Happy Birthday King James Version

King James Version, the difficult second Harvey Danger album—not the Bible translation, silly!—was released seven years ago yesterday, on September 12, 2000. Writing sessions began in December, 1998, recording started in March or April of 1999 in Bearsville, NY, and continued in fits and starts throughout the next year. By the time it was finished, the major label that bankrolled it no longer existed, and the entire music business had entered an upheaval that, frankly, has yet to end, and isn't likely to.
Though the initial trajectory of the album was away from pop (away from melody, away from fun, away from humor, away from anything the band was identified with or, indeed, was good at), time had a way of guiding us back toward our strengths, and the resulting push and pull made an album that not only reflected the tumltuous life of success, self-doubt, internal wrangling, yearning to prove ourselves to a largely indifferent audience/totally indifferent label, and unavoidable immersion in the depths of narcissism we'd been living, but turned to the elements of that tumultuous life for thematic and even musical inspiration. What I hear when I listen to the album is not the sound of my life in 1998-2001, but the sound of our little band striving (sometimes together, but often against one another) to make it sound more like we thought it should sound. More than anything else, I think, we wanted to make an album that no one expected from us. An album no one else could make. An album that made no concessions to any idea (ours/theirs/yours) of a popular audience. An album you had to seek out. An album you had to work to love. KJV is unarguably that, right down to Tae Won Yu's beautiful/terrible/perfect cover art, which expressed our band's fractured mental and psychic state, or relationship to ourselves, our city, our project, and each other brilliantly. It's also a mess (possibly because we micromanaged him into the ground). There are sounds I hate on the album, but far more that I love. More to the point, having never before or since put so much of myself into anything with so little to show for it afterwards, there are sounds I never got over the fact that more people didn't hear. Almost never. Having met a lot of people who did hear the album and to whom it meant something, I think I am now. Which is better than never, but goddamn...
Sometimes I think we put far too much energy toward all the wrong things. Sometimes I think we were utterly delusional. Sometimes I wish we had done every single thing differently. But sometimes I think KJV is a legitimate cult gem that will one day join the ranks of Oddessey and Oracle and The Village Green Preservation Society or at least fucking Pinkerton or whatever. Not likely, I know, but I still have a dim wish.
Mostly, though, I'm glad to find myself thinking about it less. I do wish it a happy birthday, however, and many happy returns. (Thanks to iTunes).
Labels: Harvey Danger, King James Version
12 Comments:
thank you for making this album.
Happy birthday indeed. King James Version is my favorite album. Not just my favorite HD album, my favorite album of all. Somehow it reminds me of a passionate, tempestuous relationship that will never work out but always be the one you loved the most, though it cut you up.
Best. Album. Ever.
I think it's a downright fantastic album. Everything you've written about above really comes through.
I think my favorite Christmas present ever was the KJV. My sister gave it to me and I knew it would be the King James Version before I opened it but I was still most pleased to receive it. So I heard it and it meant something to me.
As I told you the time I introduced myself, it'd make my desert island Top 10. Throw in a song like "Defrocked" as a lost classic, I think it holds up very well.
In 25 years when the buzz has reached fever pitch, you can put out that deluxe 2CD version with bonus tracks, scrapped initial takes, and extensive linear notes.
Here's hoping.
It is really fucking great, Sean.
Thank you for KJV. Why I'm Lonely and Pike St/Park Slope and The Same as Being In Love are three of my all time favourite songs by anyone.
Whoa, 2 month belated Happy Birthday, KGV! In this day and age of the iTunes single when it's common only latch onto only two or three songs on a particular album for constant replay, King James Version is solid all the way through. More than solid, it's just a great album period. Hearing this made me a Harvey Danger fan 7 years ago and I still am today... this year I may FINALLY see you guys live for the first time when I migrate south and west to Vancouver from "upper Canada".
King's lead hat put the innocence inside her, it will come, it will come, it will surely come...
I was looking through stacks of empty CD's cases tonight as I was cleaning out my old house and was very happy to find my copy of KJV. I only was able to listen to it for about 6 months before I misplaced it until now. I'm so happy and am listening to it as we type. I've been wishing I could listen to this again for years.
It reminded me of being a scared freshman in college in Charlotte NC . The first day that classes started I walked through the student union and was happy/ surprised to see the video for "Sad Sweetheart of the Rodeo" playing on a TV there. It made the day a little easier to take.
i only recently discovered this album and needless to say it is one of my favorites. i like it better than Merrymakers by far. i really like putting on meetings with remarkable men and screaming it at my friends who have no idea what they're listening to. thanks for that.
It was a pleasure - if bittersweet - to read your thoughts on KJV. It's a strange album, one I did indeed have to learn to love. But after seven years of life with it, my affection for it is only growing. I'm not sure where else I encounter songs with such strange and large lifespans, songs with strange transitions that become entirely different beasts half-way through. I try to but a KJV song on most mixes I make; songs like "That's Not Why I'm Lonely" and "This is the Thrilling Conversation You've Been Waiting For" are particularly frequent in their appearance... there's a kind of precision to them that few rock songs match.
Anyway -- from one long-time fan, here's a thank-you for making one of my favorite albums.
Hey, Sean... I also just wanted to tell you that KJV is one of the best albums ever made. Thank you for writing it. :)
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