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Barcelona

Barcelona

A Break From The Symphony Of Crickets And Taxed Hearts

Aug 21, 2009

Words by Sean Moeller
Illustration by Johnnie Cluney
Sound engineering by Mike Gentry

  1.  
    Welcome to Daytrotter
  2.  
    Time To Mend original version appears on Absolutes This is my favorite song.  When we recorded it with Daytrotter, it was still a brand new song.  Like most of my songs, I wrote it during a relationship.  What's weird is that it didn't make much sense until the relationship had ended.  What's really exciting to me, and why I love to play it live, is how relatable I feel it is.  People in all stages of relationships have responded in crazy ways to this song.  The production is so minimal and there is a lot of space to soak and think.  My favorite song.
  3.  
    The Takers original version appears on Absolutes This song originated from a conversation I was having while falling asleep, in separate beds, with one of my friends who was working for a label we were doing some work with.  I thought I had maybe bitten off more than I could chew when I asked her about her love life.  She had reached a point where she had categorized every man she had ever known into givers and takers.  Recently, she had been burned yet again by a taker, and she was convinced that once someone was a taker, they couldn't change.  While I don't completely agree with that, it got me thinking about the relationship I was in at the time.  I had grown used to taking way more than I was giving.
  4.  
    It's About Time original version appears on Absolutes We got to track this using a Yamaha CP70.  I geeked out about that. This song has a funny starting point.  I was driving around listening to pop radio and I heard a Hellogoodbye song.  Embarrassingly enough, I was bobbing my head along pretty intensely.  But soon after, I decided I should try to write a better song.  No offense to them, but it pumped me up.  I went home and wrote it within a couple of hours. I'm a sucker for a chorus that starts on the four chord, and out of all of our songs, this one hits the hardest in my mind.
  5.  
    Stars original version appears on Absolutes I wrote this song when I went to school in Spokane, Washington, a few years ago.  Spokane is in eastern Washington and I grew up in Seattle, and they could not be two more different cities.  One night I was sitting on top of a cliff overlooking the "downtown" with my future ex-girlfriend and we were talking about how we both wanted to get out of Spokane.  That conversation turned into a discussion about what the hell were we supposed to be doing here, on earth, much less in some random city.  It was a clear night, and I was pissed off about being in a city and a scene I hated, but once thought I loved.  Her and I shared a very raw and honest conversation that night.

Today marks one of those fairly rare occasions when it turns dark again prematurely, just after the lunch hour, as a summer thunderstorm decides to pass through, rumbling the dishes and confusing wildlife. Right now, where this is being written in the far eastern reaches of Iowa, it's loud outdoors as the thick lawns and all the rocks, stumps and foundations are harboring crickets whose natural sensors have been knocked haywire, garbled by the oncoming weather threat. To them, it's the makings of dusk and they've rosined up their wings, slicked back their antennas and begun to play the evening songs already, hours before they're usually bound to - an act that's sure to have them hoarse and worn out come the break of day tomorrow. It's a serene setting, one that puts you into a comfortably slumped state, unduly relaxed with a sense that all of the day's work's been done and there's nothing but conversation, dinner, drinking and slumber to take up the rest of the time. It's here that we throw the needle onto the Barcelona record and the mood and circumstances meld into the music that lead singer Brian Fennell, guitarist Chris Bristol and drummer Rhett Stonelake make. The Seattle band seem to be brethren of what look to be the soft acres of rolling fields, all from a distance, until up close the leaves of the plants reveal themselves to be prickly and easy to lace hands and necks and arms with cuts and harsh rubs. These are the fields that look majestic from afar, but are the rougher places where these crickets take up hiding and shelter so as not to be picked off by predators before the next song of theirs is supposed to begin. The Barcelona sound is one of touching heights and climactic drops - the what ifs and the troubles of keeping the mind from thinking too much about that important organ resting between ours two lungs. It tends to get in the way or at least filibuster most of our time and it certainly does the head of Fennell, who writes about love the way one would a terminal illness - something that's here or not here, but time's running out and there's no telling when, if or how it will turn out. There's plenty of gravity revered and awe expressed in the amount of sway that the heart can interact and in the way that it can dictate and distract. He sings about how it turns us into wrecks and monsters and how those monsters get into trouble in different ways, looking out upon the objects of their love, singing on "The Takers," "What makes these monsters cry/You can see the gold reflecting in their eyes," showing that everyone can be brought to their knees through these flimsy or firm acts. Barcelona gives itself over to the idea of the heart almost as a personality, or a person of its own, doing what it wants and being as flakey or unreliable as the person and blood that it belongs to. Fennell sings about the possibility of starting back at the beginning again - which essentially means a death and rebirth, or a different use of a body - and not needing money or these "poor hearts." There's a soothing feeling of well-earned tranquility, as if these hearts had been worked, taxed as far as they could be taxed, and deserved to just be put out to pasture, like old race horses. They belong out there with the waiting crickets and the winds that rustle, those hearts. And it's the stage for Barcelona, a backdrop of clean passion.

Barcelona Official Site

Session Comments

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  1. They are incredible live, just saw them a few weeks ago! myfavoritebandisfun. Monday, March 15, 2010 10:15 pm
  2. Just heard the song "Time to Mend" and immidately downloaded the entire album off Itunes. Love it. M1k3y Sunday, January 03, 2010 12:00 pm
  3. I love them so much... I saw them live in October and they were incredible. They really are great people too. MayYourSkiesBeBlue Monday, November 16, 2009 10:13 pm
  4. definitely one of the bands with great lyrics! anggina Thursday, November 05, 2009 4:36 am
  5. This band is one of the best bands to come around in awhile. And from Seattle even better!! krizzten Wednesday, October 14, 2009 11:49 am
  6. When is "Come back when you can" gonna be posted??...its amazing!!! Anonymous Wednesday, October 07, 2009 8:49 pm
  7. This has been my fav band for a few months now...Saw them last month...and will be seeing them next month!! Get their cd!!! Can put it in...and let the entire play endelessly!!! parkercrossing Tuesday, September 22, 2009 6:07 pm
  8. This has been my fav band for a few months now...Saw them last month...and will be seeing them next month!! Get their cd!!! Can put it in...and let the entire play endelessly!!! parkercrossing Tuesday, September 22, 2009 6:07 pm
  9. saw them in Little Rock with Copeland. Fell in love, to say the least KMThomas Tuesday, September 01, 2009 10:37 pm
  10. thumbs up. Anonymous Tuesday, September 01, 2009 7:22 am
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