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Alternative
Spaces
Strange
music in unusual places
BY
BRETT CAMPBELL
 |
| Justice
Yeldham |
For a town its size, Eugene is blessed with
more than its share of exceptional performing arts spaces —
the UO, the Hult, the Shedd, McDonald, WOW Hall, etc. — that
provide stages for top- and mid-level touring musicians. But a truly
rich urban arts culture also needs alternative outlets for the offbeat,
the avant garde, the up and coming artists that can provide the
element the big names can't: surprise. A good percentage of the
pathbreaking art created in America's art capital, New York, spawned
not at Carnegie Hall or Lincoln Center but rather in low-rent downtown
lofts, art galleries and other alternative spaces.
Here, alternative performance venues are springing
up in our once-desolate downtown. Following last month's atmospheric
performance by DJ Cheb I Sabbah and singer Riffat Sultana, this
Friday, March 21, Fenario Gallery hosts a psychedelic equinox celebration
with SuperTrout (ex-Prankster John Swan, Joe Croce and various
other notable Eugene rock musicians), enhanced by a light show.
Let's hope these Fenarions become regular events.
On March 27, our prime instigator of downtown audiovisual
adventure, DIVA art center, hosts Australia's Justice Yeldham,
who brings new meaning to the term "glass artist" by miking and
amplifying sheets of glass, pressing them against his face, and
using vocal and trumpet-playing techniques to create unearthly,
often harrowing sounds. He's performed from Beirut to Bilbao to
Zurich, but his (literally) shattering shows aren't for the squeamish.
The next night, March 28, DIVA hosts Rooted,
a compelling collaboration between the UO's Douglas Detrick and
prizewinning Wisconsin performance artist/poet Kelly Shaw Willman,
who's worked with musicians such as avant violin virtuoso Daniel
Bernard Roumain. Detrick, a promising jazz-inspired trumpeter, composer
and electronic musician, looks to be one of the next stars to emerge
from the university, following his mentor, Brian McWhorter. His
multimedia collaborations with Willman have included "iconographic
tokens" such as snakes, apples, sequins and video/installation art
combining his music and her performed poetry.
Speaking of exploratory jazz-based music, still
another indispensable alternative downtown space, the Jazz Station,
hosts pedal steel phenom Dave Easley on March 25. Like Béla
Fleck and Jerry Douglas, the New Orleans-based Easley takes an instrument
previously associated with country music into new territory. He's
worked with jazzers such as Brian Blade, Kenny Garrett and Dave
Liebman as well as Daniel Lanois (whose haunting style suits his
songs), Dr. John and many others. Still another downtown spot, Bel
Ami restaurant, is now offering free live music at Midtown Marketplace,
with upcoming shows including such fine local musicians as Tim
McLaughlin, Craig Einhorn and Sun Bossa playing
this month.
Another unusual and intimate venue, Harmony Roadhouse
Music Studios at 25th & Willamette, hosts a highly recommended
world music show featuring award-winning Kolkata sitar master Neeraj
Prem performing ragas with Seattle's Brandon McIntosh
on sarod and Eugene's Josh Humphrey on tablas. This is a
must-see concert for fans of Indian music and an excellent introduction
for newbies to some of the world's most mesmerizing music. And on
March 23, still another attractive world music concert happens at
Far Horizons School at 29th & Hilyard, when Eliyahu &
Qadim perform Middle Eastern music for oud and saz (lutes),
kemanche (fiddle), tablas and other percussion, ney (reed flute),
bansuri (bamboo flute) and vocals. The Bay Area based ensemble incorporates
musicians from Arabic, Indian, Jewish, Iranian and other Middle
Eastern traditions — a welcome antidote to the region's political
conflicts.
With homegrown, low-budget alternative venues like
these attracting music fans to the central city to experience such
fascinating, unusual sounds, imagine what could happen with a fraction
of the assistance offered the out-of-towners in last year's collapsed
developer-driven (and taxpayer subsidized) downtown makeover. These
locally grown entrepreneurs are revitalizing downtown from the grassroots.
Of course, there's plenty of fine sonic fare at
our usual downtown stages. This Thursday, March 20, the Shedd offers
the fourth appearance of the always delightful Celtic music duo,
fiddler Alasair Fraser and cellist Natalie Haas. No
one plays traditional Scottish fiddle more beautifully or engagingly.
On March 22, the Hult Center hosts the 20-member ensemble Perú
Negro, whose irresistible blend of music and dance, African
and Andean sounds draws on slave protest songs and more celebratory
music. Fueled by various African and South American percussion instruments
(including a drum made from a packing crate) and guitars, the colorfully
clad dancers make an exhilarating spectacle. You can do your own
dancing to south of the border sounds at Cozmic Pizza when Grupo
Picante plays live salsa on March 27 and Los Cumbiamberos
perform Columbian cumbias on March 28.
On March 23, Sam Bond's hosts Boston's bluegrass/old-time
string band Joy Kills Sorrow, whose banjo-fiddle-mandolin-guitar-bass
lineup does just that, with regular Seattle visitors Hot Club
Sandwich opening with their gypsy swing. The garage brings the
wild, danceable Eastern European sounds of the Bay Area-based Balkan
brass band Brass Menazeri on March 28, with our own electronic
jazz funksters Eleven Eyes opening. And at the UO's Beall
Concert Hall, the wife-husband, piano-violin Cleveland Duo
joins saxophone master James Umble to play an alluring program
of new and 20th century music by Ravel, Bartók and several
contemporary composers, including the John Adams who's not the subject
of a cable TV miniseries.
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