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Kerplunk (stylized as Kerplunk!) [nb 1] is the second studio album by the American rock band Green Day, released on December 17, 1991, by Lookout! Records.Following a US tour promoting their debut studio album 39/Smooth (1990), drummer John Kiffmeyer left to attend college and was replaced by Tré Cool, formerly of the Lookouts.
Green Day [b] 1,000 Hours (EP) 1989 "16" Green Day [b] 39/Smooth: 1990 "1981" Billie Joe Armstrong Green Day Saviors: 2024 "2000 Light Years Away" Billie Joe Armstrong Green Day Jesse Michaels Pete Rypins Dave E.C. Henwood Kerplunk: 1991 "21 Guns" Billie Joe Armstrong Green Day 21st Century Breakdown: 2009 "21st Century Breakdown" Billie Joe ...
Green Day released their first two studio albums, 1,039/Smoothed Out Slappy Hours (1991) (consisting of the original 39/Smooth as well as their first two EPs 1,000 Hours and Slappy) and Kerplunk (1991), through the independent label Lookout! Records before signing to major label Reprise Records.
Green Day’s follow-up to Dookie isn’t a classic on that level, but the appeal of Insomniac is similar, and it feels like you’re listening to the band play harder and louder than they have ...
Concert poster, dated March 16, 1990, at 924 Gilman Street for Lookout!-signed punk bands, including Green Day, Neurosis, Samiam, and the Mr. T Experience.. In 1987, friends and guitarists Billie Joe Armstrong and Mike Dirnt, 15 years old at the time, along with bassist Sean Hughes and drummer Raj Punjabi, a fellow student from Pinole Valley High School, formed band "Blood Rage", the name ...
"Welcome to Paradise" is a song by the American rock band Green Day. It first appeared as the third track on the band's second studio album, Kerplunk (1991). It was re-recorded and rereleased as the fifth track on the band's third studio album, Dookie (1994), and released as the album's third single. Its physical release was exclusive to the ...
Musically, the material on Cigarettes and Valentines was hard, "quick-tempoed punk" songs in the vein of Green Day's Kerplunk (1991), and Insomniac (1995). [6] This sound would have contrasted the group's previous two studio albums, Nimrod (1997), and Warning (2000), which displayed more rock, and folk punk genres, respectively.
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