Every Wednesday from 6:30-8:30
Trivia Night like you have never imagined! Jess Shaw and Kevin Ryan will guide you through an evening of trivia and self discovery. They will test how smart you are, but you may need to be prepared to compete in interactive challenge round in order to gain extra points!
Wednesday night will never be the same….$100 CASH prize for the first place team.
Every Friday from 6:00 – 8:30
Service Brewing presents, Bluegrass by the Pint every Friday from 6:00-8:30pm. Join us for live Bluegrass from one of our favorite local bands, Swamptooth!
No Cover
*Please check calendar as event may be subject to change due to previously scheduled events.
The last Saturday of every month from 12:00-1:00
Earn that beer with Savannah Power Yoga every month at Service Brewing. $15 includes a 60 min vinyasa yoga class and one pint of BEER!
Be sure to bring your mats and feel free to come as early as 11:30AM. Class starts promptly at noon. Our little brew cats, Black Hawk and Chinook, will be onsite checking poses and looking for back scratches.
Nama-stay for a beer!
Every Thursday at 6:30PM
Join the club… $5 gets you in as an official Run Club member for the year. Each time you show up, you’ll get a Run Club point that goes towards some pretty rad prizes. Choose from 3 varying routes and distances or make up your own.
SOLD OUT SOLD OUT SOLD OUT SOLD OUT
Join Savannah Stopover for the 10th Anniversary Kick Off Party at Service Brewing with Beach Fossils!
Negative Gemini to open the show.
Tickets are $16 in advance, $18 day-of.
Chazito’s Food Truck will be serving up their world-famous latin cuisine from 7:30-10 p.m.
The long-awaited return of Brooklyn’s Beach Fossils, Somersault showcases a band in bloom. Charting into new musical territory with a refined songwriting style, it’s an album that captures flashes of life in New York grounded in personal experience.
The band’s self-titled 2010 debut established a sound that was both minimal and enveloping. With Somersault, the group’s first release since 2013’s Clash the Truth, Beach Fossils have channeled years of experimentation into expansion and reinvention. Augmented with more complex instrumentation, including string arrangements, piano, harpsichord, flute, and sax, the new songs offer multi-layered pop guided by sharp, poignant, and honest lyrics.
As the band’s first release on Dustin Payseur’s new label Bayonet Records, which he co-owns with wife Kate Garcia—the group made the most of their newfound independence, investing ample time in expanding its range both musically and lyrically. While Payseur handled the bulk of the songwriting duties in the past, Somersault is a true collaboration between the founding member and bandmates, Jack Doyle Smith and Tommy Davidson. The new songs speak to a more fluid, eclectic sound, filled with lush compositions formed by studio experiments and sam-pling of the band’s own recordings.
Orchestral pop gem “Saint Ivy” shines with plucked strings, buoyant basslines and a propulsive, wayward, guitar. “Tangerine,” a driving, tightly wound melody, rushes forward and briefly leaves the ground due to the gossamer guest vocals of Slowdive’s Rachel Goswell. The effervescent “Rise,” which hinges on the spoken word of Gavin Mays (Cities Aviv) discussing a failed rela-tionship, hangs, like many recent breakups, in a sense of suspension. The cloudy, wistful “Soci-al Jetlag,” bustling with samples of crowded streets, features the type of candid, off-the-cuff lyr-ics that make the entire effort immediately illuminating.
Recorded at multiple studios across New York City, a cabin in upstate New York, and even Los Angeles (including the home studio of Jonathan Rado of Foxygen, who helped engineer part of the album), Somersault turns the newfound chemistry between the trio into a sonic tapestry. Due to the variety of sessions and recording locations, the album was a Frankenstein-like series of reworking and reimagining songs. As the group pieced together different parts in a cycle of creation and cooption, and built out more elaborate songs track by track, the process became more reminiscent of a record created via sampling and arranging than one built by simply grind-ing out riffs. The long-simmering album, filled with breezy music both melancholic and uplifting, sees the band channeling their voices and honing their craft.
Flowing between shimmering compositions and immersive soundscapes, Somersault evokes the laid-back mood of a warm, breezy city night, the air crackling with humidity and excitement. These songs pulse and pull, capturing a blend of promise and heartache. It’s beautiful and lay-ered, a refined, sweeping creation that threads together numerous styles, textures, and themes into a refreshing, singular vision.