2008-03-07: Planks at Little Mountain Studios
Posted: March 5th, 2008 | Author: Blackbox Squeezebeard | Filed under: Show announcements and recaps | Tags: art opening, Ehren Salazar, Emmett Hall, Erik Lyon, Little Mountain Gallery, Russian Words, SSRIs | 1 Comment »Courtesy of the illustrious history of the Butchershop Floor gallery that formerly occupied the space, the Creaking Planks have maintained fairly chummy relations with the Little Mountain Studios that assumed its lease… not least due to sporadically guitarrón-slinging Scruffy Bigbass’ participation in both organizations. Though it’s a tradition that, as recently remarked upon, has been disrupted for a while, we’ve long been considered the “house band” for exhibition openings, and have enjoyed on-again-off-again “residency” (which is fancy musician jargon for free practice space that the public can drop in on.) In addition to the openings in the front-of-house, with the back vacated by the improv pioneers the staff have been occasionally curating small music shows in the back studio.
This Friday, you get both: “The Danger of Disappearing“ opens, featuring new drawings by “This is the story about how everything got ruined” auteur Erik Lyon, plus a concert around back featuring the SSRIs, Russian Words and Emmett Hall. Hymn For Her fell off the bill, and proprietor Ehren Salazar was invited to occupy the vacuum; he in turn invited us to join him in helping to fill that space with glorious sound. We may be playing the opening up front; we may be playing the concert around back; we may be playing both! (but likely not at the same time… unless we straddle the middle and broadcast in both directions simultaneously.) However it goes down, we’ll be on relatively early — think 8 pm — to give Blackbox Squeezebeard time to hustle down to Natasha Enquist’s star turn on the International Women’s Day episode of Accordion Noir at 9:30 pm.
Find attached two thumbnails, one of Erik’s new work, and one of the original concert poster before we sinisterly replaced Hymn For Her — click for the full pictures:
[...] so many hours into propping up. It’s been Quite Some Time (two and a half years?!) since the last time we played an art opening there, but these strange little gigs were positively fundamental in the [...]