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Joyce Manor - Joyce Manor (Remastered) (2021) Hi-Res

Joyce Manor - Joyce Manor (Remastered) (2021) Hi-Res

BAND/ARTIST: Joyce Manor

  • Title: Joyce Manor (Remastered)
  • Year Of Release: 2011 / 2021
  • Label: Asian Man Records
  • Genre: Pop Punk, Emo, Indie Rock
  • Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-48kHz
  • Total Time: 19:02
  • Total Size: 45 / 134 / 245 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Orange Julius (1:24)
02. Call Out (Laundry) (2:05)
03. Beach Community (1:42)
04. Derailed (1:43)
05. Famous Friend (1:31)
06. Leather Jacket (2:16)
07. 21st Dead Rats (1:35)
08. Constant Nothing (1:25)
09. Ashtray Petting Zoo (2:19)
10. Constant Headache (3:07)

The classic self-titled record from punk-rockers Joyce Manor, now available on picture disc. The music has been completely remastered / remixed. This debut is causing a bit of a fuss on the punk rock underground. If you like anything from Jawbreaker, Weezer, Descendents, Against Me! then you need to give this a listen!

Each Sunday, Pitchfork takes an in-depth look at a significant album from the past, and any record not in our archives is eligible. Today we revisit the influential debut from the SoCal band, a pop-punk spark that spread like wildfire in the Tumblr era.

Joyce Manor emerged from the beer-soaked ecosystem of basements and bowling alleys that has sustained SoCal pop-punk for nearly a half-century. But Barry Johnson knows who was truly responsible for the legend of Joyce Manor, ten entirely quotable, all-hook songs in 18 minutes, megaphoned by the new vanguard of punk tastemaking: “16-year-old and 17-year-old girls, with septum piercings and green hair,” sharing gifs, lyric quotes, and glitchy live videos. In other words, “Tumblr,” in case it’s unclear what exactly he’s getting at. And in being the first definitive punk album of the Tumblr era, Joyce Manor set the course for its foreseeable future, anticipating a decade of social media and streaming trends that rewarded immediacy and the perpetual bite-sizing of attention spans.

In 2011, they were simply a band that everyone could agree upon: The hardcore kids appreciated Joyce Manor blasting through at least three songs by the time they refilled their Solo cup, while the nerds latched onto the early forays into folk-punk, ska, and songs that wondered if fish have periods. The Defend Pop-Punk and emo revivalist wings were unified by a band who viewed Jawbreaker, blink-182, Green Day, and Weezer as equals in shaping the sound of California pop-rock.

All of these typically warring sub-factions would deem Joyce Manor “elder statesmen” at this point, a band dignified by their longevity. Yet they already sounded over it on Joyce Manor, resignation the subtext of every song—resignation at being post-teen, post-punk, or, if you prefer, just too old for this shit. Johnson was already in his 20s when Joyce Manor formed in the South Bay suburb of Torrance, shaped by its provincial adolescent Americana: He first met bassist Matt Ebert through a local bowling league, not far from Del Amo Fashion Center, once described as “America in mall form.” They later reconnected on an Orange County Ska message board. The initial bond with guitarist Chase Knobbe, then a 16-year-old employee at Gable House Bowl, was consecrated with ill-gotten Joose in a Disneyland parking lot.




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