Bad Veins
Hearts Diverting Openly And In Secret Lairs
Jul 22, 2009
Words by Sean Moeller
Illustration by Johnnie Cluney
Sound engineering by Mike Gentry
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Welcome to Daytrotter
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Gold and Warm
original version appears on Bad Veins
I think Gold and Warm is probably the song we have to thank for a lot of the success we've seen so far in our career. I don't necessarily think it's our best song or anything like that, but it IS our Ambassador. There is something about it that brings people into our world, where they are free to explore the other things we do. The album version is really to credit, this Daytrotter arrangement kind of puts it in its place with the rest of our songs, slow and mopey!
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Afraid
original version appears on Bad Veins
Afraid is a very simple song, and I think it kind of sums of the themes of the entire record. I have a lot of theories on fear, and how many other emotions are just variations of it, or how much of what we do is based on fear, and maybe we don't realize it. heavy and melodramatic indeed.
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The Ending
original version appears on Bad Veins
This Ending is another track that illustrates how simple our songs really are. Its about how I feel (or how I felt) about random things going on in my life, and its built on basically three chords. I think it's one of my favorite tracks on the record, though it's probably one of the last songs that album listeners notice.
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Go Home
original version appears on Bad Veins
This is the album closer, again, probably 3 chords. I think my favorite part of this song is the fact that we managed to work a sax solo into it on the record, a fact that Seb and I continuously tease each other about. It's really about a simple frustration I have with certain people in my life, a sense that people keep walls up around them, refusing to get close to others. The silly thing is I think I'm the biggest culprit of such behavior.
Bad Veins' Ben Davis suggests in the late album track called "Blanket" that he won't get scared of not getting anywhere. The underwriting for the thought involves a relationship with someone dear and perhaps there was an initial sense that it was going to turn out rosier than it currently sits here in the lazy doldrums, just whittling away, no better and no worse, but maybe it is worse because of the stagnancy. It's been eroded and that part is causing some obvious consternation. There are a lot of very precarious relationships (or just one?) contained within this very promising Cincinnati band's debut full-length and they don't stray too far from their frayed and woozy balances which keep both sides of the heart's equation looking for anything other than the nonsensical tidings that they seem to be drowning in. There is a lack of grasp on the shortcomings, or where the shortcomings come from in the interactions between these two people, who are the mellow, mellow, mellow versions of John Darnielle's classic and prolonged ruminations of the trials and more trials of his alpha couple as they slug through a marriage that seems to have had a fuzzy beginning and oddly enough, no end in site. The couple that Davis and band mate, drummer Sebastien Schultz have designed to follow may not be the same people throughout, but they all have a universal hold on key characteristics that make them able to try on and wear the others' clothing and problems with great ease. It's all very familiar feeling to the characters on "Bad Veins," as if they could walk into any conversation or tense room and find themselves nodding involuntarily, mouthing the emotions and the words as they were taking place for the first time in those other living people who didn't see them come up behind them. Davis and Schultz make epic sounds, squalling warmth and larger-than-life arrangements that show poise and energy and the perfect amount of emotiveness. There's a direct connect between the topics at hand and what they're actually doing to the characters who are riddled with them, how the slow pace of love, the hard-beating heart of love makes sure to never give away too many of the answers, but remain a stubborn cloud that may or may not just pour its guts out all over the place without any warning given. The questions and the worries that Davis sings about having seem to begin nagging from the morning and definitely into the night, chewing on him, making him suffer, even if it's ever so lightly, as his characters are embroiled in these moments of grayness and near-combustion. He makes these people feel as if they're resilient though awfully breakable at the same time. All they want out of life is the happy ending, but there are the dips and drops, the unavoidable troubles of life's refusal to cooperate properly. When Davis sings, "I cannot reap what I cannot sow/I'll never keep what I can't grow/I can't be done cause I can't begin/I don't want you to be alone again. And I don't want to be alone again," it's as close to a synopsis to the general feeling of sunsets and what they mean in both literal and figurative ways. It's this sunset hopefulness and dread that makes "Bad Veins" such a beautiful album - an honest dissection of people at the fork in the road, with eyes torn in both directions half thinking that they might go this way or that and knowing just as well that the one standing in front of them might be thinking the same thing, feeling their own eyes splitting. Hearts divert openly and in secret and that's where we are with these veins, the good ones and the bad ones.
Bad Veins Official Site
Bad Veins Debut Daytrotter Session
Dangerbird Records