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Let
the Ghoul Times Roll
Halloween
week all dressed up
BY
ADRIENNE VAN DER VALK
There's nothing scarier than being all dressed up
and having no place to go. Luckily, folks in this town recognize
Halloween as the oh-so-worthy holiday that it is and, as usual,
are giving it the treatment it deserves by brewing up a smorgasbord
of spooktacular shows to get our fancifully bedecked asses out and
shaking.
There really couldn't be a better way to set the
tone for All Hallows Eve than Mood Area
52's live soundtrack for the classic Nosferatu,
which fills the notably haunted halls of the Bijou at midnight on
Friday, Oct. 26 ($5; see page 49 for more on the Bijou's Halloween
weekend). If old-timey undead guys aren't your scene, John Henry's
has got Hip Hop Halloween featuring a staggering run-down of artists
including Animal Farm,
COR-One and A
Sol (10 pm, $4, 21+). Saturday the 27th,
JH's swaps baggy pants for leg warmers with the '80s cover band
M80, shaking
it all the way back to a time when synthesizers weren't considered
ironic (10 pm, $4, 21+). If you just don't know what you want to
be this year, check out the not-long-for-this-town Ray
Charles Manson Family Feud. They're bringing
their collective multiple personality disorder to McShane's on the
27th and can really bring down the house with their rock 'n' roll
version of "Mama Said Knock You Out" (9 pm, $3-$5, 21+).
Fast forward a few days to the actual day of reckoning
and prepare yourself for the horrifying reality of having to choose
between Eleven Eyes
at Sam Bond's (9 pm, $5, 21+) or Architecture
in Helsinki with Jason
Webley Quintet at the WOW Hall (9 pm,
$15 adv., $17 door, all ages). Remember what I said about synthesizers
being ironic? I take it all back after watching A in H's awesome
video for "Do the Whirlwind" on YouTube. This Australian pop outfit
will make you want to dress up like an old-school Atari character
and live in simpler, pixilated and primary-colored times. How they
got matched up with the madcap Mr. Webley is a mystery, but a pretty
rad one considering they're both acts likely to get a crowd whipped
into a serious frenzy. A few blocks north the frighteningly festive
Sam Bond's will host Eugene's favorite jazz band. They will not
only creep you out with their unique brand of fusion-y phantasm,
but they might just give you a prize for costumed awesomeness.
Two final shows to debate as you dab fake blood
on your body part of choice: C-Rayz Walz
with Marv Ellis
and Freak Funk
featuring Lafa Taylor
will inject the Indigo District with a double dose of hip hop on
the 31st; an all-ages show starts at 6:30 pm ($10, under 7 free)
and late-night for the older folks kicks off at 11 pm ($15, $10
with costume). More traditional followers of the darkness may prefer
Mistress of Reality
and their super sexy tribute to Black Sabbath at Diablo's Downtown
Lounge (with the Wayne Gacy Trio, 10 pm, $15 adv., $20 door). Diablo's
is just naturally scary, with its flaming walls, penchant for hosting
the leather-clad and a serious history of Halloween debauchery.
If years past are any indication, these Mistress chicks are probably
not messing around … and don't you forget it!
To make Halloween the freakiest, feistiest and most
fantastic it can be, this holiday needs (and deserves!) a week-long
build up and special attention to planning of both schedule
and outerwear. With so many rockin' parties to choose from (far
more than there's room for here), you can stop worrying about how
to have fun and start coming up with something a whole lot more
original than being a lame-ass hobo or predictably naughty nurse.
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