Fresh Air Fest — Third Angle New Music
 
 

Sunshine, lawn chairs and new music: Fresh Air Fest is back!

Join us on Sauvie Island at Wapato Island Farm for a family-friendly day of picnic dinners, drinks, and a distinctly 3A lineup. The 3A String Quartet performs Roots & Strings, a program of works by Mexican, Cuban, and North & South American Indigenous composers to pay tribute to the ancestral tribes of this sacred land and to Wapato Island Farm’s roots. Then, electronic indie band Balún headlines with their musical and cultural fluency that spans from their traditional Puerto Rican roots to the dancehalls of Brooklyn. 

Between sets, you can enjoy food, drinks and handmade goods from our local vendors and experience a soundwalk composed by Gerardo Calderon in response to the land, sky and tributaries of Wapato Island.

 

Schedule

4:00 PM - Grounds open

4:30 PM - Roots & Strings (60 min)

5:30-7:00 PM - Soundwalk, vendors

7:00 PM - Balún (60 min)

Please bring lawn chairs, blankets, and umbrellas (for shade) to enjoy Fresh Air Fest.

Only service animals will be allowed at Fresh Air Fest

Tickets

PACKAGE DEAL - when you buy any 4 tickets, get 25% off your entire order!

Single Set (Roots & Strings or Balún)*
$35 - General Admission
$30 - Senior(65+)/Under 35
$25 - Student/Arts industry worker
$10 - Youth (18 and under)

Full Event Pass
$60 - General Admission
$50 - Senior(65+)/Under 35
$40 - Student/Arts industry worker
$15 - Youth (18 and under)

*Single Set Tickets include access to the 5:30-7:00PM time for soundwalk, vendors, food and drinks

 

Roots & Strings 4:30pm Mainstage

3A’s resident string quartet, pays tribute to the sacred land, and to Wapato Island Farm’s Latinx roots, with Roots and Strings, a program of works by Mexican, Cuban, and North & South American Indigenous composers. From Gabriela Ortiz’s dream sequences and pounding Mexican rhythms, to Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate’s personal homage to his Pueblo cousins, come feel the rhythm of the earth and its people.

Personel:
Hae-Jin Kim, violin
Wendy Richman, viola
Megumi Stohs Lewis, violin
Valdine Ritchie Mishkin, cello

Program:


Gerardo Calderon 5:30pm Sound Walk

Download/listen to the soundwalk

Gerardo Calderon is a composer, teaching artisat, producer and multi-instrumentalist. Born in Mexico City. He grew up surrounded by music, dance and culture. Gerardo is the musical director of Grupo Condor and Nuestro Canto, and has pursued his interest in learning about traditional Mexican music, Latin American folk music and Pre-Colombian music. He has performed with folk music ensembles in Mexico, Canada, New England, and the Pacific Northwest, and He has also toured with choir and world music ensembles through out the USA. Gerardo has composed music and designed sound for contemporary Ballet companies, documentaries, short films, commercials, theater companies, and cultural organizations. For Fresh Air Fest, Gerardo composed a soundwalk composed by Gerardo Calderon in response to the land, sky and tributaries of Wapato Island. What is a soundwalk?

Co-Presented by The Bodecker Foundation & Third Angle:

Balun 7pm Mainstage

Brooklyn-based electronic indie band Balún self-identify as transnational. The quartet that broke out of the San Juan indie scene a decade ago has undergone a formational odyssey through the industry, academia, and the stateside Puerto Rican experience. Balún’s long-awaited sophomore album Prisma Tropical focuses a vast field of genres and influences into a revelatory sound that evokes both the band’s homes and the distance between them. Heavy doses of tiple, bomba barrel drum, and dembow work alongside loops and layers of shimmering synths to accomplish something explicitly of the island, yet fluent in the language of global pop. Tied together around the magical realism of singer and composer Angélica Negrón’s lyrics, Balún’s deep understanding of reggaeton's Jamaican dancehall roots has transformed their shoegaze pop into “dreambow.”

Balún's LP 'Prisma Tropical' was released on July 20th, 2018 via Goodchild Music and premiered on NPR’s First Listen. Their single 'La Nueva Ciudad' Premiered on Remezcla and was Spotify Latino's Song of the Day, breaking into the Viral Charts globally and in 8 countries including Spain, Mexico, Chile, & Argentina. 'Prisma Tropical' was one of NPR’s Top 50 Albums of 2018, placed #4 in Rolling Stone’s Top 10 Latin Albums of 2018, and The New York Times named the single “Años Atrás” one of the "Best 65 Songs of 2018".

Check out their website, instagram, twitter, facebook

Balún is Co-Presented by The Bodecker Foundation & Third Angle New Music. A huge Thank You to The Bodecker foundation for support in lodging our guest artists for this show!


Music written by these Latinx and North & South American Indigenous composers will be performed on the Roots & Stings program.


La Akateka Maya

Elbow Room

Suntouch Body Work

Rusenko Art

We’ve partnered with local vendors, including:

  • La Akateka Maya Food: traditional Mayan tamales and mole

  • DeFuego Food Cart: Burritos and Burritto bowls

  • 503 Distilling: beer, wine, spirits, and non-alcoholic beverages

  • Elbow Room: Zines, Postcards, T-Shirts, Bags, Cards, and Artwork

  • Queen Bee Hoodies: Art Hoodies and Totes

  • Rusenko Art: Original art, prints, stickers, screen printed clothing

  • Mossy Hawk: Tufted rugs/wall hangings, beadwork & fabric patches

  • Bina Botanica: Natural skin care and beauty products , herbal remedies

  • Sun Touch Body Work: cranial sacral massage work, woven ivy earrings and pine needle baskets

  • Coral Story Beauty: a Native Woman-owned and operated Green Beauty Makeup and Skincare business selling their in-house skincare line among other skincare and make-up products made by fellow Indigenous woman-owned brands, such as local Rose Alchemista, Choke Cherry Dreams, and Cheekbone Beauty.

  • Wapato Island Farm: seasonal farm-grown offerings made with the intention of supporting the body and spirit by honoring the cycles of the year through the power of relationship with local plants and fungi.

  • White Buffalo Asdzáán: homemade bags

  • Ground Culture: Bokashi balls for cleaning soil + water, bokashi compost starter, compost tea

White Buffalo Asdzáán

Queen Bee Hoodies

Coral Story Beauty

Interested in being a vendor for the festival? Fill out this form and we will get in touch with you!


Wapato Island Farm is a woman-owned, 32-acre working farm located on Wapato Island (Sauvie Island) in Portland, Oregon. Surrounded by the Columbia River, Wapato Island Farm has maintained ecological integrity, resiliency, and organic standards as it continues to thrive in our climate-vulnerable Pacific Northwest region. The land has hosted a diverse variety of seed, including the sacred three sister crops of corn, beans, and squash. It provides a home for wildlife, and has remained an integral part of Sauvie Island’s working land and community.

Parking: Limited parking is available on the farm, so we encourage carpooling and ask that you allow our elder patrons and those with limited mobility to use the closest on-site parking.

Some additional parking is available on the roadside immediately bordering the farm.

The most reliable parking will be at the public lot located after you cross the Sauvie Island Bridge. We will be running constant shuttles to and from the farm, but it is about a mile walk if you would rather enjoy the sun!

Transit: Sauvie Island is accessible by public transit via the 16-Front Ave/St Helens Rd bus line. Wapato Island Farms is about a 20 minute walk from the bus stop and a shuttle will be provided from the lot to the farm.

Accessibility: The closest parking to the performance area will be reserved for those with mobility needs, and we will allow for drop off close to the performance field. There are gravel and dirt paths on the farm, but some traversing over grass will be required. Port-a-potties will be close to the performance field, and an ADA port-a-pottie will be available. See map below for layout: