Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current, March 21, 2019, Page 22, Image 22

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    new! Mix
and
music
Match
Charming Disaster
Saturday, March 23 • 7:30 pm
Brew Station, Cottage Grove
all ages until 8:30 • Free
menu
207 E 5TH
TAPANDGROWLER.COM
4th annual MARCH MADNESS IPA CHALLENGE: blind taste-off event
THRough
“sweet 16” ipas
2 flights AT BEERGARDEN
& 2 flights at tap and growler
the final 4 at publichouse, april 1- april 8
&
777 W 6TH
BEERGARDENME.COM
207 E 5TH
TAPANDGROWLER.COM
what’s your favorite ipa?
PHOTO BY SHERVIN LAINEZ
mar 19
mar 31
The Disaster
Twins
BROOKLYN-BASED
FOLK-NOIR DUO PLAYS COTTAGE GROVE
By Will Kennedy
T
he Brew Station & Coast Fork Feed in Cottage Grove features beer,
food, animal feed and live music. If there was ever a more “you know
you’re in Oregon when” kind of combo, I don’t know what that would
be.
“Hopefully people will feel comfortable enough to bring their
horse,” says Jeff Morris, half of the Brooklyn-based Gothic cabaret
folky-noir duo Charming Disaster.
In fact, Charming Disaster may just add animal feed to their tour rider, Ellia Bisker
jokes.
The duo is touring the Northwest in advance of their new album, SPELLS +
RITUALS, out this June.
This will be Charming Disaster’s third album, and each song is like a spell or ritual
inspired by folklore and mythology, as well as true crime and books, I’m told. The pair
lists Edward Gorey, Tim Burton, Raymond Chandler and the murder ballads of the
Americana tradition as influences.
“Each song is its own little narrative,” Bisker says, with a little of the deadpan acoustic
punk of Jonathan Richman, as well as the arch theatricality of Amanda Palmer.
Album-track “Baba Yaga” has the galloping backbeat of classic country, Bisker
whoopin’ and hollerin’ like a cowhand driving the cattle home.
Elsewhere, the Sondheim-esque “Belladonna Melodrama,” has Bisker and Morris
singing a tale of poisoned daggers, lovers escaping to sea under cover of darkness,
and avenging the good name of an unjustly killed father. It’s dark but also campy stuff,
careful to never take itself too seriously.
“I think I was raised to have a macabre sense of humor,” Bisker says. “I love the
Addams Family. I was destined for this from the very beginning. Humor is the only
way to deal with mortality. How else can you deal with these things? They’re realities.”
“That grin is just the skull looking back at you,” Morris says, adding that without
that sense of humor, Charming Disaster would just be goth-emo. “But that’s not our
aesthetic.”
Bisker and Morris say their songwriting is a collaborative process that’s evolved
a lot over the years. These days, one musician brings the other a seed of a song,
according to Bisker.
“It’s very exciting to have a collaborator that will come to you and say, ‘I have this
idea,’” she says. And this collaborative process works because of an implicit trust
between the songwriters.
Morris says: “I feel very comfortable showing Ellia all these ugly bumps.”
He adds that they make each other mixed tapes, talk about books and attend art
exhibits.
“We do a lot to cultivate that mind meld,” he continues. “We spend so much time
together touring.”
SPELLS+RITUALS isn’t even quite out yet, and the duo is already working on new
music.
“We’re pretty prolific,” Bisker says. “We’re working on a couple new songs right now.”
One new song is about falling asleep in the snow, something you’re warned never to do.
“It would be fun to have a Charming Disaster song about falling asleep in the snow,”
Bisker says. ■
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E U G E N E W E E K LY . C O M