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COLUMN
FROM THE MUSIC DESK
Complex,
Indeed
An Ambitious Eastside "Maxi-Lounge" Kicks Off With a Blue-Chip Show
// Still Fighting to Get the OLCC To Say the Magic Word
by ZACH
DUNDAS
zdundas@wweek.com
Southeast
2nd Avenue lies quiet in drought-defying Sunday rain. A backpacking
mendicant and a couple of skateboarders more or less have the drizzle
to themselves.
Second runs
through the gut of an undeniably cool neighborhood, a warren of
brick streets, iron rails, warehouses begging to host action-movie
showdowns and core industries that couldn't give a damn about the
Silicon Forest. The area is home to a number of sterling community
assets, like Montage, Tazo Tea, My Father's Place
and Taboo Adult Video. Still, it would be easy to write
it off as a graying antique in the all-singing, all-dancing cyber-age.
If a group of
businessmen, artists and music promoters have their way, however,
there will soon be an influx of action on 2nd. They hope to transform
a long-dead nightclub into a super-sized cafe/supper club/art center/"maxi-lounge"/theater/music
venue. They say B Complex, which hosts a two-night "pre-opening"
celebration starring top-notch electronic artists this weekend,
will offer Portland a brand of sophistication not found elsewhere.
"This is an
experiment of sorts for a new kind of reality that could exist in
a gathering establishment," writes Brian Williamson, the
effort's booking agent, in an email. "We have this wacky, far-fetched
hunch that there's a growing body of people craving something different
than what presently exists, some other 'place to B' (sorry)."
The prospective
engineers of this paradigm shift have restored a multi-level space
with a deeply uneven past. Most famously, the building once harbored
the club Euphoria, where bands ranging from L.A. punk legends
X to ex-Portland jazzman Jim Pepper played in the
'70s. Euphoria was apparently beloved by the venue-starved Portland
arts community of the time for its venturesome music and theater
booking.
According to
accounts of the era, the club also experienced entanglements with
the Oregon Liquor Control Commission. For example, a story
from Willamette Week's Sept. 13, 1977, issue reports that
the OLCC yanked Euphoria's booze license because three of its many
owners at the time had criminal records.
In the decades
since Euphoria relocated to the Great Nightlife District in the
Sky, a succession of businesses cycled through the building. Annie
Pearl's, a Southern restaurant, ran into problems with
neighbors over trouble at hip-hop shows in the early '90s. More
recently, a short-lived club called The Mercury Room occupied
the premises.
If this weekend's
shows--which include national jazz/electronic fusion acts like Ninja
Tune's Kid Koala and Sientific American--is any
indication, B Complex is looking to extend the more positive aspects
of the Euphoria tradition. Early statements from the Complex camp
sketch a project incorporating music, theater, an Internet cafe,
quality food and creative drink, all in a space that could potentially
hold up to 600 people. Williamson is booking first-division music
into the summer, with engagements with Autechre, Vandermark
5, Saul Williams, Da Lata and Portishead veteran
Andy Smith already scheduled for May and June.
All this would
seem to jibe well with the City's vaunted vision of a reinvented
inner Eastside. After all, Her Honor herself recently spoke
of this very district as a natural extension of downtown, a prime
candidate for revitalization. As every good little New Urbanist
knows, quality nightlife destinations are key to injecting energy
into any neighborhood.
However, there
are other factors at play. B Complex is in the middle of a designated
alcohol impact area and has attracted the opposition of some
neighbors. The OLCC rejected the club's liquor license application,
largely because of the impact area. B Complex has appealed the ruling
to an administrative law judge, a state-appointed hearings
officer. A hearing is currently scheduled for the second week in
April.
In the meantime,
B Complex will use a caterer's license to sell beer at this weekend's
show. The owners apparently plan to go forward with the project
whether or not they score a booze license. If they're successful,
odds are that the strip of 2nd Avenue between Southeast Oak and
Pine will be very different, very soon.
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