Tiny Vipers + Rafael Anton Irisarri + Cars & Trains - Mississippi Studios (Portland; Jul. 14, 2010)

text: Jarrod Dunham / photos: Troy Dunham (tiny vipers 1-5 + rafael anton irisarri 6-9 + cars and trains 10-15)

Our image viewer requires Macromedia Flash. Get Macromedia Flash. If you have Flash installed, click to view gallery

Perhaps, I tell myself, if I keep falling in love with Tiny Vipers, the rest of the world will follow suit. I tried again Wednesday night. Maybe next time.

The stated capacity for Mississippi Studios is 250+. I say this because if my headcount of less than 30 was correct, then there was room for another 220 people or so. But that’s cool. It’s not like we’re talking about Kiss or U2 here. This kind of music doesn’t need big crowds. But if you weren’t one of the two dozen or so people sitting around on the floor at Mississippi Studios with a loved one and a tall boy of PBR, I hope whatever it is you were doing instead was beautiful. Because this was.

Cars & Trains, the electronic music project of Tom Filepp, opened the evening with an eclectic, surprisingly organic set. Building progressively complex loops with a small array of instruments, Filepp put together haunting folk songs that effortlessly danced around his electronic beats. Endless repetitions of deceptively simple lyrics – “Imagine my surprise/When my brothers all had died” – over a crescendo of harmonious sounds resulted in amazingly heartfelt tunes. Unique for electronic music, it was as much a joy to watch him create his music as it was to listen to it.

Following the excellent Cars & Trains set came Seattle’s Rafael Anton Irisarri. Working primarily with a laptop and a guitar, Irisarri played a brief set of a single, wonderfully evocative ambient composition. For a time, it required very little imagination to conjure up the image of a lazy stream, which was only enhanced by the very casual and relaxed nature of the setting, with almost everybody in attendance sitting in rapt attention on the floor. And in fact, a little imagination was almost necessary. Irisarri’s compositions are wonderful, but his stage presence is non-existent. He spent much of his set simply staring into the screen of his laptop as he tinkered with frequencies. This was an occasion—rare in my opinion—where a projection screen could have been put to good use, but as it was the experience could be enhanced simply by closing one’s eyes.

After a considerable interval came the headliner, Tiny Vipers. This was my second time seeing Tiny Vipers—the stage name of Jesy Fortino—having previously covered an intimate performance at the Aladdin Theatre last summer. I raved about that show, and had high expectations for this one. Though Fortino’s set was considerably shorter this time around, my expectations were surpassed in every other sense. By the time she sat down at the microphone, the crowd had maybe doubled in size. Still small, but enough people that chairs had been produced from somewhere to provide for more comfortable seating options, though many opted to remain on the floor. For all the intimacy that the Aladdin can rightfully boast of, the informality of this arrangement easily bested it. The room was perfectly silent while Fortino played, and the atmosphere seemed more a gathering of friends than an actual concert. Fortino, echoed that vibe, seeming perfectly unselfconscious and at ease throughout her performance. Her set was much too short, but so enchanting in spite of its brevity that it didn’t matter. This performance emphasized quality over quantity, and as always, Fortino packed so much spirit and emotion into her quietly beautiful music that it was impossible afterward to summon anything but contentedness. To judge from the response she received, I’d hazard a guess that another couple dozen people fell in love, again or for the very first time, with Tiny Vipers on Wednesday night. Perhaps next time there will be a couple dozen more.

DOWNLOAD: Tiny Vipers - Campfire Resemblance (MP3) or Follow us for more Tiny Vipers MP3s (Twitter)

Tiny Vipers review to your liking? You'll sweat:

1 comments thus far ...

  1. 1jhon Thu Sep 2, 2010 | 03:35 pm

    Nice concerning as better as clarifying position.Gives Thanks for providing for us.I show your article with my delight.
    tailored car mats

leave us a comment:





song battle!!!

Two songs go in, one comes out. Pick a side.

Q-Tip - You
vs.
Common - Faithful

Columbus Short Would be an excellent match for Sam Cooke (especially if this movie was to include Sam’s Soul Stirrer years). Just as long as in the movie Sam does the singing of course lol. But as far as physical resemblance my boy Columbus Short all the way. View this clip of Cadillac Records were he played lil walter… http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SmxTbcnW6bY

by Akin Z on Wed Feb 1, 2012 at 12.37 am from the entry: Sam Cooke to get a movie

Oops meant Aloe Blacc not Black. Sorry about the typo. If you doubt that he should play Sam check him out here on you tube singing Loving you is Killing me. The likeness is uncanny - but the voice is quite different.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yJuyaVcL2I&feature=artist

by Tamara L on Tue Jan 31, 2012 at 08.30 am from the entry: Sam Cooke to get a movie

I have read the Peter Guralnick book and it is thoroughly researched down to the minutest detail. Amazing.
I would go for Aloe Black because he looks so much like Sam, but for heaven’s sake why are we talking about the quality of the actor’s singing? Sam’s singing has got to be dubbed in. We want the real thing not an impersonator. There is only one Sam Cooke. The actor can act, let Sam do the songs.

by Tamara L on Tue Jan 31, 2012 at 08.24 am from the entry: Sam Cooke to get a movie

Thanks for the mention, we do appreciate your time and attention. Please check us out@DirtyDurdie.com.

once again thanks for noticing us.

by Dirty Ice on Tue Jan 24, 2012 at 11.04 pm from the entry: Yasiin Bey - Fete (Providence, RI; Dec.10, 2011)

John Boutte should play Sam Cooke. Except the point someone made about him dying young, this is true. Boutte may be a bit too old.

by Brendan on Tue Jan 17, 2012 at 06.17 pm from the entry: Sam Cooke to get a movie

La cara de kurt de: NO ME DIJERON NADA :| ajajjajajaja

by asdsad on Tue Jan 17, 2012 at 04.29 am from the entry: Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic Weigh In On Kurt Avatar

Blacks say the word 50+ times a day. Fuck the double standard, stop trying to create controversy.

by Steve C on Fri Jan 13, 2012 at 02.00 pm from the entry: John Mayer is about to get swallowed up in public outrage

Melophobe is a concert review and concert photography website reviewing indie-rock, folk, hip-hop and more. Below are addresses to which you can send inquiries:

Advertising

advertising@melophobe.com

Editorial

editor@melophobe.com

Website

webmaster@melophobe.com

melophobe sponsors
Connect To melophobe