Difference between revisions of "Quiet Life"

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[[File:QuietLifeExterior1990.jpg|thumb|The exterior of Quiet Life, 1990]]
 
[[File:QuietLifeExterior1990.jpg|thumb|The exterior of Quiet Life, 1990]]
[[File:TheGuitar1.jpg|thumb|Quiet Life as seen in the 1992 music video for "[[The Guitar]]"]]
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'''Quiet Life''' was a small nightclub in Brooklyn, New York, which operated from October 1989 until March 1990. [[They Might Be Giants]] performed at the club, and [[John Linnell]] lived in the club's building.
 
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'''Quiet Life''' was a small club at 18 Havemeyer St in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. It was operated by [[Matthew Hill]] from the late-1980s to 1990. [[John Linnell]] lived in the same building and [[They Might Be Giants]] performed at the club.
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== History ==
 
== History ==
[[File:Quiet_Life_1990_Flyer.jpg|thumb|1990 flyer of upcoming Quiet Life shows. None of the shows dated after March 25 took place.]]
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[[File:TheGuitar1.jpg|thumb|The former Quiet Life space, as seen in the 1992 music video for "[[The Guitar]]"]]
The building was a funeral parlor before it was reorganized into an apartment building. Some rooms retained floor drains from when the site was used for embalming. Matthew Hill, a childhood friend of Linnell and Flansburgh, set up the club in 1988 or 1989. WFMU DJ [[Nick Hill]] and musician [[Brian Dewan]] were also involved in running it.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20120423104538/http://everyband.wordpress.com/2012/03/27/john-linnell-and-the-statesmen/}} The club was located on the building's ground floor and could be accessed by a basement entrance. The room was arranged with rows of old wooden school chairs facing a small stage. Linnell [[Direct From Brooklyn|described it in 2003:]] "There was highly unlicensed alcohol selling going on down there... Nice place."
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Quiet Life was established by [[Matthew Hill]] in October 1989. It was located at 18 Havemeyer Street in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. This was the apartment building that Matthew shared with [[Nick Hill]], [[Brian Dewan]] and John Linnell. Nick and Dewan were involved in the club's operation with Matthew.{{ref|https://web.archive.org/web/20120423104538/http://everyband.wordpress.com/2012/03/27/john-linnell-and-the-statesmen/}} Linnell described the venue in 2003: "There was highly unlicensed alcohol selling going on down there... Nice place."{{ref|https://tmbw.net/wiki/Direct_From_Brooklyn}}
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The club was located on the building's ground floor and could be accessed by a basement entrance. It operated only on Saturdays, and had a five dollar entry fee. The space was arranged with rows of old wooden school chairs facing a small stage. The walls were decorated with Dewan's clock shrines and glow-in-the-dark taxidermy sculptures. The building was originally a funeral parlor before it was reorganized into apartments. It was reportedly the favored funeral parlor of the Brooklyn mafia in the early 20th century. Some rooms retained floor drains from when the site was used for embalming.
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[[They Might Be Giants]] presumably played a number of shows at Quiet Life. The band's only known show was a New Year's celebration on [[Shows/1989-12-31|December 31, 1989]], where they played an acoustic set under the name [[Count Drinkalot]]. Brian Dewan opened for them. In 1989, John Linnell played a short solo set of his [[State Songs]] at Quiet Life, opening for [[Amy Allison|the Maudlins]].
  
[[They Might Be Giants]] presumably played a number of shows at Quiet Life. The band's only known show was a New Year's celebration on [[Shows/1989-12-31|December 31 1989,]] where they played an acoustic set under the name [[Count Drinkalot]]. An audience member taped this show, and in 2019 the band released it to members of the [[Instant Fan Club]]. Also in 1989 John Linnell played a short solo set of his [[State Songs]] at Quiet Life, opening for [[Amy Allison|the Maudlins]].
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Quiet Life ceased operation immediately after the {{wp|Happy Land fire}} on March 25, 1990. The incident, and the city's subsequent crackdown on unlicensed clubs, lead to the closure of many similar nightclubs in New York. Alternative newsweekly ''{{wp|The Village Voice}}'' wrote a full-page article on Quiet Life, which was unfortunately published days after the club shut down.
  
Quiet Life ceased operation immediately after the {{wp|Happy Land fire}} on March 25, 1990. The incident, and the city's subsequent crackdown on unlicensed clubs, lead to the closure of many similar nightclubs in New York.
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They Might Be Giants' 1992 music video for "[[The Guitar]]" was partially filmed in the Havemeyer St. apartment building. The video shows the former Quiet Life space, and some of Dewan's sculptures. On [[Shows/1993-06-13|June 13, 1993]], Nick Hill broadcast his WFMU show "The Music Faucet" live from the building. The show included performances by Brian Dewan, [[Laura Cantrell]], [[Amy Rigby]] and They Might Be Giants.
  
In 1992 They Might Be Giants released "[[The Guitar]]," and much of its music video was filmed in the former location of Quiet Life. On [[Shows/1993-06-13|June 13 1993]] Nick Hill broadcast his WFMU show "The Music Faucet" live directly from the building. The show featured performances by [[Brian Dewan]], [[Laura Cantrell]] and [[Amy Rigby]], among others. They Might Be Giants made a short appearance, playing three songs as a duo. Linnell [[TMBG Unlimited - November|wrote in 2001:]] "In the summer of 1993 WFMU DJ Nick Hill decided to broadcast his usual "Music Faucet" program live from his own apartment in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. By a pleasant coincidence, about half of the guests on his show were also living upstairs from him or somewhere nearby. Nick and most of the performers were out on Nick's deck, but microphones were also run up into Brian Dewan's studio and also into the bathroom Brian shared with Mr. Linnell, which is where John and John performed."
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=== Gallery ===
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<gallery>
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File:Quiet_Life_1990_Flyer.jpg|1990 flyer of upcoming Quiet Life shows. None of the shows dated after March 25 took place.
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File:Quiet_Life_Village_Voice_Article.jpg|''The Village Voice'' article, March 27, 1990.
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</gallery>
  
 
== Related pages ==
 
== Related pages ==

Latest revision as of 13:55, 24 September 2024

The exterior of Quiet Life, 1990

Quiet Life was a small nightclub in Brooklyn, New York, which operated from October 1989 until March 1990. They Might Be Giants performed at the club, and John Linnell lived in the club's building.

History[edit]

The former Quiet Life space, as seen in the 1992 music video for "The Guitar"

Quiet Life was established by Matthew Hill in October 1989. It was located at 18 Havemeyer Street in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. This was the apartment building that Matthew shared with Nick Hill, Brian Dewan and John Linnell. Nick and Dewan were involved in the club's operation with Matthew.[1] Linnell described the venue in 2003: "There was highly unlicensed alcohol selling going on down there... Nice place."[2]

The club was located on the building's ground floor and could be accessed by a basement entrance. It operated only on Saturdays, and had a five dollar entry fee. The space was arranged with rows of old wooden school chairs facing a small stage. The walls were decorated with Dewan's clock shrines and glow-in-the-dark taxidermy sculptures. The building was originally a funeral parlor before it was reorganized into apartments. It was reportedly the favored funeral parlor of the Brooklyn mafia in the early 20th century. Some rooms retained floor drains from when the site was used for embalming.

They Might Be Giants presumably played a number of shows at Quiet Life. The band's only known show was a New Year's celebration on December 31, 1989, where they played an acoustic set under the name Count Drinkalot. Brian Dewan opened for them. In 1989, John Linnell played a short solo set of his State Songs at Quiet Life, opening for the Maudlins.

Quiet Life ceased operation immediately after the Happy Land fire on March 25, 1990. The incident, and the city's subsequent crackdown on unlicensed clubs, lead to the closure of many similar nightclubs in New York. Alternative newsweekly The Village Voice wrote a full-page article on Quiet Life, which was unfortunately published days after the club shut down.

They Might Be Giants' 1992 music video for "The Guitar" was partially filmed in the Havemeyer St. apartment building. The video shows the former Quiet Life space, and some of Dewan's sculptures. On June 13, 1993, Nick Hill broadcast his WFMU show "The Music Faucet" live from the building. The show included performances by Brian Dewan, Laura Cantrell, Amy Rigby and They Might Be Giants.

Gallery[edit]

Related pages[edit]