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Blink 182 "Take Off Your Pants And Jacket" Album

Take Off Your Pants And Jacket

Title: Take Off Your Pants And Jacket
Format: Album
Label: Mca
Released: 2001-06-12
Buy Take Off Your Pants And Jacket!

Tracklisting & Lyrics

1. Anthem Part 2 lyrics »
2. Online Songs lyrics »
3. First Date lyrics »
4. Happy Holidays You Bastard lyrics »
5. Story Of A Lonely Guy lyrics »
6. The Rock Show lyrics »
7. Stay Together For The Kids lyrics »
8. Roller Coaster lyrics »
9. Reckless Abandon lyrics »
10. Everytime I Look For You lyrics »
11. Give Me One Good Reason lyrics »
12. Shut Up lyrics »
13. Please Take Me Home lyrics »
14. Untitled lyrics »
15. Time To Break Up [Bonus Track] lyrics »
16. Mother's Day [Bonus Track] lyrics »
17. What Went Wrong? [Bonus Track] lyrics »
18. Fuck A Dog [Bonus Track] lyrics »
19. Don't Tell Me It's Over [Bonus Track] lyrics »
20. Grandpa [Bonus Track] lyrics »

Reviews

Not too much has changed since we last left blink-182. You might hear the same snap, crackle, and pop that the trio has prided themselves on for almost ten years. There's even the continual cabbage-patch screech of Tom Delonge and support for rampant teen angst. But five albums later, these San Diego natives grab their rosy-cheek punkadelics and add a bit more of a flamboyant, passionate maturation on . When leaped onto the charts in 1999, the lyrical direction was 90 percent party-boy mentality, leaving little room for traces of a growth spurt. And while we're still feeling the continual back-drip of tracks from , the fresh plethora of tunes from these rambunctious Toys-R-Us rockers have more purpose than ever. With a fight-for-your-right joviality that's often irresistible, songs like "Anthem Part 2" and "Stay Together for the Kids" house a indomitable school-kid voice where a surging vapor of knockout speed chords meet wrecking-ball percussion. The meanings are bucketed and spilled, with lines like "If we're f*cked up/You're to blame" ("Anthem Part 2"). And forget about escaping lyrics such as, "I'll never talk to you again/Unless your dad 'ill suck me off," which stems from the hilarious, almost brilliant 42-second clash called "Happy Holidays, You Bastard." "First Date" and "Roller Coaster" are only a couple of their tunes that act as therapy for post-pubescent dilemma, also present on previous efforts like and . Each song about the rotten girlfriend or unhip parent speaks loud and often to the 2000 MTV generation. Nevertheless, the dumped-in-the-amusement-park tone and lyrical progression are sharp, if not entertaining. The band's stint on the Vans Warped Tour, with veteran punksters such as Pennywise and Rancid, has become a supreme outlet for blink-182. is one of their finest works to date, with almost every track sporting a commanding articulation and new-school punk sounds. They've definitely put a big-time notch in the win column. ~Darren Ratner, All Music Guide.

Their formula is simple enough--equal parts teenage humor and brattiness combined with infectious guitar hooks that just beg to be cranked up on the stereo. But with Take Off Your Pants and Jacket, the guys in Blink 182 may have delivered their best album to date, a punk-pop fusion that's so consistent you'll wonder which of the 13 tracks will become radio hits (any has the chance, really). Yes, as with Dude Ranch and Enema of the State, the songs here revolve around falling in love ("The Rock Show," "First Date"), falling out of love ("Online Songs," "Happy Holidays, You Bastard"), and plenty of other ways to kill time while away from school ("Reckless Abandon"). And yes, these guitar-driven songs all pretty much sound the same, but Take Off never gets boring. There's too much nervous energy here, too many slight variations in the arrangements, and too many hilarious lyrics that you won't want to miss. Parents may remember that the Buzzcocks used this same shtick in the late '70s, older siblings may remember that Green Day did it well not so many years ago, but Blink fans know that their band is more clever than anyone else playing today. The bonus tracks are throwaways, but that's OK--the threesome have given us plenty to bop our heads to here. ~Jason Verlinde, Amazon.com.

If MTV's TRL were a high school party, Blink-182 would be the uninvited gate-crashers who spent the night trying to get the family dog drunk. While the Christinas and Justins of the Bubble Gum Clique preened and pondered their popularity, the guys from Blink stood in the corner telling fart jokes and laughing to themselves. And after years of sneaking in the backdoor of the teeny-bopper shindig, they found their names on the guest list thanks to a string of pop-punk hits from 1999's Enema of the State. Now with Take Off Your Pants and Jacket, they'll be the first to get an invite.
The third studio effort from the Blink boys is a raucous pop-punk trip down memory lane, recalling all the bad girlfriends, bad break-ups and bad acne high school had to offer. Amidst Tom DeLonge's nasaly vocals and speed-freak guitar, Mark Hoppus' driving bass and Travis Barker's unrelenting drums, Blink-182 has a knack for taking those uncomfortable pubescent moments that we all endured and helping us realize they weren't as earth-shattering as we thought they were. Regardless of how many failed relationships they may have had, they don't have much trouble tattooing their pain on their arms. Take Off's songs run the relationship gamut from the crush ("The Rock Show") to the inevitable break-up ("Roller Coaster"). And who can't identify with the sweaty-palmed excitement of "First Date"? Picking out the right clothes and getting your hair just right was almost as stressful as that first fumbling kiss.
Lamenting your shitty life is nothing new for a rock 'n roll band, but Blink-182 finds a way to never let the somber subjects weigh the music down. Generation X wallowed in its teen angst along with Pearl Jam and Nirvana, but after awhile Eddie's whining about fame and popularity just got depressing, and we all know what happened to Kurt. Bored by the heady notions of grunge, Generation TRL doesn't want to waste time worrying about its problems when there are friends to two-way page. It likes its sorrow infused with pop and shrink-wrapped in humor. In keeping with the evolution of emotional pain, Take Off's complaints rarely stray far from "This sucks," and for every song about rejection, there's another about being happy that the bitch is gone. And of course what would a Blink-182 album be without the raunch? In less than a minute's worth of neck-snapping punk, "Happy Holidays, You Bastard" ("I'll never talk to you again / Unless your mom will touch my cock") proves they still know what makes teenagers laugh.
What makes Take Off an impressive step in Blink's burgeoning maturity, though, is that for all its light-hearted obsessing over dating and diarrhea, it reveals a serious side not evident in previous efforts. Accepting the mantle of the Lorax of high school misfits ("I speak for the dweebs!"), they find time to look outside the classroom for once and see that all is not right with the world ("Anthem Part II"). There's even the surprisingly touching "Stay Together For the Kids," which might not make it any easier for kids to watch their parents split up, but at least it will show them rock stars know what it's like to come from a broken home too.
Take Off Your Pants and Jacket may not do anything more than give Blink-182 an outlet for joking about being uncool, but who couldn't use a little humor to wash away bad memories of high school? As pop radio continues to be inundated by too many teens playing the part of grown-ups, it's nice to see some rock stars are comfortable acting like kids. ~Matt Halverson, music-critic.com.

 
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