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Javelins

Javelins

Paranoia, Sometimes Out Of Doors

Mar 29, 2009

Words by Sean Moeller
Illustration by Johnnie Cluney
Sound engineering by Patrick Stolley

  1.  
    Welcome to Daytrotter
  2.  
    El Dorado original version appears on Heavy Meadows Originally this song had a sample of John Wayne threatening people running through the bridge, but we decided on a string arrangement instead. Neither are on the session though. oops! This is one of our beefiest songs.
  3.  
    Flowers original version appears on Heavy Meadows The lyrics were written for our guitar player Matt, and a little for Julian too. It's pretty straight forward, bad relationships come and go but we'll always be buds.
  4.  
    Heavy Meadows original version appears on Heavy Meadows Writing this song was strange. I wrote out the lyrics, came up with the melody, and recorded it over just a drumtrack. Then I gave it to the band and you guys said fill in the music. I think it worked out great! It's one of our faves to play. Scott Allen from Julian and I's other band Thunderbirds Are Now was along with us for this tour, so he's playing keys and tambourine on all of these songs. Thanks Scott!
  5.  
    The Pounding original version appears on Heavy Meadows I like the version we did here. The song on record starts out with a string section, but we hacked something different together for this session.

"Be careful what you hear, should you happen upon heavy meadows," is a line that gets heard in the title track of Detroit, Michigan trio Javelins' latest record, Heavy Meadows, and immediately one starts to think about how impossible what they're suggesting you do is. It's like telling someone at the top of a skyscraper, "No matter what you do, don't look down." The heavy meadows are full of creakings and groans, things busy living and as busy dying off, whipping and knocking against each other in the incessant wind tear. And anyone wandering too far out and into those surroundings either has a lot of stuff to hear upstairs or they're soaking in the deafening silence - hearing all of the many, many voices and words jumping forth from the clamoring stalks and tangles. The band - which consists of two vocalists, drummer Matt Rickle and guitarist Matt Howard and bass player Julian Wettlin - goes on to bring love into the conversation, adding that if one makes the decision to fall in love, perhaps out in these meadows of verdant weeds and grasses, running away from all of regularity and other people, to make sure that you're somewhere that you'd be happy ending up, stuck for the most part. It's as if the falling part of the love recipe is meant to be taken quite literally. There will be a spill, a tripping over some inanimate and stationary object that will subsequently result in an accident that will require a splint, a setting and perhaps a cast. You might be eating things out of a straw for a while if this all happens, so you'd better have yourself a patient soul and you'd better be cool with the person that caused the fall. It will end up better that way. Things will work out that way, if you can just stick to the basics and not only watch where you're going, but pay attention to who's following you or who is next to you, at all times. There's a degree of paranoia throughout the song, suspicion that needs to be dealt with, ironed out and understood. There may be ulterior motives to be worked out and fickleness isn't frowned upon. One should be skeptical in the songs of Javelins, which sound like sincere flatteries being paid to early Superchunk, with quirky musicality and the coolly heated vocals of Rickle and Howard that sound so fresh and young, but experienced in the right ways. The skeptical behavior shouldn't be turned toward the songs or the band itself. Instead, it just rises up from the material, as if love's conceivability or its ability to be convincible was a crapshoot. It's a feeling that carries into all of the directions that the band takes its music - both lyrically and rhythmically. It's odd and unpredictable and yet feels like the way that many young men can appreciate discussions and dissertations being strung up and grilled.


Javelins Official Site
Javelins MySpace Page

Session Comments

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  1. we'll always be buds, my good buddies. jonshaft Saturday, April 04, 2009 3:51 pm
  2. Es bueno banda los javelinos. yo sordo, pero hombres estas grande muchachos y la music es muy fantastico. Muchos gracias PaleoFan Monday, March 30, 2009 9:02 pm
  3. good choice on recording a javs sesh. i've been listenin'n' to dese guys fo' years. my band played a few shows wit' 'em when i was still playin' musiCK in Detroit. Solid bods, Great hair. eightbitsucks Monday, March 30, 2009 6:45 am
  4. Good choice on recording a Javelins session. I've been listening to these guys for years. My bands played a few shows with them when I was still playing music in Detroit. Solid guys, great musicians. mdarket Sunday, March 29, 2009 6:05 pm
  5. Good choice on recording a Javelins session. I've been listening to these guys for years. My bands played a few shows with them when I was still playing music in Detroit. Solid guys, great musicians. mdarket Sunday, March 29, 2009 6:05 pm
  6. nice groovin' Seth Wiley Sunday, March 29, 2009 4:38 pm
 
 
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