Showing posts with label Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Festival. Show all posts

Pickathon 2016 - The world's BEST music Festival



I have previously put forth the hypothesis that Pickathon (in its current state) may be the perfect music festival: perfect size (3,500 festival-goers), great line-up vs size, perfectly accessible and yet it feels like it could be a big festival, perfect balance of family-friendly vs escape-from-reality festival. Very well thought-out and well planned. Excellent food and beer choices, at reasonable prices. And the list of how they are doing this right, goes on and on. Having returned this year for Pickathon 2016, I feel more confident that this festival may just be the perfect festival.

Again the food was awesome, supplied by Portland’s excellent array of restaurants and food-trucks. The beer gardens are each supplied by a local brewery, offering a variety of delicious microbrews, which differ at each stage to keep your taste-buds stimulated, to match your other sensory inputs.

The festival has upped-their-game on these lanterns that light the path into the woods. I loved the prior iteration of these, but this year’s were absolutely stunning. I seriously want to high-five whoever designed these, because they are incredible.


Here is a video of the lanterns being amazing, to a soundtrack of a live version of Wolf Parade's great song, Dinner Bells. There is no visual trickery here, just an awesome LED lantern being awesome, and my shaky camera-work (sorry for the shaky video).



Dramatic Skies over Pickathon
The 2016 Bands

This band is a major throw-back nostalgic band for me, and has been on my to-see list for a decade since their Apologies to the Queen Mary album.They have been on an "indefinite hiatus" for the last 5 years, shattering my hopes of seeing them. But Bam! They kicked-off their new tour at Pickathon!  Their inclusion on the line-up sealed the deal for my ticket purchase. 

Their 1st show on the main stage focused mainly on their new material which has promise, (as it sounds just like the old-stuff!), just not as familiar to me. I look forward to delving further into the new album. But during that 1st show I was worried that they wouldn’t be hitting all the tracks that I so desperately needed to hear. Someone shouted-out the title of one of the hits, to which Dan Boeckner responded  “We’ll be playing that one tomorrow!” and I knew juuust where I would be on the next night.


Their show at the Woods Stage was awesome. I caught the show from the back to take advantage of the nighttime visual appeal of the Woods Stage. It was a cool show. I was in just the right vibe, and they delivered all the favorites, fulfilling my needs.


I was also stoked to see Beach House, a long-time favorite of mine. They did their standard mysterious dimly-lit, wet-blanket stage-presence, but I didn’t expect anything else, and wouldn’t know what to do if they did do anything more energetic. They also hit many of the hit tracks and it was a very enjoyable show for patiently awaiting all of the little perfect nuances that make-up their hauntingly beautiful music.


While I never have gotten into Wilco (for no reason in particular), I did recognize a few Wilco songs, and it was a good set. The setting: chillin on the grass with a view of Mt. Hood in the background; looking nearly too picture-perfect to be believable. Good vibes in the grass.

This set seemed very lack-luster. It was his last set of the festival, and maybe he was worn-out from partying, but I thought this set was kinda tame. It was nice to hear some of my old favorites, as well as some of the new tunes I like.


This is another band that I sadly have never gotten into, mainly because of their massive discography spanning … what … a century? But this show was also enjoyable, and there were several songs that sounded like they should be some of my favorite songs, and I just don’t yet know it (?). Good tunes and good vibes. I was talking with some of our crew at the show, and they confirmed that they need to delve into the Yo La Tengo catalogue atleast annually to fulfill a mental quota. As far as musical critiques go, that’s a pretty damn good one. Depressingly, that still does not help me find a launching-point into their daunting discography.


I don't recall. but here is a picture.


After a recommendation from a friend to check this band out, I studied-up and found it to my liking, so I was excited to catch this band. Their 1st set was 45 minutes late, due to a thorough sound-check. They sounded great after all that, but only played 4 songs, so that was a huge let down. But my prep paid-off in grooving along to those 4 songs. I think I caught their later set, from the lawn outside the Galaxy Barn.


I only know this band by name, but I caught this set from the lawn outside the Galaxy Barn, and it was decent.

I caught 2 sets by this band, and while they were overall enjoyable, there is nothing that particularly stands out about this band to me, so I think I’ve met the capacity at which I have for them. What did stand out to me was the odd way he stands and holds his guitar, which kept cracking me up.


I am a big fan of Dan Deacon, having loved his Bromst album, but fallen out of touch as of late, mainly due to seeing him perform live a few times, which has been, in my experience, lack-luster and cripplingly awkward due to his annoying insistence on crowd-participation. Sooo, given that history, I timidly caught his first night-time show from outside the Galaxy Barn. Which to my surprise turned out to be really great!

Since the festival vibe at Pickathon is much more…. (how to put this…)  of an easy-going, participatory vibe, the antics worked, and worked incredibly well. At one point he started a high-five war, challenging everyone to see who could achieve the most high-fives during the song, which went ok inside the Barn for a bit. But outside, completely unbeknownst to Mr. Deacon himself, the high-fiving spiraled out of control into a wild torrent of high-fives that went on-and-on spreading like some kind of mania. I know that probably sounds lame to read, but it was wild to see in person.

He even managed to successfully pull-off some very difficult emotional pleas (Black Lives Matter) and many political rants (Healthcare, etc, and a funny rant about the Metric System) which bordered on over-the-top banter. That type of stuff is difficult to deliver without totally killing the vibe, but most of it went off without a hitch, to which I give props. (Although I would have preferred a dialed-down version.)
The apparent word-of-mouth about that 1st show, led to another high-participation successful show at the Woods Stage, which was also fun. Oh, and some of the new material sounds pretty good, so my interest in Dan Deacon has been restored!


I like the Small Town Heroes album by this band, so I was excited to see them. The set was good and the performance was good. Even made me feel emotional at one point during “The Body Electric”. But somehow I left after this show feeling like I am kinda over this band, and I don’t really know why. Didn’t expect that. haha!


I’ve been wanting to see this (previously-from) Seattle band for a while, and they delivered! Surf Rock is hard to not enjoy, but they really nailed it. Supported, of course, by the stunning visuals of the Treeline Stage’s lighting effects. A beautiful visual and auditory treat. Their latest release, Weirdo Shrine, is a great album.


Caught this set. She and her lyrics were dark, morbid, and comical at times. It was odd in a novel way, and surprising in the shock-factor. If her intention was to get people’s attention, it worked. (or maybe that is just the way she is?). Either way, I’ll be checking out this music some more, to try to understand what is going on here. haha.

I have since found her album Beyond The Bloodhounds to be an enthralling and impressive 1st album. Check it out! Seriously good.


I caught at least some of one of these sets, and I remember thinking it was alright, but it didn’t really make an impression either way, so I dunno what that really says.

Since this festival I have had the Singing Saw album on heavy rotation, and love it. I wish I had known this album prior to catching this show, b/c it would have changed everything.


I caught this late-night set, and thought it seemed really lame.


I caught this late-night set, and thought it sounded lame and more lame. This is not my type of music. I gave it a try and reaffirmed that I don’t need to give this band any more of my time.




An Aside About the The Feral Children of Pickathon

Another thing that I was marveling at this year is the absolutely fascinating co-existence of the festival-children along with the average festival-goer. This is a very family-friendly festival; the kind of festival that a previously unencumbered veteran festival-goer would frequent once they have spawned offspring; toting  the whole family along for a magical weekend of camping in the woods with thousands of weirdos. Therefore this festival has a fair share of dirt-covered feral children that litter the sides of the wooded trails, peddling wares, busking for change, and generally running completely wild. The entrepreneurial spirit of these kids is incredible. Someone should do a documentary on these kids and there money-making schemes. I don't mean any of this in a negative way. It is seriously fascinating. The level of freedom that the parents grant their children is astonishing and honestly refreshing. 

Most impressive is that those kids can coexist amongst thousands of other festival-goers who have a completely different experience, but who share a common goal: a childlike carefree appreciation for uninhibited fun. 

These two groups exist together seemingly uninhibited by one another. It's as if they exist on the same plane, but as if they are on different dimensions, which don't overlap. (the interaction of the parents and the kids is likely a different story).  

A festival weekend must be an amazing weekend for a kid, and it must really have a major impact on them. I imagine that once grown-up, festival children must look back and marvel at their naiveté about the goings-on around them during their childhood music festival attendance. haha.

The Hammock area at the Woods Stage

Another rave about the Treeline Stage Design

While 2014’s Treeline Stage was really cool, this year’s Treeline Stage was really aesthetically pleasing, especially when lit up with colorful kaleidoscopic lights. The structure was built of 1,280 2x4 pieces. Major props to this year’s Portland State University’s School of Architecture for designing such a brilliant structure and having the forethought to consider how the stage-lighting would mesh with the texture of the structure to make a beautifully visually-rewarding experience for my brain. Thanks! This rendering shows that they had thought the visual appeal through.


A  quote from PSU’s webpage about the project’s so-called “Diversion Architecture” design:

“Like its two eponymous predecessors, the structure will leave no trace once the festival is over, except in the memories of the attendees who will have the chance to experience its beauty. All its components will be re-purposed and reused, making minimal to no impact on the site or on the waste stream.”

Anyway, in summary, another great festival! The best festival!


TimBRRR! 2016



After a 1 year hiatus, I made it back to the 2016 Timbrrr!Music Festival in Leavenworth, WA on January 29th - 30th, 2016. (I can’t remember why I missed the 2015 festival).  It was another fun lil’ festival. We had a crew of 6 people this year, which was great, b/c there is a law of the universe that states:  the larger the festival-crew, the more exponentially fun the festival !

The winter-wonderland of Leavenworth. 
The accommodations
We got a KOA deluxe cabin that sleeps 6 people, and I thought it was perfect for our crew.  It was an upgrade from the basic cabin from 2 years ago (which was just bunk beds in a room). This deluxe model had all the amenities: kitchenette, bathroom, table, chairs, dishes, etc.  Cheap & effective.


The crew



The activities
There was actually snow on the ground this year, which was a nice change from the 1st annual 2014 Fest. We took a little sled and a tube and did some fairly lame sledding down a little bank. It was fun, but basically not worth the effort.  Matt and Jordan put the winter sports into this winter festival by going skiing on Saturday, while the rest of us nursed hangovers and made an epic journey to the Safeway that was a field of snow away from our KOA cabin.





In the main venue they had a green-screen, which I realized rendered my green shirt invisible! I had fun with that for a while.
 


The Music






I ended up catching this band, who I think has 50% songs I like, and 50% songs I hate. I think some of the songs have an interesting “sound”, but others are just annoying droning or rambling crap.

I thought the set was awkward b/c it seemed like the lead-singer was staring directly at me the whole time and it freaked me out!  It’s probably that he is just one of those performers who kinda looks at the same general area the whole time, and his music is overall depressing, so he naturally isn’t really put on much of stage presence, but it really seemed like he was glaring at me. I turned around to see if there was something behind me worth looking at, and people behind me asked if he was staring at them or me! To which we all had a good laugh.

I also had the realization that I cannot really relate to his music at all, which is mostly about drug-addiction. And while I like a few of the songs, I couldn’t help think how absurd it is that I even try to relate. And visa-versa: how weird it is for this character to perform to a bunch of people from a completely different history and place in life. He must think we are all so lame. So all that was running through my head during this set, which was lack-luster anyway. Thanks to KEXP, and other regional influences, including this and the related festivals, this guy has risen from complete obscurity and is doing ok in the music biz (oddly enough).

This band, fronted by my apparent doppelganger, is like mix of Bob Dylan and the Velvet Underground. The music is decent but I don’t know if I buy the whole act. I’m torn whether or not I appreciate the similarities between these bands or if I think they are too similar. Is it homage or rip-off? They have 1 song that is a very good Bob Dylan emulation.  This is the 2nd time I have seen this band, as I saw them at Doe Bay Fest 2015.

Fruit Bats

Who cares. I’m sick of this band playing every single festival. I believe this band had its day. That day is in the past.


I seem to remember this being ok. He got the crowd livened up when he decided to go into the giant inflatable snowglobe and perform a few songs in there, jumping around, etc. I’ve since seen this band’s name show up at various other places: Sasquatch 2016, SXSW 2016, and Bumbershoot 2016.

This local Seattle shoe-gaze band has a solid album which I have since listened to quite a bit. This set was good, and if you like shoe-gaze, this band is definitely worth looking into.

Portland band. I remember being slightly intrigued to see them, and overall disappointed by the set.

This local Seattle electro-pop band has some catchy tunes, and festival listening-prep had me excited to see this band. Their set was fun and I have since kept their very few available tunes in rotation. They have a song , Jamais Vu, about the Doe Bay Music festival which I think is cool and captures the vibe fairly well. It is a fun adventurous jaunt of someone trying to go get some water, but instead becomes lost in an intoxicating haze of the surrounding excitement. The thing about this band that I cannot stand, is my perception of the annoying wholesomeness of this band. Admittedly I know nothing of the people in this band, but based on their lyrics I picture them as the squarest, straight-edge, boring people on the planet. Like they were the house-band at a new-wave church and then released an EP. But several of those songs are catchy and fun.


The rest of the sets I either missed completely, or just wasn’t paying attention too.


And I’m happy to say that they have figured out the coat situation! They had a cumbersome coat check system on the 1st day (lines, lines, lines), and moved to just plain-ole coat racks on the 2nd day (Ding! Ding! Ding!: they finally got the system figured-out: simple free-for-all system. Yay!)

In Summary
Overall another good festival. A great winter festival! But the line-up wasn't as fun as TimBRRR! 2014.

Pickathon 2014


In the summer of 2014 we had the pleasure to join some Portland friends and go to an absolutely chill and awesome music festival located just outside of Portland, known as Pickathon. Now I know that it’s already too late, and you have assumed this is some kind of bluegrass festival, but back it up a second. I made that misjudgment as well, based on the name, and while it may have been something like that in its early years, it has matured into an amazing festival showcasing a range of music and pulling some excellent bands

While there isn't much out-there as far as coverage of Pickathon, (and certainly nothing of the caliber of this blog), here are few good articles about the festival: 
This interview gives a good overview of the festival vibe. 
This article discusses Pickathon and has coverage of the 2013 festival.
This 2014 line-up video has a good visual representation of the festival.




The Stages
The festival grounds are made up of a large camping area of trails meandering up into the forest, and the main venue area where most of the stages are located. The stages are quite unique and provide for interesting and different crowd experiences. Many of the stages provide for an incredibly intimate feel (especially for a festival).

The appropriately-named Woods Stage is nestled up in the forest within the camping area, and is a beautiful and visually awesome venue. Large enough for a big-name artist to play, but small enough for an intimate-feeling show. This stage is really cool.
The Barr Brothers playing the Woods Stage (from Pickathon 2012)  (I did not take this photo: photo by John Keel)

In a bit of genius, the Mt View and Fir Meadows Stages are placed right next to each other, and act as the main stage, allowing one act to setup while another plays right next to it, keeping the music flowing. Clever.
The main stages: Mt View and Fir Meadows

The Starlight Stage is located near the food trucks but also a bit too close to the main stage, so if the schedule has overlap, the sound does too.

There are 2 indoor venues inside barns on farm. The Galaxy Barn is small and intimate venue to see a band, if you are willing to brave the crowds and the heat. This barn could use a bit more ventilation, as it was unbearably hot and overpacked. But that is to be expected when you can see bands like The War on Drugs in such a tiny venue.


Here is an interesting short 8-minute documentary on the design and construction of the very cool Treeline Stage (of 2014)



The Food
Festival food is provided by a plethora of delicious Portland food trucks. All of which are incredible! Portland has awesome food trucks. And the food is not ridiculously overpriced, just regular food truck prices (so only a little overpriced).

Some hungry festival-goers at the food trucks,
but the only one you
need to know about is Pine State! (one of our favorite Portland eateries)
In a very successful campaign to curb waste/garbage, the festival uses only reusable custom-labeled festival-swag steel cups which you can purchase, or you can use your own reusable container. They also have a genius dish-trade system, in which you essentially buy access to dinner-ware, which you can drop off to be washed, in trade for a token. When you buy your next meal, you just trade the token for the dinner-ware. Then at the end of the festival you make the final trade of the token for a clean set to take home as festival swag! All of the dinner-ware is very nice, high quality, festival merch that you essentially rent, and then get to keep! And it saves literally tons of garage from being generated.  It is very convenient, simple, worthwhile, and easy movement to get behind. Seriously genius! 
2015 edition of the official Pickathon dinner-ware: Plate-bowl, fork-spoon, and Klean Kanteen® stainless steel cup.

Tess enjoying a Pine State Biscuit
The Festival 
The festival grounds are beautiful, secluded, and forested. You cannot beat camping in the woods, which is something that is unfortunately fairly rare to find at festivals.  This is the type/size festival that can still pull-off campfires within the venue grounds, which is cool and rare at festivals (campfires are restricted in the camping area). The festival is family and kid friendly. It even has a entire dedicated area for kids activities and entertainment. There is also a night-life feel to the festival in the evenings, but not as much of late-late-night vibe as many other much larger festivals. 

All of this is just like a 20-30 minute drive from Portland, making its proximity absurdly convenient for that city. The festival grounds are so beautiful and you feel so secluded from society that it could easily seem like you journeyed 5 hours to get there, but when Portlanders are done with the awesome weekend, they simply pack-up, and are back home in 20 mins! Absurd.  I don’t know of any other outdoor camping festival that is that easy/convenient to any city.

The Music
The lineup of the 2014 festival was pretty solid. Here is what I remember seeing. (I'm sure there were others, that I have forgotten.)

[This blog-post was written long after the festival, so I’m sorry to say that I don’t really remember too much about the music. Here is what I do recall.]

The War on Drugs
They put on 2 excellent sets. I caught the Woods Stage set, which was an awesome venue to see them. Their performance, their music, and the venue were far better than the lack-luster performance on the normal stage in the middle of the day at Sasquatch 2012). I then watched the Galaxy Barn set on the screens from outside, which was also very enjoyable. This band, and their new album are such good-listening.
The War on Drugs
Mac DeMarco 
I caught the Woods Stage set, and it was a good show. You could tell that Mac was having a good time. He did some crowd surfing which got the crowd excited.

Foxygen
I was so excited about this band, given how awesome their 1st album was, but their performances were so crappy. They were washed-up, cheesy, awkward, and just pathetic. They had 3 backup singers which was cool, but their shows were just disappointing. A friend of mine, who also caught one of their shows at another unrelated venue had a similar take on their performance, maybe that is just the way the way it is.

Those Darlins
I love this band, but this show was fairly disappointing. I guess they were focusing on a new album, because I didn’t recognize the songs. Towards the end they played “Red Light Love”, and it turned into a full out dance-off. Apparently I wasn't the only one waiting to hear the old stuff. They were very much the people I expected/wanted them to be.


Those Darlins looking the part: all trashy and sexy.
(Note in this picture everyone is sitting down, and calmly enjoying the tunes.)
The end of the Those Darlins set. 
Now note that here everyone is on their feet, dancing a jig. 
This is when they played “Red Light Love”.
Destroyer (solo)
I caught this very intimate set on the very small Treeline Stage and it was enjoyable. I don’t know a lot about Destroyer’s solo music, but he was pulling out the deep-cuts, according to what he was saying.
Destroyer ... (Destroying it.)
The Sadies
I caught most of their Galaxy Barn performance on the screens from outside, hanging out in the grass, enjoying the scenery, and I recall that their overall stage-presence, outfit aesthetic and sound was enjoyable.

Nickel Creek
Tess knew and loved this band in days past. I have no knowledge of them. But I recall that this show was good, and they seem talented.
Our view (or lack-there-of) of Nickel Creek
Quilt
I remember this being enjoyable enough to try to remember to look them up further.



Leroy Thomas & The Zydeco Roadrunners
Leroy Thomas & The Zydeco Roadrunners
Festival-goers at the Woods Stage
Random life-size elephant statue on the grounds
I LOVE these awesome things hanging in the trees, illuminating the pathway into the woods. 
SO cool.



Festival-goers at the Main Stage(s)
Summary
This is an awesome festival, in a beautiful setting, super-conveniently located to an awesome fun city. It pulls excellent bands, and it is ever-growing into the prime festival, drawing better and better line-ups. It is not (yet) too big or too crowded. It is accessible, relaxed, and fun. The mentality and the vibe of the festival-organizers and festival-goers is just right. It may be damn near the perfect festival.
I am a fan of art installations at music festivals. 
you cannot have enough!