when I started writing songs, from those two chords."

That Bridges compositional bedrock began in a minor mode is revealing. At a moment when popular music seems in thrall to major chord sing-alongs, the blue hues of Bridges' tunes embrace a subtlety that feels wholly refreshing. "Based on my innocence on guitar and my lack of knowledge of the technical side, my songwriting is something I have to make on-point with melody and delivery to make it shine," he explains.

With a few early compositions tucked under his belt, a seeming dichotomy surfaced: Bridges’ tunes sounded less like the modern R&B he’d grown up loving than a style he was, in fact, not very familiar with: classic soul. Furthermore, Bridges’ sleek, fastidious fashion sensibility dovetailed with the songs he was writing. He began a tenderfoot period of apprenticeship playing coffeehouses in and around Fort Worth, slowly finding and refining his voice. 

A turning point soon came via a pair of selvedge trousers. One night at an Austin bar Bridges was approached by a young woman who complimented him on his snazzy Wrangler's and said that he should meet her boyfriend, a fellow with a comparable sense of style. Her boyfriend turned out to be Austin Jenkins of the band White Denim. "I hadn't heard of White Denim at the time," Bridges says, "but I went and looked them up and thought yeah, that's interesting music." After Jenkins and his bandmate Joshua Block subsequently peeped Bridges perform at a low-key local show, they insisted Leon enter the studio to cut a few tracks on their burgeoning bank of vintage equipment.

That initial three-day session, with Jenkins and Block producing, yielded the recordings that set Bridges at the center of rapturous attention from aficionados and labels alike. The buttery, seductive "Coming Home" and the piston-driven, doo-wop flavored "Better Man" demonstrated Bridges' versatility. Inking with Columbia Records, whose roster includes a certain hero named Bob Dylan, was the outcome of courtship and deliberation. "Columbia has artists I look up to like Adele and Pharrell, as well as Raphael Saadiq and John Legend," says Bridges. "They way they value artistry makes it feel like home."

The early 2015 release of another new song, "Lisa Sawyer," has further burnished Bridges' promise. With its brushed snares and glowing brass, "Lisa Sawyer" is a remarkably assured offering from so young a talent. The song, about Bridges' mother, a woman "with the complexion of a sweet praline," has the flavor of one of Allen Toussaint's productions for the great Lee Dorsey. Connecting the sacred and the secular, "Lisa Sawyer" feels natural considering Bridges' churchgoing childhood. And by writing with specificity about his own family, Bridges is creating resonant work about the African-American experience.

"I have a lot of insecurities because I don't have a big powerhouse voice," he admits. "I'm not a shouter. I rely on phrasing to get my feeling across." Bridges' delivery exudes strength through tenderness. "I guess that's why I connected with Sam Cooke."

The name Sam Cooke has appeared frequently in Bridges' early notices in the press. The point of comparison is apt, but not initially intentional. "When I wrote 'Lisa Sawyer' I didn't know anything about old soul music," Leon says. "I was asked 'Is Sam Cooke one of your inspirations?' I had to say no, because I only knew Sam Cooke's 'A Change Is Gonna Come' from the movie Malcolm X, which I'd watched with my father. But from being asked about Sam Cooke and Otis Redding I started digging deeper into soul music from the '50 and '60s and realizing this is really the root of what I'm doing."

What to make of the fact that Bridges is working in a tradition whose existence he was initially only vaguely aware of? "It speaks to the gift God placed in me," Leon says, choosing his words carefully. "It humbles and wows me to think I was pulling from something I didn't really know about."

In the striking black-and-white images that have accompanied Leon's emergence, one photograph stands out. It depicts Bridges sauntering down a sunlit sidewalk, his shadow falling not behind him but stretching out in the direction of his forward stride. The implication is that Bridges is not walking away from the past, but moving forward with both family history and the tradition of soul music in full view. His ancestors and antecedents walk with him. "They're with me at all times," affirms Bridges. Steeped in tradition, drenched with intention and desire, Leon Bridges' soul music is happening here and now.

Revolution Hall
8:00pm Saturday, May 28, 2016

Sleep paralysis plagues singer/songwriter Chelsea Wolfe, and that strange intersection of the conscious and the unconscious has inadvertently manifested itself within her work. Across the span of her first four albums, there is an underlying tension, a distorted and nebulous territory where dark shadows hover along the edges of the sublime and the graceful. But until now, Wolfe’s trials and tribulations with the boundaries between dreams and reality have only been a subconscious influence on her work. With her fifth album, Abyss, she deliberately confronts those boundaries and crafts a score to that realm she describes as the “hazy afterlife… an inverted thunderstorm… the dark backward… the abyss of time.”

Get tickets: http://bit.ly/CWolfePORT2016

TWERK PDX (832 N Killingsworth St)
10:00pm Friday, May 27, 2016

QUEER HIP HOP DANCE PARTY EST. 2012

SPECIAL GUEST : Daniela Karina (Women's Beat League)
https://soundcloud.com/danielakarina

Club Secretary: KiKi

USUAL SUSPECTS:

II TRILL ( https://soundcloud.com/iitrill )

ILL CAMINO ( https://www.mixcloud.com/ill666camino/ )

H/IPH/OP/R/NB/T/RAP/B/OOTY/B/OUNCE 

SAFER SPACE ENFORCED

Wheel Chair Accessible Entrance & Bathrooms (No Stairs)

21+ $5

FLOCK Dance Center
8:30pm Friday, May 27, 2016

Join an evening of discourse, observations & explorations surrounding Takahiro Yamamoto's piece, Rules of Engagement. Rules of Engagement explores the combination of physical reality in the space and fictional reality in the mind. Taka asks: Can I allow my body and mind to be open to the effect of fictional narrative? What is the line between reaction and consequence? 

The Critical Engagement Series brings together audiences & choreographers in hopes to reveal some of the mystery surrounding the languages around dance & the unique practices of individual choreographers. We start with the question: What does the choreographer need at this particular moment in their process & how might this also serve the wider community?

A 20 minute video of Taka's work, followed by a discussion with Taka about what we saw and experienced. 

Drinks and light snacks provided. 

http://flockpdx.squarespace.com/new-events/2016/5/27/critical-engagement-series-taka-yamamoto

$5-10 sliding scale 

Roseland Theater
8:00pm Friday, May 27, 2016

Purity Ring is a Canadian electronic music duo formed in 2010 and originally from Edmonton, Alberta. The band consists of Megan James (vocals) and Corin Roddick (instrumentals).

Doug Fir
8:00pm Friday, May 27, 2016

Seeing Autolux live is like being placed on a conveyor belt at an android factory. Bit by bit, song by song, they replace the eyes, ears, limbs, and hearts of everyone in the crowd. Converting the faithful followers into a small militia of mechanical automatons. The guitars are aluminum silver, the drummer makes her own clothes, all awesome and partly from space. Funky beats and feedback. Everyone sings. Everything is distorted and distressed, without losing melodies or precision. The allure of Autolux is their ability to create dark and desolate soundscapes that still convey undertones of sensuality. Their music is immensely moving and dramatic, but also colorful. They rebel against norms without ever being impish or contemptuous. If ever there was a band deserving of comparisons to Caravaggio, Autolux is it.


The Los Angeles based trio has just recently signed to TBD Records in the US and ATP Recordings for the rest of the world, although their first record, Future Perfect, was released on T Bone Burnett's label, DMZ, under Columbia in 2004. Future Perfect began with "Turnstile Blues", featuring one of the most distinctive drumbeats and musical atmospheres of any album in recent memory. A Pitchfork review stated, "In the first 10 seconds of the album opener, Carla Azar shames most every beat-maker with her ridiculous Leibezeit-cum-Bonham percussion." The song created a vacuum of precise tumult that pulled you in, stretched you out, and spit your altered shape through a flawless cycle of songs. The album's otherworldly moods and eclectic makeup of songs made it difficult to categorize and gained the band much-deserved respect. Four and half years have passed since the band stopped touring on Future Perfect. But the space since then has been filled with activity in spite of any obstacles thrown their way, including the process of freeing themselves from Columbia and escaping with full ownership of Future Perfect.

As part of the long build up to the release of their new album, Transit Transit, they made the song "Audience No.2" available as a 'pay what you will' track on their website. Soon after, they joined PJ Harvey for a tour of Russia. During this time they also continued to play their own shows, trying out new songs live, and in some cases revisiting the recorded versions to make necessary alterations or, in some cases, total deletions. In the summer of 2009, they collaborated with the painter Kill Pixie (Mark Whalen) for 'Future Spa', an art exhibition/sound installation in Los Angeles. In more recent months, the band has toured extensively, including an appearance at All Tomorrow's Parties in upstate New York and an opening spot with Thom Yorke's Atoms For Peace.

Now, the much-awaited follow-up, Transit Transit is finally here. It begins no less uniquely than its predecessor, although this time the subtler concussion of rhythm that starts the title track is an announcement of change, and the following mood and vocal—a metaphysical sorbet. If you have been waiting, somewhat impatiently, for this record, Transit Transit has yielded an unexpected mix of material, but has everything you had hoped for. And if Autolux is a band you are just discovering, here is a deep and profound world of noise and emotion to immerse yourself in.

The band produced Transit Transit themselves with guitarist/vocalist Greg Edwards serving as engineer. Most of the record was recorded at Space 23, the band's makeshift studio in their rehearsal room near downtown Los Angeles. A few drum tracks – "Highchair," "Spots," and "The Science of Imaginary Solutions" – came from an earlier session with producer/engineer John Goodmanson. The title track "Transit Transit" (the last song to be recorded) was started in Denmark by Edwards, using a virtually unplayable upright piano and a sample of a coffin-style freezer found in a nearby basement, and then finished back in Los Angeles. There is a notable sonic progression to Transit Transit: samples, vintage synthesizers, and manipulated ambience glue central song components together. There are a lot more vocal harmonies and piano driven songs, even a bit of trumpet. Vocal duties are shared by all three members throughout the album – their voices strangely similar – but each having a definite emotional character. Bassist/ singer, Eugene Goreshter continues to innovate his bass style, effortlessly modernizing the instrument's melodic role on songs like "Census" and "Supertoys," while still providing an on-edge rawness and groove-filled momentum. Edwards' guitars serve to modulate the moods throughout the record, constantly evoking feelings found in the space between emotions. And Carla Azar's sturdy, creative drumming (a phenomenon to behold on stage) continues on record with plenty of hook beats – ferocious and orchestral, at once.

The majority of the album was mixed by Kennie Takahashi, three of the tracks being mixed by Dave Sardy, and then mastered by Bob Ludwig. Artist Kill Pixie and Carla created the artwork for Transit Transit.
Revolution Hall
8:00pm Friday, May 27, 2016

Titus Andronicus

In July of 2005, the rock band Titus Andronicus made their first live appearance, performing for a few friends in an unfinished basement. The ensuing decade would see nearly 800 shows, 18 members, and the release of three full-length albums and 14 7-inches, as the group rose from their obscure beginnings in the tri-state DIY scene to the heights of international "indie stardom," only to (nearly?) throw it all away in a vicious cycle of depression and decadence. The culmination of that ten-year journey is The Most Lamentable Tragedy.
The Most Lamentable Tragedy [hereafter TMLT] is the fourth studio album by Titus Andronicus [hereafter +@] and the band's debut for Merge Records. A rock opera in five acts, it will see release on the 28th of July 2015 as a digital download, double CD, and triple vinyl LP. "[In July 2005] I turned 20 years old—I started the band and closed the door on my teenage years," says singer/songwriter Patrick Stickles, "and on July 28th this year, I'm turning 30. Putting out this record is my way of closing the door on my twenties—sharing what I have learned, sorrowing what I learned too late."
TMLT was produced by frequent collaborator Kevin McMahon and +@ lead guitarist Adam Reich. The core band is rounded out by the long-standing rhythm section of Eric Harm (drums) and Julian Veronesi (bass) plus hotshot rookie guitarist Jonah Maurer. Joining the lads throughout are veteran pianist Elio DeLuca and luminous Canadian violinist Owen Pallett, beside a colorful cast of special guests representing some of the New York scene's most exciting bands (The So So Glos, Baked, Bad Credit No Credit, Lost Boy?, etc.).
The central narrative of TMLT ("a work of fiction," Stickles says, looking away) concerns an unnamed protagonist whom we meet in the depths of his decrepit despair. Following an encounter with his own doppelgänger (an enigmatic stranger, identical in appearance though opposite in disposition), long held secrets are revealed, sending our protagonist on a transformative odyssey, through past lives and new loves, to the shocking revelation that the very thing that sustains him may be the very thing to destroy him.
Hardly the rambling mess its 29 tracks and 93:44 runtime might suggest, TMLT is a miracle of structural integrity and symmetry. The complete sequence of five "acts" will present a cohesive vision the likes of which few rock groups would have the self-esteem (let alone the chops) to even consider attempting, while the division of these acts, and the special care taken to give each its own sonic and thematic identity, will grant the listener the ability to ration or binge according to their pleasure. Across these five acts, we watch the passage of four seasons—the desolate desperation of winter melts away under the warm hope of approaching spring, just as the sticky fumes of the big city summer dissipate when autumn brings its comforting colors, and with them, the knowledge that they will fade, that all will fall and decay.
Still beyond the linear legibility of its seasonal motif, TMLT creates a universe that begs to be explored, an interlocking cycle of phases and recurrent events. "The first half is the second half in reverse—holding the first up to the mirror, we see the second," explains Stickles, feverishly. "Like our universe, it expands outward in every direction. It contains our most ornate arrangements and our most spare, our most uplifting music and our most bleak. With equal fervor we strive to show you +@ at our most beautiful and our most brutal, our most polished and our most raw." All these factors contribute to what Stickles identifies as "a certain bipolar quality."
"It should always be the dearest hope of the Artist that the Art they create could have been created by no one else," Stickles says suddenly, unprompted, "and that if it cannot be adored, it should be despised. Cast wide the poles! +@ is undaunted and TMLT will not be quietly abided."
Nor can it be denied—TMLT is the pinnacle and the missing piece, both the crown jewel of the band's discography and the legend that contextualizes their entire body of work. It reveals that +@ are what hardcore fans have said they are for years, and what the world must now recognize them to be: not merely the greatest rock and roll band of this era, but one of the greatest rock and roll bands of all time.

La Sera

La Sera is the project of Katy Goodman (Vivian Girls, All Saints Day) and Todd Wisenbaker (Ryan Adams' 1989). The band currently resides in Los Angeles, CA.
139 SE Taylor St
6:00pm Friday, May 27, 2016

You’ve worked yourself to the bone the whole month, so now it’s your time to have some fun! Come enjoy free beverages from Fat Head’s Brewery, Basecamp Brewing Co and Riunite wine all night long! Plus music, food carts, art collectives and much more! But, more importantly, come relax and leave the work for Monday. 

ROI Friday a summer event series that will take place on every last Friday of the month until August. We're attempting to embody the same atmosphere as First Thursday, but with a unique spin. The entire ethos revolves around getting return on your time. 

ROI Friday is promoting on every last Friday of the month (May 27th, June 24th, July 29th and August 26th) at SE 2nd street between SE Taylor and SE Yamhill street.

Presented by Kin Living

Sponsors include:
Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI)
Fat Head's Portland
Base Camp Brewing Company
Riunite
Essentia Water
City Home

21+ / $5 suggested donation at entrance. All donations will benefit OMSI.

Dig A Pony
8:00pm Thursday, May 26, 2016

Discogs and XRAY have joined forces to bring some of our favorite DJs together for one night at Dig a Pony. They'll take turns selecting from their crates (playing nothing but rare vinyl) all night long. Come hang out with Discogs and XRAY and hear sets that sound like no others: 

Cuica (Missisippi Records)
DDDJJJ666 (Hipsters Suck, Crossroads Records)
Morning Remorse (Blind Dates with Morning Remorse)
Rev Shines (Lifesavas, Today's Good News)


Drink Specials for XRAY Members (Bring your Membership Keychain!)

FREE

Veterans Memorial Coliseum
8:00pm Thursday, May 26, 2016

Macklemore & Ryan Lewis kick off a 2-month European Arena tour on March 8 and today they announce their North American Spring tour including a headlining performance at Bonnaroo in Manchester, TN. Support by Raz Simone. 

The duo is composed of Ben Haggerty, a singer who goes by the name of Macklemore, and Ryan Lewis, a record producer, DJ, and professional photographer, who met the former at a photo shoot and they have significantly collaborated ever since.

On Friday, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis self-released ‘This Unruly Mess I’ve Made,’ the follow up to their multi-PLATINUM, award winning 2012 album ‘The Heist.’ The thirteen track LP includes PLATINUM selling single “Downtown” (featuring Kool Moe Dee, Melle Mel, Grandmaster Caz, and Eric Nally), as well as previously unavailable “Growing Up” (featuring Ed Sheeran) and “Kevin” (featuring Leon Bridges).


:: Flutter ::
5:00pm Thursday, May 26, 2016

Flutter has been on Mississippi Ave for ten whole years, and we want to celebrate our birthday with you. 

There will be prizes, giveaways, drinks and surprises, plus DJs Strange Babes to help ring in the eleventh year in style. 

Wear your dancing shoes!

Killingsworth Dynasty
9:00pm Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Soundcontrol PDX presents PAPER: a night of dark electronics


Sean Pierce
Bloom Offering (SEA) 
DJ Wax/Wane

This event is FREE, live electronic projects and dark techno.

Turn, Turn, Turn
8:00pm Wednesday, May 25, 2016

An evening of experimental sound art.


RUST PROMOTER
[Hypnotic Disturbances]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8h94zjQhaWo


YOUNG HOUND
[Sound Collage]
https://younghound.bandcamp.com/track/sonic-subway


TALC
[Loose Form]
https://soundcloud.com/shane-mcdonell
https://soundcloud.com/bobdesaulniers


Visuals by Krystal Pérez 
http://www.krystalperez.net/


$5-10 Sliding scale, no one turned away for lack of funds
8 PM
+21

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