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| Jason Simon of Dead Meadow |
Vocalist/guitarist Jason
Simon, bassist Steve Kille on
bass and drummer Mark Laughlin met
while attending all-ages punk and indie concerts in and around Washington, DC.
They formed Dead Meadow in 1998 from
the remnants of two indie bands, determined to craft a new sound utilizing
classic rock sounds. They combined '60s psychedelic rock and '70s heavy metal with themes from fantasy
and horror authors such as J. R. R.
Tolkien and H. P. Lovecraft. A
debut album was released in 2000. The band members relocated to Los Angeles,
California, and after a few personnel changes the band is back to its original
line-up. The band's sixth and most recent studio album is 2013's Warble Womb.
Everything old is new again. At the Bowery Ballroom tonight, Dead Meadow's heavy-bottomed, guitar-driven
sound hearkened back to the power trios of the late 1960s like Cream and the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Recreating the ambience of that era, Dead
Meadow played before a low-tech light show projected onto the large screen at
the back of the stage. Again imitating the hard rock pioneers, Simon spent almost
the entire performance playing lead guitar with his fingers and altering the
sounds with his numerous foot pedals, ranging the distortions from wah-wah to
fuzz to reverb to echo to feedback. Simon sang just enough lyric to label the
compositions as songs; he was more focused on playing extended guitar leads. These
blues-influenced leads ranged from sludgy, monolithic heavy metal drones to hypnotic,
trance-inducing shoe-gaze riffs. The booming blues cadences were seduced by
ethereal guitar improvisation, evoking an otherworldly atmosphere. At the end of the set, Simon removed his
guitar and the band walked off stage, but the guitar effects continued to echo
until the encore began. Dead Meadow's love of tripped out riffs showed a band mastering
a crunchy, dark, cerebral space-rock. The band only needed to defeat monotony
by giving the singing an equivalent amount of depth and punch.
Visit Dead Meadow at www.deadmeadow.com.

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