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The Road Home: Bend singer and songwriter Chris Beland heads back to California but leaves us a new album

After living in Bend since the fall of 2005, the singer, now known as Chris Beland, is saying goodbye and moving back to his home state of California.

Six years ago I met a guy named Chris Chabot. In the time between then and now, the guy known for his heartfelt one man acoustic guitar and harmonica shows in Bend has found a father, changed his name and come into his own
as a powerful songwriter. In fact, if youโ€™ve heard live music at a coffee shop or restaurant in town, chances are he was the first to play there.
After living in Bend since the fall of 2005, the singer, now known as Chris Beland, is saying goodbye and moving back to his home state of California. Before he goes, he will release his third album on Sept. 29 at the Old Ironworks building at 50 Scott St. next to Sparrow Bakery.

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All the Little Lights By Passenger; Label: Nettwerk

The merry banjo and graceful guitar on All the Little Lights make the kinds of sounds more typically associated with a Scottish bar or an Irish cobblestone street.

The latest release from troubadour and Brighton United Kingdom native Mike Rosenberg, who records under the moniker Passenger, is an amusing British folk album that uses jaunty, string-laden ditties as a vessel for heartfelt themes.
Though Rosenberg now lives in Sydney, the merry banjo and graceful guitar on All the Little Lights make the kinds of sounds more typically associated with a Scottish bar or an Irish cobblestone street.

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Live Music PSA: Helping you navigate the world of live music both in Bend and beyond

Every so often we’ll introduce you to one of best local venues or share ideas for where to can catch a killer out-of-town show.

The ability to listen to music in your car or your home, even as you walk around town definitely has its merits.ย  But millions of people strongly prefer to hear their music another wayโ€”live.ย  We here at the Source want to help facilitate your journey into the magical world of live music. To that end we are launching a new series. Every so often we’ll introduce you to one of best local venues or share ideas for where to can catch a killer out-of-town show. Consider it a running PSA that promises to always steer you toward the very best in live music entertainment.

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Connecting the Dots: Portland folk rock singer M. Ward continues to sing his story on the new album A Wasteland Companion

After releasing solo albums that at first struggled to gain attention, M. Ward is now collaborating with heavy hitters like Neko Case, Cat Power and Norah Jones.

At 38-years-old, Portland singer Matt Ward has rarely been without a guitar in his hands. Two decades ago, the gospel, folk-rock singer was at the center of the burgeoning Indie scene with California band Rodriguez. After releasing solo albums that at first struggled to gain attention, Ward is now collaborating with heavy hitters like Neko Case, Cat Power and Norah Jones.
Itโ€™s a journey that Ward has been infusing into his music from the beginning of his career.
He begins his seventh studio album A Wasteland Companion with the track โ€œClean Slate,โ€ echoing that theme as he sings โ€œWhen I was a younger man I thought the pain of defeat would last forever. But now I donโ€™t know what it would take to make my heart back down.โ€

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Second Chances: Johnny Solomon leads Minneapolis band Communist Daughter into a new era of sobriety

For lead singer Johnny Solomon of Minneapolis rock band Communist Daughter, having two songs in one episode of ABCโ€™s hit drama Greyโ€™s Anatomy, came with some mixed feelings.

For lead singer Johnny Solomon of Minneapolis rock band Communist Daughter, having two songs in one episode of ABCโ€™s hit drama Greyโ€™s Anatomy, came with some mixed feelings. In between gulps of Diet Dr. Pepper from a mason jar, Solomon, who named the band after a song by Neutral Milk Hotel, talked about those emotions and the results of getting sober.
Solomon was living in Hazelden Addiction Treatment Center when those two haunting songs about discontent and struggling to change were featured on Greyโ€™s Anatomy. As a result, he is often reminded of that time when he plays those songs in concert and likely will be again when his band appears at The Horned Hand on Sept. 27.

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Watch Me Climb on Top of This!: Bend hip-hip group MOsely WOtta scale creative heights with a King Kong concept album

Local music group MOsley WOtta releases their new album KinKonk.

โ€œCast us as the monster, and bride of Frankenstein. Youโ€™re gonna try to take us, now weโ€™re off the leash. Youโ€™re gonna to try break us on these city streets.โ€
On the surface, these lyrics from MOsley WOttaโ€™s new concept album KinKonk, refer to King Kong on the loose in New York City clutching Ann Darrow in his hands. But dig deeper into the LP that drops this week and youโ€™ll find they relate to exploitation in a much bigger sense. Itโ€™s an album Bend audiences should clamor for unlike any other produced locally in recent memory.

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Vagabond Heart: Slaid Cleavesโ€™ musical wanderlust brings him to Sisters

Slaid Cleaves, who is currently on a summer break in Maine before heading out West, stepped away from a boiling pot of $2.99 per pound lobster long enough to talk about life on the road and his current songwriting process.

Maine folk singer Slaid Cleaves is a soft-spoken storyteller with a guitar.
His songs are honest replications of everyday life and emotions that arenโ€™t bogged down by confusing imagery. As a result, his hymns quickly cultivate connections with listeners and become harbors for personal exploration. Itโ€™s for that reason Cleaves has been invited back to the Sisters Folk Festival for performances on Saturday, Sept. 8, and Sunday, Sept. 9.
Cleaves, who is currently on a summer break in Maine before heading out West, stepped away from a boiling pot of $2.99 per pound lobster long enough to talk about life on the road and his current songwriting process. Heโ€™s developed a method that works, he said.

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The Source Staff Summer Album Picks

Were you too busy river floating, pub cycle pedaling and high desert camping to keep up with all the fantastic albums released this summer? No sweatโ€”weโ€™ve got you covered.
Here are a handful of records released this summer that deserve a little love before you close the book on the season.
Unearth / Grasscut / Label: Ninja Tune
Sitting squarely between the worlds of pop and orchestral electronic music isUnearth, the sophomore album from Brighton UK duo Andrew Phillips and Marcus Oโ€™Dair who record together as Grasscut. Unearth incorporates ambient guitar and well composed classical electro-movements that when paired with Phillipsโ€™s ice-cold and sometimes auto-tuned pop vocals become air conditioning for your ears. Songs like โ€œStone Linesโ€ and โ€œReservoirโ€ are perfect for soaking up an afternoon breeze while the more upbeat tracks โ€œPiecesโ€ and โ€œFrom Towns and Fieldsโ€ are good for that sexy nighttime pool party. The influences of European electronic music are all overย Unearth, and are a welcome respite from the dark grinding beats that currently dominate the genre.
ETHAN MAFFEY

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Metropolitan vs. Rustic: One weekendโ€”two distinctly different music festivalsโ€”infinite enjoyment

Two major music festivals happening in Portland and Sisters that are worth the trip.

Musicfest Northwest, Portland Oregon Sept. 5-9
Every September the heart of the Rose City buzzes for the better part of a week with psychedelic and indie rock nouveau, avant-garde electronic beats and impassioned folk music.
Now in its twelfth year, the festival has become the third largest indoor festival in the country. Over the years, MFNW has attracted such acts as The Smashing Pumpkins, Built to Spill and Band of Horses.
This year, MFNW expands to five days of music and for the first time includes Portland Digital eXperience, which is like a PDX version of a TED conference with speakers focusing on tech and digital creativity.

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Closing the Book: On her latest album Brandi Carlile says goodbye to her twenties

After turning 30, Brandi Carlile is ready to acknowledge her past and embrace the next chapter of her life.

Seattle alt-country singer Brandi Carlile isnโ€™t likely to forget where she came from. But after turning 30, the singer is ready to acknowledge her past and embrace the next chapter of her life. With her fourth studio album, Bear Creek, Carlile is doing just that.
On Sept. 1, Carlile returns to Bend for her first headlining appearance at the Les Schwab Amphitheater. Blitzen Trapper opens the show.
Carlile will be performing new music as well as her previous recordings. In that way, this album and tour are helping Carlile transition into the next phase of adulthood and to close the book on parts of her life.

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