Juturna (album)
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Juturna | |||||
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Studio album by Circa Survive | |||||
Released | April 19, 2005 (USA) January 31, 2006 (Japan) |
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Recorded | 2004-2005 at Salad Days Studio, Beltsville, Maryland | ||||
Genre | Experimental, Indie, Rock | ||||
Length | 52:33 | ||||
Label | Equal Vision Records | ||||
Producer | Brian McTernan | ||||
Professional reviews | |||||
Circa Survive chronology | |||||
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Juturna is experimental rock band Circa Survive's debut album, released on April 19, 2005 by Equal Vision Records. It reached #183 on the Billboard 200 on May 7, 2005. As of July 19, 2006, it has sold 74,896 copies.
[edit] Track listing
- "Holding Someone's Hair Back" – 3:22
- "Act Appalled" – 3:20
- "Wish Resign" – 4:14
- "The Glorious Nosebleed" – 3:13
- "In Fear and Faith" – 3:35
- "The Great Golden Baby" – 4:11
- "Stop the Fuckin' Car" – 4:22
- "We're All Thieves" – 4:53
- "Oh, Hello" – 2:36
- "Always Getting What You Want" – 4:01
- "Meet Me in Montauk" – 14:39 (includes hidden track)
There is a hidden track, "House of Leaves," approximately 8:55 after the silence that follows "Meet Me in Montauk." It is named after House of Leaves, a book by Mark Z. Danielewski. "House of Leaves" also has backmasking: if played backwards you can hear the words 'speak so softly'.
Contrary to popular belief, the Japanese version does not include four bonus songs. It does, however, have a video for "Act Appalled".
Anthony Green has stated the title for the song "Stop the Fuckin' Car" was inspired by the popular cult film, the Boondock Saints.[citation needed] There is a scene in the movie in which vigilantes Connor and Murphy McManus and David Della Rocco are fleeing the McManus's apartment and Rocco sees the strip club that a mob underboss frequents and yells "Stop the fuckin' car!"
The song "Stop the Fuckin' Car" had its name censored to "Stop the Car" on the tracklisting on the back of the CD. However, it still states the title as "Stop the Fuckin' Car" on the booklet inside the case.
[edit] Inspiration from Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
"Meet Me in Montauk" is a reference to the movie Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. The title comes from the line Clementine whispers in Joel's ear just before the last memory of her is erased. The song is 14 minutes long, though only roughly two minutes of the song have to do about the movie itself; the rest is silence leading to the hidden track. Lyrics relating to the movie include, "I already forgot how I used to feel about you," and the last line in the song, "you'd mean so much more to me if I remembered".
Many other songs on Juturna have references to the movie in their lyrics, and singer-songwriter Anthony Green has commented that the songs are a blend of his personal experiences and the movie. Another direct reference is "Wish Resign," which takes its name from the same source that the movie took its name. It comes from the line in the Alexander Pope poem "Eloisa to Abelard" that follows the line from the which the movie got its name:
“ | How happy is the blameless vestal's lot! The world forgetting, by the world forgot. Eternal sunshine of the spotless mind! Each pray'r accepted, and each wish resign'd. |
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— from "Eloisa to Abelard," by Alexander Pope.
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Juturna was rumored to be synced to Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, however this was denied by Anthony Green in an interview with the Australian music magazine The Brag.
[edit] Miscellaneous
- Juturna is the Roman goddess of fountains, wells and springs. It was taken as the album title to symbolize a new beginning for the band members. It was originally the title of an unreleased song from an early demo of "The Great Golden Baby".
- The album artwork is by Esao Andrews.
- "Suspending Disbelief", off The Inuit Sessions was originally intended to be on Juturna. It did not make the album though. Proof of this is that the feedback at the end of "Oh, Hello" leads into the feedback at the beginning of "Suspending Disbelief".
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