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AthFest vets take stage before tour

BRITTANY FORRESTAL

Issue date: 6/18/09 Section: Variety
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 Local favorites Dead Confederate has been making its mark nationally, but will play AthFest before going on a summer tour.
Media Credit: COURTESY DEAD CONFEDERATE
Local favorites Dead Confederate has been making its mark nationally, but will play AthFest before going on a summer tour.

In recent months, locally-based band Dead Confederate has been a group on the lips of both music critics and fans alike. After last fall's release of a critically-acclaimed debut album, "Wrecking Ball," the group played numerous shows and festivals and even made a stop on Late Night with Conan O'Brien.

But all this recognition, according to lead singer and guitarist Hardy Morris, was hardly to be expected when the group formed in Augusta in the late '90s.

"I always just thought music would be a big part of my life and I'd wind up teaching English," he said.

It wasn't until 2006, when the band was in Atlanta, that Morris, along with bassist/vocalist Brantley Senn, keyboardist/vocalist John Watkins, drummer Jason Scarboro and guitarist Walker Howle, decided to make the transition from an informal collective to a full-fledged band.

DEAD CONFEDERATE PLAYS ATHFEST

When: Friday, June 26, 7:50 p.m.
Where: AthFest outdoor stage
Price: Free


"We decided to start taking things a lot more seriously because we were done with college and we were kind of like ... 'Are we going to stick with these jobs or are we going to do music?'" Morris said. "It actually seemed...[that] we were writing stuff that ... made kind of a difference and was, I guess, quality."

Shortly after its official formation, the band moved to Athens, where Morris said the creative atmosphere helped the group define itself as an unconventional Southern, psychedelic rock band.

"[In Athens], you never hear two bands that are really doing the same thing," he said.

"Everybody knows that they've got to do something all their own or else it's going to be blatantly obvious because the town is so small."

Citing influences such as Pink Floyd and Nirvana, the group combines Morris' raspy vocals with roaring guitars, heavy bass lines and a deeply-resonant rhythm to create a lush, layered and turbulent soundscape.

According to Morris, this unconventional sound came from the band's collaborative songwriting process.
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