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Have you ever wondered what it would have been like if the Algonquin Roundtable had put out indie rock seven-inches instead of
writing for the New Yorker? Well wonder no more: Mess up the Mess
delivers 14 acid-soaked gems on their debut album- You Remind me of
Summer Vacation.
Mess up the Mess never forget that the personal is political, and boy
oh boy, this time it's personal for real! Whether plotting revenge
by proxy [(The Week After) My Week at the Ashram], lamenting the
inability to come up with a timely riposte (Esprit de l'Escalier),
using personality typing to weed out potential partners [You're not
my (Myers-Briggs) Type], or wishing people would just go away (most of
the other songs) or get crushed by a ton of bricks (Ton of Bricks)
this group is tuned into the mess that is the modern condition.
However, instead of messing it up by burning down every ex-urban
subdivision, taking a baseball bat to every gentrifier's SUV, or
placing voodoon curses on every neo-con, they perform upbeat songs:
Songs about wanting people to go away, or people telling you to go
away, or people basically being jerks a lot of the time. It's the
truth, and it's a mess. But least you can dance to it and, unlike
arson, it's not against the law-yet.
Elizabeth's acerbic lyrics and melodic basslines, Jeanni's explosive
keyboards and exuberant vocals along with Matt's layers of feedback,
distortion, and bursts of jangly guitar-y brightness insure that
whole affair doesn't sound like too much of a downer. And if
anybody tries to start any trouble, Mistress Julie, on drums, has
their back(beat.) Likened to such disparate acts as The Go-Go's,
The Clean, The B-52's and any Riot Grrrl band you care to mention,
clearly no one can categorize Mess up the Mess' unique sound, but it
doesn't stop them from trying.
Formed in Washington D.C. in early Spring 2005, Mess up the Mess has
been entertaining and agitating audiences from the start. Signed to
local label Paroxysm (home to the incomparable Hott Beat and
The Capricorns) these four feminists have been known to get District
audiences to dance! (two more miracles and that'll be St. Mess to
you.) So find out what all the fuss is about, but be forewarned: your
mess is about to get messed up!
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