Friday, February 26 2010 10:00 PM
18+ $14.00 ($14 Door)
Lincoln Hall
Download free music from Portugal. The Man, Port O'Brien and The Dig here
“Save me, I can’t be saved” —Opening line from Satanic Satanist
“...I don’t believe.” —Closing line from Satanic Satanist
“These two lines are like bookends to the new album. They tie into the way my dad and other people escaped to Alaska in the ‘70s, and represent their proud independence and courage. The album’s last line finishes the thought of the first line. It was Alaska. Everything we’ve gotten to be and everything we’ve gotten to go through, we’ve been lucky enough to have what we have.” —John Baldwin Gourley
“But it’s the songs themselves that truly set this band apart.” —Alternative Press
Within days of Alternative Press including Censored Colors on its list of 10 Essential Albums of 2008, the members of Portugal. The Man were trekking through the Boston snow to start work on their fourth release in four years, The Satanic Satanist. As John Baldwin Gourley, named the year’s Best Vocalist in that same issue of AP, explains the pace at which his band has turned out any number of the decade’s more inspired moments, “Honestly, I think we should be putting out more music. It keeps you thinking, keeps you growing and progressing. If you stop and let it sit for too long, I feel like you start to lose track of where you were going.”
For 2008’s Censored Colors, Portugal. The Man spent two weeks in Seattle with their friends in Kay Kay and the Weathered Underground making an album Gourley says he wrote in tribute to the music of a youth spent tuned to oldies radio as his parents drove around Alaska. One of his earliest musical memories, finding a tape of Abbey Road in a box of his parents’ cassettes, resulted in Censored Colors’ second side where all the songs are strung together in an epic suite.
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