Fall Out Boy - From Under The Cork Tree (2005)

  • 20 Jul, 10:21
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: From Under The Cork Tree
Year Of Release: 2005
Label: Island Records
Genre: Pop Punk, Punk Rock, Alternative Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 59:56
Total Size: 486 / 156 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Our Lawyer Made Us Change The Name Of This Song So We Wouldn't Get Sued (Album Version) - 00:03:08
02. Of All The Gin Joints In All The World (Album Version) - 00:03:11
03. Dance, Dance (Album Version) - 00:02:59
04. Sugar, We're Goin Down (Album Version) - 00:03:48
05. Nobody Puts Baby In The Corner (Album Version) - 00:03:20
06. I've Got A Dark Alley And A Bad Idea That Says You Should Shut Your Mouth (Summer Song) (Album Version) - 00:03:10
07. 7 Minutes In Heaven (Atavan Halen) (Album Version) - 00:03:02
08. Sophomore Slump Or Comeback Of The Year (Album Version) - 00:03:23
09. Champagne For My Real Friends, Real Pain For My Sham Friends (Album Version) - 00:03:23
10. I Slept With Someone In Fall Out Boy And All I Got Was This Stupid Song Written About Me (Album Version) - 00:03:31
11. A Little Less Sixteen Candles, A Little More "Touch Me" (Album Version) - 00:02:48
12. Get Busy Living Or Get Busy Dying (Do Your Part To Save The Scene And Stop Going To Shows) (Album Version) - 00:03:27
13. XO (Album Version) - 00:03:40
14. Snitches And Talkers Get Stitches And Walkers - 00:02:50
15. The Music Or The Misery - 00:03:27
16. My Heart Is The Worst Kind Of Weapon (Demo) - 00:03:22
17. Sugar, We're Goin Down (Patrick Stump Remix) - 00:03:59
18. Dance, Dance (The Lindbergh Palace Remix) - 00:03:28

Fall Out Boy's 2003 LP stacked sarcasm, wronged romance, and hardcore-derived passion on the head of a punk-pop pin. Take This to Your Grave was urgent at every turn, and though it fit the conventions of its genre, it was bolder and more memorable than the average release on Kung Fu or Drive-Thru. The kids responded -- Fall Out Boy were fast favorites of the online social networks (MySpace), and an endless tour schedule solidified their rep. With 2005's From Under the Cork Tree, the band fully delivers on their first full-length's promise. Sure, it nods a little more to the standard dynamics and production tweaks of pop-punk and emo in the mid-2000s -- Cork Tree was produced by Neal Avron, who's worked with A New Found Glory. But in many more ways it's the same album as Grave, a youth-intense blast of pop culture reference, pop-punk hyperactivity, and the feeling that we'll never understand life until Patrick Stump or Pete Wentz tells us about it. And we believe them. Stump is Fall Out Boy's vocalist and guitarist, Wentz its bassist and lyricist. Wentz' verbiage can be lengthy -- "I Slept With Someone in Fall Out Boy and All I Got Was This Stupid Song Written About Me," one title goes -- but he has an innate ability to simultaneously acknowledge and deconstruct the mushy emo soliloquy. Temper that with a road-hardened cynicism about band life, superficial love, and the adventure of signing a record contract, and you have lyrics with a point beyond simply acting up or getting sentimental. "Champagne for My Real Friends, Real Pain for my Sham Friends" is blunt. "Yeah we're friends," Stump says, "Just because we move units." But the album also has a current of longing to it, of missing regular life, regular relationships. Musically, Cork Tree's first five tracks are relentless, with razor-sharp melodies that seem familiar but sound totally unique at the same time. The "Oh! Oh!"s and punchy chords of "Of All the Gin Joints in All the World" are a thrill greater than any Jimmy Eat World album ever; "Sugar, We're Goin Down"'s half-time shifts are triumphs of tumbling words; and the opening track meditates wryly on all-ages shows' fame. Further, when Fall Out Boy rip into "Sophomore Slump or Comeback of the Year," summer 2005 will not be able to ignore them. "We're the therapists pumping through your speakers/Delivering just what you need," they sing. It's obviously time to embrace our inner mall kid.