The Tomorrow People have been running around town since 2009, headed up by Riley Geare and featuring bassist Erik Mimnaugh and Jordan Ruback tearing up the drum set. Geare often helps to lay down tracks for other locals such as Little Volcano and Trio Flux as a sound engineer and is also known to put on a Bowie review with his side project Queen Bitch. The bands now-on-vinyl EP, Rose City Rose, presents influences of Bowie, Queen, classic rock and metal particularly in Geare’s keyboarding and guitar notes that ladder along his vocal ballads. Rose lavishes raw, grease lightning style numbers in which Geare belts it out quite beautifully with his guys backing him up in anthem. At times it is heavy metal, at others rock opera. It is a roller coaster of understood track names. The dreamy 1960-70s soundscape of "Universe" makes one starry eyed with harmonies of oohs and aahs a-plenty, but this gives way to the startling wake-your-ass-up of whaling guitars, unstoppable tempo and utter destruction of "Eternity" only to simmer back down to a slow jam of longing with "Forever". It is fantastical, glittery ROCK. – Brandy Crowe
Nucular Aminals Celebrate the Release of Start from an End at The Know 11.3
I’m really enjoying this new Nucular Aminals album. It’s called "Start from an End" and the title is very fitting. The album sounds like a sequel to their 2011 7" "Nobody’s Man." The first few notes of album opener "Family Barber" don’t really touch on any particular feeling, other than a mild tone of creepiness set by their last release. Then, at around the 30 second mark, you are violently pulled into whatever dark, musty basement these people have obviously been practicing in for way too long. After that it’s over. You’re lost in this music and there’s no way out. Their songs feel like tightly wound psych-rock mazes that lead you into rooms with blacked out windows only to rip off the walls and expose you to the hot, slime green light outside. Nucular Aminals play very loud too. This is handy in the live setting because then you’re truly living in the strange sci-fi garage galaxy they have created for themselves. Check them out at their record release show at The Know on November 3rd with Tiny Knives and W.Hines for the more than fair price of $5. You’ll be glad you did. – Edgar Paleo
Hungry Ghost Plays Mississippi Studios 11.3
Hungry Ghost plays the kind of tight, tastefully constructed songs that can only come from musicians with experience and direction. The self-described “supergroup of obscure ‘90s indie rockers” combines heavy, blues-inspired riffs with a mature understanding of the psychedelic and an apparent need to experiment to create songs that sound simultaneously familiar and esoteric. The guitar tones are dialed with utmost precision and used to channel a chaotic and charged energy placed atop volcanic drumming and steady, smooth bass lines played with complete coordination and synchronicity. It’s easy to get lost in the grainy guitar riffs, and even easier to be woken from your trance by the abrupt breaks in music and the shouting vocals. If this sounds like your kind of show then you’re in luck. Hungry Ghost is bringing their dynamic sound to the fantastic Mississippi Studios for a free show on Saturday, November 3rd. Go and feed the ghost. – Benjamin Toledo
Boy Eats Drum Machine Releases The Battle at Burnside Brewing Company 10.26
John Ragel is a serial multitasker, enthusiastically orchestrating songs that are poly-genre and made up of improvised melodies and rhythms as Boy Eats Drum Machine. As a DJ he knows how to drop all kinds of percussion and experiments freely with his turntable and instruments. He is a one-man band, augmenting the tones further with his saxophone skills or guitar chord embellishments. Sometimes the colors of his sounds begin to bleed a bit into an artistic jazz scat break-down, but then something random will unexpectedly drop from above. Excerpts of laughter or cheers from his audience fall into the track perfectly and return it to its journey of beat-box/ pop-rock ear candy. He shifts light-heartedly on stage between electronics, instruments and vocals, and seems to purely enjoy playing music, having created six albums with additional compilations of bonus material to date. In his latest release, The Battle, the smooth pitch of Ragel’s voice cites religion, politics, and temptation but not without laser pews and Nintendo noises whirring overhead. Boy Eats Drum Machine will be celebrating the release of The Battle at Burnside Brewing Company’s Night of the Living Ales. Local electronic spook Purse Candy and the adorable musings of Oh, Darling will also be performing along with the added Halloween raucous of ghoulish go-go dancers and craft brews. Watch out for Ragel as Bowie. – Brandy Crowe
Charts Play Record Room’s 2 Year Anniversary Party 10.27
When listening to Charts, I can’t help but imagine myself at a low lit, gum popping, high-school dance of a by-gone time. There are guys in fancy blazers playing questionably appropriate rock-n-roll for the kids. Then someone spikes the punch, and I dash off in my bobby socks to wave a scarf at a night time drag race and smoke lots of cigarettes. Ok, so in my research I found that there had been a 1950’s doo-wop band named The Charts and perhaps this influenced me as I listened to Charts (no "the"). They do have a classic sound: a lo-fi buzz of burly bass (Andrew Clyde) and drum kicks (Josh Smith), all slicked up with romantic strikes of guitar strings and the twangy, sometimes punky vocals of Michael Rowan. There are rockabilly and punk elements, perhaps influenced by Ween, The Violent Femmes, or Suicidal Tendencies, that give them an intentional lilt, such as the warped "We Got it Good" off of The Eggy Tape EP. The trio’s latest work, Tease, continues in this drawl. The sound is heavy, yet off-beat and sweet, with a few tracks having the added harmonies of a female singer. The band has been rumored to play a swanky house show or two and has been busy playing with The We Shared Milk, jamming on the streetcar, and performing as part of a special PDX Pop Now! fund drive for KBOO community Radio. With Halloween season in Portland at hand, they are set to play a seasonal set of haunted pop songs like Slow Down Zombie(Your Eating Too Fast), How Did You Get So Dead, and more, for Record Room’s 2nd Anniversary party this Saturday. – Brandy Crowe
The North Wind Release “Mirror Lake” EP at The Know 10.25
Earnest and tightly-wound guitar that weaves between lighthearted post-rock and nuanced prog-grunge, The North Wind‘s guitar work on Mirror Lake is showcased like a snake winding across wet rock with it’s tongue flickering, no tail in sight. These songs never fall into the self-indulgent swells of delay-drenched drama that characterize their contemporaries; the pedal board is reigned in, and these songs move forward to a melodic closure that is equally rewarding and provocative. The atmospheric calm gives way to calamities of distorted chord progressions layered with shattered crystals of clear-to -the bottom counter melodies. The North Wind‘s rhythms keep the purposefully-meandering chords in a tight framework, and threaten to take the songs to ever-greater heights. Simultaneously blissful and workman-like in its guitar craft, this EP rewards multiple listens and attention to its delicate movement and syrup-thick moments like the impressive closing track "She Said." – Stephen Shoup
October 25th at The Know with 1939 Ensemble
Weinland Celebrate the Release of “Los Processaur” at Mississippi Studios 10.26/10.27
Weinland‘s winding and wistful melodies, gracious harmonies, and minimal arrangements elicit a nostalgia for something you may not quite have experienced, but feels like a kaleidoscope passed from the collective unconscious. The vignettes are overexposed; smiles are present just long enough to fade. There’s no mondo cheer here, but these tracks make you feel ready and encouraged for healing from some doom sure to come; that kiss goodbye, or a driving straight off the cliff ahead–but only because you were distracted by the shape of a strange cloud in a clear sky. Their songs breathe and leave enough play between the songwriter-driven choruses for dashes of air organ, flawlessly-toned guitar, and keyboards that alternately laugh and drone. Transfixing and delicate, Weinland‘s songs sit down and remind you to "own up to what you’ve done." – Stephen Shoup
October 26th and 27th at Mississippi Studios
Bison, Bison Rock Plewsapalooza 10.27
If you’re like me and have a hole in your soul that can only be filled by a night of head-banging and hazy guitar fuzz, then Bison, Bison is the band you’ve been waiting for. These Portland head-bangers play the sort of blues-infused hard rock that’s been stirring otherwise placid crowds into moshing frenzies since the first time Sabbath took the stage. But they do so with a modern edge that evokes the effect-heavy, trance-inducing influence of stoner legends such as Sleep and Kyuss. Bison, Bison released their self-titled debut last August which is full of heavy guitar tones, volcanic drumming and psychedelic bass lines that provide a track for the bluesy vocals to drive their way through the sludgy riffs. Bison, Bison is playing at Plew’s Brews on Saturday, October 27th in honor of Nofest’s Plewsapalooza. Go and enjoy an entire day of rocking North Portland bands, just don’t be surprised when you wake up with a bangover on Sunday. – Benjamin Toledo
Boys Will Be Boys: The Autonomics Play Kelly’s Olympian 10.18
The Autonomics are an energetic youth rock trio from southern Oregon made up of the twin brothers Leikam, Evan on drums and Vaughn on bass, along with vocalist and guitarist Dan Pantemburg. As their name may suggest, The Autonomics have a primal, involuntary sound of banging beats and grinding guitars. There is some well placed feedback jerking about, and vocals that can climb from deep and smooth up to tweaking punk. A signal of dooming bass then pulses about to hold it all steady. It is like a controlled chaos of dark classic rock and happy jam band, contradictions which may explain why a song named "Yeah Slow Like That" might make one want to jump and dance around. There seem to be influences of the Strokes and Jack White, but with more angst and ’90s garage rock and cruder, comedic college boy themes like "Ur So Pretty, Let’s get Shitty". The track "Revolver" from the band’s 2010 release "Good Luck and Medicine" was recently released onto the soundtrack for dirt bike/action sports documentary Moto 3: The Movie. Trials Evolution after the show, anyone? – Brandy Crowe
October 18th with Tigress and Eidolons at Kelly’s Olympian
Log Across the Washer Play Valentines 10.8
Having seen Tyler Keene’s solo project, Log Across the Washer, only once, I can tell you this much:
Tyler is very polite in the way that he grabs your attention for the proceeding 45 minutes. His songs contain the kind of delicate vocal melodies that make you feel like you miss out on something special when you decide to go outside to tell your smoking friends to "come in and pay attention to this guy." He comforts you by playing deceivingly humble and wiry guitar lines. I say ‘deceiving’ because as soon as you think you know where the song is going, you realized that it has gently morphed into something slightly different, before disappearing and effortlessly segueing into the next song. Before you know it, 45 minutes have passed, and the man who started his set standing alone on stage is now vibing out with a drummer and saxophonist that seem to have come out of thin air. This description may be ridiculous, considering the fact that Log Across the Washer play straight-up songs with little to no frills, but it is important to articulate the fact that Tyler has the talent and the ability to make you listen very carefully. That being said, Log Across the Washer, Federer, and Capillary Action are playing a free show at Valentines, Oct 8, and trust me, it’s definetely worth your time. – Edgar Paleo
De La Warr Release New Music Video
There’s something about De La Warr that you can’t help but enjoy listening to. Formed in 2011, the group’s sound possesses the sort of musical maturity and synchronicity it takes some bands years to develop. De La Warr’s songs are full of powerful vocals, heavy rhythms and tastefully infectious lead lines that shape the sort of feel-good indie pop that could get anyone smiling. The band just released a music video to their single, "Like A Drum" which captures their playful style and energy in a visually and emotionally captivating way. It incites the feeling of excitement that precedes a water war with your friends on a hot summer day. Their next show is on October 19th at the Someday Lounge, prepare for a costume party of epic proportions. – Benjamin Toledo
The We Shared Milk Release “History of Voyager and Legend Tripping” at Mississippi Studios 9.22
If you’ve been at all involved in Portland’s music community over the past year then there’s a good chance you’ve come into contact with The We Shared Milk. The indie- garage trio’s fuzzed out tunes, explosive performances and relentless gigging has built them a momentum that’s taken them from playing house shows and dive bars to Musicfest Northwest. Now with a new release "History of Voyager & Legend Tripping" and a national tour to look forward to, their audience can only grow. The album is the next step in TWSM‘s musical progression, both in content and production quality. It captures their percussive energy and driving bass riffs with utmost clarity, yet maintains the hazy guitar effects and lo-fi vocals that define their style. The We Shared Milk is celebrating the release at Mississippi Studios on Saturday, September 22nd. Go and wish them luck before they leave to share their milky music with the rest of the country. Soon there will be no vegans left. -Benjamin Toledo