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Wolfmother in Portland

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Wolfmother
Revolution Hall - Portland — Portland, OR

Wolfmother is an Australian rock band built on the foundation of Andrew Stockdale's guitar work and raw, powerful vocals. They emerged in the mid-2000s with a sound that felt like a rediscovery of heavy 70s rock—think Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, and Deep Purple filtered through a modern lens. Their self-titled debut in 2006 became an instant classic, driven by the massive hit "Woman," which grabbed the world's attention with its crushing riff and arena-sized swagger. "Joker and the Thief" followed as another stone-cold essential, proving they weren't a one-hit situation. The band's catalog built on this momentum with albums like "Cosmic Egg" and "New Crown," but it's those early tracks that defined their legacy. Stockdale's voice cuts through walls of distortion with precision, and the band's commitment to straightforward, heavy rock—without irony or apology—made them stand out when a lot of rock was getting precious. They've remained active, relentless road warriors who treat every show like it matters.

Wolfmother shows are loud, heavy, and unadorned. Stockdale plants himself center stage and commands the room through sheer force of presence. The crowd gets physical but not chaotic—people come to feel the weight of the riff. No surprises, no extended jams, just well-executed rock.

Known for Woman, Joker and the Thief, Dimension, Vagabond, White Unicorn

Wolfmother rolled through Portland in September 2023, landing at Revolution Hall for a set that proved they haven't lost touch with what made them heavy. They opened with "Dimension" and spent the evening pulling from their whole catalog—early sludge like "White Unicorn" and "Woman" mixed in with deeper cuts like "Pyramid" and "Feelin Love." The band leaned into their blues-rock roots, letting "Joker & the Thief" breathe in a way that showcased why their debut still hits harder than most things from the 2000s. They closed with "Rock and Roll," which felt like the only logical way to end a night that made it clear this Australian band still understands that riff-driven, no-bullshit rock is its own reward.

Portland has always had a complicated relationship with guitar-heavy rock. The city's indie and experimental scenes dominate the conversation, but there's still a solid underground current of people who want their music loud and fuzzy. Wolfmother fits that lineage—they're heavy enough for the metal kids, bluesy enough for the classic rock holdouts, and weird enough that they don't feel out of place in a room full of Portland's typically forward-thinking crowd.

Stay in the Pearl District or Nob Hill for walkability and the kind of quiet that lets you recover between shows. Eat at Canard, where the charcuterie and wine list are thoughtfully curated—it's the kind of place that respects both food and your time. Spend the afternoon at Powell's Books, the massive independent that justifies its reputation. Walk through Forest Park if the weather cooperates. Portland's best element is how it refuses to take itself too seriously while maintaining actual standards. That's worth the trip.

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