it is a record.... made in the USA with a picture sleeve... Tracklisting:A1 One To One (3:41) A2 I'm The Man (4:18) A3 Beat Crazy (3:59) A4 Is She Really Going Out With Him? (3:49) A5 Don't Wanna Be Like That (4:07) A6 Got The Time (4:28) B1 On Your Radio (4:56) B2 Fools In Love (7:14) B3 Cancer (7:31) B4 Is She Really Going Out With Him? (A Cappella Version) (4:07) B5 Look Sharp! (4:17) C1 Sunday Papers (4:56) C2 Real Men (4:51) C3 Is She Really Going Out With Him? (Acoustic Version) (3:49) C4 Memphis (5:13) C5 A Slow Song (7:45) D1 Be My Number Two (2:43) D2 Breaking Us In Two (4:05) D3 It's Different For Girls (3:21) D4 You Can't Get What You Want ('Til You Know What You Want) (5:32) D5 Jumpin' Jive (2:28) D6 Steppin' Out (5:30) Of the three angry young men that emerged in the British new wave movement of the early '80s, Joe Jackson was perhaps the most idiosyncratic. Not content with being a pop songwriter, Jackson went to considerable lengths to prove himself as a composer -- often, he even seemed to have contempt for pop music itself. Appearing a few years after Elvis Costello and Graham Parker, Joe Jackson was doomed to always live in their shadow. Jackson was considerably more ambitious than Parker, rivaling Costello in his stylistic detours. After establishing himself as a gifted songwriter with a pair of edgy new wave pop records, he quickly set out to prove his eclecticism, recording album-length tributes to reggae, jump blues, traditional pop and jazz. While such diversity earned him critical praise and a cult following, it didn't result in widespread acclaim until 1982's Night and Day, which launched the jazzy hits "Steppin' Out" and "Always Something Breaking Us in Two." ...Powered by eCRATER . List your items fast and easy and manage your active items.