Take Off Your Pants and Jacket

| Blink-182

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87.5%
  • Reviews Counted:8

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Take Off Your Pants and Jacket

Take Off Your Pants and Jacket is the fifth studio album by American rock band Blink-182, released on June 12, 2001 by MCA Records. The band had spent much of the previous year traveling and supporting their previous album Enema of the State (1999), which launched their mainstream career. The album's title is a tongue-in-cheek pun on male masturbation ("take off your pants and jack it"), and its cover art has icons for each member of the trio: an airplane ("take off"), a pair of pants, and a jacket. It is the band's final release through MCA. The album was recorded over three months at Signature Sound in San Diego with producer Jerry Finn. During the sessions, MCA executives pressured the band to retain the sound that helped their previous album sell millions. As such, Take Off Your Pants and Jacket continues the pop punk tone that blink-182 had honed and made famous, albeit with a heavier post-hardcore sound inspired by bands such as Fugazi and Refused. Regarding its lyrical content, it has been referred to as a concept album chronicling adolescence, with songs dedicated to first dates, fighting authority, and teenage parties. Due to differing opinions on direction, the trio worked in opposition to one another for the first time, and the sessions sometimes became contentious. The album had near-immediate success, becoming the first punk rock record to debut at number one on the US Billboard 200 and achieving double platinum certification in May 2002. It produced three hit singles — "The Rock Show", "First Date", and "Stay Together for the Kids" — that were top-ten hits on modern rock charts. Critical impressions of the album were generally positive, commending its expansion on teenage themes, although others viewed this as its weakness. To support the album, the band co-headlined the Pop Disaster Tour with Green Day. Take Off Your Pants and Jacket has sold over 14 million copies worldwide.-"Wikipedia"

Critic Reviews

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  • Rolling Stone

    On Take Off Your Pants, they continue their roll: happy songs about girls they like, sad songs about girls who don’t like them, serious songs about divorce, dysfunction and the end of the world, plus one really funny song 

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  • Slant Magazine

    What makes Blink most appealing is that they are having so much fun while everyone else in rock is whiny or angry. The fun they’re having, however, is no different from the kind of fun that made them huge with “Enema of the State.” The last line of the album, “This is the best time we ever had,” must certainly be true. Whether it’s true for Blink fans will depend on their tolerance for more of the same.  

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  • Sputnik Music

    At the end of the day, this album is just good pop-punk, plain and simple. It’s catchy, it’s fun, and it’s full of hooks. Recently, it’s gotten to the point where pop-punk has been overtaken by the faux-emo look and sound, and it’s nice to go back to when the genre was good.  

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  • All Music

    Take Off Your Pants 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. 

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  • Drowned in Sound

    Fans of the band not expecting much will probably think it’s a decent record, if you was expecting the sugar-rush you got when you first heard ‘EOTS’ then forget it. It’s Good, just not good enough.  

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  • The Young Folks

    Take Off Your Pants and Jacket is the transitional record, something that doesn’t entirely work but something that needed to be made. It’s not a bad record, but certainly the awkward middle child in their discography. Better yet, it’s a lesson for all pop punk bands to know your own age as much as your audience. 

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  • Mind Equals Blown

    The album wasn’t all fun and games though, as glimpses of the maturity that the band would fully come to realize shone through in “Stay Together for the Kids.” Arguably the best song on the album, the band utilizes soft-loud transitions to great effect, with a foot stomping, arena-filling chorus sung by DeLonge. 

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  • U Discovered Music

    Their awkward brand of humorous, high-school delinquency, coupled with an ability to pen infectious, uplifting anthems, resulted in the band ruling the pop-punk phenomenon at the beginning of the 00s, and their fourth album, Take Off Your Pants And Jacket, showed that they weren’t stepping down any time soon.  

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