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Volume 2 <strong>Number</strong> 2<br />

Inner-Vu<br />

Featuring Bob Stark<br />

CSN Celebrate<br />

40 years<br />

GBU<br />

the Daddies<br />

Licensing Your<br />

Masters Overseas<br />

Music<br />

Resource<br />

Guide<br />

The Band<br />

Terry Robb<br />

Always Electric<br />

FREE<br />

MONTHLY<br />

$ 0.00 US $0.00 CAN<br />

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0 61507 8056 8<br />

www.buko.net<br />

photo <strong>Buko</strong>


Top selling 20 Portland Artists for June 2008<br />

1. Death Cab for Cutie - “Narrow Stairs”<br />

2. China Forbes - “’78”<br />

3. She & Him - “Volume One”<br />

4. Helio Sequence - “Keep Your Eyes Ahead”<br />

5. Spoon - “Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga”<br />

6. Pink Martini “Hey Eugene”<br />

7. Builders & the Butchers - “Builders & the Butchers”<br />

8. Pink Martini - “Hang on Little Tomato”<br />

9. Lewi Longmire Band - “Fire ‘neath the Still”<br />

10. Pink Martini - “Sympathique”<br />

11. Various - “PDX Pop Now 2008”<br />

12. Floater - “Acoustic Live at the WOW”<br />

13. Pierced Arrows - “Straight to the Heart”<br />

14. Amelia - “Long Lovely List of Repairs”<br />

15. Shins - “Wincing the Night Away”<br />

16. Decemberists - “Castaways & Cutouts”<br />

17. Gossip - “Live in Liverpool”<br />

18. Tracy Grammer - “Book of Sparrows”<br />

19. Stolen Sweets - “Shuffle Off to Buffalo”<br />

20. Various - “Kink Lights Out Nine”<br />

Contents<br />

p4<br />

Exploring your Music<br />

p7<br />

by Doug Dyer<br />

p8<br />

Electrifing the Blues with Terry Robb<br />

by Ty Hitzmann<br />

Licensing Your Masters overseas<br />

by Bart Day<br />

Inner-Vu, an interview with Bob Stark<br />

Johnny Martin looks inside the studio<br />

p16<br />

the X-Files<br />

CD reviews<br />

by Ximena Quiroz<br />

CSN: Celebrate 40 Years<br />

by Jeanne Galarneau<br />

p18<br />

p13<br />

The Good the Bad and the Ugly<br />

by SP Clarke<br />

My TyPod<br />

by Ty Hitzmann<br />

p22<br />

p24<br />

The Band<br />

the Misadventures of Noise Pollution<br />

By Mike D. Light<br />

<strong>Buko</strong>’s Eyefull<br />

p25<br />

Girls and Guitars<br />

By <strong>Buko</strong><br />

p26<br />

p17<br />

Music Resource Guide<br />

<strong>July</strong> 2008<br />

• Established 2007 •<br />

by <strong>Buko</strong> Publishing<br />

Fearless Leader / Graphics: <strong>Buko</strong><br />

CFO: Jeannine Dawson<br />

Media: Get Up Media<br />

Photos: <strong>Buko</strong> • Jeanne Galarneau • Ty Hitzemann •<br />

Writers: S.P. Clarke • Bart Day • Doug Dyer<br />

• Jeanne Galarneau • Johnny Martin • Ty Hitzemann •<br />

Keith Robert Laurent • Mike D. Light • Ximena Quiroz<br />

Printed by: Oregon Lithoprint<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> LLC<br />

PO Box 13480 • Portland, OR 97213<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> is available by subscription.<br />

Send $40. 00 for one year, postpaid.<br />

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Business inquiries; info@buko.net. Advertising rates furnished upon request<br />

contact; advertising@buko.net. All advertising is subject to approval before<br />

acceptance. <strong>Buko</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> reserves the right to refuse any ad for any reason<br />

whatsoever. <strong>Buko</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> assumes no responsibility for claims made by advertisers.<br />

Article and photographic submissions; submissions@buko.net. All views<br />

expressed in all articles are those of the authors and are not necessarily those of<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>. All letters, pictures, bios and their content sent to <strong>Buko</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong><br />

become the sole property of <strong>Buko</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> and may be used and published<br />

by <strong>Buko</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> without obligation and liability to the author thereof. ©2008<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> LLC. Any reproduction in whole or in part without express written<br />

consent of the publisher is prohibited.<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 3


If you are an artist or indie<br />

label, one way to significantly<br />

expand your universe is to<br />

license your master recordings to record<br />

companies outside the United States.<br />

There are various advantages of doing so. Aside from the obvious<br />

advantage of generating additional record sales, there is also the advantage of<br />

creating a relationship with a record company outside the United States who<br />

will have various music business relationships in that foreign country and<br />

who can connect you up with booking agencies, venues, festival organizers,<br />

music publishers, etc. in that territory. This may enable you to do touring<br />

and to build an audience in those countries that otherwise might not be<br />

practical to try to do.<br />

label or artist, if its records are already selling well in the U.S. and the artists already have<br />

a significant reputation in the U.S.<br />

BASIC DEAL POINTS<br />

The basic deal points of the typical music licensing agreement are as follows:<br />

1. Scope of License. The license may cover only one or a few specified recordings,<br />

or may cover your entire catalog. It is sometimes a good idea to start out with less than<br />

your entire catalog, so that you can “test drive” the relationship first, before committing<br />

your entire catalog.<br />

2. Territory. If you are licensing masters to indie foreign labels, you will normally<br />

be licensing only for a particular county or for a particular group of countries. Often<br />

the agreement will be for so-called “bundled countries,” such as Benelux (standing for<br />

Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg) and GAS (Germany, Austria, and Switzerland).<br />

On the other hand, if you were entering into a foreign licensing agreement with<br />

one of the major worldwide labels, such as WEA or BMG, you might be licensing your<br />

masters to one company for all countries outside the United States in one fell swoop.<br />

As a practical matter, though, a deal with one of the “majors” is normally not available<br />

to a U.S. artist or label unless you already have major sales in the U.S.<br />

Incidentally, if the territory is defined in the licensing agreement as the “European<br />

Union” or similar terminology, the territory will in effect change over time as more<br />

countries join the European Union.<br />

THE BASICS OF LICENSING<br />

When you enter into a music licensing agreement with a foreign record<br />

company, you are in essence authorizing them to duplicate and sell copies of<br />

existing masters, in exchange for paying you a royalty for each record sold. The<br />

label is responsible for paying all costs, such as the costs of manufacturing,<br />

promotion, and advertising, and it is up to the foreign label to manufacture<br />

CDs and to get those CDs distributed in their territory.<br />

One alternative to a foreign licensing arrangement is to manufacture<br />

your CDs in the United States yourself, then export them to distributors in<br />

other counties. However, one big disadvantage in going the “export” route,<br />

at least if you do it legally, is that for most foreign countries, you will usually be paying<br />

a government-imposed tariff in those countries of 20% to 40%. Also, a distributor gets<br />

a much smaller piece of the pie, and generally is not going to do the level of proactive<br />

marketing and promotion that will need to be done to break you successfully into<br />

foreign markets.<br />

As a result of these various factors and others, the best alternative for the vast<br />

majority of U.S. indie artists and labels trying to break into foreign countries is going to<br />

be a licensing arrangement with labels based in those countries, rather than a distribution<br />

agreement in those countries.<br />

APPROVAL RIGHTS<br />

A U.S. label that wants to enter into licensing arrangements with one or more<br />

foreign labels must first make sure that it has the rights to do so under the terms of its<br />

recording contracts with its artists. If the label doesn’t already have such rights, then the<br />

label needs to get its artists’ approval before entering into any such licensing arrangements<br />

with foreign labels.<br />

NEGOTIATING CLOUT<br />

As a general rule, it is going to be much easier for a U.S. label or artist to get a<br />

foreign licensing deal, and especially a deal on terms that are quite favorable to the U.S.<br />

4 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2<br />

by Bart Day<br />

Entertainment Attorney<br />

3. Term. Typically the term of the agreement will be for five years, though sometimes<br />

such agreements are for three years and sometimes for seven years. Generally, the<br />

smaller the advance, the less of a justification there is for entering into a longer term.<br />

Normally, there is also a “sell off” period added to the end of the term of the<br />

agreement, which allows the label to sell off any existing inventory for an additional six<br />

months to a year after the end of the term. If there is a “sell off” period included in the<br />

agreement, it is wise to add a clause prohibiting the label from manufacturing more<br />

copies of a CD during the original three, five or seven year term than they can reasonably<br />

expect to sell during that three, five or seven year term.<br />

A practical tip: As soon as the licensing agreement expires, it is a very good idea to<br />

send the label a “Notice of Termination” even if the contract doesn’t require it. (It usually<br />

doesn’t.) Otherwise, there is a significant risk that the foreign label will, innocently<br />

or not so innocently, continue selling your records. The risk of that happening can be<br />

significantly reduced by sending them a “Notice of Termination.” Be sure to send any<br />

such notice in such a way that you have proof that it was actually received.<br />

4. Exclusivity. Normally the agreement is “exclusive,” in which case you cannot<br />

later authorize any other company in that territory to sell your records during the term<br />

of the licensing agreement.<br />

5. Royalty Rate. Unlike the United States, where royalty rates are usually based on<br />

the retail price of records, the royalty rates in most other countries are based on some<br />

price that is somewhere between the wholesale price and the retail price. For example,<br />

in some countries the price is based on the “PPD” (“Published Price to Dealer”) price.<br />

“<br />

As a general rule, it is going to be much easier for a U.S. label or artist to get a foreign<br />

licensing deal, and especially a deal on terms that are quite favorable to the U.S. label or<br />

artist, if its records are already selling well in the U.S. and the artists already have a significant<br />

reputation in the U.S.. ”<br />

In other countries, like France, they often use the so-called “BIEM-IFPI” rate.<br />

Typically, the royalty rate is in the 15% to 20% range (and sometimes more) –<br />

which is higher than the typical rate in the U.S. – because the foreign royalty rate is not<br />

based on the retail price as in the U.S., but instead (as mentioned above) on a price that<br />

is significantly lower. Hence, in order for you to come out roughly the same in terms of<br />

dollars and cents, the foreign royalty rate has to be higher.<br />

In any event, here are a few random tips about evaluating the royalty rate being<br />

offered:<br />

A. The best way to evaluate the royalty rate is to run the royalty calculations and<br />

figure out what you will be earning for each record in dollars and cents, rather than<br />

getting fixated on percentage rates etc. In order to do any useful number crunching,


you will need to find out the exact price that the label is currently using, then convert<br />

that amount to U.S. dollars, and then do your royalty calculations based on the royalty<br />

terms contained in the proposed licensing agreement.<br />

B. There is often a difference from one county to the next in regards to what are<br />

considered acceptable royalty provisions. What is customary in one country is often not<br />

customary in another country. So, if you are negotiating royalty provisions for particular<br />

Discover<br />

the<br />

possibilities.<br />

foreign countries, you need to know what is customary in that country. For example,<br />

in the U.S., royalties are typically not paid on promotional free goods that the record<br />

company gives away, but in some other countries that is not the case.<br />

C. If you’re comparing offers from two or more companies, you need to investigate<br />

and compare the reputation and financial stability of each company. You can<br />

sometimes end up doing much better financially with an average deal from a relatively<br />

honest company than you will do with a great royalty rate from a crooked or financially<br />

borderline company.<br />

D. If the licensing agreement contains any definitions of, for example, the “PPD”<br />

price, read the fine print very carefully.<br />

6. Advances. The amount of the advance that is paid, if any, will depend<br />

on the foreign label’s forecast of how many records can be sold in their territory.<br />

Advances vary wildly and can be anywhere between $500 and $50,000 (but<br />

sometimes higher and sometimes lower).<br />

In some cases, it will make sense for you to enter into the licensing agreement even<br />

if the advance is minimal, if there is a good chance that your relationship with the foreign<br />

record company will significantly help you to get established in their territory. By the same<br />

token, because of the difficulty of auditing foreign countries and trying to collect money<br />

from foreign companies, often times you have to assume that the advance is the only<br />

money that you will ever see from the deal.<br />

By the way, the advance should be described in the contract as being nonrefundable<br />

(i.e., you won’t have to ever pay it back). Also, the advance is normally<br />

deemed “recoupable” (i.e., the label can reimburse itself for the advance from your<br />

future royalties), so if your advance is $5,000, and if the total royalties end up being<br />

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$15,000, the label later will pay you only $10,000 (i.e., the $15,000 in royalties minus<br />

the $5,000 advance).<br />

7. Release Commitment. You should have a clause in the licensing agreement<br />

requiring the label to release the record by a certain date, and that if they don’t do so,<br />

you have a right to terminate the agreement.<br />

For masters that already exist at the time of the licensing agreement, you will<br />

normally want to have a fixed calendar date by which time the record has to be released.<br />

For records not yet recorded, but that will be recorded and released during the term<br />

of the licensing agreement, the release commitment is usually 90–120 days within the<br />

date of your delivery of the master to the label.<br />

You want to be careful that the contract language is very specific and precise, and<br />

you will also want to be sure to ship the masters in such a way that you will later be able<br />

to prove the exact date of delivery if necessary.<br />

8. Sharing in Other Types of Income. Sometimes there is potential income from<br />

sources other than record sales. For example, a U.K. ad agency might want to use a<br />

track in a film, and so the licensing agreement needs to deal with this scenario. If at all<br />

possible, have the contract provide that the rights to enter into those kinds of deals stays<br />

with you and are outside the scope of the licensing agreement. By the same token it<br />

usually makes sense to give the label the piece of any such deal that they find for you,<br />

so that they have a motivation to make such deals happen.<br />

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<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 5


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Eric Lindell<br />

Phoebe Snow<br />

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Lavay Smith & the Red<br />

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www.waterfrontbluesfest.com<br />

6 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2<br />

Sometimes the contract will say that the foreign label<br />

has the rights to enter into such deals for your masters, but<br />

only for territory/countries covered by the agreement,<br />

and that in return, you will receive a share of the income<br />

from such deals.<br />

The bottom line here: The main thing you absolutely<br />

want to avoid here is a contract that gives a foreign label<br />

the right to enter into such deals, but doesn’t spell out your<br />

rights to receive a certain specified share of the income<br />

from such deals.<br />

9. Payment. Payments are usually made semiannually.<br />

The agreement should provide for the royalties to<br />

be wired to your account at the label’s expense (as opposed<br />

to the label mailing you a check, which can cause very long<br />

delays in your actual receipt of the money and the clearing<br />

of the check).<br />

10. Foreign Taxes. You will also normally want<br />

a clause requiring the foreign label to help you file the<br />

necessary paperwork with the foreign government(s)<br />

involved, so that the foreign label will not have to withhold<br />

foreign taxes from the royalties that are otherwise<br />

payable to you. If that is not possible, you will at the very<br />

least want some arrangements whereby the foreign label<br />

“<br />

Unlike the United States, where royalty rates are<br />

usually based on the retail price of records, the royalty<br />

rates in most other countries are based on some price<br />

that is somewhere between the wholesale price and<br />

the retail price. ”<br />

gives you a formal statement at the end of each year as to<br />

the amount of foreign taxes that were withheld that year,<br />

so that you can claim the appropriate tax credits on your<br />

United States tax returns.<br />

11. Audits. There should be a clause allowing you<br />

to audit the foreign label’s business records, and providing<br />

that if there is a discrepancy of more than 10%, they must<br />

pay your audit costs. However, as mentioned above, it<br />

very likely will not be practical for you to audit the foreign<br />

label’s business records, but you want to have that option<br />

if at all possible.<br />

MECHANICAL ROYALTIES FOR FOREIGN SALES<br />

Mechanical royalties –- i.e., the royalties that record<br />

companies pay to music publishers/songwriters based<br />

on how many records are sold –- are handled differently<br />

almost everywhere outside the U.S. than they are handled<br />

in the U.S.<br />

The details are really too complex to cover well<br />

here, but the main thing to remember is this: If you are<br />

an artist who is also a songwriter, or if you are a label that<br />

also operates as a music publisher, and if your material is<br />

on records being sold outside the U.S. and Canada, and if<br />

you are not represented by a worldwide music publisher<br />

and have not entered into sub-publishing agreements with<br />

foreign publishers, then you need to take the necessary<br />

steps to make sure that you receive the foreign mechanical<br />

royalties that you are due.<br />

HOW TO FIND MUSIC LICENSING OPPORTUNITIES<br />

There are a various ways to find music licensing<br />

opportunities, for example:<br />

1. Researching Foreign Labels. You can obtain the<br />

necessary contact information from such directories as<br />

the Billboard International Buyer’s Guide. (Check with<br />

the “Reference Librarian” at your local library to see if they<br />

might have a copy on hand that you can use, and if not, ask<br />

if they can borrow a copy for you through an inter-library<br />

loan from another library.)<br />

Also, some Internet searching can be very helpful in<br />

locating foreign labels that are appropriate for you.<br />

Before submitting material to a foreign label, it’s<br />

usually a good idea to send them a professional and nonhypey<br />

e-mail first, just to find out whether they are even<br />

interested in considering your material.<br />

2. Tip Sheets. Tips sheets such as “New On The<br />

Charts” allow subscribers (and sometimes non-subscribers)<br />

to post a listing of masters that they have available<br />

for licensing.<br />

3. Referrals. Check with any established artists<br />

and American labels that you know of, in case you think<br />

they might be able to turn you on to appropriate foreign<br />

labels.<br />

4. MIDEM. There is a large international music<br />

business conference in Cannes, France every year (in late<br />

January), called “MIDEM,” where people negotiate music<br />

licensing deals. The practical side of it is that unless you are a<br />

well financed artist or label, it won’t be affordable to attend<br />

that conference. One alternative is to buy the MIDEM conference<br />

directory, which you can use as another resource<br />

directory to locate appropriate labels.<br />

Incidentally, there are occasionally people who will<br />

advertise that, for a cash fee, they will shop your material<br />

at the MIDEM conference. Be very careful with any such<br />

arrangements and check those people and their track<br />

records out thoroughly. You obviously don’t want to find<br />

out after the fact that you have just financed someone’s<br />

vacation in the south of France and have nothing to show<br />

for it.<br />

Note: Bart Day is a Portland-based entertainment<br />

attorney in private practice and outside music counsel for<br />

Vivendi Universal Games, the computer games unit of Universal<br />

Studios. He is also VP of Business Affairs for Media<br />

Creature Music, a Los Angeles music publisher and catalog<br />

administration company.<br />

Bart is the co-author of the book Music is Your Business:<br />

The Musician’s FourFront Strategy for Success. He is also the<br />

co-author of a chapter (entitled “Contracts and Relationships<br />

between Major Labels and Independent Labels”) in The<br />

Musician’s Business and Legal Guide, a book compiled by<br />

the Beverly Hills Bar Association and published by Prentice<br />

Hall Publishing (New York). From 1998 to 2002, he was<br />

an elected member of the Board of Governors of the Pacific<br />

NW Chapter of the Recording Academy (presenter of the<br />

Grammy Awards).<br />

The reader is cautioned to seek the advice of the reader’s<br />

own attorney concerning the applicability of the general principles<br />

discussed above to the reader’s own activities.


Exploring your Music<br />

by Doug Dyer<br />

With the current state of computers in both Hardware and Software,<br />

now may be a great time to explore your music. Computers are<br />

becoming relatively inexpensive but they still offer end users plenty<br />

of hutzspa... - Speed, power, performance to cut through even the most serious of<br />

audio projects.<br />

There are several factors that would back up that statement. And if we look<br />

at three basic levels of entry into this computer-aided music concept you start to<br />

get the idea that a base investment in a personal recording set-up<br />

makes a lot of sense.<br />

Lets start with a basic entry level single singer songwriter<br />

(selling seashells...) user; they’ve got lots of ideas, have maybe<br />

even recorded to tape or some other dedicated recorder., and are<br />

really wanting to play with their ideas. A simple Mac Laptop or<br />

iMac with GarageBand is a great starting point. -<br />

***A word of caution here, I am a confirmed “Mac-Guy”<br />

both personally and professionally so this article while having a<br />

decidedly Mac slant to it, shouldn’t dissuade you from the basic<br />

facts - and so while I mention “Mac specific” products and developers<br />

- many of the same things could be said of my brethren on<br />

the other side of the PC / Mac fence. As much as a fan of the Mac<br />

as I am, I know that there are an equal or even greater number of<br />

PC fans as well. So for those I hope that the generalities of this<br />

article help you more than the specifics. ***<br />

Now, back to our single singer songwriter selling seashells...<br />

An entry level MacBook with a small external firewire drive for<br />

recording to, and a simple audio interface (like a griffin iMic) is a<br />

great place to start figuring out what you can really do with your<br />

music. GarageBand comes loaded on all new MacBooks (and<br />

iMacs) and has opened the door for many who have transitioned<br />

(usually rather quickly) up to the next level - like a Logic Express<br />

or Pro Tools -M-Powered still contained in the same laptop /<br />

simple I/O set up.<br />

A really good entry level system: Macbook w/software, good converters, O.K.<br />

mic pres, good microphone, dedicated recording drive, headphones and cables can<br />

be put together for between ($3K to $5K) and would serve you well as a platform<br />

on which you could start with and be able to expand later.<br />

BTW: whenever possible you should always try to have a dedicated recording<br />

hard drive especially in a laptop set-up. It creates better overall system performance<br />

and takes a lot of the weight off of the laptop, (hopefully increasing its lifespan)<br />

But what if you’re more than just one guy Say you’re part of an ensemble,<br />

group or band and you just need more than a simple single/double channel audio<br />

interface can bring you. Well that’s where we see the most significant strides by folks<br />

these days (Both artists and developers). So with the addition of some more serious<br />

hardware; multi-channel audio interfaces, nicer mics & mic pres, and or higher quality<br />

converters you can do quite a bit with a mid range MacBook Pro or iMac<br />

The power and performance that can be had in this mid range level ($8K to<br />

$12K) is astonishing and honestly rivals $20K & $30K dollar systems from just a few<br />

years ago. Many more musicians are looking at this type of set up - which allows them<br />

to explore not only their own music but that of their friends and partners as well.<br />

So as an example a mid-range iMac, Digidesign 003 rack hardware and<br />

software, Digimax xlt (for up to 16 tracks of input) several basic<br />

mics and maybe a real nice Neumann or Audio Techinca mics<br />

for vocals, cable and monitors can all easily be had in this $10K<br />

ish range.<br />

And fear not! if you’re already an established studio or<br />

artist and you want to take it to the next level - don’t you worry<br />

we can keep on going well into the $100,000 and beyond range<br />

for a very professional set-ups that rival that of the big boys in<br />

New York & LA.<br />

For this kind of level you can get dedicated audio hardware<br />

for up to 96 physical channels of 192khz audio, full tactile control<br />

over the entire mix & enough DSP to put a guy on mars - with<br />

enough plug-ins & effects that would make even the real serious<br />

engineer / artist turn red (or green for that matter!)<br />

A new 8 core dialed up MacPro tower with up to 32 gigs<br />

of RAM, 4 terabytes of local storage is one serious player. - The<br />

addition of some major Pro Tools HD hardware (Both cards<br />

in the computer and Audio Interfaces in the racks), along with<br />

ethernet control surfaces would be a great cornerstone for any<br />

high-end artist / studio venture.<br />

Conclusion: So whether your just a simple single songwriter<br />

trying to capture your first songs -OR - a multi-piece band trying<br />

to get that sound - OR even a well established artist (studio) trying<br />

to “go Pro” with todays computer music technology - You Can!<br />

Now is a great time to take a look at what is available in the realm<br />

of computers and music and explore the possibilities for yourself.<br />

I wish you a safe journey - good luck and have fun.<br />

Note: Doug Dyer is a long time Pro Tools guru, he owns and operates Sound Thinking,<br />

one of the Northwest’s Premieres Digidesign dealers. He has built rigs of every level of<br />

size and complexitry from entry level laptops for students up to full on HD rigs for Steve<br />

Miller Band & the Blazers. He currently works several days a week with the folks over at<br />

the MacPac and is very knowledgeable when it comes to computer audio systems in general<br />

and Digidesign’s Pro Tools family of products specifically. If you have any questions or<br />

would like to contact him personally feel free to reach him at the MacPac 503-256-5210<br />

or doug@soundthinking.com<br />

9<br />

Rock<br />

12<br />

around<br />

6<br />

clock<br />

the<br />

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2329 NW 23rd Place, Portland<br />

rockaroundtheclockpdx.com<br />

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<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 7


The best musicians in Portland have been trusting their sessions and mixes<br />

to this man for more than twenty years. There isn’t a local engineer or<br />

producer that doesn’t know his work. And “work” is a fitting word. He<br />

does it at a high level and with great skill. He comes across as a very genuine person<br />

with years of experience to back up his decisions.<br />

I found his understated manner, depth of music theory, and respect for song-craft<br />

to be a “perfect mix”.<br />

Thanks for meeting me Bob.<br />

No problem.<br />

And congratulations on your Latin Grammy Nomination. (mastering)<br />

Oh, Vayo’s “Tango Legends”- thanks.<br />

Now, this is called Big Trees<br />

It’s kinda of an interesting situation. My company is Big Trees Music,<br />

and I’ve located all my gear here at Kung Fu Bakery. So the facility is<br />

Kung Fu Bakery but my personal business is Big Trees Music.<br />

Now, was Big Trees somewhere else before<br />

Big Trees used to be a combination of myself and Jeff Leonard. We<br />

parted ways on friendly terms and we still work together a lot.<br />

Jeff Leonard the bass player<br />

Yeah.<br />

How long have you been making Big Trees services available<br />

Oh, it’s going on ten years now. I’ve been doing my own thing here<br />

at Kung Fu Bakery since Nov. 2000.<br />

What is the goal of your studio<br />

To work on good music always.<br />

Do you ever listen to your first demos<br />

Oh yeah. I think a lot of it is that I’ll go back and listen to the music<br />

I enjoyed.<br />

So you find “the song” maybe bringing you back<br />

Exactly. It’s more about the song.<br />

What do you mix down to<br />

Right now I’m mixing to the hard drive thru Lavry converters.<br />

Preferred would be ¼” at 30ips with Dolby SR.<br />

Do you have time for experimentation<br />

Not as much as I’d like. But I’m working on McKinley’s next album and we’re experimenting<br />

with filtering noises and creating drum sounds with stuff from the garbage<br />

etc. I want to do more of that stuff on my own time and build to my bag of tricks.<br />

8 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2<br />

3319 SE Division<br />

503-238-GITR<br />

guitarcrazymail@aol.com<br />

www.guitarcrazy.com<br />

photo by Johnny Martin<br />

Are you saying create a Bob Stark effects library<br />

Well, sort of. There are ambient things I do which show up on people’s recordings<br />

and they don’t complain.<br />

Ambient things. Are those things that you brought from the outside in or is that an<br />

effect that you do in mixing<br />

Combination of that.<br />

Do you have a morning routine<br />

I wake up when my wife wakes up, watch a bit of CNBC, get a<br />

shower, eat breakfast and head to the studio.<br />

A session prep routine<br />

A lot of times I just walk in and work. If I’m working on a mix, it’s<br />

just turn on the computer- go. The session prep for yesterday was<br />

get in here and meet the drummer to get the gear in, and while the<br />

drum tech is working, get the drum mics set up. Just basically be<br />

ready for what’s going to happen that day.<br />

So in terms of the drums, that takes more time. Is the drum tech<br />

yours or his<br />

Just someone hired for the session. He’ll tune the drums and make<br />

them sound really great. This is a Portland casualty- there are not a<br />

lot of drummers in town that know how to tune their drums. There<br />

is only a couple guys in town I know and trust.<br />

You know their names might be useful to <strong>Buko</strong> readers…<br />

OK. Greg Williams is one, Mike Snyder is another. These guys<br />

make the drum-kit work for each tune. They don’t get just one<br />

drum sound that you live with for the whole session, whether it’s<br />

appropriate or not.<br />

How long have you been recording, since you were a kid<br />

If you want to get back to the earliest part of it- probably in high<br />

school, me doing demos for my band. Not recording as an engineer,<br />

but as a player. Budgets were really limited, and an eight track studio<br />

back then costs what a full-blown facility costs now! So the bang<br />

for the buck has definitely increased over the years.<br />

But maybe you’ve been recording for 20 years<br />

As an engineer, ’83…so we’re coming up on 25 years now.<br />

Twenty-five years, and are you still learning something on every session<br />

Probably not on every session. I have learned deeper and deeper patience.<br />

(laughter) OK I think I know where you’re going with that…<br />

I think one unfortunate thing, and I’m hoping some bands will prove me wrong- is


that there’s been deteriorating musicianship. Now when I’m getting young bands in,<br />

they really don’t have a very large musical vocabulary. I feel odd, and it may be just an<br />

age thing, because I’ve done so much music, but I can write their tunes out as they’re<br />

playing them.<br />

You have a sense of the chord structure, and they may not even know what they’re<br />

playing<br />

Yeah. I think the song writing HAS notched up over the years, But the musicianship<br />

has deteriorated. I think computers have helped with that, because “oh now we can<br />

tune- now we can slide things…and we used to have to play it. I love when a young<br />

band comes in and they can play.<br />

Do you find yourself wanting to help bands like that, or wanting to<br />

Wanting to. I think the biggest band I’ve been involved with in town lately is Intervision.<br />

What drew me to them was that they could actually play their instruments and they<br />

have good song writing. Paul and Tony, the guitarist and vocalist are just fabulous<br />

songwriters.<br />

What type of music have you yet to record<br />

Done grunge, metal, pop, jazz, classical, funk, hip-hop, chamber, string quartets, big<br />

band… You know what I haven’t done, but I enjoy doing on the side is electronic<br />

music.<br />

You mean dance- like rave<br />

Um, chill. It’s music that people usually do on their own so it’s not like somebody’s<br />

gonna come to me and go, “produce my chill album”.<br />

What do you like to monitor on- speaker wise<br />

Focal. Secondary set is the NS-10’s. I’ve worked on them for over twenty years.<br />

So there’s a known entity there. What do you look for on each<br />

On the Focals I look for detail in the upper-mids. There’s a crossover point between the<br />

Musicians Union<br />

www.afm99.org<br />

Artistry Advocacy Unity<br />

woofer and tweeter, and the Focals are the first monitors that I don’t hear that on. The<br />

transition from lows to highs is very smooth so it allows me to hear a lot of details on the<br />

mids and upper-mids, and for me that’s very critical to get separation happening.<br />

And that’s a main area that will distort a speaker right<br />

Yeah. And on the NS-10’s, I’m kind listening for punch. Unlike a lot of people, I turn<br />

the NS-10’s up and I want to feel it hit me. They’re harsh and everything and I can’t<br />

be on them for more than ten-fifteen minutes at a pop.<br />

Now which one do you turn down<br />

Let’s just say I’m turned down most of the time.<br />

You usually mix quietly<br />

Yeah. 65 to 70db.<br />

Can you share a moment that elevated your engineering skills<br />

In an oddball way, when I was working on some mixes for McKinley up in Seattle and<br />

David Torn was the producer. Torn is deaf in one ear and he was pretty amazing to<br />

me because he would look at the console, and see how I had things panned and laid<br />

out… He’d be essentially listening in mono, and making incredible changes like “ try<br />

this- make this really pop out…” and now when I go back and listen to that album,<br />

I know I took a lot away from that session because now my sense is to always make<br />

some event popping out- something for the listener to listen to. Something new for<br />

them to hear each time.<br />

Wow, that’s an interesting approach.<br />

I had a sense of staging a mix before , but working with him really pushed that envelope.<br />

Which part of your studio are you hoping to upgrade soon<br />

Console. I’m using Sony DMXR100, and I’m thinking there are three consoles in the<br />

running. A Neve 5088, an SSL AWS900, and Digidesign Icon- which is probably the<br />

least likely. This is a mid-term goal- end of this year to three year range. One of my<br />

favorite engineers in town, Dean Baskerville, is a very SSL competent guy, and has<br />

expressed an interest in doing more work in this room. So that would get me out of<br />

the studio a little bit and still generate a bit of income. Everybody’s dream…FREE<br />

MONEY! (laughter) It’s not saying I want to engineer less, just more places other<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 9


than here.<br />

You’d like to be more selective, and pick better projects<br />

Yes, exactly.<br />

Are there a few engineers that you hold in esteem<br />

George Massenburg and Bob Clearmountain.<br />

With Bob what is it, clarity<br />

Not some much clarity. It’s like how dense he’s able to make a mix and not make it sound dense. There’s<br />

a lot going on! Listening to Jonatha Brooke’s “Careful what you wish for”, the title cut on that sounds<br />

like a Queen tune. So he handles that really well. And the stuff he did with David Bowie is beautiful<br />

sounding.<br />

So is it a depth thing<br />

It’s a punch thing. Like that thing where I said you go to the NS-10’s and you turn them up and suddenly<br />

every kick drum is moving the speaker in a controlled way and it hits you, but it doesn’t fight<br />

everything else that’s going on. And interestingly enough, to me, the bass is pretty low in a lot of his<br />

mixes, but you still hear every single note. Two of my favorite albums that he’s done are Lisa Loeb’s<br />

“Firecracker” and Duncan Shiek’s “Humming”.<br />

And Massenburg, going back to earth Wind and Fire, all that stuff sounds incredible. But what I really<br />

liked was when he got into the producer role, like Lyle Lovett’s “Joshua Judges Ruth”. To me that’s<br />

something to really shoot for sonically.<br />

Name a few OLD recordings that still kill you<br />

Strawberry Fields Forever. Cornelius Brother’s and Sweet Sister Rose. Early Paul Simon, like the first<br />

solo Paul Simon album- that album is amazing to me. There’s a song on there called Armistice Day<br />

that just rocks!<br />

How did you arrive at Kung Fu Was it a happy accident<br />

Jeff and I were going to build a studio and realized it was going to be too hard to do. We located it at my<br />

house which is a stressful place to have your business. I knew that Tim was putting this place together and<br />

he contacted me so, happy accident- yes, but I’ve known Tim for years so “planned” happy accident.<br />

Can you name 2 pieces of gear you’ve got your eye on<br />

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photo by <strong>Buko</strong><br />

Sure. I would love to obtain a real Pultec EQP1-A. I picked up the Manley Massive Passive which<br />

is a fabulous EQ, but it’s not quite it. There’s just a sound they have when you turn up 3k on a kick<br />

drum…”oh THAT’s the sound”. And I’d like to get maybe the four channel API pre or another four<br />

channel GML. I love that preamp.<br />

That’s more of a clean class A circuitry type<br />

Yeah. I’m not one of these guys that thinks everything has to be tubes. I think people would be amazed<br />

at how much stuff that’s perceived as vintage, doesn’t have tubes.<br />

Can you recommend some websites for info & reviews<br />

TapeOp online. Gearslutz.com. The Womb.<br />

Any favorite publications you enjoy besides <strong>Buko</strong><br />

<strong>Buko</strong>’s the only one. (laughter) No- I’ll pick up TapeOp and Mix. I get Electronic Musician and I get<br />

EQ, but I zip thru those.<br />

What’s your headphone mix system<br />

A custom deal. Tim and I wanted musicians to be able to create their own mix as opposed to creating<br />

it at the console. We have 8 channels we can send out discretely to musicians.<br />

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10 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2


What’s your oldest piece of gear<br />

Do instruments count I have a kalimba I got when I was a kid, when I was into Earth<br />

Wind and Fire.<br />

Is there a mic that you reach for quite often<br />

I’ll have to say not really. Everything is dependent on what the source is. If there were<br />

one mic that would work on pretty much anything it’d be a U67. A lot of people are<br />

gun shy about the TLM103, personally I like them a lot. They have a nice openness<br />

and they are a very quiet microphone.<br />

Did you apprentice anywhere<br />

Sound Impressions as they opened their doors. In the very early eighties, and it didn’t<br />

become a known entity until about ’86 or so. Started out as 4 track reel to reel.<br />

What made you want to be an engineer<br />

I was playing in a fusion band. We had a couple albums recorded, and I didn’t like<br />

how they were produced. It made me want to get on the other side of the glass. So<br />

if I ever worked myself into the position of producing, I’d approach it with the ethic<br />

that “I wanna get the sound the band or artist wants” as opposed to “ I wanna put my<br />

thumbprint on how things sound”.<br />

What’s your basic drum mic’ing set up<br />

I have 3 set ups. <strong>Number</strong> 1: to individually mic everything and have some overheads<br />

and room mics. <strong>Number</strong> 2: the 3 mic Glyn Johns set up. <strong>Number</strong> 3: I’ll take 2 B&K<br />

4011 mics, left and right, equi-distance from the snare about 3ft off the ground. And<br />

then put an overhead mic ( U67 or U47) not close but in the room, so you get a nice<br />

stereo picture without close-miking.<br />

That’s your ambient and everything, you’re not squashing the overhead<br />

Paul Creighton of Intervision doing<br />

his vocal tracks at Kung Fu Bakery.<br />

photo by <strong>Buko</strong><br />

No. You have to use it with drummers who know how to balance their kit.<br />

What do you use for comparative listening Certain CD’s<br />

I’m doing this all the time. A lot of times I’m looking how this song hits me.<br />

There a Jack Joseph Puig mix of Athenaeum that I really like. Catie Curtis. A lot of the<br />

older Joe Jackson stuff. Lisa Loeb’s “The way it really is”, I use that a lot. John Mayer’s<br />

first album “Room for squares”. I could go on and on. It’s not really matching the<br />

genre- it’s more of hitting me on an emotional level.<br />

What’s your current back-up system<br />

Multiple hard drives. Western Digital has good drives. LaCie is fine. I’m a LaCie “D2”<br />

guy. I’m a Otherworld Computing “Mercury Elte” guy. I know they work and I know<br />

they don’t fail (knocks on wood).<br />

IS there a preferred EQ that you use a lot<br />

On the computer I like the Sonnex EQ, which is a derivative of the Sony Oxford.<br />

Outboard- I love the Manley Massive Passive. It’s a chunk of change and it’s been<br />

worth every penny of it.<br />

Are there times when you compress going in<br />

Lots of times. If I’m doing a vocal that I know, in the end I’m going to compress, I’ll do<br />

it going in. Because I know I can get more character out of a distressor going down that<br />

I can out of any of the computer stuff. A lot of times, I’ll commit to a sound, because if<br />

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I’m committed to a sound I’m not going to have to work on it later on- just the levels.<br />

I really hate having options when it comes time to mix.<br />

A lot of those choices should have been made earlier and you’re trying to make<br />

them…<br />

Yeah.<br />

And character helps the mix right And you’re not shy about getting that going in<br />

Right. And I’ll commit to delays, I’ll commit to reverbs…<br />

When you say “commit” you’re printing them right with the original source track<br />

I’m saying “ here’s the guitar with it’s (amp) reverb, to a track.<br />

Well, that takes some experience.<br />

A lot of times you can a character out of a spring reverb on an amp, that people hear on<br />

a gig etc. I have no problem committing to that. Why would I want to try to recreate<br />

a spring reverb sound from a dry guitar later on<br />

Is that something you tell the client ahead of time<br />

Oh yeah, absolutely. They are usually aware that we’re committing to sounds. It comes<br />

from working for years in tape where you don’t have 90 tracks, and that ethic has paid<br />

off working in digital, because decisions get made and then when we’re mixing- we’re<br />

mixing.<br />

How are you currently approaching compression on drums Is it a safety thing or an<br />

early commit-to-a-sound thing<br />

In reality I don’t do a lot of compression on drums. Or, as much as I used to. Now<br />

I find myself really trying to keep dynamic range intact. I’ll do some compression<br />

when I mix.<br />

Do you do much ambient mic’ing<br />

With drums, yes. With guitars, yes. With bass, usually not. Vocal, sometimes a room<br />

mic.<br />

Are you squashing the crap out of it with a distressor<br />

I’m really liking the new Neve 5043 (portico). Not only ambient but I’m liking that<br />

a lot on bass, both amp and D.I.<br />

What’s your computer, operating system and recording software<br />

Mac platform, OSX. Protools, Logic Pro, Digital Performer and all the peripheral<br />

stuff that goes with it like Reason, Ableton Live. And Garageband. Ya gotta use<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 11


Garageband!<br />

Any favorite plug-ins<br />

I really don’t have one. I find them all to be tools.<br />

What’s your best sounding mic pre<br />

I wouldn’t have bought them if I didn’t think they were great sounding. I almost said<br />

as a gut reaction- GML.<br />

away from the studio. That whole thing of leaving and coming back- you get a fresh<br />

perspective every time you come back, and things happen very quickly when you first<br />

sit down. A lot of new things get accomplished at that moment.<br />

Any mixes you’d like to have back<br />

All of them. (laughter)<br />

Do you recall a favorite project<br />

Can I mention two The last Intervision Project “Shades of Neptune”. they kinda gave<br />

me free rein on that. And I was working more as producer and less as an engineer. So<br />

we hired Dean Baskerville to engineer the tracking sessions, and I mixed the album.<br />

It was great to be listening and evaluating in a producer’s role, and I think it paid off in<br />

the end. The album is a really interesting album to listen to.<br />

The other album I enjoyed working on was more because of the songwriting. My<br />

absolute favorite voice in town is McKinley. She gave me a little bit of free rein and as I<br />

describe it now- I was probably too careful on that album. (Goner) She has an incredible<br />

voice, her pitch is always on. She’s a joy to work with, and both of these albums I was<br />

instantly able to listen to them as music. And that hardly ever happens with anything<br />

I work on. On the jazz side, any album I worked on with Dan Balmer.<br />

Can you recommend any books to would-be-engineers<br />

Yes. Behind the Glass by Howard Massey and the Recording Engineers Handbook.<br />

Bob puts the finishing touches on<br />

Myrrh Larsen’s latest project.<br />

photo by <strong>Buko</strong><br />

Ok Bob, you can leave with one pre and one mic…<br />

Yeah the GML and I’d probably grab the TLM103. Unlike the U67, the 103 is fairly<br />

bullet-proof. I could pretty much use it on anything, you know- it’s care of placement.<br />

Any approaches you take to mixing<br />

I’m a “start with the vocal” guy. Find the song. A lot of times it’s vocal/piano or vocal/<br />

guitar. Make those sound like they could be printed and be the song, and build<br />

around that.<br />

What signs tell you that you’ve been mixing too long<br />

I’m pretty disciplined about trying to stay in the studio no longer than ten hours.<br />

How do you like to take your breaks<br />

I’ll work for a couple of hours, get some coffee, work a couple more hours and get out<br />

of the studio for lunch. Never eat lunch in the studio. I think it’s really critical to walk<br />

It’s like an encyclopedia, a very large book.<br />

Can you mention a piece of low-cost gear that surprised you<br />

Yeah the Audix I-5’s. There really is a replacement for the 57.<br />

What kind of hospitality do you offer here<br />

I’m a nice guy. (laughter) We have a bathroom.<br />

Any advice for young engineers in bedroom studios<br />

Take a music theory class. It’s one of the advantages I have over other engineers. It’s<br />

really important as an engineer and as a producer- to be able to communicate with<br />

the musicians and to be able to help them through problems that come up with their<br />

writing, arranging and whatever. All they need to know is that I can help them. having<br />

that tool puts me three steps ahead of other engineers. Also, have people skills. It’s not<br />

the gear- it’s the guy running it.<br />

Anything else<br />

Be patient and learn. We all had to empty the trash at some point…<br />

oh- we still do!<br />

12 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2


Growing up, while most of my friends forged out their favorite<br />

sports figures as heroes, I felt a lot like the odd kid who<br />

just didn’t fit in. Early on, my idea of heroes were<br />

always musicians- Namely guitar players. When I’d watch<br />

people like Johnny Cash, Roy Clark, and Glen Campbell<br />

play on T.V. and hear the crowds cheer for them, butterflies<br />

would brew inside of me almost to the point of tears. I<br />

was in awe of them. To me their accomplishment on that<br />

instrument was not unlike the awe and respect that most<br />

of my friends were attaching to “Hammerin’ Hank” Aaronor<br />

Wilt Chamberlain. Their dexterity and concentration<br />

were fascinating to me, and I remember the funny faces I’d get<br />

from other kids when attempting a comparison. I’d say,<br />

“Don’t you think Hank Marvin’s skillful agility on<br />

the guitar is like an athletic feat” Then they’d<br />

mutter “whatever” and run out to throw their<br />

baseballs or footballs, I’d stay in my lonely<br />

little teenage room sweating air guitar moves<br />

along with Buck Owens or Link Wray.<br />

A few years later, I found a well-worn<br />

copy of Roy Buchanan’s “Loading Zone” at<br />

the library. Up until then I had never heard anything<br />

quite like Roy’s piercing angst-drenched<br />

electric guitar with such a unique delivery. I<br />

was amazed by this middle-aged man who<br />

looked like my math teacher was able<br />

to sear the paint off my walls with his<br />

Telecaster. It wasn’t until many years<br />

later I was fortunate enough to hear<br />

photo by Ty Hitzemann<br />

by Ty Hitzemann<br />

“The absolute word around<br />

town was that you HAVE to<br />

see this guy. It was like the 2nd<br />

coming of Hendrix. His playing<br />

was so powerful. He was fast<br />

and very flamboyant. But the<br />

great part was that you could<br />

succinctly hear every single<br />

controlled note.”<br />

-Terry Currier<br />

one other person who’s playing<br />

was so far from the pack, and carried<br />

such a unique diversity and<br />

WOW aspect to me.<br />

Fast forward to 1996.<br />

W hile attending the Rose<br />

Festival, I just happened upon<br />

a Curtis Salgado/Terry Robb<br />

live acoustic performance in support<br />

of their critically acclaimed<br />

release called “Hit It ‘n Quit It”. Up until<br />

that time Terry had been somewhat of an elusive<br />

performer to me. I certainly knew his name, had<br />

heard about his local and international success,<br />

and rumors of his legendary performances. Somehow<br />

I always seemed to have just missed him at<br />

some venue where he either played recently, or<br />

the night before. I remember a couple of television<br />

performances like the Conan O’Brien<br />

Show that TR had played with Salgado and<br />

Steve Miller that I had unfortunately missed,<br />

even though I watched most every night<br />

(snap!).<br />

Attending the Festival show caused my<br />

electric guitar seeking adrenalin to seethe<br />

and surge. Never before had I seen an acoustic<br />

guitar showcase able to draw the calcium out of my bones that performance<br />

did. Backing up Salgado, one of the greatest soul-blues singers in the<br />

world, Terry was equally mustering up his own circuitous Voodoo<br />

cluster of magic- mojo. Solid rhythm, staccato chops, impossible<br />

note flurries, all with an impeccable timing, Robb’s performance<br />

was arresting. I was hooked. “No” I told my friends, “You don’t<br />

understand, THIS IS THE GUY. Forget what you’ve heard<br />

before.” Just listening to the last track on their CD, “Feeling good”<br />

would tell the story so completely the reader would need not to<br />

finish this article. That performance was merely acoustic, but It<br />

solidified my perception of what true passion in performance was<br />

all about. It was also there in the audience someone shouted, “See<br />

you at the Candlelight Terry”!<br />

Throughout the mid to late 90’s, it was at the Candlelight<br />

Room where many feel a lot of TR’s legendary performances<br />

were forged. With the likes of Alan<br />

Hager, Cartlon Jackson, and Albert Reda<br />

backing him, Terry would use the weekly<br />

slot to experiment in front of willing<br />

downtown after-work crowds<br />

who were open to his experimental<br />

moods which included<br />

a mix of traditional songs,<br />

progressive rock, acoustic<br />

ragtime or fusion-- but always<br />

delivered with a solid blues<br />

foundation. It was here that<br />

packed audiences would shake<br />

off the day to TR’s interpretations<br />

of Muddy Waters, Son<br />

House andJohn Lee Hooker,<br />

to more complex covers of Jeff<br />

Beck, John Mclaughlin, and<br />

Eric Clapton-- Along with electric<br />

slide work that would make Elmore<br />

James shudder. I have yet to hear any<br />

guitar player besides Steve Vai attempt,<br />

let alone come close to Zappa’s mindblowing<br />

anthems like “Black Napkins”,<br />

or “Zoot Allures”. Many had been going<br />

for quite a while and could only humor<br />

my in-between wailings of ‘Look! Whoa!<br />

did you see that’. All those huge concerts<br />

where I was squinting to catch an expensive<br />

binoculared view of my favorite rock<br />

guitar-gods were to be put on notice. Here<br />

was a LOCAL guy, matching or besting<br />

most of them, and he was right up the<br />

road. Needless to say, it was very difficult<br />

to sleep any night I saw him.<br />

By that time Terry had already<br />

released an electric based solo effort<br />

called “Jelly Behind the Sun”with<br />

former Frank Zappa frontman Ike<br />

Willis, who previously hired Robb<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 13


as a lead electric guitar player in his own solo band. Terry being Ike’s first pick<br />

attested solidly that his skill was appreciated above many others who could have<br />

been chosen. Ike spent many years of studio and touring time behind one of the<br />

greatest electric guitar players and musical geniuses of the 20th century. Yeah...<br />

he picked Terry Robb. Their duo performance of Terry’s beautifully penned”Say<br />

Yeah” is the stuff hits are made of, exhibiting his crafty song writing and melodic<br />

ability . Robb’s pristine leads were emotionally arresting.<br />

Recently, I sat down at Terry’s kitchen table surrounded by numerous framed<br />

photos of him playing with the likes of Canned Heat, Los Lobos, Ramblin’ Rex<br />

leads with such a force”, bluesman and master harpist Bill Rhoads remembers.<br />

“Terry really had a knack for stretching out, and he wasn’t afraid to tip the boundary.<br />

He really is like no other, but electrically, his explosive style is akin to Buddy<br />

Guy”. Indeed, TR is his own man, uniquely interpreting and forging orthodox<br />

styles into something new entirely. At times there are elements of jazz to his playing<br />

because of striking dissonances in his electric soloing. Within those realms<br />

and Francis Clay.” The reason I decided to play the blues was because its the least<br />

neurotic music. Even when its exaggerated there’s still a purity to it”. Terry states<br />

his references to those who carried special influence to him very simply and matter<br />

of fact, “Hendrix was a big influence to my direction of blues, jazz and funk. As<br />

a kid I really liked him. Once I got older and revisited Jimi, his Band of Gypsys<br />

had a real impact upon my playing. Muddy Waters had a lasting effect upon me<br />

because he could make an incredibly strong statement with a single note. To my<br />

surprise, after a long pause he said, “But really, Henry Vestine was my guy because<br />

he could play passionate blues with a real abandonment.” Others have said the<br />

John Fahey influence has become the strongest glue completing the fabric of<br />

Terry’s prodigious delivery. TR’s adoration and extensive collaboration with the<br />

eclectic-acoustic master put 12 years of imprint upon his chord-voicing, unusual<br />

finger stylings and over-all composition. It was priceless direction from one of the<br />

very best. “Fahey gave me the affirmation to try, or include anything-- which was<br />

a revelation to me as far as my finger picking style and delivery.”<br />

These days, Robb’s live sets have been running the gamut of these stylized<br />

criss-crossings. From Muddy to John Mclaughlin to Eric Clapton to Zappa.<br />

Terry’s adaptability to playing styles are more than numerous. “People like Albert<br />

he easily touches down on note arrangements that might call to mind Ornette<br />

Coleman or Sonny Rollins. Whether its blues, ragtime or progressive rock,<br />

toeing in territory that might be hectic to some electric players is an easy shoe<br />

for TR to put on.<br />

Music Millennium Owner and Impresario, Terry Currier remembers his<br />

first encounter hearing Robb play electric from a performance in the 80’s. Having<br />

worked very closely with Robb over the years, Currier just shakes his head and<br />

looks up at the ceiling with continued amazement recalling what he witnessed.<br />

“The absolute word around town was that you HAVE to see this guy. It was like<br />

the 2nd coming of Hendrix.” Currier continued. “ His playing was so powerful.<br />

He was fast and very flamboyant. But the great part was that you could succinctly<br />

hear every single controlled note.”<br />

Not surprisingly, most of what is available from Terry Robb has been acoustic<br />

efforts. This is Robb’s admitted forte. “I cut my teeth on a lot of these Delta blues<br />

guys, and always incorporated that into my electric playing and visa-versa. The<br />

NEW MUSIC<br />

NOW AVAILABLE!<br />

Collins, Hubert Sumlin, BB King and John Lee Hooker were real important to<br />

my electric approach, and I have been fortunate to have learned from playing with<br />

Buddy Guy, Johnny Shines and Junior Wells”. From all these influences it has<br />

forged one of the blues most invigorating players with an outstanding capacity for<br />

the original. The guidance from these essential players coupled with Robb’s famous<br />

acoustic abilities honed tirelessly since childhood only add to the narrative. His<br />

attack is quite similar to Zappa’s complex note flurries, but with Buchanan -like<br />

bends and “pinch” harmonics. Single note cries can be guttural, and syncopated<br />

with emotional wails of flaming vibrato which he often subterfuges with volumeswells<br />

and staccato mutings. His sustaining patterns have the Jeff Beck “dodge<br />

and burn” pattern with just the right whine and timbre to twist your brain into<br />

the cosmologic abyss. Billy Gibbons once exclaimed, “I sure like the way Terry<br />

Robb plays that electric slide”. ‘Nuff said.<br />

“I first saw Terry play with Ramblin’ Rex. Terry was playing these incredible<br />

14 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2<br />

HEAR AND BUY “KILL THESE BLUES” TODAY AT<br />

KOLVANE.COM OR MYSPACE.COM/KOLVANEMUSIC<br />

FORMERLY ROSE CITY KINGS


Terry Robb and Robbie Laws at the<br />

‘04 Waterfront Blues Festival.<br />

photo by Ty Hitzemann<br />

only difference with electric is that I get to play with amp feedback”. As well as a<br />

seasoned top Producer, blues Historian and sought after session musician. He is<br />

also a veritable go-to-guy in the industry. He and Adam Scramstad are beginning<br />

work on both a CD and DVD project with players from his electric band of which<br />

Adam plays guitar, Dave Kahl on bass, and Jeff Minnick on drums. The DVD<br />

is expected to be played live in the studio with an audience. Together, Terry and<br />

Adam have launched Psychedelta Records and are finalizing Linda Hornbuckle<br />

and Janis Scroggins new release called “Sistas”. They have signed John Callahan<br />

among others and are excited about the projects to come.<br />

There are many who’ve been waiting a long time to experience the electric<br />

TR-- Well, the wait is over. In the last couple of months, the Terry Robb Electric<br />

Band has been showcasing in a few select places, priming for some larger dates that<br />

are planned. Some of us recently followed him to a show in Zig Zag at Skyways<br />

Bar and Grill where an audience of both commuters, and locals had their jaws<br />

dropped. The band kicked out fresh material, traditional blues, and some new<br />

self-styled blues- powered numbers. Terry’s extended solos were exemplified with<br />

his usual one-of-a-kind delivery in mesmerizing detail and prowess. The Band has<br />

been knocking audiences out show after show.<br />

You can catch the Terry Robb Electric Band on <strong>July</strong> 4th at the Waterfront<br />

Blues Festival. August 9th at the White Eagle, and September 12th at Mt. Tabor<br />

Theater-- All in Portland, OR. You can also see his incredible acoustic talents<br />

every Thursday at Halibuts on N.E. Alberta.<br />

Hey! There’s nothing like the real thing baby, but you can check out many<br />

examples of his playing on Youtube, just to get your tongue wet! Enjoy.<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 15


Who is John Dwyer With the number of bands he’s<br />

been involved with, he could be the next Billy Childish.<br />

Think Coach Whips, Pink and Brown, The Hospitals, and a<br />

bunch of other bands I have not heard (of ).<br />

The Oh Sees features dueling vocals between Dwyer<br />

and Brigid Dawson, with Petey Dammit and Mike Shoun<br />

completing the lineup. Dwyer and Dawson harmonize<br />

through heavy distortion in a beautiful rhythmic harmony<br />

with the garage warbly guitars (no bass!) and energetic drum<br />

beats. Their songs sound like they were recorded into a can.<br />

They give the listener a breather from their pogo dancing trash fun with slower<br />

numbers like “Grease 1,” which I would love to slow dance to with my punk rock<br />

boyfriend from college. It is also more reminiscent of their earlier experimental<br />

folk/psych recordings such as on Sucks Blood, which is still available.<br />

The Master’s Bedroom is a great listen when I need to be reminded that<br />

good, fun, rock and roll is still being recorded. Real music lives on and it is a<br />

welcome relief.<br />

Sudden Infant – Psychotic Einzelkind<br />

Blossoming<br />

B<br />

Noise Records<br />

erlin based Swiss-born experimental musician Joke Lanz, known as<br />

Sudden Infant, brings us his latest works in the album, Psychotic Einzelkind.<br />

Compare his aggressive and intense rhythms with early Einstürzende<br />

Neubauten or even angst from other acts like Cop Shoot Cop and you are right<br />

on the money. Heavy, percussive, and carefully crafted, Sudden Infant will have<br />

you tapping your feet to the beat while getting your teeth punched out at the<br />

same time.<br />

There are über distorted vocals throughout, which I liken to a nine year<br />

old boy playing by shoving contact mics in his mouth and running about like a<br />

crazed monkey. Part of the unique quality of this recording is how these sounds<br />

are interpreted by different people. What I consider child-like sounds, others can<br />

interpret as angry and disturbed. No two people in the same room will get the<br />

same message from this album.<br />

As an added bonus, Lanz has three songs remixed by experimental music<br />

luminaries Z’EV, Lasse Marhaug, and Thurston Moore. Bonus!<br />

The Daysleepers – Drowned In a Sea of Sound -<br />

Claire JRecords<br />

ust when I thought shoegazer music was not on people’s minds anymore,<br />

I stumbled upon The Daysleepers. Drowned In a Sea of Sound is a solid<br />

and satisfying full length debut from beginning to end. If you remember the<br />

heyday of dreamlike smooshy indie pop, The Daysleepers will make you think<br />

this is a lost record from that time.<br />

Think back to Slowdive, My Bloody Valentine, The Stone Roses, and that<br />

entire movement of swirly echoes and soft vocals that all these bands had in<br />

common. The Daysleepers’ Jeff Kandefer successfully recreates the same dreamlike<br />

vocals that melt with the band’s guitars and synths.<br />

Unfortunately, I would not say that they pick up where these other well<br />

known artists of the genre pick up. Had this record come out in the late 90s, it<br />

probably would have gotten lost in the limelight. There is no new edge to their<br />

sound, nor are there signs of reinventing the genre. Instead, it’s a successful recreation<br />

of music I had forgotten about.<br />

I enjoy listening to Drowned, and am glad to be reunited with a genre I put<br />

on the backburner. Thanks to this record I have dusted off some of my old Cocteau<br />

Twins and Mojave 3 albums among others.<br />

Thee Oh Sees – The Master’s Bedroom Is Worth Spending A Night In<br />

Castle JFace/Tomlab Records<br />

ust like their myspace blog says, they do not sound like the B-52s. No, far<br />

from it. They are more like teenage garage punk rock with a more modern<br />

flair. The Oh Sees, also known as OCS (which could stand for Orinoka Crash<br />

Suite, Orange County Sound, whatever…) are another John Dwyer project and<br />

this is the seventh album from this band.<br />

16 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2


CSN: Woodstock icons celebrate<br />

40 year partnership with Summer tour.<br />

Text and Photo by Jeanne Galarneau<br />

Crosby, Stills and Nash played to a sold out crowd of nearly 3000<br />

despite the threat of showers in Woodinville, Washington’s Chateau<br />

St. Michelle Winery Amphitheater, Friday June 6th, the fifth stop<br />

of their 39 date summer concert tour. David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham<br />

Nash, known as, CSN, supergroup and counter culture icons of 70’s, delivered a<br />

two set 90 minute show spanning their four decade career. Fans were treated to<br />

Woodstock era classics as well as hit songs from each of their respective solo<br />

careers.<br />

Formed in 1968, when Nash was invited into the studio to hear Crosby and<br />

Stills then collaborating after the breakup of their respective bands, the Byrds<br />

and Buffalo Springfield, Nash, then member of a British pop group the Hollies,<br />

spontaneously joined in singing a top harmony to a new Stills penned song “You<br />

closest of friends. Nash poking fun at his partners after receiving a bouquet of<br />

flowers from a fan, pacing the stage and waving them about. Crosby noodling on<br />

guitar, abruptly interrupted by Nash chiming in with, “Bus stop, bus stop, please<br />

share my umbrella...” Crosby quipping back with, “We know your group had the<br />

most hits!” Looking better than he has in years, Stills remarked, ”I am no longer<br />

wearing my old fat suit.” Both he and Crosby achieved substantial weight loss.<br />

Crosby stated,” I lost 50 pounds.”<br />

Stepping up to the mic, Crosby commented: “Don’t you think it should<br />

be illegal for a person to control nuclear weapons when he can’t pronounce the<br />

word nuclear<br />

Truly a spokesman for peace in an insane world of needless war, government<br />

mistrust and excess.<br />

CSN delivered a solid 22 song performance, a mix of electric and wooden<br />

guitars, polished vocals to an exuberant crowd. Stephen Stills, master of tasty<br />

guitar solos, sang with his sweet yet scratch vocal, which made one think he may<br />

have been singing with a sore throat leaving Nash and Crosby carry the vocals<br />

on Wooden Ships. The crowd joined in on rousing sing-a-long of Teach your<br />

Children the encore. Definitely worth the price of admission.<br />

Don’t Have to Cry.” The sound was magic. Critically acclaimed from their first<br />

release, CSN won the Grammy for “Best New Artist” in 1969, and were inducted<br />

into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997. Each of them stars in his own right,<br />

accomplished lead vocalists and songwriters, crafted a unique sound of guitar and<br />

piano, with intricate interlaced harmonies and counter melodies, the hallmark of<br />

their sound, unmatched by any other group in the industry. Socially conscious,<br />

their lyrics often politically charged, chronicling global social issues such as civil<br />

rights, nuclear power, and anti-war, became anthems of the boomer generation.<br />

They are three together, still in love with the music and each other. The<br />

evening’s performance was punctuated with dry wit and humor reserved for the<br />

Set List<br />

Wasted on the Way<br />

Long Time Gone<br />

49 Reasons<br />

Immigration Man<br />

Military Madness<br />

Isn’t it about Time<br />

Cathedral<br />

Déjá Vu<br />

Southern Cross<br />

Intermission<br />

Helplessly Hoping<br />

You Don’t Have to Cry<br />

Carry Me<br />

Guinnevere<br />

Our House<br />

Lay Me Dkown<br />

Delta<br />

Wounded World<br />

Marrakech Express<br />

For What It’s Worth<br />

Wooden Ships<br />

Encore<br />

Teach Your Children<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 17


y SP Clarke<br />

“Cherry Poppin’ Daddies daddy, Steve Perry,<br />

is an Oregon icon and should surely be in the<br />

Oregon Music Hall of Fame. His unrelenting<br />

musical vision, which has always fused<br />

elements of Funk, Ska, ‘30s Jazz, Swing and<br />

basic raunchy Rock, has now spanned almost<br />

twenty years. ”<br />

18 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2


Susquehanna - Cherry Poppin’ Daddies<br />

Space CAge Bachelor Pad Records<br />

herry Poppin’ Daddies daddy, Steve Perry, is an Oregon icon and should<br />

surely be in the Oregon Music Hall of Fame. His unrelenting musical<br />

vision, which has always fused elements of Funk, Ska, ‘30s Jazz, Swing and basic<br />

raunchy Rock, has now spanned almost twenty years. Since the band’s inception<br />

as a controversial frat-rock band, the Daddies have never been far from the local<br />

forefront, while continuously playing music that sounds strangely recycled- as if<br />

five radios from long ago eras were all blaring (harmoniously) together at once.<br />

As with the Daddies’ contemporaries in the early ‘90s, the Crazy 8’s, the<br />

Daddies sported a horn section, when horns (during the era of Grunge) were not<br />

typically being employed by rock bands. The reason this melange worked at all<br />

was attributable to the genius of Steve Perry. That is not a euphemism, the guy is<br />

a real genius (he has a degree in molecular biology, fer chrissakes). Steve was the<br />

glue that held the band’s productions together- even when the execution did not<br />

fully meet the musical vision.<br />

The Daddies have been a popular local band for over fifteen years. I remember<br />

seeing them at Larry Hurrwitz’s Day For Night in 1991 or 1992, Steve with<br />

a brightly colored mane falling halfway down his back, his head half-shaved;<br />

fairly shimmers. Perry still maintains his Sammy Davis Jr. approach to vocals, but<br />

a certain mature suavete that is all his own has crept into his delivery. The Thin<br />

White Duke meets the tuxedo-clad coolness of Bryan Ferry.<br />

Jason Moss’ spaghetti western guitar is backed by Mexicali salsa brass<br />

(provided by Dana Heitman, who has been with the band since its inception) for<br />

“Bust Out.” Steve employs a creaky lower-range vocal for the verses and choruses,<br />

sounding more like himself in the bridge. Moss’ sterling nylon string guitar solo<br />

adds a smooth Jalapeno touch to the proceedings. Moss also stands out with<br />

expert whammy bar coloration on the nocturne that is “The Mongoose And The<br />

Snake.” The Ska-flavored “Hi And Lo” calls to mind a Mighty Mighty Bosstones<br />

sort of arrangement.<br />

“Blood Orange Sun” is an uptempo Reggae number, with a number of autobiographical<br />

references to Perry’s childhood. The title of “White Trash Toodle-oo”<br />

references Duke Ellington, while the song itself is a hopped version of other songs<br />

the Daddies have produced over the years. Meanwhile, the rocky “Julie Grave” is a<br />

bit different for the Daddies, with none of the aforementioned musical references<br />

to be found, closer to something Ziggy Bowie might have done back in the early<br />

‘70s. A catchy handclapping rhythm accentuates the tale of childhood lust.<br />

With castenets a-clicking, hands a-clapping and flamenco feet a-tapping,<br />

“Roseanne” is a taste of Espagnole; a righteous send up. Moss’ highly stylized<br />

guitar, obviously influenced by African pop music, is the highlight of “Tom The<br />

Lion,” another departure for the Daddies; a direction heretofore unraveled for<br />

the band. Infectious. Moss returns with jazzy comping on “Wingtips,” a song<br />

Sammy Davis Jr. would have enjoyed singing. A sassy bossa nova, replete with<br />

flutes, “Breathe” is a quick trip to Brazil, with a lovely chorus.<br />

An acoustic guitar makes an appearance, along with French horn accompaniment<br />

and a sonorous cello, to dress up “The Good Things,” a song few would<br />

guess to be performed by the Daddies. Delightful. “Arra’ncate” utilizes many of the<br />

earlier Latin themes in a send-up that would do Pink Martini proud (unless the<br />

translation of the Spanish lyrics would fail to meet Pink’s highly PC standards).<br />

A true tour de force, the Daddies have produced an album that takes the<br />

listener around the world. While some of the material sounds like classic Cherry<br />

Poppin’, about half of the songs are a real stretch for the band- yet fully within the<br />

breadth of their talents and ambitions. And, while every member of the Oregon<br />

Music Hall of Fame is fully deserving of their induction- the list of honorees will<br />

not be complete until Steve Perry and the Cherry Poppin’ Daddies are included in<br />

the ranks. They are some of the best musicians the state has ever seen. And certainly<br />

twenty years is enough indentured musical servitude to warrant inclusion.<br />

maneuvering a giant plastic penis around the stage and into the crowd. This might<br />

have been during their brief period as the “Bad Daddies” after their hometown<br />

of Eugene erupted in civil uproar over the name “Cherry Poppin’”. Those days<br />

were oh so quaint.<br />

I remember seeing the band again, maybe a year later, playing to a packed<br />

house at Belmont’s Inn. They were far tighter by then, with the horn section better<br />

integrated into the mix and with Steve sporting close-cropped hair and a more<br />

suave stage presence. Within five years, the band had a national hit with “Zoot<br />

Suit Riot,” one of four new songs presented with several of the band’s previous<br />

Swing masterpieces in the album of the same name.<br />

And for quite some time the Daddies were unfairly lumped into the “Cocktail<br />

Nation” pile that was momentarily popular in the late ‘90s. This almost became<br />

the death of the Cherry Poppin’ Daddies. Their attempts to escape that Zoot suit<br />

motif were met with a collective yawn. It has taken the band almost ten years<br />

to free themselves from that albatross and return to being the band they once<br />

were- not locked into any particular style, but fully capable of deftly maneuvering<br />

through any of them.<br />

“Susquehana” is an ambitious project, which Perry likens to a musical version<br />

of James Joyces’ “Ullyses,” wherein (as Joyce did, literarily) he employs different<br />

styles and arrangements to flesh out each musical chapter among the thirteen songs<br />

proffered. Longtime Daddies fans will hear all the various musical styles to which<br />

they have become accustomed to hearing performed by the band. But here, the<br />

tasteful application of various World music shades, color many of the compositions<br />

as well. It is the same old Cherry Poppin’ Daddies- yet somehow different.<br />

For one thing, the band has sonically never sounded better. The horn section<br />

The End - Podington Bear<br />

Hush NRecords<br />

o, this musician is not to be confused with Paddington Bear, that saccharine<br />

little children’s book character with the dumb hat and raincoat.<br />

In fact, this bear is not to be confused with anyone. Mr./Ms.Bear is a mysteriously<br />

shadowy individual. Look up the name online, and see what you get. Podington’s<br />

website gives very little information about the person or the music. But this individual<br />

is dedicated to the Pod aspect in the name. Believe that.<br />

Podington is an extremely creative instrumentalist, fashioning lush sonic<br />

soundscapes at an incredible rate of output. Check out the simultaneous Hush<br />

Release- “The Box Set,” for verification of that assertion. That 10 CD set contains<br />

135 pieces (including this album), over 8 hours of original music, most of which<br />

was composed and created over the past year. Last year, the Bear attempted to<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 19


elease (via the website and Podcast), a new piece of music every couple<br />

of days and nearly accomplished the task. Lael Alderman, eat your heart<br />

out!<br />

Podington would have you steal the music, or at least borrow it, rather<br />

than to conform to the age-old practice of selling it to you via the usual channels<br />

of treachery and corporate hypocrisy. This album- and the rest of the<br />

compendium are a nod to the fact that not everyone has the wherewithal<br />

to obtain this stuff via the electronic media. Some people just like to hold<br />

“product” in their cold clammy hands, don’t you know.<br />

This particular seven piece construction conforms (loosely) to the<br />

work of Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, whose groundbreaking work in the field of<br />

death and dying, and whose Five Stages of Grief, was pretty much the last<br />

word on the subject (so to speak) throughout the last several decades of<br />

her own life (which ended in 2004).<br />

To Kübler-Ross’ “Five Stages of Grief ”- Denial, Anger, Bargaining,<br />

Depression and Acceptance, Mr./Ms. Bear offers slight modifications.<br />

The seven pieces presented here are entitled “Change,” “Denial,” “Bargaining,”<br />

“Fury,” “Ebullience,” “Grief ” and “Acceptance.” As to whether Mr./<br />

Ms. Bear has experienced a death in his/hers immediate family cannot be<br />

ascertained.<br />

However, those of you put off by the subject of death and dying have<br />

nothing to fear with this cinematic display of sonic splendor. The music<br />

here is transcendent and uplifting, without being morosely grim nor glumly<br />

self-pitying. Only the elegiac track “Grief,” Satie-like in its construction,<br />

connotes anything even remotely sad.<br />

And what glorious music it is! Comparative allusions have been made<br />

to Aphex Twin and Brian Eno- and though atmospheric in its own right,<br />

this music is far more melodic and emotionally immediate than that with<br />

which this music is compared.<br />

Words are hardly worthy to describe this music. Highly orchestral.<br />

Warm. Emotive. Passionate. Thoughtful. Extremely well executed. Original.<br />

Deep. Unique. Far less precious than Mr./Ms. Podington’s moniker<br />

would imply.<br />

It is music that must be experienced to be appreciated and it really<br />

should be appreciated, if but for the incredible depth and scope of the output.<br />

Try it. You may or may not like it, but you will come away with a profound<br />

respect for the musician that is Podington Bear.<br />

The Builders And the Butchers - The Builders And The Butchers<br />

Bladen County Records<br />

The Builders and the Butchers have been hailed in some quarters as taking<br />

up the local banner for the Decemberists- since the latter moved on to major label<br />

stardom and whom are now seldom seen in our local scene. While the newcomers<br />

share certain attributes, including a decidedly antebellum atmosphere, they lack<br />

the literary precocity of the Meloy clan. To these ears the band more resembles<br />

the Bluegrass intimations of Kevin Ritchie and his work as Bingo; with a touch of<br />

the funereal folk of Ritchie Young and Loch Lomond- though, strangely, vocalist<br />

Ryan Soller’s whining voice also closely recalls that of David Surkamp of the ‘70s<br />

Seattle band, Pavlov’s Dog. Let that percolate in your brain for a while.<br />

The music is loose around the edges- sort of sing-along songs for the modern<br />

20 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2


Gangs of New York. “The Night Pt. 1” is an uptempo dirge, whereas “Pt.2” is a real<br />

dirge, with Soller caterwauling into the blackness. “Red Hands” combines Harvey<br />

Tumbleson’s bubbly mandolin with guests Annalisa Tornfelt’s moaning fiddle<br />

and Adrienne Hatkins jangly banjo- to good effect. A sense of drama pervades.<br />

“Spanish Death Song,” is livened up by drummer Paul Seely’s mournfully dramatic<br />

trumpet work. Flores por los meurtos. “Black Dresses” holds to the dingy motif,<br />

slap happy in the face of begrimed gloom. The bride wore black.<br />

“Bottom of the Lake” breaks with the stylistic mood of the previous<br />

arrangements- with symphonic strings sawing away behind Soller’s raucous<br />

banshee banter. “The Gallows” brings to mind the slightly intoxicated barroom<br />

flair of Philadelphia’s Dr. Dog, with a heavy dose of the Pogues thrown in, for<br />

morbid folk authenticity. Tumbleson’s mandolin swims across “Bringing Home<br />

The Rain,” a sort of bluegrass jig, with Soller’s customary dreary lyrical outlook<br />

lending jaundiced perspective to the jauntily morose proceedings. Like a wake<br />

for a dead circus.<br />

“The Coal Mine Fall” picks up where the previous song left off. Like turning<br />

a corner onto a new street, festooned with black bunting. The shadowy gospel<br />

call-and-response background vocals of “Slowed Down Trip to Hell is no less jolly<br />

than its predecessors: meaning not at all. A dim world view, to say the least. “Ten<br />

Miles Wide” maintains the chunky acoustic guitar setting for another happily<br />

bleak lament about death and misery. The final song of the set, “Find Me in the<br />

Air,” vaguely sounds like “After The Goldrush” period Neil Young, and is by far<br />

the cheeriest number of the bunch- which isn’t saying much.<br />

The Builders and the Butchers sing drinking songs for the chronically<br />

depressed and irrepressibly downtrodden, with a sublime rousing melancholy<br />

hanging over the good times like the breath of the Devil himself. Ryan Soller’s<br />

unique approach to a song is, like the Decemberists, a throwback to earlier days;<br />

although, just when those days might have actually transpired is somewhat hard to<br />

say. All the same, his musical vision is consistent with itself, if a tad anachronistic.<br />

Still, it is a sure thing that this band could liven up any Friday night of inebriation<br />

with the frivolous songs of the dying and the dead.<br />

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<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 21


y Ty Hitzmann<br />

DANAVA: UononoU<br />

Kemado<br />

This new release sets course in<br />

some new directions while<br />

continuing to maintain the rebound<br />

of 70’s progressive rock in the last few<br />

years. I for one had been missing it since<br />

Rush became the only band worthy of<br />

attempting to carry on the tradition. Fast<br />

forward 30 years to groups like the Goddamn<br />

Gentlemen and F***ing Champs,<br />

who finally, have made some great returns<br />

of the genre.<br />

Danava lights this torch and runs<br />

wildly with it, and has created in the process,<br />

some very original ferociously intense and foundational<br />

sounds in the rock arena. However, to call it<br />

simply rock &roll would be as incomplete as naming<br />

Led Zepellin simply a ‘blues band’, even though<br />

they in many ways were just that. We don’t blame<br />

Dusty Sparkles not being keen on labels. to make<br />

references is human nature, we can only compare to<br />

others who’ve gone before to some degree.<br />

Danava doesn’t consider themselves a metal<br />

band. I agree. They also don’t consider themselves<br />

Prog. I respectfully disagree.<br />

However classified, we’re talking intensely original<br />

material here. There are slight references to Thin<br />

Lizzy mixed with Rush and Sabbath elements .That<br />

said-these guys are cut from their own circuitous cloth,<br />

which is norm these days any way you slice it.<br />

No rock audience could possibly be disappointed<br />

even if this was all any band could muster up as a tour de<br />

force...What a combination for all of us who are starving<br />

for hard driving poly-rhythmic intellegent and guttoral<br />

rock and roll unpolluted with empty filler.<br />

Within the first two tracks I was more than conv<br />

i n c e d<br />

and had the fever of a gold rush prospector.<br />

The title track, “Unonou” blasts the senses and immediately assures the listener<br />

the band’s intent is tightly worn, and well practiced. Hit potential for sure.<br />

“Where Beauty and Terror Dance” is reminiscent of early Rush, but with a<br />

darker sensibility.<br />

“Emerald Snow of Sleep” has a Yes essence to it, and adds some interesting lines<br />

from the bands keyboardist, Rockwell. He adds a uniqueness to the CD that is necessary,<br />

yet hard to describe. The elements of the song gather together for a stinging guitar<br />

solo, then blends into a jazz-like horn arrangement at the end.<br />

The 4th track,”A High or a Low” carries a boxy contrived sound to the mix. Along<br />

with its elements of Cheap Trick and Lennon quasi- Beatles feel, there remains this<br />

bands ability to incite incredibly stone-cold rock passages.<br />

Haunted is the complex but controlled, almost Doors like frenzy of “Spinning<br />

Temple Shifting”. Sparkles’ leads are prominent and culminating. He is well practiced<br />

and has conquered monumental ground in the Prog arena and is more than impressive<br />

to say the least.<br />

22 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2<br />

“One Mind Gone Separate Ways” is the final track, a collective<br />

body of narrative movements that will blow you away. The melding<br />

of instruments captures the minds eye. The oneness presented here<br />

is sheer magic...an awesome magnitude of completeness.<br />

This album should be funded with a petite orchestra to be fully<br />

realized in an entirely live setting. The only downside is that his vocal<br />

mix is sometimes weak and unintelligible.<br />

Bassist Dell Blackwell bears a heavy load that he carries with consummate<br />

precision. He has a controlled attack that is at once graceful<br />

and cacophonous.<br />

Percussionist Buck Rothy sets his miking close which adds a<br />

snappy flavor to the mix. This is even more evident live where he is a<br />

powerhouse of energy and sweaty intent.<br />

Sparkles’ guitar leads stand alone, and can sting with a complexity<br />

on par with the likes of Jimmy Page.<br />

Together, they have cut something influential that keeps on growing<br />

with each listen.<br />

Expect more good stuff from this band.<br />

QUANDRY - Five Senses of Phantasm<br />

Self Released<br />

There’s nothing like a refreshing dose of heavy in just the right way. Metal has<br />

its parameters for wiggle room, wherein individuality can become lost in<br />

simply trying to keep w/ in its own confines.<br />

Having never heard this trio before , I immediately figured that a band opening for<br />

local monoliths Floater had to be good, so I picked them out to give a listen and ended<br />

up giving it a 2nd, then 3rd go-around and was pretty impressed by this effort.<br />

These dudes hail from Eugene originally as a high school party band, only to<br />

temporarily break up and then regroup again in 2004 after realizing that they actually<br />

had something good going.<br />

FIve Senses of Phantasm bathes the listener in a bevy of textures with usual influences<br />

seeming from just the right places, allowing originality to chart the course.<br />

One song blasts you with chunks of distortive thundering walls of power, while<br />

the next track floats you down a soulful stream of consciousness. Quandry has no<br />

problem meshing Megadeth-like power chording and disarray with an absolute dreamy<br />

Floydian- like amiability, which glimmers through their certain pall of doom almost<br />

in one collective breath. These guys are in tune with each other.<br />

This CD delivers a few diverse styles, like African rhythm and middle-eastern<br />

chord progressions, and slight industrial flavors delivered with smooth and sinister<br />

overtones as well.


The first track starts strong with a Nirvana flavor to it, but the feel is fastforwared<br />

to a modern day presence of mind. Highly original and perfect to open<br />

the door. “Scarab” could levitate the dead up through the cold hard earth with its<br />

shear power and angst .Emotion and mood sets the journey with a sort of a space<br />

travel sensibility.<br />

“Apostasy” plays out great with Guy’s thundering guitar lines setting the rhythm.<br />

Here, Nate(Vocals,Bass,Keys) and Scotty(Percussion) seem to play behind him as<br />

the rhythm section.<br />

The attractive guitar tickling with an ivory like smoothness is polarized with a<br />

bone crushing smash in “Shock Therapy”. The tonality is moving, with tight transitions.<br />

And Nate’s vocal styling is powerful and convincing.<br />

“Deals” is the closer, and shows that the last can be as good as the first. Delivering<br />

classic controlled madness, harnessed at the end with a soothing piano line to<br />

help lick the wounds.<br />

I was also grateful they were wise enough to spare us from too much of the<br />

over-used wolfen- growl that has wasted far too many megabytes where actual musical<br />

creativity belongs - Plus, it’s just not scary anymore.<br />

Five Senses of Phantasm is impressive. The CD embraces a diversity of style<br />

within its genre pool while dipping enough in creative territories. Quandry has successfully<br />

forged a convincing attitude of Mean Metal along with a mind expanding<br />

emotional appeal.<br />

CHERRY POPPIN’ DADDIES<br />

Wonder Ballroom<br />

Portland, OR. 4.19.08<br />

The shot-in-the-dark resurgence of the Swing movement in the NorthWest has<br />

long been over...Well, not quite. Gone are the flap dancing Zoot Suit clad 20 and 30<br />

somethings that crowded many a dance floor in the lat 90’s. And long gone also are a<br />

good number of the bands that payed mostly worthy tributes to that great era.<br />

Not gone however, is the fabulousCherry Poppin’ Daddies, who are arguablythebandwho<br />

single handedly jump-started the swing era resurgence in Portland and the<br />

N.W. as early as the late 80’s. Their success has a lot to do with their smart inclusion<br />

of ska, punk and “Rat Pack” elements. Spike Jones lyrical content, Sergio Mendez<br />

interludes and Zappa-esque complicated note structuring definitely helped.<br />

One of the coolest and unique attributes about the Daddies is that there’s<br />

not much comparison to match them with. Yeah, there’sRoyal Crown Review who<br />

maintain the 40’s and early 50’s hard-boiled approach. And there’s theSquirrel Nut<br />

Zippers, who’s niche is more afforded to areas of Gypsy and Klezmer. But the CPD’s<br />

have consistently re-evaluated the cutting edge of the times, and prevailed as relevant<br />

and sharp.<br />

The Daddies invigorated a nice sized crowd in Portland, partly in support of<br />

their new CD, “Susquehanna”(see S.P. Clarke’s review). But the CPD’s still show an<br />

all consuming fire to keep knocking out great numbers from their vast catalogue. This<br />

crowd brought a little of the late 90’s swing crowd back, but a whole lot of the dancers<br />

were just regular Joe’s and Jane’s who just plain dig the excitable lure of the band’s<br />

appeal, which has become legendary. I spoke with a very young couple who’d first<br />

heard them in Jr. high school, “They are so way-out there, we’re so stoked and glad to<br />

be here. They are unbelievably cool!”<br />

Vocalist Steve Perry has lost neither of his moves nor his sweaty sex appeal as<br />

he jumped, jived and waled on the stage. The chicks were reaching out with mouths<br />

agaped and eyes agog while he crooned Sinatra-esque numbers, erstwhile twisting his<br />

hips and vrooming his signature tenor voice with an Elvis-like vibrato. Steve muses,<br />

“Our audiences have morphed over the years from hippies and grungers, to swing and<br />

the ska crowd, and always the rockabilly and hipsters. Now with the internet we’ve<br />

got quite a metal fan base.”<br />

This is no surprise since from their debut album, “Ferociously Stoned” these<br />

guys were breaking all molds by fusing countless genres together, but with a clear nod<br />

to Swing as a modus-operandi. “We’ve always tried to keep making it different. We’re<br />

just trying to justify american music by giving it a different slant wherever we can. Pop<br />

music is just the palette to work from as a starting point, and then just fuck with the<br />

dead space.” The Band moved through a great variety of new and old, kicking them<br />

out with just enough of their original vintage feel, but taking the songs through some<br />

updated modes to keep them interesting.”<br />

An important note is that Perry recently finished up a degree in molecular genetics<br />

that took him some 22 years to accomplish. Not because of a lacking of ambition<br />

or good grades, but because he vowed to keep his well-oiled machine of top notch<br />

musicians on the march. “I can’t do music and biology at the same time”, says Perry.<br />

We think you can.<br />

HELL’S BELLES:<br />

DANTE’S<br />

3.22.08<br />

These four femme fatale’s project within feminine maelstrom of high voltage<br />

sound, but with a shot of testosterone you have to hear to totally appreciate. They no<br />

doubt bust their balls cranking out AC/DC like there’s no tomorrow. Crank it to the<br />

breaking point, look everyone in the eye, and pull the trigger.<br />

I’ve seen the Belles’ audience get bigger every year, and it’s no wonder they do,<br />

because they always return packing just a little more iron and ferocity.<br />

Dante’s must’ve had a trouble keeping the place cooled off at saturday’s show. The<br />

crowd was packed, the alcohol was pouring, sweat was steaming off of lead guitarist<br />

Adrian Conner and singer Jamie Nova as they puffed and pounded through so many<br />

of the Australian hard rock band’s catalogue, it would be daunting to list. I don’t know<br />

about anyone else, but I’m pretty sure I heard them cover much more than I expected.<br />

Hearing them burn through “Whole Lotta Rosie”,” Back In Black”, “Hell’s Bells” and<br />

“Dirt Deeds’ during the first set made it worth the trip. And nothings quite as good<br />

with your live rock and roll set than a little strip tease act, and mid show BA. At least<br />

we get to view Adrian’s buff derriere instead of Angus’ puny butt. After that we know<br />

we’re going to get the psycho Angus-like circle floor spindle guitar solo. Adrian ran<br />

around like a crazy clock hand and must’ve held that floor down for a good 2 minutes<br />

while blistering out “Thunderstruck”. She straddled, mocked, praised, saluted, and<br />

flipped off all around her and never stopped. Then she got up and continued the last<br />

section of the song pounding both feet on the mat. The crowd went wild.<br />

They are touring in support of their recent CD, We Salute You, which exhibits<br />

their fine-honed skills as seasoned Professionals. Covering along with some well known<br />

songs like “Back In Black”, and for “Those About To Rock’, lessor known numbers<br />

“Walk All Over You”, and “Let There Be Rock”, are astoundingly accurate and heavy.<br />

“Riff Raff” is my pick of the litter for a great song that has never gotten the attention<br />

it deserved in the first place. Adrian knocks it out of the park, with stellar backbone<br />

support on rhythm guitar by Lisa Brisbois. These girls have the spirit within them to<br />

carry this torch a long way - And their packed audiences will help them with both arms<br />

shafted firmly in the air to greet them.<br />

AC/DC may play seemingly easy licks, but seasoned guitarists agree few bands<br />

have been able to pull off such raw ferver and intensity as they do. It’s irresistably cool<br />

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<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 23


24 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2


Breakneck<br />

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<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 25


You can also see this guide online at buko.net, to<br />

save space long equipment lists are limited to the<br />

online listings.<br />

Attorneys<br />

Bruce D. McLaughlin<br />

Attorney at Law, P.C.<br />

PO Box 25059, Portland, OR 97298<br />

Phone: 503-644-9597<br />

Fax: 503-644-9598<br />

Email: bmclaugh@davidbowie.com<br />

Attorneys Entertainment<br />

Jeff Brown<br />

1327 SE Tacoma St., PMB #262<br />

Portland, OR 97202<br />

Email: jeffbrownlegal@gmail.com<br />

Bart Day<br />

1001 S.W. Fifth Avenue, Suite 1100,<br />

Portland, Oregon 97204<br />

Phone: 503/291-9300<br />

Email: allmedia@hevanet.com<br />

Peter Vaughan Shaver, Esq.<br />

3939 NE Hancock St. Suite 308<br />

Portland, OR 97212<br />

Phone: 503-473-8252<br />

Fax: 503-288-5219<br />

Email:pv@pdxsa.com<br />

Jay M. Schornstein<br />

1609 SE 48th Avenue<br />

Portland, OR 97215<br />

Phone: 503-232-3498<br />

Fax: 503-231-6491<br />

Email: schornj@aracnet.com<br />

Band Listings<br />

can be found online at buko.net<br />

Design and Photography Services<br />

by <strong>Buko</strong><br />

PO Box 13480 Portland OR 97213<br />

Email: buko@bybuko.com<br />

Web: www.bybuko.com<br />

Specalize in Photography and Print Design some<br />

web.<br />

Cravedog Inc.<br />

1522 N Ainsworth St.<br />

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Phone:(503) 233-7284<br />

Toll free: 866-469-9820<br />

Email: info@Cravedog.com<br />

Web: www.Cravedog.com<br />

Owner: Todd Crosby.<br />

Graphics for CD packaging with order.<br />

Get Up Media<br />

Phone: 971-227-8929<br />

Email: info@getupmedia.com<br />

Web: www.getupmedia.com<br />

Specalize in web design, myspace design and<br />

marketing, graphic work and photo editing.<br />

Juliana Tobón • Photographer<br />

Phone: 503.544.5882<br />

email: info@jtobon.com<br />

web: www.jtobon.com<br />

Nettleingham Audio<br />

108 E 35th Vancouver, WA, 98663<br />

Toll Free: 888-261-5086<br />

Phone: 360-696-5999<br />

Email: kevin@nettleinghamaudio.com<br />

Web: www.nettleinghamaudio.com<br />

Owner: Kevin Nettleingham<br />

Graphics for CD packaging with order.<br />

Silverlining Media<br />

Phone: 503-805-1259<br />

Email: kevin@silverliningmedia.net<br />

Web: www.silverliningmedia.net<br />

26 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2<br />

Specalize in web design.<br />

Zap Graphics<br />

2014 NE Sandy Blvd. Suite 208 Portland, OR.<br />

97232<br />

phone: (503) 232-8785<br />

Web: www.zapgraphics.com<br />

Email: keith@zapgraphics.com<br />

CD packaging design and production<br />

Photography, Web design<br />

Advertising, Graphic Design<br />

Duplication/Manufacturing<br />

Allied Vaughn<br />

1434 NW 17th Avenue<br />

Portland, OR, 97209<br />

Phone: 503-224-3835<br />

Email: kevin.felts@alliedvaughn.com<br />

Web: www.alliedvaughn.com<br />

Contact: Kevin Felts<br />

Rates posted at website: no<br />

500 CD Package Cost = $1,895.00 3 color on-disc<br />

printing 4/1 4-panel insert + tray card, in jewel<br />

case with shrinkwrap.<br />

1000 CD Package Cost = $1,795.00 3 color<br />

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Audio Duplication Plus<br />

5319 SW Westgate Drive<br />

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Phone: 503-203-8101<br />

Email: audupplus@aol.com<br />

Web: www.avduplication.com<br />

Contact: Bruce Hemingway<br />

Rates posted at website: no<br />

500 CD Package Cost = $1,050 Retail Ready<br />

package. Descriptions unavailable.<br />

1000 CD Package Cost = $1,300.00 Retail Ready<br />

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BullseyeDisc<br />

3377 SE Division, #105<br />

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Toll Free: 800-652-7194<br />

Phone: 503.233.2313<br />

Fax: 503.233.4845<br />

Email: mail@bullseyedisc.com<br />

Web: www.bullseyedisc.com<br />

Rates available at website: yes<br />

CD Forge<br />

1420 NW Lovejoy Suite #327<br />

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Phone: 503.736.3261<br />

Fax: 503.736.3264<br />

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Rates posted at website: get an instant, fully<br />

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Co-Operations, Inc.<br />

20049 SW 112th Ave<br />

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Toll Free: 866-228-6362<br />

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Email: contact@co-operations.com<br />

Web: www.co-operations.com<br />

Rates posted at website: no.<br />

Cravedog Inc.<br />

1522 N Ainsworth St.<br />

Portland, OR 97217<br />

Toll Free: 866-469-9820<br />

Phone: 503-233-7284<br />

Email: info@Cravedog.com<br />

Web: www.Cravedog.com<br />

Owner: Todd Crosby.<br />

Rates posted at website: yes<br />

1000 CD Package Cost = $1,220.00 3 color<br />

on-disc printing. 4/1 4-panel insert + tray card, in<br />

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Dungeon Replication<br />

106 SE 11th Avenue,<br />

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TollFree: 877-777-7276<br />

Phone: 503-796-0380<br />

Fax: 503-223-4737<br />

Email: info@dungeon-replication.com<br />

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Rates posted on website: yes<br />

1000 CD Package Cost = $1,235.00 Includes glass<br />

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Web: www.logicgen.com<br />

Rates posted on website: no.<br />

Nettleingham Audio<br />

108 E 35th Vancouver, WA, 98663<br />

Toll Free: 888-261-5086<br />

Phone: 360-696-5999<br />

Email: kevin@nettleinghamaudio.com<br />

Web: www.nettleinghamaudio.com<br />

Owener: Kevin Nettleingham<br />

Rates posted on website: yes<br />

500 CD Package Cost = $945.00 5 color on disc<br />

print, 4 page 4/1 insert and traycard, (black or<br />

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Local: 503.223.5010<br />

Fax: 503.223.4737<br />

Email: info@nwmedia.com<br />

Web: www.nwmedia.com<br />

Rates posted on website: yes<br />

Retail Ready packages - Short Run/Fast Turn<br />

packages – Recycled paper stock options – Jewel<br />

case/Digipaks/Wallets/Sleeves – Posters/Flyers/<br />

Stickers – 100 posters = $49, 300 posters = $99<br />

with a retail-ready package – Call for the latest<br />

specials!<br />

Phylco Audio Duplication<br />

10431 Blackwell Rd.<br />

Central Point, OR, 97502<br />

Toll Free: 800-348-6194 Phone: 541-855-7484<br />

Fax: 541-855-7581<br />

Email: info@phylcoaudio.com<br />

Web: www.phylcoaudio.com<br />

Contact: Gail Husa<br />

Rates posted on website: yes<br />

500 CD Package Cost = $936.00 2-panel full color<br />

insert and tray card (4/1, full color outside, black<br />

and white inside) , 2 color on CD, insertion of<br />

printing into jewel case, shrink wrap, and barcode.”<br />

1000 CD Package Cost = $1,224.00 2-panel full<br />

color insert and tray card (4/1, full color outside,<br />

black and white inside) , 2 color on CD, insertion<br />

of printing into jewel case, shrink wrap, and<br />

barcode.<br />

SuperDigital<br />

1150 Nw 17th Ave<br />

Portland, OR 97209-2403<br />

Toll Free: 888-792-8346 (orders only)<br />

Phone: 503-228-2222<br />

Email: superdigital@superdigital.com<br />

Web: www.superdigital.com<br />

Owner: Rick McMillen<br />

Rates posted on website: yes<br />

500 CD Package Cost = $950.00<br />

3 Color Printing on disc- from supplied film1100<br />

4 page Full Color(4/1) Booklets & Tray cards<br />

from supplied color film. Includes FREE UPC<br />

BarCode, glass master, jewel case and wrap.<br />

1000 CD Package Cost = $1,165.00 3 Color<br />

Printing on disc- from supplied film1100 4 page<br />

Full Color(4/1) Booklets & Tray cards from supplied<br />

color film. Includes FREE UPC BarCode,<br />

glass master, jewel case and wrap.<br />

Labels<br />

Burnside Records<br />

3158 E. Burnside Portland, OR 97214<br />

Phone: (503) 231-0876<br />

Fax: (503) 238-0420<br />

Email: music@burnsiderecords.com<br />

Web: www.burnsiderecords.com<br />

Owners: Terry Currier & Jim Brandt<br />

Producers: Various<br />

Types of music released: Blues<br />

Artist roster: Mason Ruffner, Henry Cooper, Paul<br />

Brasch,Johnny & the Distractions, John Fahey,<br />

M.Doeherty, Mick Clarke, David Friesen, Obo<br />

Addy, Lloyd Jones, Too Slim & the Taildraggers,<br />

Kelly Joe Phelps, Terry Robb, Duffy Bishop Band,<br />

McKinley, Gary Myrick, Sheila Wilcoxson Bill<br />

Rhoades & Alan Hager, Bugs Henderson.<br />

Distribution: Burnside sub-distributes two Portland<br />

based labels: The Magic Wing and Eurock.<br />

National distribution through Distribution North<br />

America & Rock Bottom.<br />

Affiliated Label: Sideburn Records<br />

Types of music released: Roots Rock<br />

Artist Roster: 44 Long, Rudy Tutti Grayzell,<br />

Tommy Womack.<br />

Cavity Search Records<br />

P.O. Box 42246 Portland, OR 97242<br />

Email: csr@teleport.com<br />

Web: www.cavitysearchrecords.com Owners:<br />

Denny Swofford, Christopher Cooper Types of<br />

Music Released: Music we like by bands/artists<br />

we like. Artist Roster: Pete Krebs, Pete Krebs &<br />

Gossamer Wings, King Black Acid, Richmond<br />

Fontaine, Golden Delicious, Wayne Horvitz,<br />

Steve Lacy, Elliott Sharp, Elliott Smith.<br />

Criminal Records<br />

P.O. Box 25542 Portland, OR 97225<br />

Phone: 503-244-5827<br />

Contact: Paul Jones<br />

Types of music released: Northwest Blues, R&B.<br />

Preferred submission: We’re not looking for new<br />

artists.<br />

Kinds of deals usually offered: CD, cassette.<br />

Artist roster: Claire Bruce, Paul DeLay Band, J.C.<br />

Rico, Linda Hornbuckle, Lloyd Jones Struggle,<br />

Dave Stewart, Jim Mesi Band, Joe Dobro, Too<br />

Slim & the Taildraggers, Paul Jones, Shade.<br />

Diamond Z Records<br />

16016 Lower Boones Ferry Road, Suite 5<br />

Lake Oswego, Oregon 97035<br />

Phone: 503-675-1670, 503-635-7355<br />

Email: DZRRecords@aol.com<br />

Contact: Steve Landsberg.<br />

Elemental Records<br />

PO Box 55771<br />

Portland, OR 97238-5771<br />

Phone: 503-803-6020<br />

Email: cassandrabanton@hotmail.com<br />

Web: www.elementalrecords.com<br />

President: Cassandra Banton<br />

Vice President: Robert Wynia<br />

Exec Producer: Diogenes Alexander Xenos<br />

Roster Management: Aaron Thorpe<br />

Active Roster: Floater, TV:616, Blyss Available:<br />

Jollymon, Sweaty Nipples, Henry’s Child, NW<br />

Compilations<br />

Distribution: Direct, Burnside, Valley Records


Studios: Gung-Ho Studios (Eugene), Freq<br />

(Portland)<br />

Submission format: CD or high quality video<br />

Offering: Unusual agreements for the right bands.<br />

EON Records<br />

PO Box 5665<br />

Portland, OR 97228<br />

Email: eonrecords@aol.com<br />

Web: www.eonrecords.com<br />

Owners: Tommy/John Thayer<br />

Producers: Various<br />

Types of music released: new<br />

Artist roster: 28 IF, Black’n Blue, Dan Reed<br />

Distribution: Nail Distribution/Portland, OR<br />

Eurock<br />

P.O. Box 13718 Portland, OR 97213<br />

Phone: 503-281-0247<br />

Fax: 281-0247<br />

Email: apatters@eurock.com<br />

Web: www.eurock.com<br />

Owner: Archie Patterson<br />

Types of music released: License recordings by<br />

European & American artists.<br />

Submission Formats: CD’s.<br />

Kinds of deals usually offered: CDs.<br />

Artist Roster: Dweller at the Threshold, Gandalf,<br />

Robert J. Horky, Erik Wollo, Green Isac, Tim Story,<br />

Mikhail Chekalin.<br />

Distribution: DNA North America, Burnside<br />

Records.<br />

Flying Heart Records<br />

4026 N.E. 12th Ave.<br />

Portland, OR 97212<br />

Phone: 503-287-8045<br />

Email: flyheart@teleport.com<br />

Web: www.teleport.com/~flyheart/<br />

Owner: Jan Celt<br />

Producer: Jan Celt<br />

Types of music released: Original NW artists and<br />

related projects.<br />

Submission Formats: Demo cassettes.<br />

Kinds of deals usually offered: Album projects,<br />

Publishing of related materials.<br />

Other services offered: producer services and bands<br />

wishing to make their own releases.<br />

Artist roster: Janice Scroggins, Tom McFarland,<br />

Obo Addy, The Esquires, Napalm Beach, SnoBud<br />

& the Flower People, Snobud Comics by Chris<br />

Newman, Phillip’s Dream World coloring book for<br />

children, written and illustrated by Chris Newman,<br />

Eddie Harris, Thara Memory, the Gays.<br />

Distribution: Burnside.<br />

Heinz Records<br />

728 SW 1st Ave Portland, OR 97204<br />

Mailing Address: P.O. Box 4628,<br />

Portland, OR 97208<br />

Phone: 503-249-0808<br />

Fax: 503-249-7842<br />

Submission format: We are not accepting submissions<br />

right now.<br />

Artist roster: Pink Martini,<br />

3 Leg Torso, Le Happy<br />

Web: www.pinkmartini.com.<br />

Jus Family Records<br />

3439 NE Sandy Blvd #701<br />

Portland, Ore 97232<br />

Phone: 800- 757-1851<br />

Email: JusFamily@aol.com<br />

Web: www.jusfamilyrecords.com<br />

Owners: Terrance Scott, Bosco Kawte<br />

Types of music released: Hip-Hop, R&B and any<br />

other form of good music.<br />

Submission Formats: cassettes<br />

Artist Roster: Cool Nutz, Kenny Mack, G-Ism,<br />

Monkey Mike.<br />

National Dust Records<br />

P.O.Box 2454 Portland, OR 97208<br />

Phone: 503-903-0625<br />

Web: www.angelfire.com/nd2/nationaldustrecords<br />

Email: nationaldust@hotmail.com<br />

Contact: Shan<br />

Producer: the bands choice.<br />

Types of music released: Punk rock, rock’n roll.<br />

Submission Formats: tapes/records.<br />

Kind of deals offered: % of product pressed.<br />

Artist roster: Apt. 3G, Nixon Flat, Nervous Christians,<br />

Jimmies, Low Rent Souls, Lazy Boy. Distribution:<br />

Profane Existence, N.A.I.L., EFA (Europe).<br />

MDR Records<br />

1920 N. Vancouver St.<br />

Portland, OR. 97227<br />

Phone: (503) 287-3975<br />

Fax: (503) 294-5021<br />

Psycheclectic Records<br />

P.O. Box 8133 Portland. OR 97207<br />

Phone: 503-295-2776<br />

Web: www.psycheclectic.com<br />

Email: label@psycheclectic.com<br />

Contact: William Weikart<br />

Artist roster: Garmonbozia, James Angell and<br />

Obscured by Clouds<br />

Tombstone Records<br />

16631 SE 82nd Drive<br />

Clackamas, Oregon 97015<br />

Mailing Address: P.O. Box 1463, Clackamas, OR<br />

97015 U.S.A.<br />

Phone: 503-657-0929<br />

Fax: 503-631-2797<br />

Web: www.deadmoonusa.com<br />

Owners: Fred & Toody Cole<br />

Producer: Fred Cole<br />

Types of music released: MONO ONLY!! Mostly<br />

original garage and psychedelic, raw rock ‘n roll.<br />

Submission Formats: Tapes mixed down to 1/4”<br />

reel to reel. DATcassette or high-quality cassette.<br />

Kind of deals usually offered: We press mostly 45s,<br />

but can do LPs and CDs.<br />

Artist Roster: Dead Moon, Flapjacks, Spider Babies,<br />

Jr. Samples, 8 Ft.Tender, Hardship, Asthma Hounds,<br />

Deadbeat Hearts.<br />

Distribution: Get Hip, Revolver, Mordam, NAIL,<br />

Subterranean, Burnside Distribution (CD’s only).<br />

Mastering<br />

Freq Mastering<br />

1624 SW Alder Portland, OR 97205<br />

Phone: 503-222-9444<br />

Fax: 503-222-6446<br />

Email: ryanfoster@freqmastering.com<br />

Web: www.freqmastering.com<br />

Nettleingham Audio<br />

108 East 35th Street Vancouver, Washington<br />

98663-2207<br />

Web: www.nettleinghamaudio.com<br />

Toll Free: 888.261.5086<br />

Phone: 360.696.5999<br />

Northstar Recording Studios<br />

313716 SE Ramona Street<br />

Portland, OR 97236-4444<br />

Phone: 503-760-7777<br />

Fax: 503-760-4342<br />

Web: http://www.northstarsamples.com/studio/<br />

index.html<br />

SuperDigital Ltd /<br />

Purple Mastering Studio<br />

1150 N.W. 17th Portland OR 97209 Phone:<br />

503-228-2222<br />

Email: superdigital@superdigital.com<br />

Web: www.superdigital.com<br />

Owner: Rick McMillen<br />

Music Stores<br />

Ape Over Music<br />

3909 Main Street<br />

Vancouver, Wa. 98663<br />

360.696.3100<br />

Fax: 360.696.3108<br />

Website: www.apeovermusic.com<br />

Store Hours: M-Th: 10-7 | Fri: 10-6 | Sat: 10-5 |<br />

Sun: 12-4<br />

Apex Pro Audio and Lighting<br />

1274 Liberty St. NE<br />

Salem, OR. 97303<br />

503.363.3555<br />

Fax: 503.363.3791<br />

Website: www.apexproaudio.com<br />

Email: joel@apexproaudio.com<br />

Apple Music Company<br />

Address: 225 SW First Ave.,<br />

Portland, OR 97204<br />

Toll free number: 800-452-2991<br />

Phone number: 503-226-0036<br />

Web: www.applemusicrow.com<br />

Email: apple@teleport.com<br />

Business Hours: Mon-Sat: 10:30- 6:30 | Sun:1- 5<br />

Artichoke Music<br />

Address: 3130 S.E. Hawthorne Blvd.,<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

Phone: 503-232-8845<br />

Fax: (503) 232-3476<br />

Store Hours: Tue-Sat: 11-6 | Sun: 12-5<br />

Web: www.artichokemusic.com<br />

Email: folks@artichokemusic.com<br />

Portland’s Premier Folk Music Shop and Guitar<br />

Emporium<br />

Beaverton Music Services, Inc.<br />

12630 SW 1st St. Beaverton, OR. 97005<br />

Toll free number: 887-643-5431<br />

Phone: (503) 643-5431<br />

Blue Dot Guitars<br />

Address: 502 7th. St. Oregon City, Or 97045<br />

Phone: 503.656.1913<br />

Web: www.bluedotguitars.com<br />

Email: chris@bluedotguitars.com<br />

Store Hours: M-Th 11am - 8pm Fri & Sat 11am<br />

- 5pm<br />

We are now Fender Authorized Warranty Service<br />

Center<br />

Guitar Crazy<br />

Address: 3319 SE Division Portland , OR 97202<br />

Phone: 503-238-4487<br />

Web: www.guitarcrazy.com<br />

Email: guitarcrazymail@aol.com<br />

Store Hours: APPOINTMENTS ENCOURAGED<br />

Wed & Fri Noon - 6:00pm Thurs & Sat Noon - 4:00pm<br />

Centaur Guitar<br />

Address: 2833 NE Sandy Blvd. Portland OR 97232<br />

Phone: 503-236-8711<br />

Web: www.centaurguitar.com<br />

Email: info@centaurguitar.com<br />

Store Hours: Daily 10:00am - 7:00pm<br />

Five Star Guitars<br />

2303 NW 185th Ave.<br />

Hillsboro, OR 97124<br />

in the Tanasbourne Village Shopping Center.<br />

voice: 503.439.9500<br />

fax: 503.533.2134<br />

http://www.fivestarguitars.com<br />

Store Hours: M-F: 10-7 | Sat: 10-5 | Sun: 12-5<br />

Guitar Castle<br />

3439 State St. Salem, OR. 97301<br />

Phone: (503) 364-2757<br />

Salem’s Vintage Guitar Store<br />

Guitar Center<br />

Guitar Center Beaverton<br />

9575 S.W. Cascade Ave.<br />

Beaverton, Oregon 97008<br />

Phone: 503-644-9500<br />

Fax: 503-644-9600<br />

Manager: Gabe McFadden<br />

Store Hours: M-F: 10-9 | Sat: 10-8 | Sun: 11-6<br />

Guitar Center Clackamas<br />

13029 Southeast 84th Ave.<br />

Clackamas, Oregon 97015<br />

Phone: 503-654-0100<br />

Fax: 503-654-0300<br />

Manager: Brian Harrison<br />

Store Hours: M-F: 10-9 | Sat: 10-8 | Sun: 11-7<br />

Joyful Noise Music Co.<br />

7705 SE Harmony Rd.<br />

Milwaukie, OR. 97222<br />

Phone: (503) 786-8742<br />

Web: www.joynoisemusic.com<br />

Portland Music Company<br />

Martin Luther King Store<br />

531 SE Martin Luther King Blvd<br />

Portland OR 97214<br />

Phone number: 503-226-3719<br />

Toll free number: 800-452-2991<br />

Everything except sheet music, band and orchestra<br />

instruments.<br />

Web: www.portlandmusiccompany.com<br />

Email: staff@portlandmusiccompany.com<br />

Store Hours: M-F: 10- 6:30 | Sat:10- 6 | Sat:10- 6<br />

Broadway Acoustic store:<br />

2502 NE Broadway<br />

Portland OR 97232<br />

Phone number: 503-228-8437<br />

-Acoustic instruments, band and orchestra instruments.<br />

Web: www.portlandmusiccompany.com<br />

Email: broadway@spiritone.com<br />

Store Hours: M-F: 10- 6:30 | Sat:10- 6 | Sun:11- 5<br />

Beaverton store:<br />

10075 SW Beaverton Hillsdale Hwy<br />

Beaverton OR 97005<br />

Phone number: 503-641-5505<br />

Toll free: 888-852-1557<br />

Phone for sheet music: 503- 641-5691 -All instruments<br />

and sheet music<br />

Web: www.portlandmusiccompany.com<br />

Email: pmcwest@spiritone.com<br />

Store Hours: M-F: 10- 6:30 | Sat:10- 6 | Sun:11- 5<br />

Sheet Music Closed on Sunday<br />

Eastside, Division store:<br />

Address: 12334 SE Division<br />

Portland OR<br />

Phone number: 503-760-6881<br />

-All instruments and sheet music<br />

Web: www.portlandmusiccompany.com<br />

Store Hours: M-F: 10- 6:30 | Sat:10- 6 | Sun:11- 5<br />

Rhythm Traders’<br />

Address: 424 NE Broadway,<br />

Portland, OR 97232<br />

Phone number: 503-288-6950<br />

Toll free number: 800-894-9149<br />

Web: www.rhythmtraders.com<br />

Email: info@rhythmtraders.com<br />

Store Hours: M-Sat: 11- 7 | Sun:12- 5<br />

Showcase Music and Sound<br />

3401 SE Hawthorne Blvd.<br />

Portland, OR. 97214<br />

Toll Free: 888-240-4048<br />

Phone: (503) 231-7027<br />

Web: www.showcasemusicandsound.com<br />

Email:showcase@showcasemusic.com<br />

Tigard Music<br />

Address: 11579 Sw Pacific Hwy,<br />

Tigard, OR 97223<br />

Phone: 503-620-2844<br />

Web: www.tigardmusic.com<br />

Store Hours: M-Th: 10-8 Fri-Sat: 10- 6<br />

Wat’z Up Hillsboro Music Co.<br />

270 e main street<br />

Hillsboro Or 97123<br />

503-648-5241<br />

fax 503-640-1291<br />

www.hillsboromusic.com<br />

Ken & Kelly Scandlyn<br />

“music store with more”<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 27<br />

Musicians Resource Guide


Musicians Resource Guide<br />

Store Hours: M-F: 10-6 | Sat: 10-5 | Closed Sunday<br />

Weathers Music Corp.<br />

2825 Commercial St. Southeast<br />

Salem, OR. 97301<br />

Phone: (503) 362-8708<br />

Web: www.weathersmusic.com<br />

Production<br />

Bruce McLaughlin<br />

Lighting Specialist<br />

PO Box 25059, Portland, OR 97298<br />

Phone: 503-644-9597<br />

Fax: 503-644-9598<br />

Email: bmclaugh@davidbowie.com<br />

Brownell Sound<br />

12115 S.E. 82 nd. Ave. Suite D<br />

Portland, OR 97086<br />

Toll Free: 800-755-1665<br />

Phone: 503-652-2160<br />

Fax: 503-652-2764<br />

Email: sales@brownellsound.com<br />

Web: www.brownellsound.com<br />

Hours: 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Monday Thru Friday<br />

Hollywood Lighting<br />

5251 SE McLoughlin Blvd.<br />

Portland, OR 97202-4836<br />

Toll Free: 800.826.9881<br />

Phone: 503.232.9001<br />

Fax: 503.232.8505<br />

Email Department Contacts<br />

Rentals - Greg Eggen -<br />

greg.eggen@hollywoodlighting.biz<br />

Production - Gavin D’Avanther - gavin@hollywoodlighting.biz<br />

Retail Sales - Dena Poer -<br />

dena.poer@hollywoodlighting.biz<br />

System Sales - Sean Chiles -<br />

sean.chiles@hollywoodlighting.biz<br />

Electrical Services Frank Locke frank.locke@hollywoodlights.biz<br />

Web: www.hollywoodlighting.biz<br />

Showroom Hours: Mon- Fri-: 8AM - 6PM<br />

Saturday 9AM - 1PM, Sunday Closed<br />

Jamac Speaker Co.<br />

8600 NE Sandy Blvd.<br />

Portland,OR. 97220<br />

Phone: (503) 252-2929<br />

Web: www.jamacspeakers.com<br />

Store Hours: Mon-Fri 9:00 am to 5:00 pm<br />

Special late night hours on Monday: 7:30 to 9:00 pm<br />

Mark McNeill<br />

Live Sound Engineer<br />

503.704.8130<br />

Text message: 5037048130@mobile.att.net<br />

Email: mmcneill@hotmail.com<br />

PowerMac Pac<br />

12310 NE Whitaker Way<br />

Portland, OR. 97230<br />

Toll Free: 800-460-8080<br />

Local: (503) 256-5210<br />

Web: www.powermac.com<br />

Consumer sales: sales@macpac.com<br />

Business sales: corporate@macpac.com<br />

Service help: service@macpac.com<br />

Pro Sound & Lighting<br />

3511 SE Belmont St.<br />

Portland, OR. 97214<br />

Phone: (503) 232-4889<br />

Web: www.prosoundonline.com<br />

Store Hours: Mon-Fri 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM Sat:<br />

10:00AM to 4:00PM<br />

Portland’s #1 Sound and Lighting Company<br />

Showcase Rentals<br />

3401 SE Hawthorne Blvd.<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

Toll Free: 888-240-4048<br />

28 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2<br />

Phone: 503-231-7027<br />

Rental Manager: Tim “TC” Chassaing<br />

Email: rentals@showcasemusic.com<br />

Web: www.showcasemusicandsound.com/rentals/<br />

rentals.htm<br />

Hours: Monday through Friday: 10AM - 7PM<br />

Saturday 10AM - 6PM Sunday 11AM - 6PM<br />

Soundguy Productions<br />

PO Box 68466<br />

Oak Grove, OR 97268<br />

Phone: 503-998-5420<br />

Web: www.prosoundguy.com<br />

Sound system, audio/video rentals, on-site recording,<br />

some backline and lighting.<br />

Publicity/Promotion<br />

In Music We Trust PR<br />

15213 SE Bevington Avenue Portland, OR<br />

97267-3355<br />

Phone: 503-557-9661<br />

Owner: Alex Steininger<br />

Email: alex@inmusicwetrust.com<br />

Web: www.inmusicwetrustpr.com<br />

We handle local (CD release shows, dailies/weeklies<br />

in hometown market), regional, and national press<br />

for bands, including print media, online, and blogs.<br />

Services also include bio writing, press releases, and<br />

other services, too.<br />

XO Publicity<br />

1707 NE Jarrett St Portland, OR 97211<br />

Phone: 503.281.9696<br />

Owner: Kaytea Mcintosh<br />

Email: kaytea@xopublicity.com<br />

Web: www.xopublicity.com<br />

www.myspace.com/xopublicity<br />

“A Damn Fine PR Firm”<br />

Radio<br />

AM<br />

KWIP - 880 am - “La Campeona”<br />

Format: Mexican music<br />

Street Address: 1405 E. Ellendale;<br />

Dallas, OR 97338<br />

Mail Address: P. O. Box 469; Dallas, OR 97338<br />

Phone: (503) 623 - 0245<br />

Fax: (503) 623 - 6733<br />

Web: www.kwip.com<br />

General Manager: Diane Burns<br />

Email: lvilla@kwip.com<br />

KISN - 910 am<br />

Format: Oldies<br />

Street Address: 0700 SW Bancroft St.<br />

Portland, OR 97239<br />

Phone: 503.223.1441<br />

Fax: 503.223.6909<br />

Web: www.kisn910.com<br />

General Manager: Erin Hutchison<br />

KPSU - 1440 am - Portland’s college radio<br />

Format: Portland State Univ. student radio<br />

Street Address: 1825 SW Broadway,<br />

Sub-Basement Suite S18,<br />

Portland, OR 97201<br />

Mail Address: P.O. Box 751-SD.<br />

Portland, OR 97207<br />

Phone: 503-725-5669<br />

Fax: 503-725-4079<br />

Web: www.kpsu.org<br />

Program Director: Tony Prato<br />

Email: programming@kpsu.org<br />

Station Manager: Jeremy Hardy<br />

KKAD - 1550 am - the music of your life<br />

Format: Classic American Standards of yesterday<br />

and today<br />

Street Address: 6605 SE Lake Rd.<br />

Portland, OR 97222<br />

Phone: 503.223.4321<br />

Fax: 503.294.0074<br />

Web: www.kpsu.org<br />

General Manager: Paul Clithero<br />

Program Director: Steve Nicholl<br />

FM<br />

KBVR 88.7 fm – Oregon State University<br />

Format: All Music<br />

Street Address: 210 Memorial Union East<br />

Corvallis OR. 97331<br />

Phone: 541-737-2008<br />

Fax: 541-737-4545<br />

Web: oregonstate.edu/dept/kbvr/html/index.php<br />

Station Manager: Jeremy Tricola<br />

KMHD - 89.1 fm - Jazz, Blues, and NPR News<br />

Format: Jazz Street<br />

Address: 26000 SE Stark St.<br />

Gresham, OR 97030<br />

Phone: 503-661-8900<br />

Fax: 503-491-6999<br />

Web: www.kmhd.org<br />

General Manager: Doug Sweet<br />

Program Director: Greg Gomez<br />

KAOS 89.3 fm Evergreen State College<br />

Format: All Music, Women’s issues, Native American,<br />

Spanish Language, Democracy Now, Comedy,<br />

Local, National and International public affairs.<br />

Mailing Address: KAOS Olympia Community Radio<br />

The Evergreen State College- CAB 301<br />

2700 Evergreen Parkway<br />

Olympia, WA. 98505<br />

Phone: 360-867-6895<br />

Web: kaos.evergreen.edu<br />

General Manager: Jerry Drummond<br />

KUOI 89.3 fm University of Idaho<br />

Format: Music, Alternative News from Pacifica<br />

Network, and Broadcast Journalism<br />

Mailing Address: KUOI-FM University of Idaho<br />

3rd floor Student Union Building<br />

Campus Box 444272<br />

Moscow, ID. 83844-4272<br />

Phone: 208-885-2218<br />

Web: kuoi.com<br />

Station Manager: Andy Jacobson<br />

Program Director: Mike Siemens<br />

KLCC 89.7 fm - Lane Community College<br />

Format: All Music<br />

Street Address: 136 W. 8th Ave.<br />

Eugene, OR. 97401<br />

Business Office: 800-922-3682 or 541-463-6000<br />

Web: www.klcc.org<br />

KBGA 89.9 FM University of Montana<br />

Format: Alternative, Variety, News, and Sports<br />

Mailing Address: KBGA Radio- University of Montana<br />

University Center Room 208<br />

Missoula, MT 59812<br />

Phone: 406-243-6758<br />

Web: www.kbga.org<br />

Office assistant: Greg Ragan<br />

KBPS - 89.9 fm - All Classical<br />

Format: Classical<br />

Street Address: 515 NE 15th Avenue, Portland,<br />

OR 97232<br />

Phone: 503-943-5828<br />

Fax: 503-802-9456<br />

Web: www.allclassical.org<br />

Email: music.info@allclassical.org<br />

KEXP 90.3 fm University of Washington<br />

Format: All Music<br />

Mailing Address: KEXP 90.3 FM<br />

113 Dexter Ave. North<br />

Seattle, WA. 98109<br />

Business Line: 206-520-5800<br />

Program Director: 206-520-5833<br />

Web: kexp.org<br />

KBOO - 90.7 fm - Community Radio<br />

Format: providing programming for unpopular,<br />

controversial, or neglected perspectives<br />

Street Address: 20 SE 8th Avenue,<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

Phone: 503-231-8032<br />

Fax: 503-231-7145<br />

Web: www.kboo.fm<br />

Program Director: Chris Merrick<br />

Music Director: Brandon Lieberman<br />

KGON - 92.3 fm Classic Rock<br />

Format: Classic Rock<br />

Street Address: 0700 SW Bancroft St.<br />

Portland, Oregon 97239<br />

Phone: 503.223.1441<br />

Fax: 503.223.6909<br />

Web: www.kgon.com<br />

Program Director: Clark Ryan<br />

KNRK - 94.7 fm Alternative Portland<br />

Format: Alternative<br />

Street Address: 0700 SW Bancroft St.<br />

Portland, Oregon 97239<br />

Phone: 503-223-1441<br />

Fax: 503-223-6909<br />

Web: http://947.fm<br />

Program Director: Mark Hamilton<br />

KYCH - 97.1 fm Charlie FM,<br />

We play everything<br />

Format: Adult contemporary<br />

Street Address: 0700 SW Bancroft St.<br />

Portland, Oregon 97239<br />

Phone: 503-223-1441<br />

Web: www.charliefm.com<br />

KUPL - 98.7 fm<br />

Format: Country<br />

Street Address: 222 SW Columbia Suite 350,<br />

Portland, OR 97201<br />

Phone: 503-223-0300<br />

Web: www.kupl.com<br />

Program Director: John Paul<br />

KWJJ - 99.5 fm - the Wolf<br />

Format: Country<br />

Street Address: 0700 SW Bancroft St.<br />

Portland, Oregon 97239<br />

Phone: 503-223-1441<br />

Fax: 503-223-6909<br />

Web: www.thewolfonline.com<br />

General Manager: Jack Hutchison<br />

Program Director: Mike Moore<br />

KKRZ - 100.3 fm Z100<br />

Format: #1 hit music station<br />

Street Address: 4949 SW Macadam Ave. Portland,<br />

Oregon 97239<br />

Phone: 503-323-6400<br />

Fax: 503-323-6660<br />

Web: www.z100portland.com<br />

Email: from site<br />

KUFO - 101.1 fm - the only station that really rocks<br />

Format: Hard Rock, Metal<br />

Street Address: 2040 SW First Avenue,<br />

Portland, OR 97201<br />

Phone: 503-222-1011<br />

Fax: 503.222.2047<br />

Web: www.kufo.com<br />

KINK - 101.9 fm - FM 102 true to the music<br />

Format: Album Rock<br />

Street Address: 1501 SW Jefferson,<br />

Portland, OR 97201<br />

Phone: 503-517-6000<br />

Fax: 503-517-6100<br />

Web: www.kink.fm<br />

General Manager: Stan Mak<br />

Program Director: Dennis Constantine<br />

Music Director: Kevin Welch<br />

KKCW - 103.3 fm - K103 soft rock favorites<br />

Format: Soft Rock<br />

Street Address: 4949 SW Macadam Avenue Portland,<br />

OR 97239<br />

Phone: 503-222-5103<br />

Fax: 503-241-1033


Web: www.k103.com<br />

Email: from site<br />

Program Director: Tony Coles<br />

KFIS - 104.4 fm - the Fish<br />

Format: Contemporary Christian music<br />

Street Address: 6400 S.E. Lake Rd, Suite 350,<br />

Portland, OR 97222<br />

Phone: 503-786-0600<br />

Fax: 503-786-1551<br />

Web: www.1041thefish.com<br />

Program Director: Dave Arthur<br />

Music Director: Kat Taylor<br />

KRSK - 105.1 fm - the Buzz<br />

Format: Rock<br />

Street Address: 0700 S.W. Bancroft St. Portland,<br />

OR 97239<br />

Phone: 503-223-1441<br />

Fax: 503-223-6909<br />

Web: www.1051thebuzz.com<br />

Email: from site<br />

Music Director: Sheryl Stewart<br />

KOOL - 105.9 fm -<br />

The Greatest hits of all time<br />

Format: Classic Rock<br />

Street Address: 4949 SW Macadam Avenue Portland,<br />

OR 97239<br />

Phone: 503-323-6400<br />

Fax: 503-323-6664<br />

Web: www.kool1059.com<br />

Email: from site<br />

KLTH - 106.7 fm - home of the 60’s & 70’s<br />

Format: Rock<br />

Street Address: 222 SW Columbia St. Suite 350,<br />

Portland, OR 97201<br />

Phone: 503-223-0300<br />

Web: www.khits1067.com<br />

Email: from site<br />

Record Shops<br />

Centaur Guitar<br />

Address: 2833 NE Sandy Blvd. Portland OR 97232<br />

Phone: 503-236-8711<br />

Web: www.centaurguitar.com<br />

Email: info@centaurguitar.com<br />

Store Hours: Daily 10:00am - 7:00pm<br />

Crossroads Music<br />

3130 SE Hawthorne<br />

Portland, OR. 97214<br />

Phone: (503) 232-1767<br />

Email: xro@xroads.com<br />

Web: www.xro.com<br />

Store hours: Mon-Thur: 11am to 6pm,<br />

Fri - Sat: 11am to 7pm Sun: 11am to 6pm<br />

Everyday Music<br />

All stores open 9am ‘til midnight 365 days a year<br />

Web: www.everydaymusic.com<br />

Downtown<br />

1313 W. Burnside<br />

Portland, OR 97209<br />

503.274.0961<br />

fax: 503.274.9831<br />

Eastside<br />

1931 NE Sandy Blvd.<br />

Portland OR 97232<br />

503.239.7610<br />

fax: 503.239.1730<br />

Beaverton<br />

3290 SW Cedar Hills Blvd.<br />

Beaverton, OR 97005<br />

503.350.0907<br />

fax: 503.350.1966<br />

Seattle/Capitol Hill<br />

112 Broadway E.<br />

Seattle, WA 98102<br />

206.568.3321<br />

fax: 206.568.5114<br />

Music Millennium<br />

3158 E. Burnside Portland, OR. 97214<br />

Phone: (503) 231-8926<br />

Fax: (503) 238-2020<br />

Web: www.musicmillennium.com<br />

email: earful@musicmillennium.com<br />

Music Millenium- Classical<br />

3144 E. Burnside Portland,OR. 97214<br />

Phone: (503) 231-8909<br />

Fax: (503) 238-2020<br />

Store Hours: Mon-Sat: 10:00 am to 10:00 pm,<br />

Sunday: 11:00 am to 9:00 pm<br />

Ranch Records<br />

170 Liberty St. NE Salem, OR. 97301<br />

Phone: (503) 362-8515<br />

Rehearsal Studios<br />

Bongo Fury<br />

14181 SW Millikan Way<br />

Beaverton,OR. 97005<br />

503.970.0799<br />

Website: www.bongo-fury.com<br />

Safe and Secure- room storage with building<br />

monitored 24/7<br />

All music genres. Monthly and hourly rates.<br />

Man In Black Studio<br />

503.309-2756<br />

Website: maninblackmusic.com<br />

Email: from site<br />

Located in SW Portland off Interstate 5<br />

Monthly and hourly rates.<br />

Rock Around The Clock PDX<br />

2329 NW 23rd Place<br />

Portland, OR. 97210<br />

503.241.2609<br />

Website: rockaroundtheclockpdx.com<br />

Email: rockaroundtheclockpdx@gmailcom<br />

High Tech Digital Security System, Double locking<br />

doors, Indoor drive-in dock with lift<br />

for easy loading.<br />

Suburbia Studios<br />

623 SE Market St.<br />

Portland, OR. 97214<br />

503.736.9329<br />

503.309.4254<br />

Website: www.suburbiastudios.net<br />

Email: info@suburbiastudios.net<br />

suburbiastudios@quest.net<br />

24 Hour Access. On-site Security. Monthly and<br />

hourly rates<br />

Repair<br />

All Service Musical Electronics Repair<br />

(Formerly KMA Electronics)<br />

617 S.E. Morrison,<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

Phone/Fax: (503) 231-6552<br />

Toll Free: 1-888-231-6552<br />

Email: service@asmusic.org<br />

Website: www.all-service-musical.com<br />

Contact: Randy Morgan<br />

Services: Quality electronic service for musicians,<br />

studios and music dealers. Factory authorized for<br />

most major brands.<br />

Hours: Mon: 9-4 | Tue-Fri: 9-6 | Sat: 10-4<br />

Years Experience: 28+, over 20,000 repairs<br />

performed.<br />

Specialties: Service and repair of pro audio gear,<br />

guitar amps, keyboards, studio equipment, and<br />

home audio gear. From vintage to state-of-the-art.<br />

If you can plug it in and make music with it, we<br />

probably repair it.<br />

Clients: We have performed repairs for almost every<br />

music store in Portland and Vancouver. We have<br />

done work for dozens of national acts and many<br />

local artists. We have clients from coast to coast, but<br />

we like our local customers the most!<br />

Bass Basses<br />

233 NE 28th<br />

Portland, OR. 97232<br />

Contact: Patrick Marshall<br />

Phone: 503.236.BASS<br />

1.800.408.BASS<br />

Workshop Specialty: Violins, violas, cellos, and<br />

upright bass.<br />

Offering restoration, rentals, repairs,sales and<br />

custom or traditional building.<br />

By Appointment please(very flexible)<br />

Fearless Guitars<br />

5237 NE Sacramento<br />

Portland,OR. 97213<br />

Phone: (503) 287-3636<br />

Email: gearsales@fearlessguitars.com<br />

Web: www.fearlessguitars.com<br />

Owner: Chance Walte<br />

Services: We specialize in custom wiring harnesses,<br />

pick-ups, repairs, boutique effects & more!<br />

Hours: Tue- Sat: 11-6<br />

Inner Sound<br />

1416 SE Morrison Street<br />

Portland, Oregon 97214<br />

Phone: (503) 238-1955<br />

Fax: (503) 238-1787<br />

Toll Free: 1-877-238-1955<br />

Email: innersound@qwest.net<br />

Speaker Repair: innerspeaker@qwest.net<br />

Website: www.inner-sound.com<br />

Owner: Jay Moskovitz<br />

Established in 1978 Inner Sound is the largest audio<br />

service center in the Pacific Northwest. Five fulltime<br />

technicians and a full-time office staff are ready<br />

to suit your repair needs.<br />

Services: Home Stereo, Professional Equipment,<br />

Car Audio<br />

Portland Fret Works<br />

3039 NE Alberta St.<br />

Portland, OR. 97211<br />

Phone: (503) 249-3737<br />

The 12th Fret<br />

Address: 2402 Se Belmont<br />

Portland, Oregon 97214<br />

Phone: 503-231-1912<br />

Fax: 503-231-0545<br />

Web: www.the12thfret.com<br />

Email: info@the12thfret.com<br />

Store Hours: Tues - Fri: 10:30-6 | Sat:12-5<br />

Guitar repair, custom modification, complete<br />

restoration, and custom guitar building by master<br />

craftsmen and luthiers since 1979.<br />

Jamac Speaker Co.<br />

8600 NE Sandy Blvd.<br />

Portland,OR. 97220<br />

Phone: (503) 252-2929<br />

Web: www.jamacspeakers.com<br />

Store Hours: M-F: 9-5<br />

Special late night hours on Monday: 7:30 to 9:00 pm<br />

Tigard Music<br />

Address: 11579 Sw Pacific Hwy,<br />

Tigard, OR 97223<br />

Phone: 503-620-2844<br />

Store Hours: M-Th: 10- 8 | Fri-Sat: 10- 6<br />

Certified Woodwind/Brass Repair Team<br />

Studios<br />

Please check the studio listings at buko.net for the<br />

complete listing of equipment for each studio.<br />

An Unreel World<br />

Lake Oswego (503)639-9364<br />

Email: mannykeller@verizon.net<br />

Owner: Karin Kopp<br />

Bartholomew Productions<br />

33470 Chinook Plaza, Ste. 345<br />

Scappoose, Or 97056<br />

Website: www.bartpro.com<br />

Email: bart@bartpro.com<br />

Phone: 503-543-7664<br />

Contact: Bart Hafeman<br />

Big Red Studio<br />

Corbett, Oregon (25 min. E of downtown<br />

Portland)<br />

Contact :Producer/engineer: Billy Oskay<br />

Phone: 503-695-3420<br />

Web site: www.bigredstudio.com<br />

Email: billyo@bigredstudio.com<br />

Blue Dog Recording<br />

1314 NW Irving<br />

Portland, OR 97209<br />

Phone: 503-295-2712<br />

Email: brobertson@bluedogrecording.com<br />

Web: www.bluedogrecording.com<br />

Owner: Bruce Robertson<br />

Ronn Chick Recording<br />

31209 NW 86th Circle<br />

Vancouver, Washington 98665<br />

Phone: 360-571-0200<br />

Owner/Engineer: Ron Chick<br />

Crossroads Productions<br />

7708 NE 78th St.<br />

Vancouver, WA 98662<br />

Phone: 360.256.9077<br />

Email: info@crossroadsproductions.net<br />

Web: www.crossroadsproductions.net<br />

Staff: Darren Bowls, Production/Artist Development.<br />

Dead Aunt Thelma’s Studio<br />

7923 SE 13th Ave.,<br />

Portland, OR 97202<br />

Mailing Address: P.O. Box 82222 Portland, OR<br />

97282-0222<br />

Website: www.thelmas.com<br />

Email: mail@thelmas.com<br />

Phone: 503.235.9693<br />

Fax: 503.238.9627<br />

Mike Moore: Studio Manager/Head Engineer<br />

Nicole Campbell Peters: Assistant Studio Manager<br />

The Doll House Digital Recording Studio<br />

2329 NW 23rd Place<br />

Portland, OR. 97210<br />

818.987.7455<br />

Owner/Engineer: Federico “Fed” Pol<br />

Website: rockaroundtheclockpdx.com<br />

Don Ross Productions<br />

3097 Floral Hill Drive<br />

Eugene, OR 97403<br />

Website: www.donrossproductions.com<br />

Email: don@donrossproductions.com<br />

Phone: 541-343-2692<br />

Fax: 541.683.1943<br />

Contact: Don Ross<br />

DIG Recording<br />

420 SW Washington, Suite 606<br />

Portland, OR 97204<br />

Phone: 503-243- DIG-1<br />

Email: info@dig-recording.com<br />

Web: www.dig-recording.com<br />

Falcon Recording Studios<br />

15A SE 15th Street<br />

Portland, Oregon 97214<br />

Contact: Dennis Carter<br />

Phone: 503-236-3856<br />

Email: falconstudios@comcast.net<br />

Web: falconrecordingstudios.com<br />

Fleschtone Records<br />

Near Multnomah Village<br />

Phone: 503 349 7883<br />

Web: www.davefleschner.com<br />

Email: davesattic@comcast.net<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 29<br />

Musicians Resource Guide


Musicians Resource Guide<br />

Fresh Tracks Studio<br />

1813 S.E. 59th Portland, OR 97215<br />

Website: www.freshtracksstudio.com<br />

Email: jon@freshtracksstudio.com<br />

Phone: 503.235.7402<br />

Contact: Jon Lindahl<br />

GoodJobStudio<br />

(IT’S YOUR MIX)<br />

NE Alberta ST<br />

Portland, Oregon 97220<br />

Contact: Johnny Martin<br />

Phone: 503-422-1886<br />

Email: info@goodjobstudio.com<br />

Web: http://goodjobstudio.com<br />

Gung-Ho Studios<br />

86821 McMorott Lane<br />

Eugene, Oregon 97402<br />

Web: www.gunghostudio.com<br />

Phone: 541-484-9352<br />

Owner: Bill Barnett<br />

Interlace Audio Production<br />

457 NE Birchwood Dr.<br />

Hillsboro, OR 97124<br />

Website: www.interlaceaudio.com<br />

Email: InterlaceAP@aol.com<br />

Phone: 503.681.7619<br />

Jackpot! Recording Studio<br />

2420 SE 50th, Portland, OR 97206<br />

Phone: 503-239-5389<br />

Web: www.jackpotrecording.com<br />

Myspace: www.myspace.com/jackpotrecording<br />

Email: info@jackpotrecording.com<br />

Larry Crane-Owner, Engineer<br />

Kendra Lynn-Studio Manager, Bookings<br />

Kung Fu Bakery<br />

To Contact Kung Fu Bakery For information, booking,<br />

location and directions. Call 503-239-4939<br />

Web: www.kungfubakery.com<br />

Lion’s Roehr Studio<br />

5613 S.E. 69th Portland, OR 97206<br />

Phone: 503-771-8384<br />

Web: www.lionsroehr.com<br />

Email: lionsroehr@gmail.com<br />

Owner: Mike Roehr<br />

Lost Studios<br />

Web: www.lost-studios.com<br />

Email: info@lost-studios.com<br />

MastanMusic Studio<br />

1028 SE Water Suite 230<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

Phone: 503.889.8646<br />

Web: www.mastanmusic.com<br />

Email: inquiries@mastanmusic.com<br />

Owner: Jeremy Wilson<br />

Mississippi Studios<br />

3933 N Mississippi,<br />

Portland, OR 97277<br />

Studio Phone: 503-753-4473<br />

Web: www.mississippistudios.com<br />

Momentum Studios<br />

109 SE Salmon St. Ste C<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

Phone: 503.239.6983<br />

Email: record@momentumstudios.com<br />

Web: www.momentumstudios.com<br />

Opal Studio<br />

6219 S.E. Powell<br />

Portland, OR. 97206<br />

Phone: 503-774-4310<br />

Email: info@opal-studio.com<br />

Web: www.opal-studio.com<br />

Owner: Kevin Hahn<br />

30 - <strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2<br />

Reynolds Audio Production<br />

/ Cool Blue Studio<br />

SW Portland<br />

(call or email for directions)<br />

Phone: 503-892-6268<br />

Email: john@reynoldsaudio.com<br />

Web: www.reynoldsaudio.com<br />

Contact: John Reynolds<br />

September Media<br />

Phone: 503.295.1277<br />

Web: www.septaudio.com<br />

Email: craig@septaudio.com<br />

Engineer/producer: Craig Harding<br />

Sound Impressions, Inc.<br />

1920 N. Vancouver<br />

Portland, OR 97227<br />

Phone: 503-287-3975<br />

Fax: 249-5021<br />

Email: info@sound-impressions.com<br />

Web: www.sound-impressions.com<br />

Owner: Dan Decker<br />

SuperDigital Ltd /<br />

Purple Mastering Studio<br />

1150 N.W. 17th Portland OR 97209<br />

Phone: 503-228-2222<br />

Email: superdigital@superdigital.com<br />

Web: www.superdigital.com<br />

Owner: Rick McMillen<br />

Venues<br />

Aladdin Theater<br />

3017 SE Milwaukie Blvd.<br />

Portland, OR 97202<br />

Info line: 503-233-1994<br />

Format: All styles (no punk)<br />

Booking: Mark Adler 503-234-9694<br />

Email: crackadler@aol.com<br />

Manager: Tom Sessa<br />

Email: tom@aladdin-theater.com<br />

Fax: 503-234-9699<br />

Web: www.aladdin-theater.com<br />

Capacity: 620<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Headliners: Brian Wilson (The Beach Boys), David<br />

Crosby (Crosby, Stills, Nash And Young), Richard<br />

Thompson, John Hiatt, John Prine, Beck, Emmylou<br />

Harris, Everclear, Roger Hodgson (Supertramp),<br />

Tragically Hip, Nils Lofgren (Crazy Horse/e. Street<br />

Band), And Indigo Girls.Warren Zevon, Ray Davies,<br />

Chic Corea, Keb Mo, Paula Cole<br />

Alberta Street Pub<br />

1036 NE Alberta St.<br />

Portland, OR. 97211<br />

Phone: (503) 284-7665<br />

Format: Acoustic Music Venue - Non-smoking Bar<br />

Booking: Please send a press kit, including CD and<br />

Bio to the Pub<br />

Attn: Kris Strackbein<br />

Booking email: albertastreetpub@gmail.com<br />

It normally takes about 3-4 weeks to get to your<br />

presskit. Please do not attempt to book through<br />

MySpace. No phone calls please<br />

Capacity: 150<br />

Equipment: PA, mics, lights<br />

Andina<br />

1314 NW Glisan<br />

Portland, OR 97210<br />

503.228.9535<br />

Website: www.andinarestaurant.com<br />

Format: Acoustic<br />

Booking: Contact Jels McCaulay<br />

Capacity: 150<br />

Equipment: <br />

Artichoke Community Music- Backgate Stage Theatre<br />

3130-A SE Hawthorne Blvd.<br />

Portland,OR. 97214<br />

Phone: (503) 232-8845<br />

Web: www.artichokemusic.com<br />

Email: folks@artichokemusic.com<br />

Format: Acoustic Music<br />

Booking: folks@artichokemusic.com<br />

Capacity: 60<br />

Equipment: Renter provides all PA equipment<br />

Ash Street Saloon<br />

225 SW Ash Street.<br />

Portland, OR 97205<br />

Bar Line: 503-226-0430<br />

Fax: 503-227-2403<br />

Format: Acoustic, Alt. Rock, Blues, Funk<br />

Booking: Heather<br />

Email: ashstreetsaloon@aol.com<br />

Web: www.ashstreetsaloon.com<br />

Capacity: 350<br />

Equipment: PA, mics, lights<br />

Berbati’s Pan<br />

231 SW Ankeny Portland, OR 97204<br />

Venue: 10 SW 3rd Avenue, corner of 3rd and<br />

Ankeny<br />

Phone: 503.226.2122 1) for a calendar of events<br />

2) for location and directions 3) for booking 4) to<br />

reach a live human<br />

Fax: 503-417-4222<br />

Format: All music Booking: Anthony Sanchez.<br />

Email: booking@berbati.com<br />

Web: www.berbati.com<br />

Capacity: 500<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Load-in: mid-block on 3rd Avenue between<br />

Burnside and Ankeny<br />

Biddy McGraw’s<br />

6000 NE Glisan St<br />

Portland, OR 97213<br />

503.233.1178<br />

Website: www.biddys.com<br />

Format: Mainly Traditional American and Irish<br />

Music, some rock/funk/blues.<br />

Booking: contact Ezra Holbrook 503.233.1178<br />

Press kits mailed to: Ezra Holbrook<br />

Biddy McGraws<br />

6000 NE Glisan<br />

Portland, OR. 97213<br />

The Buffalo Gap Saloon<br />

6835 SW Macadam Ave<br />

Portland, OR 97219<br />

Phone: 503.244.7111<br />

Fax: 503.246.8848<br />

Format: blue grass to pop Rock<br />

For booking a show send a promo kit to The Buffalo<br />

Gap Saloon C/O Booking 6835 SW Macadam Blvd.<br />

Portland, OR 97219<br />

Booking: Matt Roley.<br />

Email: gapbooking@gmail.com<br />

Songwriter Showcase/Open mic night inquiry<br />

Contact: Matthew Kendall<br />

Email: showcase@thebuffalogap.com<br />

Web: www.thebuffalogap.com<br />

Capacity: 85<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Candlelight Cafe & Bar<br />

2032 SW 5th Portland, OR<br />

Phone: 503-222-3378<br />

Fax: 503-223-8175<br />

Format: Blues, Soul, R&B<br />

Booking: Joe Shore.<br />

Email: offshore@hotmail.com<br />

Web: www.candlelightcafebar.com<br />

Capacity: 110<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Clyde’s Prime Rib Restaurant and Bar<br />

5474 NE Sandy Blvd.<br />

Portland, OR. 97213<br />

Phone: (503) 281-9200<br />

Web: www.clydesprimerib.com<br />

Format: Jazz, Blues, and R&B<br />

Booking Clyde Jenkins<br />

Capacity: 100<br />

Equipment: PA<br />

Crystal Ballroom<br />

1332 W. Burnside<br />

Portland, OR 97209<br />

Phone: 503-225-0047<br />

Format: All Types<br />

Booking: Joe Shore.<br />

Email: crystal@danceonair.com<br />

Web: www.mcmenamins.com<br />

Capacity: 1500<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Dante’s<br />

1 SW 3rd Avenue & Burnside<br />

Portland, Oregon 97204<br />

Phone: 503-226-6630<br />

Fax: 503-241-7239<br />

Format: Live music and cabaret 7 nights a week.<br />

Booking: Frank Faillace<br />

Email: dantesbooking@qwest.net<br />

Web: www.danteslive.com<br />

Capacity: 400 with tables /<br />

600 without tables<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Devil’s Point Bar<br />

5305 SE Foster Rd Portland, OR 97206<br />

Phone: 503-774.4513<br />

Format: Rock’n Roll Strip Club<br />

Booking: Frank Faillace<br />

Email: dantesbooking@qwest.net<br />

Web: www.myspace.com/devilspoint<br />

Capacity: <br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Doug Fir Lounge<br />

830 East Burnside St.<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

Phone: 503-231.9663<br />

Format: rock<br />

Booking: Unsolicited submissions from bands and<br />

DJs are always accepted by Doug Fir. Please send a<br />

CD and current press kit including photo and bio<br />

to: Booking Doug Fir Lounge 830 East Burnside St.<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

Email: booking@dougfirlounge.com<br />

Web: www.dougfirlounge.com<br />

Capacity: 299<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Fez Ballroom<br />

316 SW 11th Ave<br />

Portland, OR 97205<br />

Phone: 503-221-7262<br />

Format: All music, DJs, Danceing<br />

Booking: Micheal Ackerman<br />

Email: bookings@fezballroom.com<br />

Email: info@fezballroom.com<br />

Web: www.fezballroom.com<br />

Capacity: 300<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Goodfoot<br />

2845 SE Stark<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

503.239.9292<br />

Format: All Music<br />

Booking: Neil<br />

Email: neil@thegoodfoot.com<br />

Capacity: <br />

Equipment: PA<br />

Ground Kontrol<br />

511 NW Couch<br />

Portland, OR 97209<br />

503.796.9364<br />

Email: kontact@groundkontrol.com<br />

Website: www.groundkontrol.com<br />

Format: All Music and DJ’s<br />

Booking email: booking@groundkontrol.com<br />

Capacity: 179<br />

Equipment: PA, Lights<br />

Halibuts<br />

2525 NE Alberta St.<br />

Portland,OR. 97211<br />

Phone: (503) 808-9600


Booking: David MacKay<br />

Format: Blues<br />

Capacity: 40<br />

Equipment: PA and lights<br />

Hawthorne Theatre<br />

1507 SE 39th Ave<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

Phone: 503.233.7100<br />

Format: All music<br />

Booking Email:<br />

hawthornetheatrebooking@gmail.com<br />

All bands and artists looking to perform must<br />

submit a complete press kit. After mailing in your<br />

press kit/demo, please wait at least 1 week before<br />

emailing the booking staff. Please send a press kit<br />

that includes the following:<br />

Album or demo CD Band Bio – includes history,<br />

musical style and bio of members Press Kit Form<br />

(Adobe Acrobat .pdf format) Hawthorne Theatre<br />

attn: Management P.O. Box 42427 Portland, OR<br />

97242<br />

Club Email: nicholas@hawthornetheatre.com<br />

Web: www.hawthornetheatre.com<br />

Capacity: 600<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Jimmy Mack’s<br />

221 NW 10th Ave. (between Davis and Everett)<br />

Portland, OR 97209<br />

Phone: 503-295-6542<br />

Format: Jazz<br />

Booking Email: jmak@jimmymaks.com<br />

Web: www.jimmymaks.com<br />

Capacity: 140 + 40 SRO<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Hours Mon-Wed: 4pm-1am, Th-Sat: 4pm-2am,<br />

Sun: Closed<br />

Music begins at 8pm<br />

Kells<br />

112 SW 2nd Ave<br />

Portland, OR 97201<br />

503.227.4057<br />

LaurelThirst Public House<br />

2958 NE Glisan<br />

Portland OR 97232.<br />

Phone: 503-232-1504 (not for booking calls)<br />

Format: Acoustic Roots<br />

Booking: Lewi Longmire<br />

Email: Laurelthirstbookings@msn.com<br />

Booking Phone: 503-236-2455<br />

Web: http://mysite.verizon.net/res8u18i/laurelthirstpublichouse/<br />

Capacity: 100<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Matchbox Lounge<br />

3203 SE Division<br />

Portland, OR<br />

503.234.7844<br />

Website: www.matchboxlounge.com<br />

http://www.myspace.com/matchboxlounge<br />

Format: All Music<br />

Booking: Michael Huffman<br />

Email: coralae@gmail.com<br />

Capacity: 50<br />

Equipment: PA<br />

Mississippi Pizza<br />

3552 N Mississippi Ave<br />

Portland, OR 97227<br />

Phone: 503-288-3231<br />

Booking line: 503.888.4480<br />

Format: All (No loud music residential neighborhood)<br />

Booking: Sunny.<br />

Send Promo Kits w/music To: Sunny/ Music<br />

Booking Mississippi Pizza Pub<br />

3552 N. Mississippi<br />

Portland, OR 97227<br />

Booking Email: booking@mississippipizza.com<br />

Web: www.mississippipizza.com<br />

Capacity: 50-60<br />

Equipment: PA<br />

Mississippi Studios<br />

3933 N Mississippi,<br />

Portland, OR 97277<br />

Box Office: tues-fri 2-6: 503-288-3895<br />

Format: Singer songwriter<br />

Booking Submissions:<br />

Mississippi Studios<br />

3939 N. Mississippi,<br />

Portland, OR 97227<br />

Booking: Caroline<br />

Email: booking@mississippistudios.com<br />

Manager: Jim Brunberg<br />

Email: jim@mississippistudios.com<br />

Web: www.mississippistudios.com<br />

Capacity: 100<br />

Equipment: PA<br />

Mt. Tabor Legacy<br />

4811 SE Hawthorne Blvd,<br />

Portland, OR 97215<br />

Phone: 503-232-0450<br />

Format: Rock’n Roll Booking<br />

Email: jetsetbooking@gmail.com<br />

Web: www.mttaborlegacy.com<br />

Capacity: 600<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Ohm<br />

31 NW 1st Ave.<br />

Portland, OR 97209<br />

Phone: 503-241-2916<br />

Format: Blues, Jazz, Acoustic, Pop, Alternative<br />

Booking Email: booking@ohmnightclubpdx.com<br />

Email: info@ohmnightclubpdx.com<br />

Club Rental: vip@ohmnightclubpdx.com<br />

Web: www.ohmnightclubpdx.com<br />

Capacity: 250<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Hours: Tue-Sat: 9pm - 2am All events 21+<br />

Office Hours: Mon, Wed, Fri 12:30pm-5pm<br />

Produce Row Cafe<br />

204 SE Oak St<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

503.232.8355<br />

Website: wwwproducerowcafe.com<br />

Format: All music<br />

Booking email: mr.spock77@yahoo.com<br />

Capacity: 30-120 depending on time of year<br />

Equipment: PA<br />

Red Room<br />

2530 NE 82nd Ave<br />

Portland, OR 97220<br />

503/ 256.3399<br />

Format: All Types<br />

Booking: We encourage performers to check out<br />

our booking blog and contact us through MySpace<br />

(prefered method)<br />

Email: redroomportland@comcast.net<br />

Capacity: 107<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Ringler’s Pub<br />

1332 W Burnside<br />

Portland, OR 97209<br />

503.225.0627<br />

Website: www.mcmenamins.com<br />

Email: ringlers@danceonair.com<br />

Format: All Music and DJ’s<br />

Capacity: 305<br />

Equipment: PA, Lights<br />

Rock’n Roll Pizza<br />

11140 SE Powell Blvd.<br />

Portland OR 97266<br />

Phone: 503-760-7646<br />

Format: Rock<br />

Booking: Dave<br />

Email: RockNRollPizzaBooking@yahoo.com<br />

Web: www.rocknrollpizza.com<br />

Capacity: 500+<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

All Ages area with full bar for those over 21<br />

Roseland Grill<br />

Located in the lower level of the<br />

Roseland Theater<br />

8 NW 6th Avenue<br />

Portland, OR 97209<br />

Phone: 503-224-2038<br />

Format: All music<br />

Booking: David Leiken<br />

Email: dtl@doubletee.com<br />

Web: www.doubletee.com<br />

Capacity: 400<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Roseland Theater<br />

8 NW 6th Avenue Portland, OR 97209<br />

Phone: 503-224-2038<br />

Format: All music<br />

Web: www.doubletee.com<br />

Capacity: 1400<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Satyricon<br />

125 NW 6th Ave<br />

Portland, OR 97209<br />

Phone: coming soon<br />

Format: punk, hardcore, metal, indie music.<br />

Booking Email: Satyriconpdx@aol.com<br />

Web: http://beta.satyriconpdx.com<br />

Capacity: 450<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Someday Lounge<br />

125 NW 5th Ave<br />

Portland, OR 97209<br />

503.248.1030<br />

Format: All Music<br />

Booking: bookings@somedaylounge.com<br />

Lead Sound Person: Ryan Olson(Morphed Productions)ryan@morphedproductions.com<br />

www.morphedproductions.com<br />

Capacity:<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Tonic Lounge<br />

3100 NE Sandy Blvd<br />

Portland, OR 97212<br />

Phone: 503-238-0543<br />

Format: Rock<br />

Booking: Dave Gaysunas<br />

Email: If you want to book a show send us an email<br />

with a link to some music online to<br />

tonicloungebooking@hotmail.com<br />

Web: www.myspace.com/thetoniclounge<br />

Capacity: 215<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Tony Starlight’s Supperclub-Lounge<br />

3728 NE Sandy Blvd ,<br />

Portland, OR 97232<br />

Phone: 503-517-8584<br />

Format: Jazz, Dixieland, Vocalists, Swing, Big Band<br />

and Neil Diamond!<br />

Booking: Tony Starlight<br />

Email: tonystarlight@hotmail.com<br />

Owner: Tony Starlight<br />

Web: www.tonystarlight.com<br />

Capacity: 75<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Trails End Saloon<br />

1320 Main St.<br />

Oregon City, OR.<br />

Phone: 503.656.3031<br />

Format: Blues<br />

Booking: Tom Snyder<br />

Capacity: 118<br />

Music: Wed-Sun.<br />

Tug Boat Brewery<br />

711 SW Ankeny St.<br />

Portland, OR 97205<br />

Phone: 503-226-2508<br />

Format: Jazz<br />

Owners: Terry Nelson and Megan McEnroe-<br />

Nelson<br />

Email: tugboatale@webtv.net<br />

Web: www.d2m.com/Tugwebsite/ Capacity:<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

White Eagle<br />

836 N. Russell St.<br />

Portland, OR 97227<br />

Phone: 503-282-6810<br />

Format: Blues, Rock<br />

Booking Email:<br />

eaglemusic@mcmenamins.com<br />

Web: www.mcmenamins.com/index.phploc=55<br />

Capacity:<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Wonder Ballroom<br />

128 NE Russell,<br />

Portland, OR 97212<br />

Wonder’s Mailing Address:<br />

P.O. Box 12045 Portland, OR 97212<br />

Phone: 503-284-8686<br />

Format: All Music<br />

Booking & Advertising: Howie Bierbaum,<br />

General Manager - email from website<br />

Seann McKeel seann@wonderballroom.com<br />

Caroline Buchalter caroline@wonderballroom.com<br />

Will Reischman will@wonderballroom.com<br />

Web: www.wonderballroom.com<br />

Capacity: 778 open floor<br />

(550 if chairs are used)<br />

Equipment: PA, lights<br />

Video Production<br />

One Bad Cat Media<br />

Phone: (971) 235-1282<br />

Web: www.onebadcat.com<br />

Email: pauly@onebadcat.com<br />

Contact: Paul Lawrence<br />

Momentum Studios<br />

109 SE Salmon St. Ste C<br />

Portland, OR 97214<br />

Phone: 503.239.6983<br />

Email: record@momentumstudios.com<br />

Web: www.momentumstudios.com<br />

Video Media<br />

2580 N.W. Upshur St.<br />

Portland, OR 97210<br />

Phone: 503.228.4060<br />

Fax: 503.228.0619<br />

Toll-Free: 888.578.4336<br />

Email: from site<br />

Web: www.videomediaportland.com<br />

www.buko.net<br />

<strong>Buko</strong> magazine Vol.2 No.2 - 31<br />

Musicians Resource Guide

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