The X-Ray Cafe (1 of 3)
In October of 1990 the small space at 214 W. Burnside was still known as the UFO Café, owned by a thickly-accented Greek named Alkis. Unorthodox and adventurous in his musical tastes, Alkis hoped to increase his pizza sales by allowing a local band named The Kurtz Project to perform regularly and book other bands. Unbeknownst to the musicians and patrons, however, Alkis had been equally adventurous in his financial strategies. Some months earlier, in an inspired effort to decrease his overhead, he had also hit on the idea of discontinuing his rent payments.In the inevitable collapse that soon followed, Alkis vacated, and two members of the house band, Benjamin Arthur Ellis and Tres Shannon, somehow emerged from the wreckage holding the lease. With no experience running a club, the pair set about transforming a hole-in-the-wall pizzeria into Portland's primary all-ages hole-in-the-wall music venue.What was quickly christened the X-Ray Café soon featured blocked windows with cheerful signage handpainted above them. Underneath the building's gutted upper stories and rusted fire escape, the street-level exterior was whitewashed, and a mural was painted low along the sidewalk. The interior was furnished through a constant influx of thrifting scores, dumpster dives, and personal belongings. The walls were eventually hung with dozens of frustratingly memorable velvet paintings.In hindsight, the timing of the X-Ray's birth was perfect. While grunge and alternative music were exploding in Seattle and a low-fi revolution was mounting in Olympia, the X-Ray, and nearby Satyricon, provided much-needed stages for smaller acts, and were crucial in establishing Portland as an important regional destination for touring bands. Both clubs also formed cradles for emerging Portland musicians, but it was the X-Ray that was far more fluid, encouraging, and open to the bizarre. Local bands Crackerbash, Pond, Hazel, Smegma, Poison Idea, Dead Moon, Hitting Birth, New Bad Things, Last Pariahs, Motorgoat (which became Quasi), and the Spinanes alternated with visits from Beat Happening, Unwound, Thinking Fellers Union Local 282, Hole, Sunny Day Real Estate, and Green Day.Although it hosted an average of three or four bands a night, less than half of the X-Ray's operating hours were actually devoted to live music. Necessity and boredom fueled an endless succession of theme nights and "educational" afternoons. Sleepovers, Spanish lessons, drum and sewing circles, science and electronics lessons, and Q&A sessions about nothing in particular were regularly offered. Ellis and Shannon were open to virtually any community-minded event as long they didn't have to organize it.
Channel: Music
Uploaded: September 18, 2007 at 3:30 am
Author: OttOmOlOtOv
Length: 09:34
Rating: 4.92
Views: 4346
Tags: Anarchy Cafe Club Dada Oregon Portland Punk Riot Rock Situationist X-Ray
Video Comments
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sisterdiggins (June 5, 2008 at 4:48 am)
I miss the XRay!!Had many great ,weird ,rediculous times there.
ironballsmcginty (May 4, 2008 at 6:51 am)
i never gave two shit about this place when it was open but miss it terribly now that it's long long gone. typical. i worked the door for a shitload of forgettable nights. thumbs up x-ray.
VERNIXX (February 8, 2008 at 2:46 am)
I spent a ton of time and saw many many many shows at the X-Ray from 91-94. Thanks for posting this amazing blast from the past...
mantusmania (January 13, 2008 at 6:33 am)
Wow. Fond memories. Portland sure is a far cry these days from what it was then... RIP CRYSTAL BULLITT
OttOmOlOtOv (January 3, 2008 at 1:17 pm)
Well, a nice incentive for the young people of today to get out and LIVE. Support your local Cafes,Bars,Clubs, any place that allows the free expression of ideas and lifestyles. If you find some place like this in your community, don't let it go unnoticed or supported...This is the seed of a new society, the spark of a revolution.
incredibleuniverse (December 3, 2007 at 9:15 pm)
hey it's roger nusic lovers!!!
joshgb (November 24, 2007 at 5:17 pm)
My wife and I met at the x-ray 14 years ago. Ah, group hug.
mortytoad (November 2, 2007 at 2:23 pm)
The Greatest Place That Ever Was.Viva La X-Ray
spyrit (September 27, 2007 at 8:55 pm)
X-ray lives!!!
chardman1 (September 27, 2007 at 1:49 am)
Sadly, after a decade of alt-music clubbing, I had dropped off the map to raise my kids during this era, and completely missed the whole X-Ray phenomenon. Whenever I talk to people that were there, the more I regret not stepping out from tome to time.Nice video! |
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