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Everything In Transit (10th Anniversary Edition)

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Download links and information about Everything In Transit (10th Anniversary Edition) by Jack'S Mannequin. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 01:16:16 minutes.

Artist: Jack'S Mannequin
Release date: 2005
Genre: Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 19
Duration: 01:16:16
Buy on iTunes $12.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Holiday from Real 2:58
2. The Mixed Tape 3:14
3. Bruised 4:02
4. I'm Ready 3:55
5. La La Lie 3:54
6. Dark Blue 4:11
7. Miss Delaney 3:43
8. Kill the Messenger 3:24
9. Rescued 3:55
10. MFEO, Pt. 1: Made for Each Other, Pt. 2: You Can Breathe 8:00
11. Into the Airwaves 4:07
12. The Lights and Buzz (2015 Remastered) 3:36
13. Kill the Messenger (Live from Rock Xentral) [2015 Remastered] 3:32
14. Meet Me At My Window (2015 Remastered) 3:50
15. Last Straw, AZ (2015 Remastered) 3:44
16. Lonely For Her (2015 Remastered) 3:25
17. Bruised (Acoustic Version) [2015 Remastered] 4:29
18. Locked Doors (2015 Remastered) 3:53
19. I'm Ready (Live from New York City) [2015 Remastered] 4:24

Details

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If Andrew McMahon is the Ben Folds of Something Corporate, then his side project Jack's Mannequin is his Fear of Pop, his opportunity to step out of the group and try something different. Except in McMahon's case, it isn't so much fear of pop as much as an embrace of pop, since he sheds the loud guitars and punky overtones of his main band for a sunny, unabashedly tuneful Californian pop on Jack's Mannequin's debut album, Everything in Transit. In truth, it's not all that far removed from his contributions to Something Corporate, which were also tightly written and tuneful, but it sounds truer to his artistic inclinations than either of SC's studio albums, since underneath its guise as a loose concept album about a year of turbulent relationships on Venice Beach, it's a full-blown singer/songwriter piano-pop album. More than ever, on Everything in Transit McMahon sounds like the heir to Ben Folds' wise-ass interpretation of Joe Jackson, but McMahon isn't as cynical or goofy as Folds. His humor is sardonic and low-key, plus he's more concerned with affairs of the heart. Although he relies a little bit too heavily on first-person narratives, he has a keener eye for character and behavior than his emo peers, and he's a better tunesmith, too, not just content to write hooks, but taking the time to let the music build and breathe. With producer Jim Wirt, McMahon has given Everything in Transit an appropriately colorful, even cinematic, scope and, thanks to drums provided by Tommy Lee (who proves here that he's a more versatile drummer than he ever did in Mötley Crüe), it also has strong backbone. So the album has momentum, but it's as sweetly melancholy as a fading summer, yet not nearly as transient as that, either. It really shouldn't work — it's a conceptual power pop album, delivered by an emo songwriter, backed by an aging metalhead, and co-produced by a guy who gave Hoobastank hits — but the result is one of the more pleasant surprises of 2005. It's good enough that it makes you hope that McMahon makes Jack's Mannequin his full-time band. [Everything in Transit was also released in a clean version, containing no profanities.]