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Quantity Is Job 1

Quantity Is Job 1
FIF-Quantity Is Job 1.jpg
EP by Five Iron Frenzy
Released November 3, 1998
Recorded 1998
Genre Christian ska, ska punk
Length 40:31
Label 5 Minute Walk
Producer Frank Tate
Five Iron Frenzy chronology
Brad Is Dead
(1998)
Quantity Is Job 1
(1998)
Proof That the Youth Are Revolting
(1999)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Tollbooth (not rated)
Jesus Freak Hideout 3.5/5 stars
HM Magazine (not rated)
Teenink (not rated)
Cross Rhythms (not rated)
Mosh-Pit (not rated)
Exit Zine 4.5/5 stars
Real Magazine (not rated)
Church Musician Today (not rated)
Christian Music (not rated)
CCM (not rated)
7ball (not rated)

Quantity Is Job 1 is an EP by the band Five Iron Frenzy. It was released November 3, 1998 on Five Minute Walk.

Quantity is Job 1 was Five Iron Frenzy's first release distributed by EMI, and most of it was written in a two-week period before being recorded. Unlisted on the package are tracks nine through seventeen, which include both "These Are Not My Pants (The Rock Opera)" and a studio outtake. Musically, the album captures the band's slapstick humor style in a way that almost equates to a live show. Douglas TenNapel created the artwork. Despite being billed as an EP, the album is roughly the same length as the band's other LPs.

Lyrical themes addressed include unconditional love ("Dandelions"), the events in Denver after Super Bowl XXXII ("Get Your Riot Gear"), the constant rumors of the band's demise ("The Untimely Death of Brad"). The album also contains a cover of ELOs "Sweet Talkin' Woman." Perhaps the most cryptic song is the opener "My Evil Plan to Save the World", which according to Reese Roper is about "all of us that have ever thought that our own small minds could come up with a plan greater and more perfect than God's."

"All That Is Good", which (according to one reviewer) is a reprise from 1 Thessalonians 5:21, was written in response to the 1998 Ska Against Racism tour. In it the band questions the effectiveness of their faith and ministry on those around them.

Quantity also contains examples of Five Irons' "edgy sarcastic humor." The eight tracks of the "Pants" sequence is a multi-genre "rock opera" about a pair of pants which has no apparent owner. For the sequence, which was completely improvised in the studio, each band member was assigned a style. Styles include rap, reggae, and country western, among others. The sequence, according to Cross Rhythms, "actually IS more ridiculous than it sounds!", and has been called in other places "brilliance personified".


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