November 18th, 2009
Clublist Spotlight • A Better ’Stache0 comments
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CD Reviews: MarchFourth Marching Band, Curious Hands0 comments
November 18th, 2009
Meth Teeth Sunday, Nov. 22 | Making the best of this bummer called life.0 comments
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Primer: Girls0 comments
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Sparkle And Fade | The rise and fall of Everclear and The Cherry Poppin’ Daddies.0 comments
November 11th, 2009
CD Review: The Dimes | The King Can Drink the Harbor Dry (Pet Marmoset Records)2 comments
November 11th, 2009
Finn Riggins, Friday, Nov. 13 | Finn Riggins ditched the big yellow bus, but it’s not about to ditch its home state of Idaho.0 comments
November 11th, 2009
Kelly Blair Bauman Monday, Nov. 16 | Kelly Blair Bauman sees Portland burning, and he’s got the midlife-crisis folk to soundtrack the destruction.0 comments
November 11th, 2009
Primer: Saul Williams0 comments
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Living The Dream | Portland’s Dirtnap Records just stumbled into its 10th year.2 comments
![]() Stirring Her Brew: Valet mixes up a welcome pysch-noise potion ripe with the sounds of Spring IMAGE: rhys balmer |
[March 5th, 2008]
[AMBIENT PSYCH] Certain albums just seem to have a knack for dropping during the right season. Take the Sea and Cake’s records, for example: They’re always sure to come out just in time for mellow backyard barbecues. (I mean, where else does one hear the Sea and Cake?)
This previous winter was kept on ice thanks to ultra-cold records by Burial and the Wu-Tang Clan, to name a few. Here in Portland, pre-spring is most definitely being ushered in by Valet’s latest long-player, Naked Acid. Valet, a.k.a. Honey Owens—most notably of Jackie-O Motherfucker’s interchangeable cast, as well as Nudge and Dark Yoga, among others—crafts tunes that are much like fierce saplings struggling to break through layers of brittle frost. Icy keyboards and jittery electronics spray out across the soundscape, only to be penetrated and softened by some of the most melted-down fuzzed-out guitar either side of the Willamette.
Likewise, Owens’ dripping vocals wow and flutter throughout, illuminating everything like an unexpected flame inside a chilly, abandoned goldmine. On “Kehaar,” she sings unintelligibly of oceans and the future, bringing to mind the ethereal hushed crooning of early Slowdive, as well as more recent psych-blues outfit Brightblack Morning Light. It’s all clearly the work of one quite strange and totally free mind, as Owens plays near-everything on the record and recorded it in her own home. But there are other fingerprints to be found here: Local folk-weirdo Adrian Orange (Thanksgiving) lends his warbled vocals to galactic duet/space-jam “We Went There” (and believe me, they did), while Silentist drummer Mark Evan Burden contributes muffled beats that hack their way through the record’s most tangled psych-forests.
In fact, everything about Naked Acid makes for one strange (and strong) local brew, including cover art by Maria Dixon. If you tire of closing your eyes and being transported to somewhere distant and totally freaky, Dixon’s painting—complete with rock formations and a Siamese cat—provides apt drift-the-fuck-off material. People are always saying “keep Portland weird,” but let’s be clear—if the whole town got this weird, it’s doubtful any of us would make it to work tomorrow, or the next day, or ever again.
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