Music seen at SPACE Gallery, October 31, 2008
By CHAD CHAMBERLAIN | November 5, 2008
Portland brought out its dead for SPACE Gallery’s annual Halloween smash on Friday. Our town’s finest channeled their terrific displays of costume-creativity and ironic dance moves while on stage, notable local bands covered indelible national acts.
North Haven’s Toughcats, who took home the title of “Best Roots Act” at the Portland Music Awards this year, transformed themselves with not just their garb, but with a genre leap. Moving from northern Maine roots-music to 1980s bubble-gum pop — quite the changelings — the band covered Cyndi Lauper with an unforgettable Emilia Dahlin as the blonde, boisterous Cyndi.
But everyone was on stage, at least metaphorically. I saw Mr. Peanut pounding beers, Arrested Development’s Tobias painted blue, and a cardboard robot doing the Robot with the Utz potato-chip girl.
“Its nice to see you all in the flesh,” said the suave vampire frontman of the Misfits cover band, which consisted of variegated Portland-rockers. After opening with “Monster Mash,” they sought to raise some more hell by deviating into good old party-style punk rock. Then Popeye raised his beer, turned to me, winked, declared “Ah Ga Ga Ga Ga,” and leapt into the circle pit that was beginning to break out. Happily for all of us, the only blood shed at this dance party was fake.
View the evidence at SPACE’s blog, havefaithinworthlessknowledge.com.
Related:
Review: Soul Clap with Jonathan Toubin at SPACE, Review: Out on the town, We heart these people, More
- Review: Soul Clap with Jonathan Toubin at SPACE
Soul Clap with Jonathan Toubin at SPACE Gallery, December 11
- Review: Out on the town
Bars and clubs everywhere, 2009
- We heart these people
We all know Portland is a busy, exciting place to live. It takes a lot of people's amazing energy to keep it going, though. Who's doing the moving and the shaking?
- Prince Rama of Ayodhya + Theodore Treehouse
At SPACE Gallery, February 1
- Hope and energy
As we launch into the next decade with a collapsing economy and apocalyptic themes bleeding into every facet of culture, it's particularly hard to be optimistic about the arts, as yes, they are often the first to go.
- Fresh bedrock
Dessa Darling could never be limited to one area of interest to devote her passions — an author, lyricist, singer, teacher, philosophy-degree holder and lover of linguistics who cuts off and donates her hair to children in need every time she releases something big.
- Review: 48 Hour Music Festival
At SPACE Gallery, March 6
- Ghosts of upstate New York
An alumnus of both True/False ’09 and last fall’s Camden International Film Festival, Michael Palmieri and Donal Mosher’s evocative October Country screens at SPACE Gallery on April 8, as the first installment of an occasional CIFF Selects series, which seeks to expand the Midcoast film festival’s reach into Portland.
- Looking through Portland’s creative kaleidoscope
The annual League of Young Voters ReEmergence event will, organizers hope, be revitalized in 2010 by a relevant, popular focus — Southern Maine’s creative economy — and a wide spread of involved parties who range from visual artists to local arts associations to fashion designers.
- Cowboy junkie
England in the mid-’80s, gray and depressed by Thatcherism and the Smiths, wasn’t a place folks typically dressed to the nines in ten-gallon hats, bolo ties, and Nudie shirts. But such were the sartorial choices made those days by the members of the Mekons.
- Mandolin Fest
At SPACE Gallery, March 27
- Less

Topics:
Live Reviews
, Cyndi Lauper, Emilia Dahlin, SPACE Gallery, More
, Cyndi Lauper, Emilia Dahlin, SPACE Gallery, SPACE Gallery, Misfits (Musical Group), Less