Fall Out Boy's Evening Out with Your Girlfriend

Fall Out Boy's Evening Out with Your Girlfriend is the debut mini-LP and the second extended play (EP) by American rock band Fall Out Boy. Recorded in two days[6] around February to September 2002[7] on a low budget, the rushed schedule left the band discontent and ceasing to call it their debut album. Fall Out Boy's Evening Out with Your Girlfriend was released in 2003 through Uprising Records against the band's wishes. In 2005, Uprising released a remastered reissue as Evening Out with Your Girlfriend, without the band's involvement, following the band's very successful major label debut From Under the Cork Tree. It eventually sold over 127,000 copies in the United States by August 2008, according to Billboard.[8][9] The photograph on the cover of this album was shot by Adeet Deshmukh in Chicago's Pick Me Up Café located at 3408 N. Clark Street.[10] The girl who is pictured on the cover is a waitress at said café, and her name is Lavinia, as noted in the booklet of the album.

Fall Out Boy's Evening Out with Your Girlfriend
Demo album by
ReleasedMarch 25, 2003
RecordedFebruary–September 2002[1]
Genre
Length29:39
LabelUprising
Producer
  • Jared Logan
  • Fall Out Boy
Fall Out Boy chronology
Project Rocket / Fall Out Boy
(2002)
Fall Out Boy's Evening Out with Your Girlfriend
(2003)
Take This to Your Grave
(2003)
Remastered release cover
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[3]
Punktastic[4]
Rolling Stone[5]

Background and development

Fall Out Boy formed near Chicago, Illinois in 2001.[11] The band debuted with a self-released demo in the same year and released Project Rocket / Fall Out Boy, a split EP with Project Rocket, in 2002, through Uprising Records. The lyrics to the whole album are written by lead vocalist Patrick Stump. On later albums, bassist Pete Wentz wrote the majority of the band's lyrics. The album is also the only Fall Out Boy album not featuring Andy Hurley on drums. Evening Out was not actually recorded with five members, contrary to what is shown in the album art. The members at that time were Patrick Stump (lead vocals), Pete Wentz (bass guitar), Joe Trohman (guitar) and Mike Pareskuwicz (drums). Although incorrect, Pareskuwicz and guitarist TJ Racine have been said to be two Chicago musicians the band recruited in their early days, who left after Evening Out was released before Stump picked up guitar and Hurley joined as the full-time drummer to form the band's current lineup. Stump explained that "TJ Racine was already out of the band by the time [Fall Out Boy] tracked [(recorded) the album]" and that TJ "wasn't in the band for that long". Pareskuwicz did indeed handle the drumming duties for the album. After the release, he left the band and Andy Hurley would join as the current drummer and record the follow-up album Take This to Your Grave (2003). Trohman played almost all the guitars on it, with Stump playing a small part on "Moving Pictures". The entire album was recorded in two days and the rushed nature left the band dissatisfied and did not want it released. Stump also stated "I don't consider it a real album." The band was not involved in the 2005 re-release and did not receive royalties for either versions, with Patrick Stump stating "both were a scam on us".[12]

Songs from Evening Out were played by the band in their early shows to a small local audience, before they received mainstream attention. When the band reached mainstream popularity, they did not often mention this album.

"Calm Before the Storm" was later re-recorded with additions to the arrangement, including backing vocals (screaming) from bassist Pete Wentz, for the follow-up album Take This to Your Grave later that year. "Pretty in Punk" is a play on the title of the John Hughes film Pretty in Pink, and "Parker Lewis Can't Lose (But I'm Gunna Give It My Best Shot)" is a reference to the television show Parker Lewis Can't Lose. Different recordings of "Switchblades and Infidelity", "Growing Up" and "Moving Pictures" were released on the band's Project Rocket / Fall Out Boy split EP.

A part of the song "Growing Up" is sung by William Beckett of The Academy Is... in Fall Out Boy's later song "What a Catch, Donnie", from their 2008 release Folie à Deux. A new version of the song was later recorded and included as the last track on the band's 2009 greatest hits album, Believers Never Die – Greatest Hits.

Reception

Chart performance

Fall Out Boy's debut album has had no mainstream attention, and it has not reached any charts. Also, no singles were released from this album. The original release is not featured on the official Fall Out Boy website, rather the remastered edition is. Many reviewers, including Allmusic, consider Take This to Your Grave as Fall Out Boy's first album, possibly due to Evening Out with Your Girlfriend being a mini-LP and not a full-length release, or unknown. Also, in the lyric booklet of Believers Never Die – Greatest Hits, the band start off with the making of Take This to Your Grave, completely omitting Evening Out with Your Girlfriend. However, the track "Growing Up" is included as the last track Believers Never Die – Greatest Hits as a "rarity".

As a whole, this first collection of material from the band had little to no following as a result of a combination of a lack of notoriety, limited advertising, and poor production. The release of this collection would be better regarded as an LP than a debut album and was not featured by any of Fall Out Boy’s official channels until the remastered editions of one song was released a couple of years later on their real debut album Take This to Your Grave. This track was "Calm Before the Storm" and was reissued with additions to the vocals and a new drummer. Another track from here, "Growing Up", was later included in the greatest hits album Believers Never Die as a one-off.

Track listing

All tracks are written by Fall Out Boy.

No.TitleLength
1."Honorable Mention"3:25
2."Calm Before the Storm"4:41
3."Switchblades and Infidelity"3:13
4."Pretty in Punk"3:37
5."Growing Up"2:56
6."The World's Not Waiting (For Five Tired Boys in a Broken Down Van)"2:38
7."Short, Fast, and Loud"2:16
8."Moving Pictures"3:33
9."Parker Lewis Can't Lose (But I'm Gunna Give It My Best Shot)"3:23
Total length:29:39

Notes

Personnel

References

  1. "Fall Out Boy's Evening Out With Your Girlfriend". Fall Out Boy - Fall Out Boy's Evening Out With Your Girlfriend (CD) at Discogs. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  2. Andrew (August 31, 2003). "Review: Fall Out Boy "Fall Out Boy's Evening Out With Your Girlfriend" CD". Aversionline. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  3. Loftus, Johnny. Fall Out Boy's Evening Out with Your Girlfriend at AllMusic
  4. Paul (December 27, 2005). "Punktastic CD Reviews: Fall Out Boy - Evening Out With Your Girlfriend". Punktastic. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  5. Giberti, Jamie (29 September 2011). "Fall Out Boy: Album Guide Rolling Stones". Rock Sins. Archived from the original on 5 February 2013. Retrieved 24 December 2011.
  6. Downey, Ryan (October 2013). "Chicago Is So 10 Years Ago". Alternative Press. Alternative Press Magazine, Inc. (303): 68. ISSN 1065-1667.
  7. "Fall Out Boy's Evening Out With Your Girlfriend". Fall Out Boy - Fall Out Boy's Evening Out With Your Girlfriend (CD) at Discogs. Retrieved 16 July 2015.
  8. Harding, Cortney (September 13, 2008). ""Infinity" And Beyond". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. 120 (37): 20–23. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
  9. Billboard Back Issue Volume 120, Issue 37 Billboard. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
  10. Montgomery, James (2008-01-24). "Pete Wentz: The Boy With the Thorn in His Side". MTV News. Archived from the original on 2007-03-15. Retrieved 2010-11-27.
  11. Wiederhorn, Jon. "You Hear It First - Fall Out Boy". MTV News. Viacom. Archived from the original on February 18, 2009. Retrieved October 1, 2011.
  12. "Patrick Stump". Twitter. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
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