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American Idiot is the seventh studio album by the American rock band Green Day, released on September 21, 2004, by Reprise Records. As with their previous four albums, it was produced by Rob Cavallo in collaboration with the group.
With the song running for 9 minutes and 8 seconds, it is Green Day's second longest song (with the band's longest song being fellow American Idiot song "Homecoming", which runs for 9 minutes and 18 seconds) and the group's longest song to be released as a single. The studio version of the song was considered unfriendly for radio, so it was cut ...
"American Idiot" is a protest song [2] by the American rock band Green Day. The first single released from the album American Idiot, the song received positive reviews by critics and was nominated for four 2005 Grammy Awards: Record of the Year, Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal, Best Rock Song, and Best Music Video.
“American Idiot” ushered in a new generation of loyal listeners — in some situations, the children of the initial fans who account for one of the over 10 million sales of their 1994 album ...
Green Day is celebrating a huge milestone!. To honor the 20th anniversary of their revolutionary punk album, American Idiot, the band is releasing a deluxe edition of the record that includes ...
For their sixth album, Green Day initially hired producer Scott Litt, who guided R.E.M.’s mid-career pivot towards expansive, acoustic-driven albums like Out of Time and Automatic for the People ...
Green Day American Idiot: 2004 "Shoplifter" Billie Joe Armstrong Green Day American Idiot: 2004 Bonus track "Sick of Me" Billie Joe Armstrong Green Day "Hitchin' a Ride" 1997 Appears on Shenanigans " The Simpsons Theme" Danny Elfman: Non-album single [f] 2007 "Somewhere Now" Billie Joe Armstrong Green Day Revolution Radio: 2016 "Song of the ...
American Idiot: The Original Broadway Cast Recording is an album by the cast of American Idiot and Green Day. In September 2009, American Idiot began its run in the Berkeley Repertory Theatre, California. [1] After two extensions, it was transferred to the St. James Theatre on Broadway.