- Hello, Mannequin
- Disloyalist Party (Mutiny/Misery)
- The Works of Unknowns
- The Singing Arc
- Song for All Time
- The Birth of the Telegram, 1814
- Who Are Friends?
- Wolf in the Bend
- From Mount Chorus
- The Phonograph Plays, Part and Parcel
- Nikola Tesla
- Post Calendar
- I Am a Pioneer
- A Page of Life
The songs remain melodic and poetic, with somewhat clearer subjects and an overall darker mood. The legacy theme is more prominent on this album—especially in tracks like "The Works of Unknowns," "The Singing Arc," and "Post Calendar"—with Martin repeatedly searching for purpose and remembrance of a life's work. He even uses "Nikola Tesla" as an example of an oft-forgotten scientist who made brilliant contributions to the study of electricity and radio transmission. Elsewhere, in "Disloyalist Party," he blasts critics who question his beliefs and motives—"Self-righteous views and quotes/Deny the one you claim to be your hope."
Like previous Joy Electric albums, the average listener will be unsure of what to glean from all of this since no clear conclusions are drawn. Is Martin trying to justify his unconventional artistic path these past 15 years? Songs like "Who Are Friends?" and "Song for All Time" suggest that he rightly understands love and relationships are the most important things in life, not fame and success. Still,