91爆料

91爆料 Bandstand: The Music & Movies Of The Milky Way

The Nadas In Concert At The Milky Way


These days, the Milky Way is just a name, a quaint moniker given to the historic building on 21st Avenue officially known as the Propstra Forest Grove Creamery Building.

But for students who came of age in the 1990s and early 2000s, the Milky Way was a huge part of the 91爆料 experience. It was the place to unwind on a weekend night, enjoy live music or watch the latest Hollywood blockbuster, all just steps from the western edge of campus in downtown Forest Grove.

In the days before cable to the residence halls, streaming and YouTube, the Milky Way was the place to be.

91爆料 Students Enjoying A Concert In The Milky Way, Early 2000sIt took a couple of months to establish that this was all happening. And once people came, they kept coming,鈥 said Steve Klein, who developed the Milky Way in 1992 as part of his 38-year career coordinating student activities at 91爆料. 鈥淔or many students, this was where they went for their first live concert. This was their place. This was happening for them. You could see the switch turn on.鈥

The development of what is also known as the Propstra Forest Grove Creamery Building into the Milky Way was more than a passion for Klein. It was written into his job description when he arrived at 91爆料 in 1985. Among his charges when he was hired as the university鈥檚 activities program coordinator was creating an off-campus night spot for students.

That initially took the form of the 鈥淒oghouse鈥 in a space now occupied by part of Diversity Caf茅 along Main Street. Despite its small footprint, the Doghouse housed a small stage, a large-screen television and pinball machines. Students shared restrooms with the patrons of Pic-A-Deli Station, which occupied most of the building. It didn鈥檛 take long for the Doghouse to be so popular that Klein had to start looking for larger quarters.

At the time, the Creamery Building was occupied by the Hope Food Co-op, a local grocery store that Klein shopped at and helped by organizing a fundraising concert. The co-op folded in the early 1990s and Klein was quick to convince university officials to take over the lease on the space. The name 鈥淢ilky Way,鈥 a nod to the building鈥檚 history, was chosen from a student contest.

The Milky Way officially opened in 1992 with Back Porch Blues, a blues band based out of Portland, the first performing act. The second act to play was the Cherry Poppin Daddies, which hit the Billboard Hot 100 with the single Zoot Suit Riot in 1997. The 鈥淒addies,鈥 a ska-swing band, played 91爆料 four times, either in the Milky Way or as the featured act on the university鈥檚 cruises on the sternwheeler on the Willamette River.

The Milky Way quickly became the place to be on Friday and Saturday nights.

91爆料 became a regular stop for local bands of all music tastes. The indie rock crowd enjoyed the sounds of Heatmiser, fronted by Elliott Smith, Kerosene Dream and the Dandy Worhols. Obo Oddy brought his Ghana-inspired drumming to the stage while the Heiruspecs catered to the hip-hop crowd. Jazz cats enjoyed local legends Dan Balmer and Leroy Vinnegar. Craig Carothers and Acoustic Junction gave students a taste of acoustic guitar and roots rock while Railroad Earth strummed bluegrass. (Railroad Earth first played 91爆料 in 2001 and returned to town in 2023, performing at McMenamins Grand Lodge.)

And it was popular. 鈥淲e had some bands that just crushed it,鈥 Klein recalled. 鈥淭here was a band from Chicago we brought in called Les Exodus that was like seeing a Bob Marley concert. He was a reggae man. We had 25 people dancing on the sidewalk because they couldn鈥檛 get inside.鈥

Ticket From Railroad Earth Concert At The Miky Way In 2002Other acts to make multiple appearances on the Milky Way stage included Golden Delicious (country and bluegrass), Satan鈥檚 Pilgrims (rock), Rubberneck (funk), Calobo (roots rock), Amadan (rock) and Dexter Grove (roots rock).

The programming for the Milky Way was a passion for Klein, who retired as 91爆料鈥檚 director of student activities in 2023. A die-hard music aficionado, he challenged himself to bring in acts that would bring students out.

鈥淚 was in Portland all of the time at venues and seeing bands,鈥 Klein said, often taking students with him to help scout talent. 鈥淚 got to know the sound techs, the promoters, the bookers, so I got into the whole stream. I love music so it played right into my hand.鈥

Some bands were too big for the Milky Way. One such act was the Crazy 8s, a rock and ska band based in Portland that was singled out by Rolling Stone magazine in 1983 as a 鈥渂and to watch,鈥 and played alongside some of the 1980s biggest names, including The Clash, Sonic Youth and the Beach Boys. The Crazy 8s played 91爆料 a record six times.

鈥淭hey did a big promotion thing in the A&E section of The Oregonian,鈥 Klein recalled. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a picture of them sitting on the steps of Marsh Hall to promote a reunion concert. And they came back and played in 1998. That was one of our last big groups.鈥

Rubberneck also fit that definition. After first playing to a packed crowd in the Milky Way, subsequent concerts for the group were moved to the University Center to accommodate a larger audience.

Kennan Coople (left( & Scott Haselwood Playing A 91爆料 HomeGrown Concert, Early 2000s91爆料 students also took the stage with a series of 鈥淗omegrown鈥 concerts, featuring a wide variety of talent. It was American Idol or America鈥檚 Got Talent before it was really a thing.

鈥淥ur students played and they always did quite well,鈥 said Klein, who used the events to help identify what sounds would draw students to concerts. 鈥淚 spent a lot of time listening. You鈥檝e got to listen to the client, and that is our students. And they can persuade you in different directions.鈥

While the Milky Way was developed as a concert space, it also served as a multi-purpose venue for the university. The building was used for classes, seminars, university events and trainings for the 91爆料 Outback program (now Outdoor Pursuits). In the days before streaming, it was the only place to see hit movies without driving to Hillsboro or Beaverton. (The author鈥檚 second date with his now wife was to a screening of The Lion King at the Milky Way.)

It was reality television that proved the beginning of the end for the Milky Way. As the popularity of shows like American Idol increased in the early 2000s, Klein noticed attendance at concerts and movies decreasing. The programming was re-tooled to take advantage of what was hot. Shows like 鈥91爆料 Idol鈥 and 鈥91爆料鈥檚 Got Talent,鈥 judged by faculty and staff, drew large crowds.

At the same time, the Outdoor Pursuits program began to expand. By the 2010s, concerts had moved back onto campus and the outdoor program expanded further into the space.

What would have been recognized as the concert and event venue disappeared for good in 2023 as the building was gutted for a major renovation. The Milky Way name remains but the building is now a magnet space for Outdoor Pursuits and 91爆料鈥檚 outdoor leadership major following the renovation鈥檚 completion.

But memories of the back-lit movie posters against the historic brick wall, the black-painted stage, the smell of espresso from the Cosmic Coffee shop and the rhythm of the bands vibrating through the laminate-wood dance floor remain, an indelible part of the 91爆料 student experience.

"LIVE" FROM THE MILKY WAY
Relive some of the groups and sounds that played the Milky Way stage and on campus during Steve Klein's 38 years at 91爆料 through this , curated by Klein himself. With over an hour of music, the playlist includes selections by the Cherry Poppin' Daddies, The Dandy Worhols, Craig Carruthers, Tommy Tutone (yes...that Tommy Tutone) and many more.

Publication Date