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How It Works

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Download links and information about How It Works by Bodyjar. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Punk, Alternative genres. It contains 21 tracks with total duration of 01:03:57 minutes.

Artist: Bodyjar
Release date: 2001
Genre: Punk, Alternative
Tracks: 21
Duration: 01:03:57
Buy on iTunes $19.99
Buy on Amazon $16.49
Buy on Songswave €1.80
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.05

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Not the Same 3:10
2. Feed It 3:45
3. Ordinary Lives 3:48
4. Make It Up 2:53
5. No Payback 2:15
6. Calling Orson 3:05
7. Fall to the Ground 3:45
8. Good Enough 2:52
9. Five Minutes Away (When Punx Attack Magicians) 3:51
10. Another Day 2:53
11. Clean Slate 2:54
12. Running Out of Time 2:26
13. Halfway Around the World 3:29
14. Self Inflicted 2:43
15. Not Alive 3:11
16. Fall Into Place 2:58
17. Coolidge 2:42
18. Hazy Shade of Winter 2:33
19. You Say 4:10
20. Sequel 2:35
21. The Song Ramones the Same 1:59

Details

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The fifth release from Australia's punk heroes, boasting a dozen crisp and crunchy tracks all supercharged and swept along by the melodies. Life, love, and the pursuit of happiness are the major themes; disaster and despair are the counterpoints. The quartet may not have the answers, but they do have an unerring ability to get to the core of problems and bring them sharply into focus. From drug addiction ("Feed It") to Columbine ("Falling Down"), breaking up to starting anew, Bodyjar vividly pulls life apart to grapple with the emotions that make lives tick. "Five Minutes Away (When Punk Attack Magicians)" is not an assault on David Copperfield and his ilk, but a seething look at disillusionment, when the platitudes we offer up as comfort become no more than hurtful lies. "Ordinary Lives" is about taking chances, a recurring motif, and how life is chance; How It Works delves into life both good and bad, love and loss, celebrating while still recognizing the inherent dangers. The andrenalized music feeds through the songs with big, thumping beats, guitar riffs shredded by Cameron Baines' stop-and-go tactics, and the soaring vocals and harmonies that have just a hint of the '60s about them — Jan & Dean with body piercing and mohawks. It's a compelling sound that slots nicely into the SoCal scene, but remains uniquely Bodyjar's own.