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Meyers dismisses suggestions that the Gypsy is in trouble financially. He says March was one of the the best months they've ever had.
"It was a little rocky for a while, but now it's back," says Silas Courson, a regular who has been coming every Thursday for the past two years. "I have to be at work at 7:30 tomorrow," he says, sipping another beer as he waits to sing his number, a spirited version of the Thompson Twins' "Lay Your Hands." "I'm hurting every Friday."
Maybe it's performance anxiety that fuels the drinking, but by 1 a.m., people are dancing...on the tables. Things have gotten nuts. A rendition of the Dead Milkmen's "Punk Rock Girl" has people crammed in between the tables, jumping and shouting along with the song. And it's a weeknight. Less a celebration of performance, Scaraoke is more a celebration of a certain generation's music--Top 40 radio, '80s and '90s classics, early hip-hop. Even people who don't perform enjoy it. "It's the only place I can dance," says Michaela Kent. And though she claims to be too afraid to sing, she does all night. Just not in front of the microphone. Scaraoke is every Thursday night at the Meridian Room, 3611 Parry Ave., starting somewhere between 11 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and lasting till close.
In the meantime, you can catch some of the Observer nominees at two upcoming in-stores at Virgin Mega-store in Mockingbird Station. On Thursday, April 14, experience the rawk with Record Hop and Fair to Midland. And on Thursday, April 21, it's a smorgasbord of up-and-coming acts with a lineup of Chemistry Set, The Hourly Radio and Black Tie Dynasty. Come experience the new wave of Dallas music.