
(Photo by Alicia Rose)
New interview: Check
out a new interview with Blübird by Icelandic journalist Magnus Axelsson
at www.indie-mp3.co.uk
Here's the Link
Music review: Grads of girls camp show their rock souls
Born at the 2005 Rock 'n' Roll Camp for Girls in Portland. An electric guitar,
a drum set, two voices, channeling 1970s punk, classic rock, folk and a long
list of indie influences. Our first CD? Songs of protest, reflection and
becoming teens. Yes, middle-schoolers can write deep songs.
Band in a Box (October 2006, The Oregonian):
WE ARE...
Úna Rose (vocals, guitars, lap steel)
Katie Alto (Drums, backing vocals, piano)
Hometown: Portland, Oregon
Sound: An electric guitar and drums channeling rock, folk and all the indie and alternative bands we love.
Members: Úna Rose, 14, (vocals, guitar) and Katie Alto, 14,
(drums, vocals)
Sometimes we cover: Radiohead, The Shins, The Postal Service, Cheralee Dillon, Arcade Fire, Beck
Other band names in the running: Sound Board, Furious George,
Yukon Cornelius
How the group formed: We have known each other since second grade and have
the same musical tastes. We formed the band at the 2005 Rock 'n' Roll Camp
for Girls.
Musical guilty pleasure: Cheralee Dillon's "Little Yellow
Lemon"
How do you handle an obvious onstage blunder? We look at each
other, smile and just keep going. We have fun!
Any stage banter you wish you could rescind: We don't talk
much onstage. We just play.
Blübird in The Oregonian, October 2006:
Music
review: Grads of girls camp show their rock souls
Monday, October 09, 2006
LEE WILLIAMS
The Oregonian
Given Friday night's grand opening of the renovated Bob and Diana Gerding Theater
at the Armory, you might think Portland's downtown and Pearl District nightscape
is morphing into a new theater district.
But make no mistake. The district's nightlife is still about rock 'n' roll.
Black-tie events to the contrary, it's about being young. Often it's about
being female. And sometimes it's about shaking the walls in spaces an older
generation would never suspect.
As if to make the case, two rising young bands from Portland played rollicking
sets just one door down from the sumptuous new Portland Center Stage armory
digs, where "West Side Story" was dancing to a pre-rock rhythm.
Blubird and The Revenants, two acts formed by graduates of the city's Rock
'n' Roll Camp for Girls, took to a corner stage fashioned in the Adidas Originals
store, and, for one night, rocked the clothes racks. (Fittingly, the performance
space was in the women's section.)
With displays of white tennis shoes as background, Blubird -- aka drummer Katie
Alto and guitarist Una Rose, both 12 -- launched into a cover of Radiohead's "Karma
Police." Skillfully rendered at Thursday night's show, the '90s indie-anthem
(released when Blubird's band members were all of 3 years old) set the tone
for Blubird's half of the concert: socially aware, alternative-rock gems.
After fiercely delivering the outraged "Global Warming," an original
tune the two composed two years ago during their time studying at the Rock
Camp, Katie hid the drumsticks to focus on harmonies with Una for a version
of the Postal Service's "Such Great Heights." Their combined, confident
voices infused the bittersweet melody with new hope.
The Revenants are usually a trio: Jessica Emdee and Ariel Kwiatkowski, both
17, and Blake Peterson, 15. But, as guitarist/lead vocalist Emdee explained
before the set, "Her (Blake's) mom wouldn't let her come out tonight.
. . . This is what we have to deal with!"
Even rising rock stars, it seems, have to finish homework on a school night.
Emdee worked out her frustration on her guitar, roaring into a punk-inspired
playlist. For "Hey Mister," Emdee's fingers fretted at an especially
blistering pace, but the rougher sonic landscape she traversed didn't lose
the room, and she kept the folks firmly in-store.
"
Midnight Vultures," a raging tune Emdee composed at the Rock 'n' Roll
Camp, was a fit for her cathartic screams and sneers, which brought to mind
Courtney Love's early albums.
Unlike Love, however, Emdee seems to have a future in music.
Emdee had expressed concern that her big, punky sound might not adapt to a
store featuring sports attire that skews to a hip-hop vibe. But the night's
double bill was proof a solid rock show is still a good fit for just about
any space in town.©2007 The Oregonian
Bios coming soon ...