Tuesday, February 14

Live Review: Wax Fingers at Doug Fir Lounge, Feb. 9

Music Watching Wax Fingers set up shop is a little like watching a seasoned specialist diffuse a bomb. The... More

Feb 14, 2012 03:42 pm by MARK STOCK  | Comments 0
 

Portland Hip-Hop is Having a Big Month

Music A handful of items of note from the local hip-hop world, in case you, like me, are bad at Twitter. S... More

Feb 14, 2012 03:35 pm by CASEY JARMAN  | Comments 0
 

PDX Charts

Top Selling Albums in Portland for Feb. 6-Feb. 12

Music What were you listening to last week, Portland? Here are the top selling albums from local record st... More

Feb 14, 2012 03:00 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 0
 

Cut of the Day: The Ghost Ease, "Being Born"

Music  Considering how much information pours out of a musician or a band via their Twitter, Facebook... More

Feb 14, 2012 09:16 am by ROBERT HAM  | Comments 0
 
TOUR DIARY

Loch Lomond Tour Diary: Hearts on Fire (Big Sur/San Francisco)

Music This is the final installment of the Loch Lomond tour diary (going up a bit late). We'd like to than... More

Oct 10, 2011 10:40 am by Loch Lomond  | Comments 1
 

Loch Lomond: Bathroom Sipping is Not a Crime (Santa Barbara/Visalia)

Music Almost everything is bigger in California. We pulled into Santa Barbara to play the Mercury Lounge. ... More

Oct 3, 2011 04:30 pm by Loch Lomond  | Comments 1
 

Nurses: Martial Arts and Drug Dogs

Music This is the first entry in Nurses' tour diary. We are super-stoked to have them, no matter how brief... More

Oct 3, 2011 04:10 pm by Nurses  | Comments 0
 

Loch Lomond: Trampolines and Tecate (Long Beach/LA)

Music Leaving our beach day respite in Santa Cruz was difficult, but we managed to pull ourselves away, re... More

Sep 28, 2011 01:00 pm by Maggie Summers  | Comments 0
 
 
 
Home · Articles · Music · Music Stories · The Taxpayers, Thursday, Jan. 22
January 21st, 2009 MICHAEL MANNHEIMER | Music Stories
 

The Taxpayers, Thursday, Jan. 22

Portland punks playing sing-alongs for a better tomorrow.

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IMAGE: pc-pdx.com

[DO IT YOURSELF] Two years ago, Rob Taxpayer decided he wanted to play a gig. His house, a converted meth refuge in St. Johns affectionately called “the slime house,” was hosting a benefit concert for Food Not Bombs. “There was no punk band on the bill,” he says, talking over 2005’s Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire in his current North Portland crib. “So we put a band together.”

That band, since dubbed the Taxpayers, has gained a loyal following of supporters, many underage, who sing along to nearly every song at Taxpayer shows. All three members—singer/guitarist Rob, drummer Noah, and bassist Nate, all in their mid-20s—adopt “Taxpayer” as a last name to keep them anonymous, and the band’s name is vague enough that they can support myriad causes.

“Our goal is to use the music itself as a vehicle for something more important than music,” Rob says from the home he shares with his girlfriend and two rabbits, Whizbang and Inky. “Ultimately, we want to be sticking our fingers in a bunch of different pots—helping out with gay rights, with bike rights—we didn’t want the name to negatively affect who we want to be working with.”

The Taxpayers’ sound is nearly as eclectic as its range of causes. Heavily influenced by the Minutemen and DIY hero Ian MacKaye (Minor Threat, Fugazi) the band jumps from herky-jerky Against Me!-style acoustic guitar jams to more traditional thrashy pop-punk and countrified narratives about stealing apples from the Man. Rob speaks with the same gravelly voice that he sings in, and it’s tough to tell if he just has a nagging cold or has lost a permanent part of his vocal range from yelling so much.

Bracing for the debut of the band’s second record, A Rhythm in the Cages, the Taxpayers are playing unorthodox shows that preach the ideas of community and selflessness—including a local release show at the Sexual Minority Youth Resource Center and a trip to Minnesota to play multiple shows around a bicycle race.

“I’ve met people at shows who’ve taught me how to screenprint, how to cook, how to garden,” says Noah. “It’s a much more rich culture when you’re championing all these different things and having that be a part of the culture and community. It’s not just about bands.”


SEE IT: The Taxpayers play Thursday, Jan. 22, at Dunes (9 pm. $1. 21+) and Friday, Jan. 23, at SMYRC (7 pm. Free. 23 and under).
 
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