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The Way Things Work (album)

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The Way Things Work
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 13, 2005 (mail order),
September 20, 2005 (street)
RecordedAugust 23, 2003
GenreExperimental rock, improvised music
Length54:09[1]
LabelSmog Veil[2]
ProducerJoe Baiza, Dan McGuire
Unknown Instructors chronology
The Way Things Work
(2005)
The Master's Voice
(2006)

The Way Things Work is the debut album by American improvisational band Unknown Instructors, featuring Mike Watt (Minutemen, fIREHOSE, The Stooges, Dos, Banyan), George Hurley (Minutemen, Firehose, Red Krayola), Joe Baiza (Saccharine Trust, Universal Congress Of), Jack Brewer (Saccharine Trust), and poet Dan McGuire.[2]

The album was created and recorded on the spot in one day[3] in 2003 at Karma Studio in San Pedro, California. Watt would record his third solo album The Secondman's Middle Stand in the same studio five months later. McGuire credited the Saccharine Trust album Worldbroken as an influence saying he wanted to use it "as a template for that first album."[3] The album has been compared to Captain Beefheart's classic Trout Mask Replica.[4]

One notable track, Punk (is Whatever We Made It to Be) features interpolated lyrics from several songs from Minutemen's album Double Nickels on the Dime.

Track listing

[edit]
  1. "I'll Show You Everything"
  2. "Where You Find It"
  3. "Punk (is Whatever We Made It to Be)"
  4. "Something Eternal"
  5. "Starving Artists"
  6. "The New Bluesman"
  7. "Punch Out *The Layoff* Gratuity"
  8. "Walk with Me"
  9. "Creature Comforts"
  10. "An Evening In Hell"
  11. "Scansion"
  12. "Adam's Apple"
  13. "Turf Songs"
  14. "I Think"
  15. "Lost and Found"

All songs written and composed by Joe Baiza, George Hurley, Dan McGuire and Mike Watt, ©2005 Prestidigitation Music (BMI), except "Punk (is Whatever We Made It to Be)", composed by Joe Baiza, D. Boon, Jack Brewer, Chuck Dukowski, George Hurley and Mike Watt, © 1984 tHUNDERsPIELS (BMI).

Personnel

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Unknown Instructors - The Way Things Work". AllMusic. Retrieved October 16, 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Unknown Instructors". OC Weekly. October 13, 2005. Retrieved October 16, 2019.
  3. ^ a b Huddle, Mark (September 7, 2007). "Interview: Joe Baiza and Dan McGuire of Unknown Instructors". Verbicide Magazine. Retrieved March 15, 2019.
  4. ^ Villano, Mark (March 29, 2006). "Unknown Instructors - The Way Things Work". Rebel Noise. Retrieved October 29, 2019.