music art film review - REDEFINE magazine
Up-And-Coming Portland Musicians: Holocene’s 2013 Year-End Bands To Watch

SEE ALL POSTS RELATED TO: PORTLAND MUSICIANS + HOLOCENE PORTLAND
Aan __ www.facebook.com/weareaan

Phone Call www.facebook.com/phonecallsound

Natasha Kmeto __ www.natashakmeto.com/
Natasha Kmeto is a total badass. Unpoetic I know, but nonetheless the most satisfying descriptor for this futuristic soul diva. She's an expert at working a crowd, and as a solo performer relying on electronics, this is especially impressive. As a producer, her adventurous bass music is powerful and entrancing, while her vocal delivery is more captivating still. Her unabashed reflections on the vicissitudes of love and the trials of artistic ambition are belted out with incredibly authentic emotion, lending her music an immortal quality of spiritual resonance. - GINA ALTAMURA ++ SEE: ALL POSTS RELATED TO NATASHA KMETO + NATASHA KMETO INTERVIEWGrammies __ grammies.bandcamp.com
Earning respect from both pop and experimental audiences (like Portland's luminous Creative Music Guild), Grammies are here to scoff at your genres and blow your minds -- an engaging confluence of jazz, hip-hop, R&B, and noise, expertly composed by a duo managing to sound absolutely maximal. Dan Sutherland brings the beats, and Noah Bernstein (a former touring member of tUnE-yArDs and current saxophonist for pop-R&B outfit Shy Girls) plays effect-heavy sax. One of my most treasured moments from the past year at Holocene was Grammies' performance as part of our live film score series, Fin de Cinema; they did a highly imaginative score to a portion of Baz Luhrmann's Romeo + Juliet, including a deconstructed take on Ginuwine's "Differences" during Leo and Claire's steamiest scene. Oh the joy! - GINA ALTAMURAMagic Mouth __ www.magicmouth.net
Magic Mouth are a Rhythm & Blues group for the 21st century, incorporating elements of funk, Southern gospel, disco and swampy punk. Lead singer Chanticleer Tru has a voice that will stop you in your tracks, and brings a fierce theatricality to the band's criminally fun live sets. Having already shared the stage in their young tenure with the likes of The Gossip, SSION, and JD Samson & Men, Magic Mouth's signature sound -- already a welcome anomaly in Portland -- is sure to continue dazzling audiences nationwide. - GINA ALTAMURALike A Villain __ www.facebook.com/likeavillain
Holland Andrews already cut her teeth singing for the irrepressible energy of Portland’s own AU, but her powerful voice has sprouted a project of her own under the moniker Like A Villian. Not afraid to challenge the ear with a little dissonance and demanding drama, it’s as if Sarah Vaughn started hanging out with Diamanda Galas, and then maybe Björk suddenly shows up with a clarinet in hand, employing vocal loops to create tapestries that are by turns divine and jarring. Building an entire universe of her voice, it’s as if we’re getting a sound collage of each person or personality trait that exists in Holland, so what we get is a complex creature, capable of sounding sweet, then menacing, then strange, and then it comes hurtling back from those outer reaches to soothe you again. - VAN PHAMAntecessor __ www.facebook.com/pages/Antecessor/264102590284766
The perfect soundtrackers to your fantasy film or technicolor RPG for the console that hasn't been invented yet (or maybe the greatest one of all - your imagination?), the two synth wizards of Antecessor have yet to play some bigger shows to my knowledge, but they’re great stage setters for the nouveau New Age set. Electronic fans that are tired of laptop players (not trying to hate) can breathe a sigh of relief to see some more gear heads on the block, and they handle themselves well mining the music that lives somewhere in the territory of inner-mind tunnel visions. Soaring swells and tingle-inducing filter sweeps are present in spades between the twosome who evoke Tangerine Dream, Suzanne Ciani, and Jean-Michel Jarre. - VAN PHAMVikesh Kapoor __ www.vikeshkapoor.com
Vikesh Kapoor writes story songs in the vein of very early Dylan. They are politically charged, poetry-laden ballads of the working class -- a bold thing to attempt in 2013. Yet somehow Vikesh's talent and absolute care and sensitivity as a lyricist helps him to transcend pure nostalgia. His songs feel timeless, and his gravelly voice is that of an old soul - a young man with an enormous heart and an impassioned desire for justice. It's a moving experience to sit with his debut record, The Ballad of Willy Robbins, out on Portland's top-notch folk label Mama Bird Recording Co. Oh, and did I mention that Kapoor is quite possibly the best young fingerpicking guitarist in the city? - GINA ALTAMURAWL __ www.facebook.com/WLLWLL
This trio came rolling out like a steady fog on a gray coast, bearing full bore shoegaze and grungy rock that hearkens to the various facets of some of these genres’ greats — a sidewinding Pacific Northwestern take on the driving grit of Sonic Youth, and the syrupy, lackadaisical trip of Slowdive, and at times, they give the illusion of the largesse of My Bloody Valentine. Fuzzed out guitar and bass suffuse the songs with hazy atmospherics, a perfect bed for Misty Mary’s dreamy vocals. Drummer Stevie Sparks is the engine of the operation, motivating their songs with a forward momentum that makes their songs surprisingly succinct and snappy, despite their starry-eyed quality. Few frills and relative simplicity is this band’s major appeal - solid, sway-ready rock songs with a lived-in warmth (despite the band’s young life) seem dialed, and poised for greater things. - VAN PHAMSama Dams __ www.sama-dams.com
This exquisite experimental pop group have one of the most compelling live shows in Portland right now. They exhibit a carefully honed pop songcraft wedded with just the right amount of anxiety-addled noise to keep any rock audience firmly at their command. The work of Dave Longstreth is an easy soundalike -- easy due to frontman Sam Adams' frenetic vocalizing -- but when I compare them to my beloved Dirty Projectors, it's with a different shared quality in focus. It's in Sam's quieter moments approaching lullabies, his wife Lisa Adams' sparkly Rhodes sounds... the moments akin to vintage Disney film-music coming from a half-busted turntable, to haunting effect. - GINA ALTAMURARelated Post: Up-And-Coming Seattle Musicians: Cairo’s 2014 Bands To Watch

music art film review - REDEFINE magazine
Up-And-Coming Portland Musicians: Holocene’s 2013 Year-End Bands To Watch