ALL THINGS MUSIC PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE listen live Thursday 4/8 Now & Then: Michael Shane and Derek Michael Marc will perform hits from six decades; 6-8 p.m.; River’s Place, 787 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend; go.evvnt.com/762061-0 An Evening with The Kicks: Singer-songwriter Kelcy Lassen will unveil her new project; 6-8 p.m.; The Brown Owl, 550 SW Industrial Way, Bend; go.evvnt. com/762045-0 or 541-797-6581. FRIDAY 4/9 Joel Chadd: The folk artist will perform with Darin gentry and Kerry Sheehan in an intimate performance live-streamed from The Commons; 7:30-8:30 p.m.; Bend; go.evvnt.com/762118-0 SATURDAY 4/10 The HWY 97 Band: The classic rock band will perform; 2-5:30 p.m.; Pump House Bar & Grill, 8320 U.S. Highway 97, Terrebonne; go.evvnt.com/755281-0 Continued from previous page (For most of last year I wrote a weekly col- umn in GO! on a freelance basis, and since February I was back on staff.) I have accepted a job at another newspa- per back East, but not writing about music this time. I will miss this with all my being, but it is time to move on. Thanks to everyone at The Bulletin for let- ting me do my dream job again. Extra-spe- cial thanks to Julie Johnson and Denise Costa for hiring me, Jody Lawrence-Turner for being an awesome editor and sound- ing board, and David Jasper and Makenzie Whittle for being the best co-workers I could ask for. More thanks to the incredible musi- cians, music venues, promoters and behind- the-scenes folks that make the music happen and welcomed me into their world. And thank you for reading GO! Magazine every week; this doesn’t work without you. I could tell you about my favorite inter- views. Robert Plant is up there, so is Steve Miller — took three years to get that one. “Weird Al” Yankovic, Antonio Sanchez, Judy Collins, Kandace Springs, George Win- ston. I know I’m leaving people out. I could tell you about my favorite shows. “Weird Al” again. Deftones and Mastodon. Black Mountain. The Claypool Lennon De- lirium. Mike Watt. D.O.A. The Rev. Horton Heat. Supersuckers. That 1 Guy. I know I’m leaving stuff out. But instead, I’m going to tell you a ram- bling story. Indulge me, one last time. When I was 14 years old, I watched Cam- eron Crowe’s semi- (or mostly) autobi- ographical film “Almost Famous,” about a music-obsessed, 15-year-old kid who tricks Rolling Stone into sending him on the road with a fictional ’70s rock band, Stillwater. The film changed my life and set me on the MUSIC & MORE AT LOCAL NIGHTSPOTS THIS WEEK Jake & The Tri-County Roamers: The local band will perform on the brewery’s patio; 4-6 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; go.evvnt. com/762650-0 or 541-388-8331. Countryfied Live with Shannon Bex: The country band will perform on the outdoor stage; 6:30-9:30 p.m.; $15; General Duffy’s Waterhole, 404 SW Forest Ave., Redmond; eventbrite.com Music on the Lawn — Eric Leadbetter: The local rock artist will perform; 5-7 p.m.; On Tap, 1424 NE Cushing Drive, Bend; go.evvnt.com/762688-0 SUNDAY 4/11 Saturdays in the Yard with Bill Powers: The local roots singer-songwriter performs; 6-8 p.m.; Bunk+Brew Historic Lucas House, 42 NW Hawthorne Ave., Bend; go.evvnt.com/762785-0 or 458-202-1090. Crescendo: The Northwest trio will perform covers of popular songs on the restaurant’s patio. Reservations recommended; 6-8:30 p.m.; Sisters Depot, 250 W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; go.evvnt.com/762778-0 or 541-904-4660. Spring Sessions — The Mostest: The jam band will perform live on the outdoor stage or watch the stream on the Worthy Facebook page; 6-8 p.m.; Worthy Brewing Company, 495 NE Bellevue Drive, Bend; go.evvnt. com/758322-0 The HWY 97 Band: The classic rock band performs; 3-6 p.m.; General Duffy’s Waterhole, 404 SW Forest Ave., Redmond; go.evvnt.com/755275-0 Redmond High School Jazz Band: Join Ben Lawson, the director of Redmond High School’s jazz band, for music, memories and the meaning of being a part of a jazz band; 4-5 p.m.; online; go.evvnt. com/762000-0 or 541-312-1032. Bill Powers: The local roots-rock artist will perform; 6-8 p.m.; River’s Place, 787 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend; go.evvnt.com/762063-0 TUESDAY 4/13 Thanks to everyone at The Bulletin for letting me do my dream job again. Extra-special thanks to Julie Johnson and Denise Costa for hiring me, Jody Lawrence-Turner for being an awesome editor and sounding board, and David Jasper and Makenzie Whittle for being the best co-workers I could ask for. More thanks to the incredible musicians, music venues, promoters and behind-the-scenes folks that make the music happen and welcomed me into their world. And thank you for reading GO! Magazine every week; this doesn’t work without you. music-journalism path (along with Nirvana, of course, which I mentioned in a column just a few weeks ago). The music reporting the film depicts no longer exists, really, though I wish a band would invite me on the road as a fly-on- the-wall writer. But so many moments have stuck with me as I’ve plied my trade as a music journalist for real. Most of those moments came from the late Philip Seymour Hoffman in a brilliant performance as equally brilliant music jour- nalist Lester Bangs. There is one quote to- ward the end of the film that has always stuck with me. The 15-year-old main char- acter and Crowe stand-in, William Miller (Patrick Fugit), calls up Hoffman’s Bangs as he struggles to write his cover story for Rolling Stone. The jig is up: The magazine knows he’s a green kid. Perhaps worse, he’s become close to the band — too close. “The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you share with someone else when you’re uncool,” Hoffman-as-Bangs says. “My advice to you? I know you think these guys are your friends. If you want to be a true friend to them, be honest and unmerciful.” These are words I’ve strived to live up to in my decade-plus as a music reporter, first THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 2021 • THE BULLETIN in upstate New York and, since June 2015, in Central Oregon. You can be the judge of how “unmerciful” I was (I generally think I’m kind of a wimp), but being honest has always been my mantra, whether I’m writ- ing about the singer-songwriter who haunts open mic nights or Robert Plant performing at Les Schwab Amphitheater. Also, I am deeply uncool. There’s a reason I write about music instead of play it. Wait a second. I do play music. Did you know that? Some of you did, because I played some open mic nights when I moved here. And when I was music reporting in New York, I played in a noisy, grungy, power-poppy punk trio called The Hearing Aides for about five years. (We even released three al- bums recorded with the mighty Don Fury, a hardcore punk giant known for his work with Agnostic Front, Gorilla Biscuits, Hel- met and many more). But I stopped playing those open mic nights soon after moving here. I don’t want to go too deep, but most of it had to do with anxiety. The other reason ties back to “Almost Fa- mous.” Throughout the film, the members of Stillwater refer to Miller as “the enemy.” Stacie Dread & Mystic of Broken Down Guitars will perform live 6-8 p.m. Wednesday at Worthy Brewing in Bend. Submitted photo An Evening with Pete Kartsounes: The folk artist will perform; 6-8 p.m.; The Brown Owl, 550 SW Industrial Way, Bend; go.evvnt.com/762047-0 or 541- 797-6581. WEDNESDAY 4/14 Spring Sessions — Stacie Dread & Mystic of Broken Down Guitars: The local duo will perform on the outdoor stage or watch the stream on the Worthy Facebook page; 6-8 p.m.; Worthy Brewing Company, 495 NE Bellevue Drive, Bend; go.evvnt.com/758324-0 Miller even calls himself this in a memora- ble scene. It speaks to the idea that neither camp trusts the other; the journalist is there to be objective, the band wants “sanctimo- nious stories about the genius of rock stars,” as Bangs puts it. I struggled with this in New York, too. I’m the enemy! I can’t be a musician and be a music journalist. How does that work? In New York, it worked because I was in a much bigger market. In Bend, I work for the daily newspaper. That’s singular, daily news- paper, not one of many. I was not the only music journalist in Bend, obviously, but I was high profile enough to where I didn’t feel comfortable playing my own music, in any capacity, when my job was to write about everyone else’s music. Turns out, a pandemic really changes your perspective. Sometime in January, I wrote my first complete song in more than five years. And then, I wrote another. And another, and another, and a bunch more. And then I wrote an entire musical with Alec Kerr, my college friend and fellow jour- nalist at the Conway Daily Sun in North Conway, New Hampshire. If I have one regret about my time in Bend, it’s that I didn’t share the noise that’s in my head with you guys. I’d apologize, but I think some of you might be grateful I didn’t. (If you must hear it, you can search for The Hearing Aides online.) But maybe I won’t have to regret that ei- ther. Due to the ongoing pandemic, I actu- ally don’t know when I’ll leave Bend. And I’m itching to play. I hope to see live music soon. I hope to see all my musical friends onstage, in person again (crap, the enemy made friends). And I hope to be on a stage again, at some point. I hope.