It isn't as if I didn't want to say something about Aurelia Aurita, I just got behind, and of course, there was that whole kazoo thing too. See, the thrust of what I wanted to say is almost exactly that after hearing Aurelia Aurita, there's a lot to say.
They were the third or fourth band/performer I've seen at the Golden Bough, which has quickly become my favorite place for music. It is quiet and intimate and casual, and that's a good thing. For now, in fact, it is exactly where I want to be.
The double-edged sword is that there are usually a lot of friends and friendlies so getting from the front door to the back can sometimes take a while. This time, I missed the entire first set. Actually, I heard a few sounds from the first set even though I was standing in the middle of the store instead of the back room. It was a howling, clanging thing, and I honestly thought they were just warming up when I heard it.
Then Ty Manning (Barefoot Hookers) came out and said, "I liked it. Makes me want to get naked and paint a chicken." He said he missed art school and left.
The first song I heard was a slightly melodic number, just off-center and delivered so stoically that it lent an unusual gravity to the song. At the end, they meowed. Off and on, their performance was like that. It was odd and adventurous. They endeavored to make and present music that isn't heard in Macon, the stuff so far from commercial that its chief beauty is in the wide boundaries it creates. Most music bounces within a few similar sounds, adhering to a genre in some way even if it tries to advance or escape it. Aurelia Aurita doesn't abide by a paradigm.
That is the good and the bad of it. The music (and its performance) is -- or at least feels -- completely undisciplined. That doesn't mean they haven't worked on the songs, just that the path that each song takes feels so uninhibited that you don't know where it is going. That is freeing in the specific sense that this is Macon and everything tends to sound way too familiar. It is limiting in the experience, too, because as a listener, we eventually gravitate towards something that has certain boundaries. We do that because it allows us to explore the space between the beginning and end of a song without having to worry about how far to the right and left we'll have to go.
Regardless, I count this as one of my most memorable experiences with local live music. It was so damn nice to hear something different. I bought the CD, too. When I need to unbind myself, I put it on.
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