PBR stains the mountaintops in 2015 Project Pabst music fest

The second annual incarnation of Project Pabst finished last night in southwest Portland’s Zidell Yards. Weezer, Blondie, Run the Jewels and Passion Pit were among the acts that played during the two-day music festival.

Temperatures lingered in the high 90s both Saturday and Sunday (July 18-19.) For most attendees, the experience was oftentimes comparable to being an ant scurrying under a magnifying glass (and drinking beer in the process). Many strolled around with the cracked-out confidence of Dennis Hopper’s character in Blue Velvet.

Pabst flowed throughout festival grounds; Pabst was gargled by the fluid ton and Pabst stained the mountaintops. The blue-ribbon winner could be found almost everywhere.

PBR enthuasist in his native environment. (Scott Greenstone / Emerald).

PBR enthuasist in his native environment. (Scott Greenstone/Emerald)

Oftentimes during music festivals, especially when it’s hot out, someone in a crowd will crack open a water bottle and splash everyone in the vicinity. At this festival, whenever moshing broke out, several folks holding raised cans would be shoved and beer would take flight. Whenever you stood in a crowd and felt your shirt splashed with a fluid, it was only water about half the time.

Josh Staples of The Velvet Teen. (Scott Greenstone / Emerald).

Josh Staples of The Velvet Teen. (Scott Greenstone/Emerald)

Thee Oh Sees, while performing at the secondary Blue Ribbon stage, were among the first to wisecrack at the ubiquitous beer commercial in which we all stood.

“PBR?” asked frontman John Dwyer incredulously, as he wore his guitar strapped high on his chest.

Someone shouted back, “We have no choice!”

Thee Oh Sees completed an outstanding set before I walked over to the main stage to see TV On the Radio. Frontman Tunde Adebimpe decried the punishing sun on first hello and carried the weight of the very fun set with tracks such as “Lazerray” and “Happy Idiot.”

Kyp Malone (far left), Jaleel Bunton, TV on the Radio.

(from left) Kyp Malone, Jaleel Bunton, and Tunde Adebimpe are members of TV on the Radio. (Scott Greenstone/Emerald)

After this, Run the Jewels took the secondary stage, located just beside the Ross Island Bridge. Several onlookers peered over the bridge to get a glimpse of Killer Mike and El-P.

The two walked onto stage as Queen’s “We Are The Champions” played. The always charismatic Killer Mike grabbed a microphone and boomed, “We’re gonna burn this stage like Portland weed, motherfucker” before the pair bounced into the track “Run the Jewels.”

And later, he elaborated, “Big thanks to Josh from Cannabis Collective for baking us a cherry pie,” which was the best commercial spot of the entire festival.

RTJ parsed out a few dedications, namely to the memories of Eric Garner and Michael Brown – two infamous cases of black men who were killed by police in 2014. In another sort-of shout-out, El-P graciously thanked Pabst and Portland for the show. Killer Mike finished with, “And fuck Donald Trump!” prior to their closer, “A Christmas Fucking Miracle.”

El-P (left) and Killer Mike are Run the Jewels (Scott Greenstone / Emerald).

El-P (left) and Killer Mike are Run the Jewels. (Scott Greenstone/Emerald)

Blondie closed the night on the Captain Pabst stage with several hits, including “One Way Or Another,” “Call Me,” “The Tide Is High,” and closing with “Heart of Glass.”

Deborah Harry during Blondie's set (Scott Greenstone / Emerald).

Deborah Harry during Blondie’s set. (Scott Greenstone/Emerald)

Aimee Mann and Ted Leo make up The Both, whose masterful ease of playing made for a beautiful set on Day 2 of Project Pabst.

Mann’s “hummingbird trill” (as she put it) was immaculate and seductive, complemented by her bass playing and Lee’s guitar. They closed the set with a song written by each of them: Mann’s “Goodbye Caroline” and Leo’s “Bottled In Cork.”

Aimee Mann on bass for The Both at Project Pabst. (Scott Greenstone / Emerald).

Aimee Mann on bass for The Both at Project Pabst. (Scott Greenstone/Emerald)

Immediately thereafter, Passion Pit played “Little Secrets” at the main stage. The band was decorated with a light show that was trivialized by the mid-afternoon sun. Not even frontman Michael Angelakos’ raspy falsetto nor the band’s explosive synths could rouse much of a spark among those present.

The crowd, fifteen rows back, was something of a passive pit until their final two tracks “Take a Walk” and “Sleepyhead.” Although we’ve heard the Jack Kerouac samples in “Sleepyhead” on repeat since 2010, it’s still very danceable and very undeniable.

Passion Pit Michael Angelakos on the Captain Pabst Stage on Sunday, July 19. (Scott Greenstone / Emerald).

Passion Pit frontman Michael Angelakos on the Captain Pabst Stage on Sunday, July 19. (Scott Greenstone/Emerald)

For the final Pabst show, Weezer guitarist Brian Bell later stepped onto the main stage wearing a novelty beer-sipping helmet weighed down with two PBR tallboys. He tossed it into the front rows before the opener’s (“My Name is Jonas”) end.

The once-dorky, now-much-dorkier band played a vibrant, career-spanning set that included tracks old and new(ish). Following “Hash Pipe,” “El Scorcho,” and “Back to the Shack,” a handsomely bearded Rivers Cuomo, Weezer’s frontman, wordlessly raised a fist in the air between songs.

Weezer on the Captain Pabst stage (Scott Greenstone / Emerald).

Weezer on the Captain Pabst stage. (Scott Greenstone/Emerald)

Cuomo is a hero. He played his spearmint-colored, sticker-covered guitar and sang tracks that he wrote in the nineties. These are songs about how he resembles Buddy Holly, how he doesn’t leave the garage, and how he’s always hopelessly falling in love with half-Japanese lesbians.

He’d go on to sing more recent tracks about his audacious celeb goals, like moving to Beverly Hills or becoming a superstar personality for whom “people can crane necks to get a glimpse of me and see if I am having sex” (“Troublemaker”).

Weezer’s celebrity idealism was buffered with more humble reflections in the Project Pabst set, like: “I’ll eat my candy with the pork and beans” and “I’ll soon be naked, lying on the floor.”

20150719_200714

Captain Pabst overlooks Weezer at Project Pabst. (Emerson Malone/Emerald)

Read more here: http://www.dailyemerald.com/2015/07/20/pbr-stains-the-mountaintops-in-2015-project-pabst-music-fest/
Copyright 2024