This spring, cave doom returned to Portland. Thatโ€™s what the duo that makes up Creaturessโ€”multi-instrumentalist Jess Hamlin and guitarist and vocalist Jo Sendejoโ€”call their genre of music.

On their 2024 singles and self-titled full length youโ€™ll hear doom metal, folk, and shoegaze combining into a wave of sound that ranges from a light sonic mist to a deluge of riffs.ย ย 

After that burst of output, though, Hamlin and Sendejo both spent some time away from Portland, Hamlin in Chicago and Sendejo in Salt Lake City. Theyโ€™re excited to be back in the Rose City, working on a new album, and headlining Mississippi Studios on June 23.ย 

โ€œWe connected with lots of people over Instagram after the album released,โ€ says Hamlin. โ€œThis week is going to be us meeting all of our internet friends in real life. Itโ€™s like a homecoming. Weโ€™re a real band now.โ€

For Creaturess, their music is about suffering and healing.

โ€œThe album has been healing for me,โ€ says Sendejo. โ€œWhen I reflect and I try to play intentionally and think about the process, it sort of reminds me of this universal suffering that we all haveโ€ฆ It will always be there, and I canโ€™t get rid of it. But itโ€™s something that has made me who I am today. Itโ€™s transformed me in some way.โ€ For Sendejo, the process of creation and making art is: โ€œGiving honor not necessarily to the suffering but more to the outcome.โ€

Sendejo also cites the vast, gray Pacific ocean as a force that informs the bandโ€™s expansive sound. โ€œThereโ€™s a parallel to the coast and our album and the way the Pacific is always transforming in this really brutalist, raw way,โ€ she says. โ€œIn a way that people canโ€™t really interfere with. Itโ€™s something we all just have to witness. Thereโ€™s beauty in that.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s inherently inhumane,โ€ says Hamlin. โ€œItโ€™s doing its own thing with or without us.โ€

The influence of nature doesnโ€™t stop at the waterโ€™s edge. For Hamlin and Sendejo, cave doom is more than just a metaphor. Prior to recording their debut they traveled to Falls Creek Cave in Washington. โ€œItโ€™s this huge magma tube network that comes off of Mount St. Helens,โ€ says Hamlin. โ€œWe went down in there for about half a day in the pitch black with a bunch of field recording gear. We recorded sounds, ambiences, and samples. We also recorded the reverb of that space. All of thatโ€™s on the record.โ€

Hamlin thinks the local metal scene โ€œreflects what the Pacific Northwest looks likeโ€ฆ The metal sounds like big mountains and high deserts.โ€ Hamlin adds that Creaturessโ€™ take on metal is a bit more queer than a lot of other bands. โ€œI feel like our music is for the girls and the gays and the theys, a little bit. Not just in a fun Pride way. Thereโ€™s a different kind of emotional content and a different kind of struggle thatโ€™s more relatable to a different population. I find myself always looking for more artists of that resonance in the metal scene. You have to dig.โ€


Creaturess plays Mississippi Studios, 3939 N Mississippi, Tues June 23, 8 pm, $19.27, tickets here, 21+ w/ Tylo, Shieldย Maiden

Joe Streckert is the author of Storied & Scandalous Portland, Oregon: A History of Gambling, Vice, Wits, and Wagers. He writes about books, history, and comics.