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TOUR DIARY

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Home · Articles · Music · Music Stories · RiverCity Bluegrass Festival Friday-Sunday, Jan. 4-6
January 2nd, 2008 CASEY JARMAN | Music Stories
 

RiverCity Bluegrass Festival Friday-Sunday, Jan. 4-6

A group of recent departees and one PDX newcomer spice up RiverCity.

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Head For The Hills: Recent PDX-to-Colorado transplants TAARKA return for a bit o’ bluegrass.

[BLUEGRASS, ETC.] Now in its fourth year, the RiverCity Bluegrass Festival bills itself as the area’s “largest and most significant” music event. While Musicfest NW organizers might take issue with that description, the bluegrass fest does reside on two stages at the gargantuan Convention Center, and it’s headlined this year by national names such as hitmaker and hair legend Marty Stuart and longtime Jerry Garcia collaborator David Grisman. But there’s more to be heard here than just gitbox picking and strained harmonies. Two new releases—from gypsy-jazz Portland expats TAARKA and new Portland fiddler Darol Anger—make that loud and clear.

TAARKA, fueled by husband-wife duo David Tiller and Enion Pelta-Tiller, left Portland because, as Enion puts it, “The winters were too dark and wet.” And the couple—which produces much of the band’s string-heavy sound on The Martian Picture Soundtrack—makes music more geographically suited to its new home at the foot of the Rocky Mountains than Portland’s dreary waterfront. “Tu Tu Tango,” driven by a roaming gypsy violin and tight, frenetic bass, could well serve as the opening theme to an upper-crust BBC drama. In contrast, “50 Miles” features sparse and calming cello, hand-drums and lyrics that, though shrouded in mystery, hint at a feeling of freedom. So long as one isn’t bothered by the Alberta neighborhood-style funkiness of The Martian Picture Soundtrack (and if you’re considering going to a bluegrass festival, you ought not be), the group is a joy. And TAARKA’s folksy, understated interplay on tracks like “Lonely Woman”” suggests an even finer live show.

Darol Anger’s group, Republic of Strings, serves as an ensemble and teaching device for him and his primary collaborator, acoustic guitarist Scott Nygaard. Don’t be surprised, then, to see a few very young faces on stage alongside the duo. On Republic of Strings’ latest, the unfortunately titled Generation Nation, the group tackles everything from Aretha Franklin to early American folk and Buffalo Springfield. The covers are experiments that don’t entirely succeed, but that’s mostly due to their lack of vocal harmonies—the very feature that makes the album’s other non-instrumentals so dang purty. There’s a smoothness to tunes like the sweet, harmony-heavy “Farther Adieu” that could use a bit of roughing up, but the down and dirty bluegrass-jazz fusion of more traditional tracks like “Lady Hamilton” and “The Ramblin’ Barber” earns Anger and company some serious back-porch cred.

Among a veritable sea of strings and long-grown fingernails, TAARKA and Anger are two good reasons to check out the fest. And, perhaps most thankfully, they prove the weekend won’t be all death and Jesus.


SEE IT: RiverCity Bluegrass Festival takes place Friday-Sunday, Jan. 4-6, at the Oregon Convention Center. See rivercitybluegrass.com for individual show times. $35-$50 adult, $80-$110 family (2 adults, 2 children), $12 youth (ages 12-18). Three-day passes: $125 adult, $250 family, $30 youth. All ages. See also Friday Music listings.
 
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01.02.2008 at 02:49 Reply
this is the best bluegrass you'll hear (and feel) in a long while--

 

01.03.2008 at 02:45 Reply
I'll be there, but I don't think you're going to encourage a fence-sitter with your review. There is going to be a bunch of great music all weekend and you've chosen to give an "iffy" review of 2 great ensembles. I don't know what hair or fingernail length could have to do with incredible musicianship.

 

01.12.2009 at 10:02 Reply
Obviously, growing up in traditional bluegrass country (I didn't) isn't a prerequisite for appreciating how the wide ranging genre has evolved.

Unfortunately, the use of phrases such as "gitbox picking" or "more than just death and Jesus" would seem to indicate a minimal appreciation for the music. Pehaps just seeing O Brother Where Art Thou or an old Hee Haw re-run on cable has left the writer somewhat under-exposed, to say the least. We've all heard "High & Lonesome" become off key & nasal; crappy recordings, and those who've yet to master their craft.. But, it seems almost humorous to use "strained harmonies" in an article, written BEFORE Robin & Linda Williams and many others who have mastered their craft provide some of the more beautiful harmonies and cleanest intricate acoustic picking around..right here in River City !

Thanks WW for the usually insightful,well researced articles. Maybe some topics are best subbed out.

 

 
 

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