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Jack's Mannequin - Everything In Transit (CD)

Everything In Transit
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5 out of 5.0 stars 5 Ratings (2 Reviews)

Album Details: Everything In Transit

Release Date:08/23/2005
Label:Wea Japan
UPC:4943674062508

Other Available Formats: Everything In Transit

User Reviews: Everything In Transit

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Simply the Best

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  May 13, 2007

    Pros: Great lyrics; in-depth songwriting; easy-to-listen-to

    Cons: simply N/A

    Never in my life have I purchased a CD that has been so beneficial for myself. Actually, to be completely honest, I didn't buy it, only burned my friend's copy! It all began one morning when I was watching VH1 and they were interviewing Andre...w McMahon (singer, songwriter, pianist of JM), who had recently undergone surgery for leukemia. After interviewing him, they played the One Tree Hill video version of "The Mixed Tape." Not being a huge fan of alternative, rock or "emo" music, I was surprised by how far in love I fell with the song. I downloaded it immediately and it became the most listened to track on my iPod. Then the album came and it was all I could do to not cry every time I listened to it. It meant so much to me because at the time I was going through some pretty serious heartache, and Everything in Transit seemed to have a song for every emotion I was struggling to deal with. The CD became my therapy, and it was in those dayse when I was so happy to have it. Stand out tracks are: "The Mixed Tape," "Dark Blue," "La La Lie," "Miss Delaney," and "Holiday From Real," although the entire album is worth rejoicing over. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    "A Long Goodbye"

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Oct 9, 2005

    Pros: Great lyrics

    Cons: Some songs slip into sounding somewhat like 'carnival music'

    Andrew McMahon is an incredible songwriter - theres no doubt about that. But Everything in Transit definitley shows a completely different side of him than his SoCo hits. The CD has got a lot of piano to it that really makes you wish you could play i...t. The lyrics are also much less simple than his earlier writing. By no means am I hoping that McMahon gives up on Something Corporate, but I think through this album he's really grown in his skill in writing. I can't wait to hear the enhanced emo-style writing (which he's always done, but now seems complete) along with the alt rock melodies. Everything in Transit is the musical story of a "long goodbye" with a girl, and its so honest that you find yourself identifying with every track. This CD is originally refreshing and I recommend everyone give it a try - you may fall in love with Andrew through his songs, too. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Everything In Transit

  • All Music Guide

    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 fullblown singer/songwriter pianopop album. More than ever, on Everything in Transit McMahon sounds like the heir to Ben Folds' wiseass interpretation of Joe Jackson, but McMahon isn't as cynical or goofy as Folds. His ...humor is sardonic and lowkey, plus he's more concerned with affairs of the heart. Although he relies a little bit too heavily on firstperson 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 coproduced 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 fulltime band. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Jack's Mannequin

Better known as the vocalist/songwriter/keyboardist for the West Coast punkpop quintet Something Corporate, Andrew McMahon explores the dark side with his emopop side project, Jack's Mannequin. Utilizing the talents of numerous friends and collaborators, McMahon began work on the collective's debut in 2004. The resulting Everything in Transit, a "concept album exploring... Read more