What A Fool Believes...
is that there’s no sun in Portland this spring.
May 14th, 2008
Alma Matters | A tale of two high-school fundraisers.0 comments
April 30th, 2008
Soul Man? | Colin Meloy tries his hand, er, voice at Sam Cooke.1 comment
April 16th, 2008
The Accidental Venue | Exit Only fills a void in Portland’s all-ages scene.1 comment
March 26th, 2008
Dinosaur Schminosaur | How OPB Radio Is Rollin’ With The New.0 comments
March 19th, 2008
Bizzare Love Triangle | Oh, you’re so awesome, Jens; as are you, Bon Iver.0 comments
March 12th, 2008
Simon Don’t Say | Portland Teen Idol is keeping it real, dog.0 comments
February 27th, 2008
He’s So Excited | Badman Recording Co.’s Dylan Magierek is officially a Portlander. And with a new local release and a just-signed hot-shit band on his roster, he just can’t hide it.0 comments
February 20th, 2008
Songs in the Key of Life | Nick Jaina spins a universal yarn with his latest.0 comments
February 13th, 2008
Rumor Has It | Discovering the joy of karaoke, private-style.0 comments
February 6th, 2008
He Said, We Said | Two sides to the rock-’n’-roll parenting story.5 comments
![]() LOGGINS, LIGHT OF THE WORLD: Kenny lends his tunes to East End’s “Boat Drinks.” |
[April 2nd, 2008]
The late ’70s and early ’80s were extravagant times: The economy was booming; high-style party drugs like cocaine were in vogue; hair was big and bodified, and beards followed suit. The music? Well, the music was smooth.
And what smoother—or more indicative of excessive wealth—than sailing? Enter posthumously named musical genre “yacht rock.” The tag, placed on island-inspired soft-rock tunes released by artists such as Christopher Cross, the Doobie Brothers, Kenny Loggins, Michael McDonald, Steely Dan and Jimmy Buffett between the years of 1976 and 1984, yacht rock has made a resurgence in recent years. And East End co-owner Tony Mengis is all over it. In March, East End hosted the first “Boat Drinks,” an event dedicated to the aesthetic. “People for sure have a place in their hearts for it,” he says. “[They] were singing along every word.”
Mengis, who plays bass in local power-pop troupe the Soda Pop Kids, says he and Matt Hollywood (fellow Boat Drinks DJ and Brian Jonestown Massacre/The Out Crowd guitarist) found inspiration in Oregon’s dreary winters: “It was the dead of winter... and we just needed a party.” Aptly, tunes like “Sailing” (you know, “Takes me away/ To where I’ve al-ways/ Heard it could be”) evoke easy, breezy times spent sipping cocktails poolside. “I went to some estate sales and got fully brown and orange ’70s pool chairs and chaise longues,” says Mengis of the last Boat Drinks. “Girls were sunbathing with blended margaritas and stuff!” Casting the era in a glamorous (if comical) glow, he invites attendees to step into a spray-on tanning booth, and the 20 best-dressed guests win a chance to perform “yacht rock karaoke.” He expects song choices to fall in line: “You can’t just bust out some Heart,” he warns.
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Though Mengis—who prefers to be called “Malibu Tony” when discussing yacht rock—chuckles heartily through our conversation, he says yacht rock holds a special place in Matt Hollywood’s heart. “He’s from Santa Barbara,” says Mengis, “so he used to see Michael McDonald all the time, just at the grocery store, walking the dog and stuff.” And cheesy as the genre often is, he says people are “really dedicated” to it. “There’s message boards, people arguing about what is yacht rock and what isn’t.” He readily drops sub-genres: black yacht rock and what he calls “random smoothness.”
Even ultra-hip Portland artists like Grails’ William Slater and members of Federale and BJM signed on as live tribute band Sundance and Sweet Freedom—who played the March edition and who Mengis says will be back in May. “They can’t be held down, man. They’re yacht-rockers.” In the meantime, we presume, they’ll be sailing away...setting an open course for the virgin sea.









