Logo
Housing Connections
ISSUE #34.23 • MUSIC •
[MUSIC]

The Accidental Venue


Exit Only fills a void in Portland’s all-ages scene.

Social bookmarking | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 2 comments
Recently in "Here Comes Your Fan"

July 23rd, 2008
First Love, Last Rites | What happens after you get what you want?1 comment

July 16th, 2008
Moral Support | Menomena’s Danny Seim steps into the spotlight.0 comments

July 2nd, 2008
Privileged Information | PIAPTK releases music worth its weight in vinyl.1 comment

June 18th, 2008
Human Touch | Viva Voce branches out, in sound and number.0 comments

June 11th, 2008
Rock ’N’ Roll Savior | Remembering Christian music’s unlikely forefather.1 comment

June 4th, 2008
The Housewife’s Choice | Six reasons why ladies love Sir Tom Jones.2 comments

May 28th, 2008
Just Like Heaven | Three days of rock boil down to one old fave.0 comments

May 14th, 2008
Alma Matters | A tale of two high-school fundraisers.0 comments

April 30th, 2008
Soul Man? | Colin Meloy tries his hand, er, voice at Sam Cooke.1 comment

April 2nd, 2008
What A Fool Believes... | is that there’s no sun in Portland this spring.0 comments


SUBTERRANEAN CRUSADER: Exit Only’s Zach Barnes.
IMAGE: Jenna Biggs
BY AMY MCCULLOUGH | amccullough at wweek dot com

[April 16th, 2008]

Last Monday night, I found myself wandering under the Fremont Bridge’s industrial east side. The block I was pacing—between North Albina Avenue and Tillamook Street, just off the MAX’s yellow line—was as empty as a ghost town. Half expecting to see tumbleweed roll by, I stood under the glow of streetlights repeating “1121 North Loring” to myself and feeling utterly lost. I was looking for new venue/gallery Exit Only, and the space’s logo—a road sign of clusterfucked arrows and dead-end turns—was beginning to make a lot of sense.

A desperation text later (to Carcrashlander frontman Cory Gray, whose organ-led folk-rock band was just about to go on), I stumbled upon the warehouse space, where curator Zach Barnes met me at the door and quickly noted our matching Midwestern accents. A 23-year-old Chicago transplant, Barnes intended Exit Only to be a haven for all sorts of “underground arts,” a place where you’d just as likely catch a puppet show or indie film screening as a rock concert. But, thanks to Portland’s startling lack of all-ages venues (thanks, OLCC!), Barnes found himself bombarded by requests from bands wanting to fill the cavernous, plywood-lined space with music.

“Honestly, I had no idea the response the place was gonna get,” says Barnes, who describes Exit Only as an art gallery that’s open when bands play. But he and “jack-of-all-trades volunteer” Nate Sloss agree they’d like to see the venue, which opened in February, turn into a nonprofit “community art space.” While Portland’s alcohol-serving venues will find out this Friday whether or not the OLCC approves proposed changes to rules regarding minors in liquor-serving establishments (enabling 21+ clubs to host more all-ages events), Barnes says he’s not interested in running a bar; he’d rather skip the hassle and welcome all tastes and ages straightaway.















icon Story continues below

advertisement
OMSI
advertisement

In the one evening I spent at Exit Only, I witnessed an all-out rock show; Carcrashlander’s moving away from sad-bastard music, according to Gray, whose set was ably embellished by the insanely cool guitar stylings of experimental hip-hop artist Alexis Gideon. I also met a musician I’d just written about (country crooner Shelley Short was among the off-night’s few attendees) and, later, sat in a folkster-friendly circle while Ohioan’s Ryne Warner played a low-key set of acoustic covers (from Dolly’s “Jolene” to Townes Van Zandt) and originals from a neighboring room’s plaid couch.

Sitting cross-legged on the floor to my right was local blues-folk singer Down South Sallie, chiming in on the songs she knew. As trains rumbled in the distance, Warner played a mariachi-tinged number with a refrain along the lines of, “Let’s get the fuck out of this town!” But, when Gray grabbed his trumpet for a bit of impromptu accompaniment and a couple of youngish fans apologized for having to split (it was “past their bedtime”), it was hard to imagine ever wanting to leave. For a chilly warehouse in a barren corner of North Portland, Exit Only sure feels like home—if you can find it.

MORE: Alexis Gideon plays Friday, April 18. 9 pm. $5. All ages. Visit myspace.com/pdxexitonly for upcoming shows.

 

Rate This Story
1.57 average/7 votes

 
read all 2 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “The Accidental Venue”

1

thanks to ww for this awesome coverage, and thanks to zach for choosing to gaze into my painting for the picture. zach rocks!

remedy, Apr 22nd, 2008 4:29pm
2

Seems like a promising place.

Nice use of the word "clusterfucked".

Jacob Magers, May 21st, 2008 10:09pm
 
 
 





Recently in Willamette Week
August 20th 2008Sliced Bread, Beware | A better fire hose, a poker aid & a foldable clipboard—meet six Portland inventors whose big ideas are the best thing since, well, you know.
August 20th 2008How to Live Cheap in Portland | Throwing too much money away on food and shelter? here’s WW’s Recession Survival Guide.
August 20th 2008The Queer and the Qur’an | Ali is gay. And Muslim. Can he be both?
August 20th 2008Good Cop, Mad Cop | Many of Navin Sharma’s colleagues in the Vancouver Police Department can’t believe he got fired. After reading this, neither will you.
August 20th 2008Lean, Mean Meat-Free Machine | Portlander Robert Cheeke is the face of vegan bodybuilding.
August 20th 2008The Sopranokovs | The Russian mob comes to town with a new scam—medical identity theft.
August 20th 2008Manhunter | Almost every state lets bounty hunters chase down its most wanted. Why doesn’t Oregon?
August 20th 2008Get Wet: WW’s Summer Guide 2008 | The rain is finally over. Now let’s get wet!
August 20th 2008New Kids In The Flock | Gresham’s twin teenage sensations go about their Father’s business. And it’s making them superstars.