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==Reception==
==Reception==
nutsack im a tumor im a tumor im a tumer im a tumor duh nuh nuh im a tumor.

==Album notes==
==Album notes==
*The track "2000 Light Years Away" was later remixed by ''Dookie'' producer [[Rob Cavallo]] and mixer [[Jerry Finn]] and released on ''[[Jerky Boys: The Movie]]'' [[Jerky Boys: The Movie (soundtrack album)|soundtrack]] in 1995. Also, a live version of this song appeared on the [[UK]] "[[Basket Case (song)|Basket Case]]" single.
*The track "2000 Light Years Away" was later remixed by ''Dookie'' producer [[Rob Cavallo]] and mixer [[Jerry Finn]] and released on ''[[Jerky Boys: The Movie]]'' [[Jerky Boys: The Movie (soundtrack album)|soundtrack]] in 1995. Also, a live version of this song appeared on the [[UK]] "[[Basket Case (song)|Basket Case]]" single.

Revision as of 17:12, 23 September 2009

Untitled

Kerplunk! is the second full-length album by punk rock band Green Day. It was released on January 17, 1992 on Lookout! Records. Kerplunk! was their last release on an independent label and was also the first album to feature their current band lineup, with Tré Cool on drums. The album went on to become one of the bestselling independent albums ever, selling 10,000 units on the day of its release.[citation needed] Major labels took notice of Kerplunk!'s phenomenal popularity and many approached the band. Green Day realized that they had outgrown their record distribution capacity with Lookout! and eventually signed with Reprise Records. In December 2007, Blender magazine ranked Kerplunk! #47 on their list, "The 100 Greatest Indie-Rock Albums Ever".

The album officially includes only 12 tracks, but the versions released on CD and cassette also include the 4 tracks from the Sweet Children EP. One of those 4 tracks is a cover of The Who's "My Generation". Another notable track on the album is "Welcome to Paradise", which the band would re-record for their next album Dookie.

As of November 2006, Kerplunk! has sold 699,001 units in the US [1], and over 4 million worldwide.

In August 2005, Green Day pulled this album, as well as all of their other material released through the label, from Lookout! due to unpaid royalties.[2] It was reissued on CD by Reprise Records, who Green Day has been with since leaving Lookout!, on January 9, 2007.[3] Note that in Europe, the album was released by Epitaph Europe, and has remained in print. It was reissued on vinyl on March 24, 2009 by Reprise Records and includes a reissue of the Sweet Children EP.[4]

Reception

nutsack im a tumor im a tumor im a tumer im a tumor duh nuh nuh im a tumor.

Album notes

  • The track "2000 Light Years Away" was later remixed by Dookie producer Rob Cavallo and mixer Jerry Finn and released on Jerky Boys: The Movie soundtrack in 1995. Also, a live version of this song appeared on the UK "Basket Case" single.
  • The title of the song "Who Wrote Holden Caulfield?" refers to Holden Caulfield, the protagonist of J.D. Salinger's 1951 novel The Catcher in the Rye, which is one of Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong's favorite books. The American punk rock band Screeching Weasel's album How To Make Enemies And Irritate People features a song called "I Wrote Holden Caulfield", on which Mike Dirnt plays bass.
  • The booklet states that the album is "In Memory of Gravy...". Gravy was the name of bassist Mike Dirnt's pet cat that died.
  • The "My Adventure with Green Day" story in the Kerplunk! booklet says it was written by "Laurie L." The story is completely fictional and the name Laurie L is actually a tribute to Larry Livermore founder of Lookout! records. The author originally wrote the story for a punk fanzine, Tales Of Blarg!
  • The album booklet thanks Adrienne Nesser, who Billie Joe eventually married.
  • The booklet thanks Jason Relva, whose death would later inspire Mike Dirnt to write "J.A.R. (Jason Andrew Relva)".
  • On the album's booklet, the band thanks both John Kiffmeyer and Al Sobrante, even though they are actually the same person (Al Sobrante is Kiffmeyer's nickname).
  • The album was the 46th album released by Lookout! Records.
  • The album thanks "Brain Stew". Brain Stew is the nickname of James Washburn, a friend of the band; Brain Stew would later become a track released on the 1995 album Insomniac.
  • Christie Road is a road in Martinez, California, slightly northeast of Berkeley. It mainly parallels the tracks of the BNSF Railway, hence the train references in the song.
  • On the song "My Generation", there features a sample from the film Blue Velvet: "Heineken? fuck that shit!", said by the primary antagonist Frank Booth.
  • "Dominated Love Slave" is Green Day's first song to be written by drummer Tre Cool and the first song which he sings and plays guitar on.
  • "Words I Might Have Ate" is their first song not to feature any electric guitars.

Track listing

No.TitleWriterLength
1."2000 Light Years Away"Billie Joe Armstrong2:24
2."One for the Razorbacks"B. J. Armstrong2:30
3."Welcome to Paradise"B. J. Armstrong3:30
4."Christie Road"B. J. Armstrong3:33
5."Private Ale"B. J. Armstrong2:26
6."Dominated Love Slave"Tré Cool1:42
7."One of My Lies"B. J. Armstrong2:19
8."80"B. J. Armstrong3:39
9."Android"B. J. Armstrong3:00
10."No One Knows"B. J. Armstrong3:39
11."Who Wrote Holden Caulfield?"B. J. Armstrong2:44
12."Words I Might Have Ate"B. J. Armstrong2:32
Total length:33:58
Bonus Tracks
No.TitleWriterLength
13."Sweet Children"B. J. Armstrong, Mike Dirnt1:41
14."Best Thing in Town"B. J. Armstrong2:03
15."Strangeland"B. J. Armstrong2:08
16."My Generation"Pete Townshend2:19
Total length:42:09

Personnel

References