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Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall
8:00pm Wednesday, January 6, 2016

In the fall of 1975, Patti Smith gathered her band in Electric Lady Studios in New York City to record her debut album, Horses. Released on November 10 of that year by Arista Records, it has come to be regarded as a seminal and landmark recording that continues to have resonance and relevance for succeeding generations of musicians and artists. 

Now, forty years later, Smith will honor the longevity and lasting influence of the album with a series of special shows centered around the album. 

“It will be a true, proud celebration,” Patti says of her intent to perform Horses in its entirety. She will be accompanied by two members of the original group, Lenny Kaye and Jay Dee Daugherty, along with bassist / keyboardist Tony Shanahan, who has been a part of Her Band for twenty years.

Bullseye Projects
5:30pm Wednesday, January 6, 2016

The opening reception of "The Emotional Life Objects," featuring work by Silvia Levenson, Dante Marioni, and Heidi Schwegler.

Heidi Schwegler will discuss her 2015 residency at the Bullseye Studio and the ideas behind her work included in "The Emotional Life of Objects." on Saturday, February 27th at 1pm-3pm. 


S1 (4148 NE Hancock St)
6:30pm Tuesday, January 5, 2016

This 4 part series will introduce beginners to the process of creating an electronic based dance track. Students will gain insight into computer-based music production through the use of Ableton Live. Students will learn the basic principles behind synthesis, looping, sampling, and more. At the end of the 4 part series, participants will have gained the skills necessary to feel comfortable composing music in Ableton, and will leave the workshop having created their own song. SciFiSol (Christina Broussard) has been working in Ableton Live and Apple Logic for over 8 years producing complex song arrangements and live performance sets with attention to detail and sound design

Workshop Schedule - Tuesdays from 6:30-9:00pm:
January 5 I Ableton Basics and Beat-making
January 12 II Sound Design Basics: Creating Sound Palettes and Synth Lines
January 19 III Working with Effects, Loops, and Resampling in Session View
January 26 IV Arrangement and Composition

This course is open to female-identified students. Space is limited to 12 people and is offered on a first come, first served basis. Admission to the course is $35 – $45 sliding scale for all 4 nights. 

For more information and to register: http://s1portland.com/workshops/

S1 (4148 NE Hancock St)
10:00pm Thursday, December 31, 2015

Say SO LONG to 2015 with 
Aos https://soundcloud.com/aosseattle
Rap Class https://soundcloud.com/rap-class
Alex Ian Smith (A S S S
+S1 Resident DJs 

21+/Cash Bar
$7 Presale/$10 Door/Members Free

https://venmo.com/Felisha-Ledesma
Venmo Note: S1 NYE with your first & last name ~

Revolution Hall
8:00pm Thursday, December 31, 2015

Celebrate NYE with Wild Ones, brand of pop lives in humid nights in big cities on the coast. Set between youth and adulthood, their most recent Heatwave EP centers on young lust and isolation. Hailing from Portland, Oregon, Wild Ones' music is both ethereal and R&B. Combining heavy synths, locking drums, and melancholy vocals, they build their singular style of dream pop.

Their EP "Heatwave" was released on Topshelf Records this past August, and have been touring the country with Pure Bathing Culture this fall. Today they're premiering the video for the warm, sweet track "They Said." The video follows four teenagers as they hide from grownups, drive toward the sunset, run through corn fields, eat peaches, and all sorts of other nice things. It's a song full of glimmering synths and keyboard, and singer Danielle Sullivan's vocals fill the track with a cinematic quality that matches this visually pleasing video.

Mississippi Studios
8:00pm Thursday, December 31, 2015

Sallie Ford 

Plenty a future has been pondered in a French café, and so it was for Sallie Ford. During a tiring tour of Europe last winter Ford's then-bandmate Jeff Munger mentioned he was ready for a break from the tours Ford and her band, The Sound Outside, had logged. She said she too was ready for something new. "And I said, 'I wish I could have an all-girl band,'" Ford says. 

Ford calls Slap Back, her Vanguard Records debut an "ode to all the babe rockers." To Pat Benatar and PJ Harvey, Xene Cervenka, and Joan Jett, and Heart. But it's also her first album without guitarist Munger, bassist Tyler Tornfelt and drummer Ford Tennis, so Slap Back is just as much an ode to herself, to her accomplishments and her ambitions. 

She wanted to play more guitar, so she made herself the guitar player. She wanted to play in a band with keyboards, so she signed up Cristina Cano (Albatross, Siren & the Sea) on keys. She added Anita Lee Elliott, who's been in Viva Voce and Blue Giant, on bass, and Amanda Spring (Point Juncture, WA.) on drums. Like that, Ford had the band she hoped for.

Ford wanted to distance herself some from the rockabilly tag she and the Sound Outside picked up over the course of two albums bookended by two EPs. So she wrote garage rock, surf rock, and straight up rock songs. "I wanted to blend different eras of music–the 80s, 90s, 60s, 70s–maybe some 50s," she said, before pausing. "I was kind of over the 50s."

She turned her room into a studio and sat for hours with a notebook, her guitar, a friend's Nord Electro keyboard, and a four-track recorder. She downloaded drum loop apps with basically named rhythms like Rock Beat 1 and wrote to those. She tracked vocals on top of vocals. Slap Back's opening song, the appropriately titled "Intro," finds Ford alone in that room, building an a capella gospel tune that ends with the assertion, "I'm happy, I'm spoiled, I'm fine."

"When I was coming up with the idea of having a new band, I knew I wanted Chris involved," Ford says. "He was kind of the silent collaborator I knew was going to come into the picture." 

That'd be Chris Funk, who's produced albums by Red Fang and Langhorne Slim. Funk is best known for his multi-instrumental work in the Decemberists and Black Prairie. If you play music in Portland and you're any good, you know Funk. Ford and the Sound Outside had opened for the Decemberists, and Tornfelt's sister, Annalisa, sings in Black Prairie. The group also worked with Funk on projects for Walker, the music supervision company where he is also employed. 

In February of 2014, Ford and her new group went into a Portland, OR studio called Destination: Universe! and went to work on all the songs Ford had ready–a collection full of "simple lyrics about raw emotions," Ford says, played with the urgency exemplified in the fuzzed-out, missed-love-by-just-that-much lead single, "Coulda Been." 

What interested her on the last Sound Outside record, Untamed Beast, interests her here–relationships. "Lucky to Miss" is about being in one and on the road. "Gimme Your Lovin'" and "You Bet Your Ass" are pick-up lines, and not exactly subtle. But then, why should they be? As she sings on "So Damn Low": "Gonna start up fresh, gonna start up clean, gonna learn to say what I really mean."

Slap Back is that, too–a new start for a singer and songwriter who had plenty of success after moving from her native North Carolina to Portland. 

"Oregon" is a power-riff ode to her affinity for her adopted home state. "An Ending" covers the relationship with her former band mates, and it makes two things clear: "I hope this friendship never ends," and, "I think this is how things are supposed to be."

In 2010, Ford and the Sound Outside were voted Portland's best new band by Willamette Week. Even in a town where everything old is stylized there was something classic in her voice, something no one else had. Comparisons came back: Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald. NPR would throw Cat Power into the mix. Ford could purr and howl and even managed to hold her own in awkward banter about glasses with David Letterman after blistering his stage. 

"Slap Back has a new sound on purpose," states Ford "'cause music should be about taking risks, doing something new and being inspired to change it up."

Y La Bamba

Singer and guitarist Luz Elena Mendoza is reviving Y La Bamba. "I wanted to spend time alone and get perspective," she says of the 2.5-year hiatus. "I grew up in that band. That was me entering this world being super innocent, but now I have greater self-awareness as a Mexican-American female." The Portland-based band — which has toured with Neko Case and The Lumineers — will continue to blend her Latin heritage with elements of American folk and rock, but its latest incarnation will reflect Luz's cathartic exploration of identity. "Now the band is a celebration of family and community. Not just the music community, but everyone."

Cat Hoch

Cat Hoch is multi instrumentalist playing dreamy psychadelic pop songs in Portland, Oregon. With a drumming background, she's now fronting her own project singing and playing guitar with a backing band. She's been in multiple projects such as Tender Age, Appendixes, Jackson Boone, Focus Troup, Daydream machine playing various instruments.

Bossanova Ballroom
8:00pm Thursday, December 31, 2015

DJ Anjali and The Incredible Kid are returning to the spacious and elegant Bossanova Ballroom for their second New Year’s Eve party in a row. 

This party marks the twelfth anniversary of Anjali and The Kid playing in Portland clubs as a duo since their New Year’s Eve debut in 2000. Expect some banging Bhangra and Bollywood tracks along with Giddha
Bounce, Tamil and Telugu percussion riots, the best in Urban Desi, and maybe even some forays into other international club bangers, depending on the mood of the DJs and the crowd.

21 and over only
$15 advance / $20 at the door

Turn Turn Turn
8:00pm Thursday, December 31, 2015

NYE Extravaganza w/The Lavender Flu, Hornet Leg, Dusty Santamaria and more! 8pm-later

We are extremely jazzed to close out '15 with an absolutely killer night of music. Hornet Leg is one of Portland mightiest creators of psychsoaked scuzz. The Lavender Flu is Chris Gunn's (Hunches) new band. They played their first show at TTT and immediately jumped to the head of the pack of must-see Portland bands. Dusty Santamaria is one of Portland's best songwriters and never fails to tear it up.

Dig a Pony
8:00pm Thursday, December 31, 2015

It's the return of one of Portland's best DJ nights, the Fix. After years at the now defunct Someday Lounge, the FIX returns for one night only on New Years Eve at Dig a Pony.

Crystal Ballroom
7:30pm Thursday, December 31, 2015

Calexico

Calexico is no stranger to negotiating borders. For the better part of two decades, eight albums, and countless trips around the globe, Joey Burns and John Convertino have crossed musical barriers with their band, embracing a multitude of diverse styles, variety in instrumentation, and well-cultivated signature sounds. Under fences it digs and over mountains it climbs, sometimes into untrodden terrain, sometimes towards a more familiar landscape, and sometimes simply walking that fine line to soak up sustenance from all sides. These are men from the desert, yes, but there has always been so much more to Calexico than just heritage and heat. Now, with Edge of the Sun, Burns and Convertino find themselves straddling that celestial division of light and dark, taking inspiration from a trip to a place surprisingly unexplored by the band before, and with the benefit of many friends and comrades to help guide the way.

"When I step back from this record I see the spirit of collaboration," says Burns. "As we began working on it, we started inviting people and it was a natural thing. We've always welcomed guests; it's in our DNA. John and I are really good at hopping in to play with people and improvise but we're also sensitive to what artists need."

"We've collaborated a lot in the past on other records but this one is the most vastly collaborative," says Convertino. "Almost every song has a different guest."

The first outside invitation came when Burns was writing "Bullets and Rocks" and recognized space for a former Calexico collaborator to join. "When putting vocals on that song, it immediately reminded me of the Iron & Wine feel," says Burns. "So I texted Sam (Beam), who wrote back quickly and got it going." Encouraged by that experience, the guest list grew to include musicians from a myriad of backgrounds, origins, and genres, including Ben Bridwell from Band of Horses, Nick Urata from Devotchka, Carla Morrison, Gaby Moreno, Amparo Sanchez, multi-instrumentalists from the Greek band Takim, as well as Neko Case. Burns' older brother John Burns lent a hand to some lyrics and songwriting, and the band's keyboardist, Sergio Mendoza, stepped up to co-write and arrange certain songs, ultimately co-producing the album along with Burns, Convertino, and longtime associate Craig Schumacher. It was, in fact, at Mendoza's suggestion that Calexico would physically cross an actual border for a retreat to the historic Mexico City borough of Coyoacán to begin the writing process for Edge of the Sun.

In view of the fresh creative perspective provided by the band's journey to New Orleans to make its previous album, Algiers, Burns sought Mendoza's involvement in finding a new writing destination. "I wanted to see the band revisit elements in the songwriting that led to songs from [the band's 1998 breakthrough album] The Black Light, so I suggested going to Mexico City," says Mendoza. "To me, it wasnt going back to something they had already done, but rather adding another chapter with Mexican collaborators. The surroundings of Coyoacán really helped bring life to those ideas that were waiting for a special time and place to come out."

"Going to another city to jumpstart the creative writing process helped us to know what this record is about and where we are as a band, like an open canvas with few ties to normal routines when recording and writing," says Burns. "Of course, we have been influenced by Mexican music and culture since the beginning, and you would imagine that a trip to Mexico City would have happened on past projects, but it hadn't. So going to the center of Mexico and seeing an artistic community with such an impressive history as well as notable current musicians really inspired us."

The ten days in Coyoacán were not without their surprises. Initially expecting for the world of Calexico to mesh with the sounds and vibe of Mexico City and take on varied overt Latin influences, Burns and Convertino were amazed when they left the country with some of their poppiest songs to date. Album opener "Falling from the Sky" is earnestly straightforward in its rafter-reaching approach, and "When the Angels Play," with additional vocals and lyrics by Pieta Brown, connects thematically to the Aztecs but, in Burns' words, could have been written anywhere.

Perspective achieved, the band internalized the influence of Mexico and continued to write and record in their home Wavelab studio in Tucson throughout the middle half of 2014. Songs such as the electronica "Cumbia de Donde" and the cinematic swell of "Coyoacán" were direct results of the foreign experience and the type of lessons that can only be realized upon reflection. While Convertino's move to El Paso, Texas, presented another slight border to cross, all this distance only served to inspire and preserve the unique Calexico identity: unconventional timing and instrumental elements, an electrifying live show, and the pushing forward of social connection and ideas to create a profound space.

"It really demonstrates the dynamics of our live show, and I'm hoping this album helps translates some of that energy," says Burns, identifying Edge of the Sun most closely to the wide-ranging styles of their 2003 album Feast of Wire. "We weren't trying to replicate anything or make it hugely different from song to song, but there is some of that carryover, I think. As much as we try to break new ground on records, inevitably there's continuity, which works well on a record like this."

Convertino, too, singles out Feast of Wire as a touchstone for the new album and a special era for Calexico, one that informed the band's unique relationship with space and distance today. "Feast of Wire opened the door for us and attached our sound to the region, helping us discover that we could have that sound and still be our own thing," he says. "Joey and I have talked a lot about space in music; we make sure to give the notes we don't play as much emphasis as the notes we do play, because they're just as important. It's a big part of what Calexico does: we create a space."

Negotiating borders and the spaces within, then inviting others inside those edges: that may be the recipe for Calexico's success. As its empire expands and the familiar pieces join with fresh ideas and a new cohort to pass under wires and across fields and time, Calexico now finds itself here in 2015 on the solar precipice, navigating the edge and trying to find hope in that balance of darkness and light.

"The 'edge of the sun' could be coming from the direction of darkness seeking light, or riding the line between both," says Burns. "Which side of this edge are you on? Traversing along the edge of the sun, that to me feels closest to what this album is and what the band has been, and where we are with this international makeup of musicians. Madrid, Nashville, Tucson, El Paso, Berlin; it's an eclectic mix. All in all, this album is about pushing through the blue to brighter days. Calexico has always had that element of hope, going back and forth between a positive outlook and embracing desperate or dark themes that I think we all share."

Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/calexico

Website:

http://www.casadecalexico.com/

 

Blind Pilot

Blind Pilot began in 2007 when Israel (vocals, guitar) and Ryan (drums) embarked on a West Coast bicycle tour playing mostly to unfamiliar listeners at small-town venues. The band now exists as a 6-piece ensemble featuring fellow Oregonians Luke Ydstie (upright bass, backing vocals), Kati Claborn (banjo, dulcimer, backing vocals), Ian Krist (vibraphones) and Dave Jorgensen (keyboards, trumpet). The band's second album, We Are The Tide (2011), which NPR noted "blooms agreeably from start to finish..." followed the band's grassroots break-out debut, 3 Rounds and a Sound (2008), which was featured in NPR's "Best Music of 2008" roundup. In the years since its inception, the band has toured with various world-renowned musicians including The Decemberists, Josh Ritter, The Low Anthem, Laura Veirs and Andrew Bird and appeared at the Sasquatch! Music Festival, Lollapalooza, Austin City Limits and the Outside Lands Music & Arts Festival.

The band entered the studio this year to record their third album and an early 2016 release date is planned.

Website:

http://www.blindpilot.com/

 


Ages and Ages

Ages and Ages is not a cult. Sure, the seven-piece Portland group exudes enough electric joy that it feels like a big tent revival. And sure, one finds oneself using church words to describe the band's sound: a powerful, life-affirming and exploratory blend of lessons learned, set ablaze with a buoyant, unbridled optimism. And yeah, there are frequent lyrical references to voluntary seclusion, communal living and an existence "under the radar" littered throughout the band's debut, Alright, You Restless.

But amidst all this talk of willful isolation comes an element of the band that is hard to overlook: AgesandAges invites you into its ranks. In live performance, as gorgeous vocal harmonies rise victoriously to refuse the skepticism and irony that terrorize our daily lives, the venue becomes the commune, and the audience is given an opportunity to lower its guard. Everybody shares in the ecstatic energy that sets AgesandAges apart from most of its less vibrant Northwest contemporaries.

See, the Northwest isn't known for enthusiasm. There are a lot of frowning concertgoers who stand, unmoving with arms crossed, at the back of the room during their favorite band's shows. Frontperson Tim Perry's old band, Pseudosix, was so often greeted with that famous Northwest apathy that when the band closed shop he took a logical next step: forming a band so earnest and heart-on-sleeve that any jaded soul within its gravitational pull would be disarmed and physically moved. This indomitable spirit, combined with the band's considerable chops, has been enough to make AgesandAges a hometown favorite poised for national success.

Amazingly, the band found a way to translate its stomping, relentless live show seamlessly to disc. Recorded in eight days with producer Kevin Robinson (Viva Voce, Blue Giant) at Amore!phonics, Perry says the secret was keeping things live: performing its songs as a full unit and singing together into a shared microphone. The resulting record sounds alternately sharp (the explosive, riff-packed opener, "No Nostalgia"; the complex, twisting "These Elbows") and warm (the exotic and haunting "The Peaks"; the slow-building "When I Was Idle"), with the band's rich percussive elements weaving into the campfire pop strums of acoustic guitar and graceful flourishes of strings and piano. There's no mistaking that the group uses every member to his or her fullest, the most rewarding result being the layered vocal harmonies that comprise the backbone of AgesandAges' timeless sound.

It only takes one listen to hear that Alright, You Restless is one of the strongest debut albums to come out of the Northwest in quite some time. AgesandAges didn't start as a cult, but there's a pretty good chance it'll grow into one

Website:
http://www.knittingfactoryrecords.com/artists/agesandages

Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall
5:00pm Thursday, December 31, 2015

Celebrate the arrival of 2016 in fantastic fashion with Pink Martini and China Forbes, as well as special guest appearance by Ari Shapiro and The Portland Youth Philharmonic. Celebrating twice on December 31st, with an early show at 7:00 pm, and a late show at 10:30 pm which will not come to an end until next year!

Pink Martini will turn 21 years old, officially grownups who know how to party (semi-responsibly). The celebration will feature a bevy of special guests, including our friends the Portland Youth Philharmonic, and some cheerful holiday surprises.

P.S. Don't forget your dancing shoes. 

Pink Martini's New Years Eve shows always sell out in advance, so get your tickets early.

All ticket purchasers will leave the show with Pink Martini's new CD release, A Retrospective.

The Know
8:45am Monday, December 28, 2015

Thirsty City is a monthly event featuring fresh vibrant sounds from local and touring beat and rap acts.


The December's edition is showcasing:

Luck&Lana (LA/ Living Legends)
Ripley Snell (Jointsy/ EYRST)
Old Grape God (444/ Time Traveler)
Bry Zen (EWE of NOW Recordings)

DJ set by NorthernDraw 

Flier by Dax

Doors 8:30- $5- 21+

Mississippi Studios
8:00pm Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Ali Muhareb’s Mujahadeen

Ali Muhareb just released a solo album, *Mujahedeen*, and it rips. Sonically resemblant to some stoned fusion of Animal Collective and Hot Chip, Mujahedeen adds a solid new layer to Portland music that contends with the best.


Hands In

Boaring, his 2011 release streaming on Bandcamp, is stocked with slow surf licks and ambient Halcyon Digest-esque guitar, paired with Beatles-happy harmonies, especially on the songs "The Maniacs" and "Moment of Life." Although watching solo performances can get to the best of us, Crosby orchestrates his multitude of instruments seamlessly, with enough to watch to sustain the show. 

Church
9:00pm Monday, December 21, 2015

Electro // Pop @ Church

No Aloha // soundcloud.com/noalohapdx
Mini Blinds // https://soundcloud.com/mini-blinds/witch-girl
Paper Gates // soundcloud.com/paper-gates
Free // 21+

Star Theater
8:00pm Sunday, December 20, 2015

December 19th AND December 20th!

Come see the band X at the Star Theater. More info here! 

Analog Cafe & Theater
7:00pm Sunday, December 20, 2015

KINGBANANA.NET Presents:

Pity Sex
Coleen Green
Eskimeaux

All Ages (Bar w/ ID)

Beech St Parlor
2:00pm7:00pm Sunday, December 20, 2015

Forget the mall, come do all your holiday shopping at the first ever Beech Street Holiday Bazaar and have a cocktail while you're at it.

Featuring handcrafted and homemade gifts & goodies by old friends and new ones:

Sweets by Doe Patisserie
Old Blue Raw Honey
Body Concoctions by Umay
Cutting Boards by Edelholz Woodworks
Leather Accessories by xobruno
Sauerkraut and more by Gina Blaylock
Herbal Medicines & Teas by Melanie McAmis
Ceramics by Libby Werbel
Fashions by Jayme Hansen
Ornaments by Jen Olesen
Cards & Cloth Napkins by Kathy Foster
Art Prints by Christina Owen
Art & Magical Magnets by Heather Gonsior

PLUS:
Doodle Table by FREE SPIRIT NEWS
Nails by Finger Trips

Warm Sounds of Exotica & Lounge by:
DJ Primitiva

Holiday Cocktail Specials!

All Ages


Machus
12:00pm5:00pm Sunday, December 20, 2015

Partnering with Seattle based brand Blackbird for a pop-up event at the shop Machus. 

Blackbird will be showcasing all of their newest collection in-store. All items will be available for purchase.

There will be coffee from Ristretto Roasters all day! 

"Seattle based Blackbird is known worldwide for its unconventional and remarkable fragrances and a small but vibrant collection of apparel accessories. Blackbird continues to experiment with new and unusual materials, carefully breaking the rules to create unique covetable products for home and personal use."

www.machusonline.com
www.blackbirdballard.com

Twilight Cafe
9:00pm Saturday, December 19, 2015

This is a fundraiser event for Doernbecher Children's Hospital. The show features performances by punk bands Thundering Asteroids!, Scott Von Rocket & the Holiday Suicides, The Food and Laurelhurst.
Get Tickets

Star Theater
8:00pm Saturday, December 19, 2015

December 19th AND December 20th!

Come see the band X at the Star Theater. More info here! 

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