Not What You Expected

Not What You Expected is the sixth studio album from American pop punk band Mest, their first album in eight years with only vocalist Tony Lovato returning. Originally slated for released in April 2012, the album was continuously pushed back until September 24, 2013. A week before the release, the band announced via their official Facebook account and website that they would be giving the album away for free, one song per week, through their official website.[1] However, internationally in Japan, the album was released in full.

Not What You Expected
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 25, 2013
GenrePop punk, punk rock
LabelWave Master (Japan); self-released (USA)
Mest chronology
Photographs
(2005)
Not What You Expected
(2013)
Broken Down
(2014)
Singles from Not What You Expected
  1. "Almost"
    Released: February 14, 2012
  2. "Radio (Something to Believe)"
    Released: June 4, 2013

Singles

The album's first single, "Almost", which had an accompanying music video, was released on February 14, 2012. The second single, "Radio (Something to Believe)," was released over a year later on June 4, 2013, which has also been made into a music video.[2] Although not an official single, "One Life," was released for free during the summer of 2012 to hold fans over until the official release.

Track listing

  1. "Radio (Something to Believe)" (featuring Jeremy McKinnon) - 4:55
  2. "Goodbyes" - 3:31
  3. "Almost" - 3:28
  4. "One Life" - 3:36
  5. "M.D.M.A." - 5:17
  6. "The Past" - 3:19
  7. "Not This Again" - 3:55
  8. "Can't Let Go" - 3:01
  9. "Day Turns Tonight" - 3:46
  10. "Good Die Young" - 3:59
  11. "Blinded Bye"

[3]

gollark: It's actually worse than *just* that though, because of course.
gollark: There are some other !!FUN!! issues here which I think organizations like the FSF have spent some time considering. Consider something like Android. Android is in fact open source, and the GPL obligates companies to release the source code to modified kernels and such; in theory, you can download the Android repos and device-specific ones, compile it, and flash it to your device. How cool and good™!Unfortunately, it doesn't actually work this way. Not only is Android a horrible multiple-tens-of-gigabytes monolith which takes ages to compile (due to the monolithic system image design), but for "security" some devices won't actually let you unlock the bootloader and flash your image.
gollark: The big one *now* is SaaS, where you don't get the software *at all* but remote access to some on their servers.
gollark: I think this is a reasonable way to do copyright in general; some (much shorter than now!) length where you get exclusivity, which can be extended somewhat if you give the copyright office the source to release at the end of this perioid.
gollark: This isn't really "repair"y, inasmuch as you can't fix it if it breaks unless you happen to be really good at reverse engineering.

References

  1. "FREE MEST RECORD "Not What You Expected"". MEST. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  2. "Video Premiere: Mest, "Radio (Something To Believe)"". Archived from the original on September 28, 2013. Retrieved September 26, 2013.
  3. "MEST : Not What You Expected - 音楽". Retrieved 21 December 2014.
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