Port City Music Hall, October 2 | SPACE Gallery, September 29
By CHRISTOPHER GRAY | October 7, 2009
The ironic thing about Sufjan Stevens's belated debut in Portland was that a big show for this town is an intimate event for him: the sprawling-yet-deeply-personal songwriter/composer brought a relatively small four-person backup band to a long sold-out Port City Music Hall Saturday to perform a mix of "50 states project"-era classics and new songs that hadn't yet been road-tested. There were no costumes, no cheerleaders, no party favors; just earnest quirk and heartache, well-wrought and soberly delivered with a drum-machine pulse.
A subtle but persistent desire for a higher-energy set was quelled by pristine sound and Stevens's whispery tenor. The liberal dose of material from Greetings from Michigan, Illinois, and Seven Swans was difficult to pull off out of context (with a small band and no thematic underpinning), but Stevens handled it well: his religious explorations are still piercing and, at worst, his archaic hyper-local or historical references evoked pleasant nostalgia in the absence of orchestral patriotism ("Who was I four years ago that found this so stirring?"). As for the new material -- jammy and borderline-electronic, but still touching -- it desperately needs some editing (most of the handful of songs approached the 10-minute mark, or felt like it did), but there's a fair shot that Stevens's compositional rigor will still command fawning admiration when it's not sewn together in a tapestry of flawed and glorious Americana.

A few days earlier, an opening set (for the Screaming Females) at SPACE Gallery by the sharp year-old indie-rockers Marie Stella offered an excellent performance by lead singer Sydney Bourke. The former Satellite Lot frontwoman finds the sweet spot between being light and forceful, projecting through intimidating shards of guitar with confidence and, better yet, charisma.
Related:
Halloween Dance Party, Music seen: 48 Hour Music Festival, Music Seen: All over, More
- Halloween Dance Party
Portland brought out its dead for SPACE Gallery’s annual Halloween smash on Friday.
- Music seen: 48 Hour Music Festival
"Never underestimate the power of the repeated note" was a dictum drilled into my head. Bands at SPACE gallery on Saturday night employed this method liberally, and to great success.
- Music Seen: All over
Last week we spent five of six nights out on the town. If anyone ever complains that we don't have enough venues or shows to attend we beg to differ.
- Hot summer nights
If the coming week is indicative of anything, it's that this is going to be one busy summer. Discs have been flooding into the office and there's no end in sight. In an effort to keep up, here's a collection of four reviews for albums being released before summer even officially starts.
- Portland Music News: June 19, 2009
Yeah, this makes us feel a little old: The June 27 show at the Port City Music Hall will be a 20th anniversary show for TWISTED ROOTS . SUN GODS IN EXILE (fresh off a release show for their debut album) and SIDECAR RADIO open, and there's word that original TR bassist NEIL COLLINS will sit in for a few songs.
- Finding even better days
Gypsy Tailwind have been a slow build. Though Halo Sessions was one of the best local albums of 2008, it seems no one really heard it until 2009, thanks largely to the radio success of "So Lonely," a single whose melancholy bounce was heartbreakingly honest: "I'll tell you a secret: I drank myself to sleep last night."
- Pixel revolt
Anders Østergaard's Burma VJ: Reporting From a Closed Country is paced and edited with the keen, polished urgency of a thriller — there are frantic, confused phone conversations, along with gloomy music and a healthy amount of ominous foreshadowing — but most of its footage is shaky, off-center, and drastically pixelated, even when viewed on a television.
- Power through peace
Now is a critical time for democracy's worldwide battle against totalitarianism. Rioters in Iran are disputing the outcome of a possibly stolen presidential election. North Korea has sentenced two American journalists to 12 years of hard labor for allegedly crossing the border into the closed country from China.
- Music Seen: Femi Kuti, the Loblolly Boy
On record, Femi Kuti can't help but come off as a slightly vanilla version of his mad genius father Fela (popularizer of Afrobeat music, also known for having 12 wives at once, among other things).
- Born to rock
The last time Deer Tick were in Portland, at SPACE Gallery in November 2007, then-21-year-old frontman John McCauley decided to sing the national anthem. He sprung offstage and hit the floor belting the Tony Bennett standard "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" in a nasal voice soaked in equal parts whiskey, battery acid, and gravel.
- Music Seen: Neko Case + Haru Bangs
First things first: Neko Case is the complete package, an unmitigated bombshell (gorgeous, wry, self-effacing) with a singular artistic vision (country/folk songs so heavy on metaphor and animistic and obscure mythological references that you could — and should — unpack them for months) and a voice like an air-raid siren.
- Less

Topics:
New England Music News
, Entertainment, Music, Pop and Rock Music, More
, Entertainment, Music, Pop and Rock Music, Sufjan Stevens, Sufjan Stevens, Sufjan Stevens, SPACE Gallery, SPACE Gallery, Sydney Bourke, Sydney Bourke, Less