Spiritual Machines - Track Listing

Track Listing

All songs written and composed by Raine Maida.

No. Title Length
1. "R.K. Intro" 0:06
2. "Right Behind You (Mafia)" 3:14
3. "R.K. 2029" 0:15
4. "In Repair" 3:58
5. "Life" 4:23
6. "Middle of Yesterday" 3:54
7. "Are You Sad?" 5:08
8. "R.K. 2029 (Part 2)" 0:12
9. "Made to Heal" 3:47
10. "R.K. 1949–97" 0:44
11. "Everyone's a Junkie" 3:38
12. "R.K. on Death" 0:39
13. "All My Friends" 3:37
14. "If You Believe" 3:35
15. "The Wonderful Future" 20:00
  • "The Wonderful Future" ends at 4:30, and is followed by roughly 12 minutes of silence, after which a hidden conversation between R.K. and Molly is heard.
Japan bonus tracks
No. Title Length
16. "4am" 4:17
17. "Clumsy" 4:29
18. "Car Crash" 5:07

Studio outtakes
Several known outtakes from the Spiritual Machines sessions were demos carried over from the Happiness... sessions, such as "Ordinary Day" and "Sleeping In". "Ordinary" is seen being played during demo sessions for Happiness... on the band's 1998 holiday fan club video. The lyrics were published in the Pied Piper's Union Christmas 1998 newsletter. A poor quality recording of the latter is available on YouTube as well as in trading circles. Other song names such as "La Bra" and "A Waste of Violence" (or The Weight of Violence) were revealed on web casts of the recording sessions or seen on original artwork by Oli Goldsmith. A narrative outtake by Ray Kurzweil titled "R.K. Jack" was included as an intro to the track "Life" on A Decade.

In an August 18, 2000 article, it was revealed at that point that 8 songs were complete with four more being recorded in the past five weeks. This was before heading to New York to record "In Repair" and "Are You Sad", among others. Turner even noted "We've got so much music, we could even put another (album) out."

Read more about this topic:  Spiritual Machines

Famous quotes containing the word track:

    Our achievements speak for themselves. What we have to keep track of are our failures, discouragements, and doubts. We tend to forget the past difficulties, the many false starts, and the painful groping. We see our past achievements as the end result of a clean forward thrust, and our present difficulties as signs of decline and decay.
    Eric Hoffer (1902–1983)