If youāre of a certain age and mindset, you will freely acknowledge that Green Day is the band that got you into punk. Unless youāre one of the revisionist assholes who saw the āLongviewā video, went down the punk rock rabbit hole, and within 6 months claimed you had never listened to anything more commercial than Agnostic Front, because you werenāt into sellouts. Hereās the thing though, when Green Day first formed (as Sweet Children in 1986), the idea that a melodic punk band was a route to fame and fortune was absurd because⦠well because Green Day hadnāt happened yet. Occasionally success really does reward merit, and as weāll see below, Green Dayās discography has generally warranted it.
13. ”Uno! (2012)
The only truly disappointing Green Day record. 37 songs were recorded in the sessions for āĀ”Uno!,ā āĀ”Dos!,ā and āĀ”TrĆ©!,ā and released within three months of each other as a piecemeal triple album, and frankly, it sounds like it. Lyrics, chord progressions, and themes are recycled from other Green Day songs. Potentially promising tracks like āLet Yourself Goā and āKill the DJā are exposed as woefully underwritten, with lyrics that are repetitive or cringy or both. Itās been said about every triple album ever released, but there is a killer single album hiding within āĀ”Uno!,ā āĀ”Dos!,ā and āĀ”TrĆ©!,ā and probably a great double album with the benefit of a little lyrical editing. But stopping at āĀ”Uno!,ā or even āĀ”Uno!ā and āĀ”Dos!,ā would have deprived fans of the hilarity of the gringo-Spanish pun where the third albumās name sort of syncs up with the drummerās stage name. And thatās the price of comedy, folks.
Play it again: āStay the Nightā
Skip it: āTroublemakerā
12. ”Dos! (2012)
What to say about āĀ”Dos!?ā The lowered expectations brought on by āĀ”Uno!,ā released just seven weeks prior, certainly helped, but this installment is more fun and has a certain charm that helps it stand on its own. It has faux British Invasion garage rock vibes, with the band going as far as to call it āthe second Foxboro Hot Tubs albumā (more on that below). The missteps in the weaker tracks still keep āĀ”Dos!ā from being ranked any higher, with lazy lyricism dragging down musically solid entries such as āStop When the Red Lights Flashā and āFuck Timeā (yes, thatās a real song title). Itās a bit of a turd by Green Dayās standards, but the rest of us should be so lucky as to drop a Ā”dos! this palatable.
Play it again: āStray Heartā
Skip it: āMakeout Partyā
Honorable Mention: Stop Drop and Roll!!! (Foxboro Hot Tubs) (2008)
Foxboro Hot Tubs has been called a side project, but since it includes all of Green Day, plus touring members Jason White, Jason Freese, and Kevin Preston, itās really more of an alter ego, where Green Day dives into their ā60s garage rock influences. āStop Drop and Roll!!!ā doesnāt break any new musical ground, but itās not supposed to. It plays like a half-hour rockānāroll party where the boys are audibly having a good time. Standout tracks āMother Maryā and āThe Pedestrianā could easily hold their own on a proper Green Day album, and the record succeeds as a cohesive whole. We donāt rank non-canonical albums here at The Hard Times, but if we did, this is where āStop Drop and Roll!!!ā would land. Did I just break the rules?
Play it again: āMother Maryā
Skip it: āRed Tideā
11. Father of All Motherfuckers (2020)
The āFather of Allā¦ā cover depicts the agitprop heart-as-hand-grenade artwork from āAmerican Idiot,ā defaced to include the new album title and a vomiting cartoon unicorn. The message seems to be that nobody needs another serious political sermon right nowāthis worldās on fire, so letās dance on the ashes. And as it was released weeks before Covid shut down the planet, maybe they were onto something. Stylistically, the album sees the band again revisit the garage feel employed on āĀ”Dos!ā and āStop Drop and Roll!!!,ā with a few glammy touches, and Billie Joe singing complete songs in a falsetto. Itās not their best, itās not their worst, and itās not very long, clocking in at 10 songs and 26 minutes total, which is maybe the best part of it all.
Play it again: āTake the Money and Crawlā
Skip it: āI Was a Teenage Teenagerā
Honorable Mention: Money Money 2020 (The Network) (2003)
In 2003, Billie Joe offered assistance to a cryptic foreign new wave band called The Network, and ended up being contractually forced to release their debut album, āMoney Money 2020,ā on his label, Adeline Records. The Network repaid the favor by antagonizing Green Day in the press and hiding behind masks and pseudonyms to conceal their true identities. The feud between the bands persists to this day. Musically, āMoney Money 2020ā serves up a determined slice of latter day new wave/synthpunk, bolstered by tracks like āRoshamboā, āTransistors Gone Wildā, and the title track. Some might ask why a ranking of Green Day records would include an album by any other band, let alone one embroiled in a decades-long feud with Green Day. Itās a fair question. And not one that weāre going to answer.
Play it again: āRoshamboā
Skip it: āRetoā
10. ”Tré! (2012)
The ill-fated āĀ”Uno!/Ā”Dos!/Ā”TrĆ©!ā trilogy concludes a trajectory where each installment slightly improves on its predecessor, meaning that by āĀ”TrĆ©!,ā whichever listeners have actually stuck around get a decent album. āĀ”TrĆ©!ā sounds like the record that logically would have come out after āWarning,ā if the guys hadnāt veered into concept albums and formalwear. The cringy missteps are fewer and further between than on āĀ”Uno!ā and āĀ”Dos!,ā and the strong entries are fresher and more heartfelt. āBrutal Loveā sees Green Day try on Sam Cooke-style crooning with success, āAmandaā hints at early Beatles, and ā99 Revolutionsā rages against the 1%. But more importantly, we finally get to the big reveal, that the title is not Ā”Tres! but Ā”TrĆ©!, with a leering TrĆ© Cool on the album cover! You suckers never saw it coming.
Play it again: ā99 Revolutionsā
Skip it: āSex, Drugs, & Violenceā
Honorable Mention: Money Money 2020 Part II: We Told Ya So! (The Network) (2020)
You canāt say they didnāt warn us. The Network gave 17 years advance notice of dark times to come when they issued āMoney Money 2020ā way back in 2003. When the titular year itself greeted us with deadly disease, heightened police brutality, and a wannabe-dictator gameshow grifter trying to reclaim the White House, The Network emerged from the shadows to gloat. Containing 25 songs and released just 8 months into Covid-19 isolation, āMoney Money 2020 Part II: We Told Ya So!ā ranks with the best of real-time commentaries on life during pandemic. References to flat earthers, autocratic con artists, herd immunity, hydroxychloroquine, apocalypse, Elon Musk, and anti-maskers abound. Why do we continue to include bands that arenāt Green Day on this list? Blame the Deep State.
Play it again: āIvankkka is a Naziā
Skip it: āAmnesia Vagabondā
9. 21st Century Breakdown (2009)
Green Day shifted their paradigm when they released the critical and commercial smash āAmerican Idiotā in 2004. Then they followed with ā21st Century Breakdown,ā a second consecutive politically-charged rock opera, which largely feels like āAmerican Idiot Part 2.ā Not surprisingly, five songs from ā21CBā were included in the Broadway stage adaptation of āAmerican Idiot.ā ā21st Century Breakdownā features protagonists named Christian and Gloria, and while it pales slightly in direct comparison to its predecessor, itās a strong entry in the discography when judged on its own merit. Had the two albums come out in reverse order, they likely both would have been hailed as triumphal leaps forward. As it stands, Iām not sure what Christianās motivation is, I donāt know what drives Gloria, and I have no idea why Will Ferrell performed āEast Jesus Nowhereā with the band on SNL in 2009, but Iām here for it all.
Play it again: āKnow Your Enemyā
Skip it: āChristianās Infernoā
8. Revolution Radio (2016)
āRevolution Radioā may sound like the name of a Clash B-side, but itās actually a Green Day record, and considering itās the 12th studio album by a band approaching three decades together, āRevRadā still manages to check the right boxes. āBang Bang,ā a gun culture commentary, is as aggressive as anything the band ever released, āStill Breathingā was a mid-tempo radio hit, and āForever Nowā is a bombastic multi-part number with nods to Queen and the Who. The albumās release shortly preceded a World Series win by the Chicago Cubs, a revolutionary feat in itself that was apparently on Billie Joeās radar. This reviewer knows, because he was in the audience for an Aragon Ballroom album release show the day after the Cubs won the pennant, when Mr. Armstrong declared, āI guess you finally killed that fucking goat!ā* *No goats were harmed in the making of this list.
Play it again: āBang Bangā
Skip it: āToo Dumb to Dieā
7. 39/Smooth (1990)
Itās Green Dayās first full length and it slays. You likely know it as ā1,039 Smoothed Out Slappy Hours,ā the CD version that combined the ā39/Smoothā LP, the āSlappyā EP, and the ā1,000 Hoursā EP. āAt the Library,ā āGoing to Pasalacqua,ā āThe Judgeās Daughter,ā and āPaper Lanternsā are absolute classics. That the album came out when Green Day was still on Lookout! Records only adds to the enjoyment. Can we just take this opportunity to give it up for Lookout! in the ā90s? Operation Ivy, Screeching Weasel, The Queers, Rancid, The Groovie Ghoulies, Pinhead Gunpowder, Crimpshrine, Fifteen, Mr. T Experience, Riverdales, and on and on. Those days were full of hope and excitement, because the music inspired, and also because we were 30 years younger.
Play it again: āGoing to Pasalacquaā
Skip it: ā1,000 Hoursā
6. Kerplunk (1991)
Another Lookout! album, and another banger. TrĆ© Cool had just joined, so this is the first album by the classic Green Day lineup. Billie Joe has called āKerplunkā his favorite Green Day record; many early fans will agree. For all intents and purposes, this is the album that gave the world Green Day. Sales were huge for an album on a small punk label, leading to a major label frenzy and eventual superstardom. āKerplunkā includes the original version of āWelcome to Paradiseā and if you want to sound cool and edgy, you tell people itās the superior version. āKerplunkāsā insert also includes the diary entry of Laurie L., a teenage girl who chopped up her parents so she could go on the road with Green Day. Itās probably fictional, but if your daughter ever asks if she can tour with her favorite band, itās best not to take any chances.
Play it again: ā2000 Light Years Awayā
Skip it: āStrangelandā
5. Warning (2000)
“Warning” could have been the dreaded āmatureā album, where a bandās effort to show theyāve grown up ditches everything people enjoyed about them in the first place. Thereās a little less speed and distortion, and a bit of continued sound experimentation as seen on āNimrod,ā making the album feel more power pop than punk rock, but the whole damn thing just works. Parallel universe Green Day followed āWarningā with the reportedly stolen (and never released) āCigarettes & Valentines,ā put out more albums that sounded vaguely like āĀ”TrĆ©!,ā and faded back into a happy relative obscurity. But in our universe, Billie Joeās CD changer flipped from the Replacements to Queen, and his wheels started turning.
Play it again: āChurch on Sundayā
Skip it: āJackassā
4. Nimrod (1997)
When a band breaks through, their next album usually aims to show that they can ādo it againā – but the album after that tries to prove they can ādo something else.ā Results can be spectacular (think āLondon Callingā), or less so (I dunno, āChocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water,ā maybe?). āNimrodā sees Green Day at that crossroads when their underground days were behind them, and their initial taste of mainstream success was fading. But with fewer expectations and constraints, they threw everything at the wall, and most of it stuck. āNimrodā features ska-instrumentation (āKing for a Dayā), instro-surf-rock (āLast Ride Inā), variations on hardcore (āTake Backā and āPlatypusā), an acoustic smash (āGood Riddanceā) and plenty of songs in standard Green Day territory. 25+ years later, the album is rightly viewed as one of their classics.
Play it again: āThe Grouchā
Skip it: āHaushinkaā
3. Insomniac (1995)
In 1995, Green Day faced cries of āselloutā and the task of following up a massively successful major label debut. They answered by releasing a video for the lead single āGeek Stink Breathā that featured actual footage of a meth addict undergoing a dental extraction. Sonically, āInsomniacā echos āDookieā with crunchy guitars and hooks galore, yet at the same time skews darker and more pessimistic. The touches of humor from previous albums (like āDominated Love Slaveā and āAll By Myselfā) are gone, replaced with direct references to scene ostracization (see ā86ā) and maladjustment (āArmatage Shanksā). The result is another Green Day essential, and did we mention you get to watch a tweaker get his tooth yanked? Who knew lack of sleep could be so invigorating?
Play it again: āBrain Stew/Jadedā (best experienced together)
Skip it: āTight Wad Hillā
2. American Idiot (2004)
Letās flashback to the summer of ā04. You went to see āDodgeballā on opening night and tried to decide if metrosexual was your vibe. As for Green Day, they had been famous for a decade, but each album since āDookieā had sold less than the one before. There really wasnāt a blueprint for reclaiming commercial success. So when we heard that they planned a āpunk rock opera,ā complete with a story arc, multiple 9-minute songs, and characters named St. Jimmy and Jesus of Suburbia, we snickered and thought, āWell, good for them, they gave it a good run.ā But instead of a tedious study in niche self-amusement, they delivered a timely critique on post-9/11, Bush-era USA dealing with a skewed version of patriotism set against the Iraq War and so-called War on Terror. āAmerican Idiotā landed hit after hit, ushering in a new era for the band as well as the music-listening public. A record of this caliber lands at #1 on almost any other bandās discography.
Play it again: āJesus of Suburbiaā
Skip it: āWake Me Up When September Endsā (it was a huge hit, but if Iām being honest about which song I typically skip on this albumā¦)
1. Dookie (1994)
And here we are. Valhalla. But for this album, your humble author may not have been playing music semi-semi-professionally, writing for The Hard Times, or involved in punk in any fashion all these decades later. And for that, a big thank you to Mr. Armstrong, Mr. Dirnt, and Mr. Cool. āDookieā has insanely catchy hooks, as well as authentic punk edge from high school dropout misfits who left themselves few other career options. It has radio-ready earworms that deal with boredom, masturbation, mental illness, drug use, questioning of oneās sexual orientation, homicidal mania, and good old-fashioned boy-meets-girl love. Itās named after a slang term for shit, and features a cover depicting cartoon monkeys and dogs flinging turds off buildings on Berkeleyās Telegraph Avenue. It may not be the hit album the record industry wanted us to have in 1994, but itās the hit album we needed. And itās damn near perfect.
Play it again: the whole thing, but start with āSheā – itās less weathered by decades of radio overplay
Skip it: the 1:16 of CD silence after āF.O.D.ā ends, so that you can get to hidden track āAll By Myselfā faster