Locations

Downtown

  • 203 SW 9th Ave
  • Portland, OR 97214
  • (503) 222-0990

Hawthorne

  • 3574 SE Hawthorne
  • Portland, OR 97205
  • (503) 239-7561

Hours

  • Mon-Thur 10-7
  • Fri-Sat 10-8
  • Sun 11-6

You can't lose!

  • Turing Machine

    What Is The Meaning Of What
    What?
    • $11.95 CD
  • $11.95 on sale!

Jackpot VIP Club

Sign-up for updates of new releases, instores, and more!

Online Store:

Castanets

Other Albums by This Artist:

Castanets

Castanets

Texas Rose, the Thaw and the Beasts
With Texas Rose, The Thaw, and The Beasts CASTANETS' RAYMOND RAPOSA keeps one foot in the rustic country, folk, and blues of past records wh... (Click the album for more)
  • $12.95 CD
  • $14.95 Vinyl
Castanets

Castanets

First Light's Freeze
Castenets second album of dark, melencholy indie rock. First Light's Freeze uniquely blends country and folk elements against their indie ro... (Click the album for more)
  • CD out of stock
  • $11.95 Vinyl
Castanets

Castanets

City Of Refuge
Desolation is the canvas on which Castanets mastermind Ray Raposa chooses to present his unique brand of "experimental Americana," and City ... (Click the album for more)
  • Vinyl out of stock

Castanets

In The Vines

RAY RAPOSA of CASTANETS had almost finished his follow-up to First Light's Freeze (2005) when three men in strange masks mugged him at gunpoint in front of his home in Bedstuy, Brooklyn. Stealing Raposa's rent money, iPod and security, the three thieves climaxed a year of depression and nomadic, nocturnal dislocation. Not long after the mugging, Raposa completed In The Vines. Appropriately, the album he was struggling to complete is based on a Hindu fable about being trapped in an inescapable fate, with death and the limitations of our physical lives closing in from all corners. In the fable story, The Well of Life, a giant net stretched out by a giant woman surrounds a Brahman lost in the forest. The frantic Brahman runs in circles attempting to escape until he falls halfway down a pit and is entangled in vines. He discovers some beehives halfway between the flesh-hungry six-faced elephant at the top of the pit and the waiting serpent at the bottom. As bees buzz around the Brahman and rats gnaw at the vines holding him up, all he can do is gorge on the sweet honey. Heavy stuff, yes, but it isn't all peril, and darkness. The songs are sung with such intimacy and earnestness that In The Vines sways somewhere between the serpent, elephant, bees and rats, the honey representing a strange sense of hope and delight in the brief moments of beauty that sustain our lives.

Newsfeed: