What's Mine Is Yours

What's Mine Is Yours is the first installment in The Emo Diaries series of compilation albums, released September 16, 1997 by Deep Elm Records. The series title was originally going to be The Indie Rock Diaries, but this was ruled out when Jimmy Eat World and Samiam, who were both signed to major record labels, were selected for the album.[1] The Emo Diaries was chosen because The Emotional Diaries was too long to fit on the album cover.[1] As with future installments, the label had an open submissions policy for bands to submit material for the compilation, and as a result the music does not all fit within the emo style.[2][3] As with the rest of the series, What's Mine Is Yours features mostly unsigned bands contributing songs that were previously unreleased.[1][3]

What's Mine Is Yours
Compilation album by
ReleasedSeptember 16, 1997
GenreEmo, indie rock
Length48:15
LabelDeep Elm (DER-362)
The Emo Diaries chronology
What's Mine Is Yours
(1997)
A Million Miles Away
(1998)

Track listing

No.TitleArtistLength
1."Opener"Jimmy Eat World4:59
2."Sunday Brown & Green"Camber3:25
3."The Last in 4000"Race Car Riot4:17
4."Stupid Maybe Still"Lazycain3:01
5."Zone"Pave the Rocket4:05
6."Ordinary Life" (from You Are Freaking Me Out)Samiam4:31
7."Beginner Swimmer"Rain Still Falls2:37
8."Hialeah"Jejune4:28
9."I Want to Know"Triple Fast Action3:08
10."Turn It On"Red Level3:28
11."Kings Do Not Have Watches"Only Airplanes Count4:59
12."Friend X"Pohgoh5:16
Total length:48:15
gollark: Currently, if someone gets unauthorized access to my computer, at worst they will have access to a bunch of personal information and passwords, but I can change the passwords and wipe the computer, although it would be somewhat tedious.
gollark: OLEDs still use polarizers except the shiny new Samsung stuff.
gollark: E-ink is kind of bad and expensive, same for CRTs, and micro-LED isn't there yet.
gollark: But then I can't use a computer.
gollark: Also also radio waves.

References

  1. Greenwald, Andy (2003). Nothing Feels Good: Punk Rock, Teenagers, and Emo. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 119. ISBN 0-312-30863-9.
  2. Greenwald, pp. 118-119.
  3. "The Emo Diaries". Deep Elm Records. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
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