Barkmarket was a rock music group formed in New York City in 1987. Personnel were singer/guitarist and main songwriter Dave Sardy, bass guitarist John Nowlin and drummer Rock Savage. Barkmarket's music was usually loud and aggressive, touching on many styles, but not resting definitely in any one genre.
History
In 1986, they released an independently recorded demo tape called BARKMARKET, then in 1987 recorded 1-800-GODHOUSEon cassette 4tk. They were signed to Purge/Soundleague in NYC. After recording the second albumEasy Listeningthe band moved to Triple X Records, who released the group's third album, Vegas Throat; the latter featured guest work from avant-jazz guitarist Marc Ribot. Vegas Throat attracted the interest of Rick Rubin, and Barkmarket was one of the first groups signed to Rubin's American Recordings. Vegas Throat was reissued by American, which then issued Gimmick and the LardroomEP. During this time, they released the Peacekeeper EP on the Man's Ruinrecord label. L. Ron was Barkmarket's final album. Sardy's engineering/production work was taking precedence over his own band, and the group quietly broke up in 1997. Sardy has since become an in-demand producer and mixer for many heavy rock groups or even pop heavyweights like Oasis or The Thrills. Sardy has been quoted as saying he made a promise to himself that each of their albums would be a progression from 4tk, to 8tk, to 16tk , and then 24 tk with a promise to go back to 4tk for the final album, the beginning of "Visible Cow" on the albumL Ron was an attempt to keep that promise. Recently Sardy has been picked as one of the top tenup and comingfilm composers of 2010 for his work scoring the movies 21, and Zombieland by Composers Monthly.
Musical style
Critic Stewart Mason wrote that the band "can at times be frustratingly difficult to pin down, but their best work has a noisy, rattling power." There were also odd touches that demonstrated an experimental edge: the eerie banjo and tape loops on "", and the nearly delta blues acoustic slide guitar on "Visible Cow". Sardy's ragged, proto-screamo vocals usually offered bizarre lyrics that were at once evocative and absurd, and rarely without a menacing undercurrent: "I bought a handgun made out of glass/I cut a hole in the side of a wild ass" ; critic Ted Alvarez wrote, "Sardy's distended poetry often has a dark humor about it; lines like "I opened all your mail" and "I got a game/it won't take long/we'll list all our beatings in a cursory rhyme" add a dash of laughter to the often humorless scowl across the face of hardcore music."