http://www.portlandobserver.com QR code for Portland Observer Online Joyce Washington Drug Courts Classic High school talent shines at 14th annual event Turn 15 Advocates praise Clark County programs See story and photos, page 16 > Volume XLIV Number 22 ‘City o f Roses’ D .. . . .. . B IB see See Lo Local News, page 3 bgerücr w w w .portlandobserver.com Established in 1970 Wednesday • June 4. 2014 Committed to Cultural Diversity oj ' communitv service photo by D onovan M. S mith /T he P ortland O bserver ... Portland m usical duo Neka and Kahlo - 7hirdwav3 are celebrating the release o f their debut EP. Interracial and lesbian, the couple embraces widely different musical backgrounds to fuel a unique sound for listeners, including such genres as hip hop, rock, soul and gospel. Please, No Labels Musical couple explores ‘norms’ with debut EP D onovan M. S mith T he P ortland O bserver by To hear what the Portland musical duo Neka and Kahlo - 7hirdwav3 is trying to say in their debut EP, it’s probably going to take an abandonment of some of your precon­ ceived notions about music, maybe all of them. At least that’s the hope of this interracial couple for their album which dropped last week after a long-awaited turn. During an interview with the Portland Observer, Kahlo (real name is Mila Kokichk and Neka (real name is Shanekah), said the Thirdway EP was inspired by their scars, triumphs, enlightenment, and perhaps most importantly, their fans. In 2012, Kahlo, was confined to a bed at OHSU, sometimes weeks at a time, while awaiting a desperately needed kidney trans­ plant. The days were exhausting on not only her, but for Neka too, something the couple says strengthened their five-year relation­ ship. The duo says it’s all made for better music. “W e’re better together than we are apart, that’s something we realized through our trials here at the hospital,” Kahlo says. A northeast Portland native and the rhymespitter of the group, Kahlo says the two never stopped recording for the EP throughout the months of treatment, even during the dismal days of dialysis. “I was recording, I think, some of my better verses when I had tubes in my chest,” she recalls. Neka on the other hand is not only the vocal songstress for the two, but provides the airy beats they both muse over. A lesbian product of the Pentecostal church, this south­ ern California native says her eclectic influ­ ences lend to genre-bending that won’t be easily classified. “A lot of people, like if you’re gonna do pop music, if you do hip hop, you’re gonna do hip hop, and we were able to bring some of our gospel aspects into the music. And you know, bring a lot of the diverse cultures continued on page 5