Reggie Garrett, with his band the SnakeOil Peddlers, comes to the Palindrome in Port Townsend this Saturday. (courtesy photo)

Reggie Garrett, with his band the SnakeOil Peddlers, comes to the Palindrome in Port Townsend this Saturday. (courtesy photo)

Garrett, the SnakeOil Peddlers and the local JAM

Palindrome concert promises blend Saturday

PORT TOWNSEND — Suddenly, everybody’s grooving. The music makers are playing; the singer’s song is pouring out; the audience is tuned in all the way.

This, said Reggie Garrett, is when “something bigger takes over. And you’re all along for this ride.

“Dancing is one of the signs that that’s happening. I love it when people dance.”

Garrett, along with his blues-urban folk-rock band the SnakeOil Peddlers, looks forward to such a night this Saturday at the Palindrome, the dance hall near the edge of town.

The peddlers will have JAM — local musicians Jack Dwyer, Abakis and Micaela Kingslight — as their opening act for a show starting at 7 p.m., so doors will open at 6:30.

Admission is by donation with $5 to $25 suggested, with no one turned away for lack of funds, and all ages are welcome at the Palindrome, 1893 S. Jacob Miller Road.

The host, Eaglemount Wine and Cider, will have snacks, soft drinks, hard ciders, wines and meads available for purchase.

Garrett was living in Brooklyn, N.Y., when a friend first called him a snake oil peddler. He was a painter at the time, having earned a bachelor’s and a master’s in art. He and a group of artists lived up in a loft where the landlord turned the heat off on weekends.

“We’d have parties to dance and keep warm,” Garrett recalled. These attracted women, and the friend likened Garrett’s ability as a host to, yes, snake oil.

A lot of people would show up, he said, for that curative elixir of dancing. It was like the snake oil of yore, which they would sooner or later find out was “alcohol with a little bit of honey in it.”

Garrett’s original music sounds like that blend: Latin rhythms mixed with gospel, Celtic and folk ballads. In concert, he and the band stir in covers such as Bob Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower” and Shorty Long’s “Function at the Junction.” His longtime fellow peddlers include drummer-percussionist Will Dowd and Richard Middleton, “a phenomenally great guitarist and even better pianist.”

Garrett, 66, prefers to work with these men because, he said, they’re “really fantastic musicians who are better than me.” That’s how you grow, he believes: spend your time with people whose skills exceed your own.

After an unremunerative time as a painter in New York City, Garrett took a job in systems engineering at IBM. He stopped making art and started, in his words, slowly going crazy.

Somewhere in the mid-1980s, he took his mother’s advice to try something new. He invested his his income tax refund on a guitar.

Garrett had grown up reveling in the music of Sam Cooke and James Brown. Now in his 30s, he began writing songs and singing them at open mics around New York. The crazy-making job receded in the rearview mirror.

Rock and soul, folk and gospel have been his art ever since; words and guitar have taken over from the palette and brush. Yet there are commonalities, Garrett said, in painting and music-making.

“When you write a song, it shifts and slides,” changing into something different from what you started out to do.

“Painting is absolutely like that. As you go along,” whether creating a canvas or composing a piece of music, “you start to see other possibilities.”

Port Townsend singer-guitarist Micaela Kingslight is part of JAM, a trio of local musicians to play the Palindrome along with Reggie Garrett on Saturday. (photo by Diane Urbani de la Paz)

Port Townsend singer-guitarist Micaela Kingslight is part of JAM, a trio of local musicians to play the Palindrome along with Reggie Garrett on Saturday. (photo by Diane Urbani de la Paz)

More in Entertainment

Students to lead Studium Generale discussion

The fall series of Studium Generale lectures will finish… Continue reading

“Christmas Girl” by Jennifer Rose is part of the Blue Whole Gallery’s December exhibit, “A Silver Lining.”
Gold-themed event to highlight First Friday Art Walk

The First Friday Art Walk will celebrate with a gold-themed… Continue reading

Santa’s elves during a recent rehearsal of “Sugar Plum Done.” From left, back row, are Piper Bruch, Sapphyre Billman and Sterling Ward. From left, front row, are Jessup Coffin, Rai Warzecha and Zade Harris.
Port Angeles Community Players to stage ‘Sugar Plum Done’

The Port Angeles Community Players will kick off its… Continue reading

Queen of Hearts, from left, includes Karen Laura Peters, Thomas Jennings, Tara Chugh and Carrie Jennings. They will perform at Studio Bob on Friday. (Brittne Lunniss)
Queen of Hearts to perform at Studio Bob

Queen of Hearts will perform at 7 p.m. Friday… Continue reading

Peninsula College to host free murder mystery reading

Peninsula College will host a staged reading of “The… Continue reading

Peninsula College jazz ensemble to host fall concert

The Peninsula College jazz ensemble will present its fall… Continue reading

Auditions set for Port Angeles Community Players production

The Port Angeles Community Players will conduct auditions for… Continue reading

David Louis.
Comic finalists to stand up together at Field Hall

Competitors will be from Canada, Deep South, Brooklyn

Holiday bazaars slated across Peninsula

Holiday arts and crafts fairs will be conducted across the Peninsula this… Continue reading

Flower farmer Laurie McKenzie of Dragonheart Flowers will teach a “Winter Evergreen Wreaths” class Dec. 3 at the nonprofit Northwind Art School in Port Townsend. (Laurie McKenzie)
Nonprofit art school offers arts and crafts workshops

Artist Martha Worthley walked into Northwind Art’s classroom to… Continue reading

Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News
Supaman performs a "Men's War Dance" to a full house on Thursday at the Port Townsend High School auditorium. Supaman, whose real name is Christian Parrish Takes the Gun, is an Apsáalooke rapper and fancy war dancer who grew up in Crow Agency, Mont.
Song and dance

Supaman performs a “Men’s War Dance” to a full house on Thursday… Continue reading

Music on the Straight founders James Garlick, left, and Richard O'Neill, performing at Field Arts and Events Hall in September. The two will return, joined by pianist Jeremy Denk and cellist Efe Baltacigil Nov. 25. (Alex Bodi Hallett)
Concert to honor violist

Quartet composed of Peninsula-borne talent