It's About Time (Jonas Brothers Album)

It's About Time (Jonas Brothers Album)

It's About Time is the debut studio album from the Jonas Brothers. It was released on August 8, 2006 on Columbia Records. The album was successful in the Christian genre and was released in Christian bookstores through INO Records. Later an amended version of the album was released through Daylight Records with three songs removed and replaced by three others. A DualDisc of this version of the album was also released.

The album is currently out of print, so copies of it are rare and expensive, but both versions are available on eBay and on digital download.

One of the songs on the album, "Time for Me to Fly", was featured in the film "Aquamarine" in 2006.

"Mandy" was the first single and was released in the United States on December 27, 2005. It was written about a friend and featured on Zoey 101: Music Mix, the soundtrack for the show, Zoey 101, and featured in the TV movie, Spring Break-Up.

After Columbia Records dropped the group from their roster list, they signed with Hollywood. Hollywood received the rights to distribute the single "Year 3000" which was also released on the group's first Hollywood Records album.

The album also managed to sell 62,000 copies in the US, including all of the CD copies of the album shipped by Columbia Records.

In August 2012, the Jonas Brothers announced the vinyl re-release of the album exclusively in the 2012 gift for premium members of Team Jonas along with a digital download with each vinyl album.

Read more about It's About Time (Jonas Brothers Album):  Music Videos, Tours, 2012 Vinyl Re-release, Track Listing, Personnel

Famous quotes containing the words time and/or brothers:

    Today we all speak, if not the same tongue, the same universal language. There is no one center, and time has lost its former coherence: East and West, yesterday and tomorrow exist as a confused jumble in each one of us. Different times and different spaces are combined in a here and now that is everywhere at once.
    Octavio Paz (b. 1914)

    When we choose to be parents, we accept another human being as part of ourselves, and a large part of our emotional selves will stay with that person as long as we live. From that time on, there will be another person on this earth whose orbit around us will affect us as surely as the moon affects the tides, and affect us in some ways more deeply than anyone else can. Our children are extensions of ourselves in ways our parents are not, nor our brothers and sisters, nor our spouses.
    Fred Rogers (20th century)