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Brief Show Review: Dark Meat, Quiet Hooves at the Bluebird, Wednesday, May 21

Thu May 22, 2008 at 04:15:33 PM

I'm up to my ears in editing, so this will be brief. Last night, after people freaked out about the band's Vintage Vinyl in-store, I decided to head out to see Athens, Georgia's Dark Meat at the Bluebird.

As I was walking in from the parking lot, I heard sweet, sweet jangle wafting from the club, and I figured it was one of the groups from Athens, G-A. But no! Twas the tail-end of the Museum Mutters' set; the trio has improved so much in the last year, and are now a super-great distillation of the Replacements and early R.E.M. It's always 1986 in my world, so count that a good thing.

The next group up was Quiet Hooves --- and they were execrable. Art-damaged in the worst possible way -- warped by too much hippie-dippie art-school experimenting -- the collective sounded like a Neutral Milk Hotel cover band sight-reading In the Aeroplane Over the Sea. Badly. Another friend started singing the B-52's "Butterbean," which also fit -- although that song is about a trillion times better.

Dark Meat, however, was exactly how I imagine Athens, Georgia, to be: a bunch of eager-beaver kids getting together and making a joyful noise unto the gods of cheap beer, cheap rent and warped records. There were, oh, about 17 people onstage? More? Less? I didnt count. Trombonists, multiple drummers, violinists, guitarists. The opening song had a Stonesy groove meshed with a Brian Jonestown Massacre groove -- two separate things, swear -- while the rest of the set felt alternately like: a Southern-rock, Black Sabbath, a stoner-rock marching band and a punk rock flash mob. For me, the set grew tiresome after a bit; a quavering, female singing solo sounded like Dead Can Dance sung on a pirate ship, while the dude in the crowd spraying folks with a leafblower was a bit much.

Someone described them as, "You know that part in Gremlins where they multiple when you toss water on them? This band is like what would happen if someone did that to the Sex Pistols." Brilliant, and totally a perfect description.

-- Annie Zaleski

Category: Show Reviews

3 Comments:

James says:

What do you call a bunch of trustafarians on stage bitchin' about bein treated like an "asshole local band" by the crowd and complaining about too much "midwest existential angst" in the room?

You dunno?

Oh, well...I dunno either, just thought I'd bring it up.

Thanx %1000 to the Bluebird for hookin us up and to Quief Quota for being absolutely hilarious and butt-shakin'.

That is all.

MyOLTA says:

OLTA Art & Craft Fair, Saturday and Sunday, June 7 and 8. Noon to 7 pm each day.

This free 14 hours of all-acoustic music performances is at the corner of Olive and Taylor in the Central West End. Beer by Schlafly, food by Mangia, BBQ by Rib Ranch.

Also 84 international art and craft booths at 4415-19 Olive (just three doors east of the music stage)

SATURDAY, June 7, noon to 7 pm.

Wil Saulsbery, Saturday/noon

Kyle Albers, Saturday/1 p.m.

Bando Trio, Saturday/2 p.m.

Rosco Beano, Saturday3 p.m.

Forbidden Fruit Snacks, Saturday/4 p.m.

Piedmont Chris Johnson, Saturday/5 p.m.

Morning Vision Blue, Saturday/6 p.m.

SUNDAY, June 8, noon to 7 pm.

Typewriter Tim Sunday/noon

Butch Moore, Sunday/1 p.m.

Jane Godfry, Sunday/2 p.m.

Celia, Sunday/3 p.m.

John Bonham & Friends, Sunday/4 p.m.

Jake Austin, Sunday/5 p.m.

Kevin Bilchik, Sunday/6 p.m.

quiet hooves` says:

aw, cool. a review of our band! thanks for giving it a chance. see you soon! keep in touch and we will send you new material.

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