25 Punk Albums Turning 25 This Year That You Listened to While Your Family Ate All That Canned Food They Stockpiled for Y2K

The Y2K bug was supposed to cause the end of the world. At least it was according to your parents’ stories of failing banks, planes colliding in the sky, and your shitty old VCR rising up to strangle the whole family in their sleep. As the end of the ‘90s approached, your parents joined the growing numbers of preppers who wanted to be ready when society fell apart. They emptied their savings accounts so their cash would be safe at home. They hoarded pasta, beans, and bottled water. They stocked up on batteries and propane so your post-apocalypse household would be ready for anything. And all of it was for nothing. After years of preparation by governments and banks, the Y2K bug was mostly harmless. Most people had a laugh about how paranoid they had been about the whole thing. But your household was different.

While an army of programmers had spent the last two years of the ‘90s manually correcting millions of lines of code to avoid catastrophe, your parents chose to spend that time filling your basement with cans of Spam and Chef Boyardi. And that stuff does technically have an expiration date. These are the punk albums you listened to 25 years ago while your family worked their way through that hoard of canned food.

Green Day “Warning”

It wasn’t that bad at first. you’d always been a picky eater, and what kid doesn’t love a bland dinner of spaghetti and store-brand pasta sauce? Was it a gourmet experience from that good Italian place your dad takes your mom to every year on their anniversary? Of course not. But “Warning” was definitely not “Dookie,” and you still enjoyed it. Complex meals were a thing of the past, as was the energy level of your favorite band’s newest release.

NOFX “Pump Up the Valuum”

You moved on to NOFX, who had also departed from their earlier pop-punk-defining sound. Just like Green Day’s “Warning,” “Pump Up the Valuum” was lacking the energy you’d come to expect from a band that had been making punk music for decades. At home, your nightly ration of spaghetti was now lacking parmesan cheese. Why didn’t your family think to stock up on that green-lidded shaky cheese? That was the highlight of spaghetti night.

All “Problematic”

“Problematic” stayed true to the new millennium’s theme of punk albums that mostly appealed to long-time fans who’d buy anything their favorite band released, while not really standing out from the rest of their catalog. This was the last album All would release, and you listened to it on the last night you’d eat spaghetti until your parents paid off the credit cards they’d maxed out buying all that jarred pasta sauce. Their debt hadn’t disappeared on January 1st like they’d hoped. There was no money for food. You’d eaten all of the pasta, and played all of the All.

Rancid “Self-Titled”

While many pop-punk bands dropped calmer, often experimental music in 2000, Rancid came crashing in with 38 minutes of fast, screamed hardcore punk. They had gotten the mellower album out of their systems two years earlier, and their second self-titled album, which you’d learned to call “2000” for clarity, was hard enough to make you completely forget how much reggae Rancid had included in “Life Won’t Wait.” By now, you’d also forgotten what it was like to eat anything that hadn’t been in your basement for a year.

Millencolin “Pennybridge Pioneers”

The word “pennybridge” is a loose translation of Örebro, the Swedish city that Millencolin is from. But you didn’t know any of this because your only exposure to Millencolin was when “No Cigar” came on every time you played “Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2.” The game was a nice distraction from the drudgery of forcing down all those canned green beans that were supposed to add variety to your diet.

Bad Religion “The New America”

Bad Religion had been accused by fans of selling out years before this after leaving Epitaph Records, the independent label they founded. “The New America” was their last major-label release before founding member Brett Gurewitz returned to the band. Your dad attempted to return all of the cans to the grocery store at one point in early 2000, but the manager said he needed the original receipts to get store credit.

Ignite “A Place Called Home”

This was the Orange County hardcore group’s third album, and the most commercially successful to date. Its standout song, “Veteran,” pushed the extremist political notion that the American government should probably feed and house its war veterans, rather than watching them starve on the streets. After hearing it and being inspired, you convinced your father to donate that big box of cans in his trunk to a local food bank and lie to your mom that he’d returned them to the store.

Kid Dynamite “Shorter, Faster, Louder”

The Philadelphia punk scene was briefly home to the shouted vocals and “whoa-oh” choruses of Kid Dynamite. “Shorter, Faster, Louder” described not only the band’s second album, but their entire tenure as recording artists, as this album was released less than 16 months after their debut. One day, you examined the basement food stash and discovered that the oldest cans were already expired by significantly more than this. Was it safe to eat those?

The Mighty Mighty Bosstones “Pay Attention”

Why doesn’t “Pay Attention” ever come up when people talk about the Bosstones? Yes, it was sandwiched in time between two of their most popular releases, but it aptly showed off the group’s clever writing and unique ska-punk sound. You listened to this CD while you checked the USDA’s website on a painfully slow internet connection to find out that canned food is likely safe to eat for several years after the expiration date, so long as the cans aren’t rusty or dented. Fuck.

The Explosion “Flash Flash Flash”

The Explosion released their debut LP to critical acclaim, as well as legal troubles from their bass player’s previous label, which compelled the band to record an EP with them as part of a settlement. “Steal This” EP came out the same year, proving that it’s maybe not a great idea to give naming rights to the band you’re forcing to work with you. You started stealing food from your school’s cafeteria rather than eat SpaghettiOs from the can, which was your go-to lunch at home.

AFI “The Art of Drowning”

There isn’t a single track worth skipping on AFI’s fifth studio album to be released in as many years. The group showed zero loss of power or momentum from their hardcore roots, an accusation they’d face three years later when they released “Sing the Sorrow.” You lost a noticeable amount of weight from skipping meals after you got tired of eating the Campbell’s Chicken Noodle Soup your family microwaved every night. It was kind of your fault, though. You were the one who told them about Y2K in the first place, but you just wanted to scare them into buying a newer computer.

The Distillers “Self-Titled”

Australian-born Brody Dalle was hardly old enough to order a drink when her Los Angeles-based punk band unleashed their first album. The song “Red Carpet and Rebellion” is probably the best example available of the raspy, screamed lyrics that singer, songwriter, and lead guitarist Dalle had to offer. Back at your house, Zatarain’s Red Beans and Rice was the best meal available which required more than a can opener to prepare. This 40-minute album was long enough to play in its entirety while you cooked and ate an entire box of that New Orleans comfort dish night after night.

The Movielife “This Time Next Year”

The opening track, “I Hope You Die Soon,” made you assume this album would be another batch of shout-in-your-face hardcore, but it immediately calmed down to a more melodic, pop-punk affair. This was a needed relief, as you were starting to notice your heart quite literally pounding in your chest whenever you listened to your punk CDs. Humans were never meant to eat this much salt, and your blood pressure was dangerously high. The family doctor warned you that it was unwise to listen to punk music in your rapidly deteriorating condition.

Suicidal Tendencies “Free Your Soul…And Save My Mind”

Doctors be damned, there was a new Suicidal Tendencies album out! Maybe it was a good compromise that this wasn’t purely hardcore punk? Was thrash metal any better? Surely your doctor would approve of the noticeable funk influence on the Tendencies’ tenth album? What they would absolutely not approve of was your family’s daily intake of sodium. All those cans of Spam were going to have a permanent effect on your bodies.

Goldfinger “Stomping Ground”

Despite its goofy, Godzilla-themed album cover, this was not the brassy ska album you expected when you bought it. Goldfinger had outgrown their trombones and they wanted you to know it. “Stomping Ground” kept up the pace expected from the era’s pop-punk offerings. Their cover of “99 Red Balloons” was a fun sing-along song for a teenager who knew nothing about its WWII bombing metaphor. You counted exactly 99 unseasoned pinto beans on your plate one night after each member of your family took a scoop from the can. Fun!

Dillinger Four “Versus God”

This was a well-written and even better executed example of lyrical outrage with less of the sometimes hard-to-follow screams of their industry peers. While your music purchases that year were mostly dominated by punk veterans whose careers spanned back to the ‘80s, Dillinger Four had just warmed up with their fast, catchy brand of political punk rock. On a typical night in 2000, you warmed up the contents of the first can you could reach in the cupboard and let fate decide what you had for dinner. It didn’t matter what it was, nothing mattered anymore.

A Global Threat “Until We Die”

A fitting accompaniment to the repetitive meals you were putting down each night, “Until We Die” contained songs so similar to each other that you couldn’t tell where each track ended and the next began. You loved how fast-paced this album was, though, and thought it would have fit in with any street-punk release from the 1980s. One night, your parents revealed that they still had hundreds of boxes of MREs they’d purchased in the ‘80s during the Cold War panic. They’d always been like this, hadn’t they?

The Offspring “Conspiracy of One”

It’s hard to believe that the band that got you grounded for screaming along as that “stupid dumbshit goddamn motherfucker” line came up in “Bad Habit” a few years before this would write a song featuring Redman on the chorus and cowbell in the beat. But that actually happened in this album’s made-for-the-radio “Original Prankster.” You also got grounded once that year for trying to order a pizza with your mom’s credit card when you learned that the food stash was mostly beans at this point.

Oi Polloi “Fuaim Catha”

This was technically from 1999, but that wasn’t clear when you bought it. This Scottish anarcho-punk group was still full of rage about pretty much anything. “Fuaim Catha,” whose name means “Noise of Struggle” in Scottish Gaelic, was loudly anti-government, pro-choice, pro-earth, and for some unclear reason anti-imported-beer, there’s something in here for everybody. Did you know that the baked beans you had for breakfast the day you first heard this CD are a traditional component in a full Scottish breakfast? Check you out!

Midtown “Save the World, Lose the Girl”

This was the most emo-sounding pop-punk album you added to your collection in 2000. It’s unsurprising that lead singer Gabe Saporta, who would go on to front Cobra Starship, released the softest pop-punk album you would encounter a quarter century later when you googled “2000 punk albums list” to settle a bet about that Oi Polloi CD. The softest food you endured that same year was instant mashed potatoes from a box. How did they manage to get so much sodium into such a flavorless sludge?

Chixdiggit! “From Scene to Shining Scene”

You needed another light, pop-punk album to relax and lower your heart rate after you listened to too much Oi Polloi. “From Scene to Shining Scene” still had the fast drumming and melodic guitar elements you craved but without the red-faced screaming of the year’s harder offerings. You and your siblings screamed at your parents the night they informed you that the next month would be nothing but beans for dinner, since you had eaten every other option already.

MxPx “The Ever Passing Moment”

MxPx, the band that every radio-friendly pop-punk band in the 2000s would cite as their inspiration, wasn’t really your favorite thing to listen to. But it was always playing at your friend’s house because his overly religious parents heard they were a Christian group. He was your favorite friend to visit because Friday night was always pizza night. You got to skip one meal of beans as long as you two could keep the noise down over there in the game room.

The Living End “Roll On”

This rockabilly-influenced Australian punk group’s second album went platinum in their home country. Going platinum in Australia required 70,000 domestic album sales, compared to the 1 million sales needed in the States. The unique milestone is fair if you compare the populations of the two countries. Australia does not have any unique methods of preparing beans that could have been worked into the dinner menu at home. You checked.

Cro-Mags “Revenge”

If revenge is a dish best-served cold, then a hearty scoop of plain pinto beans would not meet the definition of “revenge”. The Cro-Mags’ “Revenge” was a welcome infusion of an ‘80s NY hardcore sound that nobody in 2000 described as being better than a bowl of cold beans, though they easily could have. This would be the Mags’ last album until 2020, so it was fitting that you listened to it while you polished off the last can of hoarded beans in your house until it became trendy to stock up on canned food again in 2020.

Zeke “Dirty Sanchez”

This album was the loudest, fastest, craziest, 21 minutes of your entire year. Zeke was the noise shrieking in your parents’ heads whenever they envisioned that angry music you listened to. You know now that you should have never searched “Dirty Sanchez” online, because the results ruined your appetite for the rest of the day. It was annoying, since that would have been your first fresh meal in a year after your family had finally opened and consumed the final can of beans the day before. But at least the year of canned food was finally over. And what were the odds that some other major event would occur in 2001 that would lead your parents into doomsday-prepper mode again? Things were looking up.

Former President Biden Excited to Start New Chapter of Destroying Homes in Palestine as a Private Citizen

WILMINGTON, Del. — Former President Joe Biden announced he is embarking on a new project designed to destroy the homes of innocent people living in Palestine, then illegally rebuilding structures for Israeli settlers, sources confirmed.

“Listen Jack, I wasn’t able to finish the job in Palestine, and that knowledge would haunt me until my dying days. I know I have more in the tank,” said Biden while pretending to shadow box and getting extremely winded. “That’s why today I’m starting Habitat for Israeli Settlers which will focus on seizing land in the West Bank, destroying the homes that are already standing, and rebuilding beautiful structures for Zionists. I’m inspired by my predecessor Jimmy Carter, he did so much for the American people, and now it’s my turn to give back to the people of Israel. They are sort of like Americans, they sure do get a lot of our tax money.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was excited about Biden’s new endeavor.

“Joe has always been a great friend to Israel. He has already promised he will bring as many privately owned bombs as he can. We are trying our best to find workarounds for this unfortunate ceasefire and if we have a former American President here then we can bomb anyone we want and say it’s for security purposes,” said Netanyahu. “It will be a great success for Biden and Israel if he is able to deliver on this beachfront property. I hope to have a home there myself someday.”

Palestinian activists immediately criticized the former president.

“We thought we were a bit safe if a Democrat was in power, but it turns out Democrats and Republicans have the same blood lust,” said Ilham Mathhar while picking through the rubble of a school she once taught at. “The only solace I take is that Mr. Biden is so old and weak I’m not sure he could swing a hammer. I’m also not sure he could hold a hammer with all the blood he has on his hands.”

At press time, Biden was seen posing with a variety of bulldozers his new organization plans to donate to Israel.

People Elon Musk Pays to Be His Friends Ask For Raise Before Agreeing to Defend Nazi Salute

WASHINGTON — The collection of white dorks that make up Elon Musk’s entourage asked for a significant raise if they are expected to publicly defend their boss from criticism following Musk’s Nazi salute at a Trump inauguration event, multiple sources confirmed.

“I’m Elon’s short ‘friend,’ he keeps me around to make himself look taller in photos. A typical day for me is waking up and liking everything Elon posted on X. Then I practice laughing in the mirror so that when we hang out I’m warmed up to laugh at everything he says and make it sound convincing,” said Eddie Menscomb, who has been on Musk’s payroll for six years. “But it’s been tough these past few months. When he jumped around on stage in Pennsylvania, I had to go on X and talk about how cool he looked and how he had a ripped six-pack. It felt dirt then, now after the Nazi salute I’m going to need a lot more money if he wants me to speak up for him. I’ve already talked with Elon’s fat friend, bald friend, and the friend with eyeballs just a little too far apart and we’ve all agreed to stick together until our demands are met. My only concern is how much leverage we have since so many people online are willing to defend him for free.”

Musk was quick to dismiss the blatant symbol of hatred he proudly did on stage, twice, as left-wing smear tactics.

“It’s so tired that everyone calls me a Nazi just because I made the exact same gesture Nazis did back when they were in power. I feel bad for these people because they just don’t get my sense of humor, if they were on my intellectual level they would see how obvious and based of a joke that was,” said Musk while taking a break from Trump events to hire someone to beat a video game for him. “The real Nazis are the people who are calling me a Nazi. I see them on X every day talking about how billionaires should be killed. It’s sad, sometimes when I’m in my spaceship I feel like a modern day Anne Frank.”

Political scientist Amelia Green does not expect this controversy to have any lasting effects on Musk.

“I’m not sure how much more clearly I can say this, but we live in Hell. The world’s richest man made an obvious overture to Nazis and mainstream media outlets are calling it ‘an awkward hand gesture’ and debating what it could have meant. The Anti-Defamation League should be sounding the alarm, but instead they seem to laugh it off and tell everyone to keep a cool head,” said Green. “I’m not even sure how we fight back at this point. We need more Luigis, that’s our only hope.”

At press time, Musk was seen trying out new facial hair in the mirror and claiming it was inspired by Michael Jordan in those Hanes commercials.

Black Metal Fan Delighted to Find This Year’s Farmers’ Almanac Predicts a Long, Cold Winter

BEDFORD, N.Y. — Local black metal fan Dennis “Bjorn” Rubenstein celebrated the news of the Farmer’s Almanac forecasting a particularly harsh winter this year, several spiked gauntlet-wearing sources report.

“When my grandpa bestowed the knowledge unto me that the unholy doctrine of the Farmers’ Almanac has prophesied a long, grueling winter ahead of us, it brought great pleasure,” Rubenstein explained. “I will spend many upcoming winter nights dwelling in my kingdom cold, which also happens to be my parent’s getaway cabin in the Catskills, writing and recording for my one-man depressive suicidal black metal project MisanGoat. Come to think of it, hopefully mom and dad remember to call the electric company to turn the lights back on before I get there. Or maybe the lack of electricity is just what I need.”

Rubenstein’s grandfather recalls the jubilant reaction of the news he broke to his grandson casually in passing.

“I’m wondering if those spiked armband things he always wears are cutting off the blood flow to his brain,” Albert Rubenstein stated. “He’s never cared about farming or crops or cows or anything like that. I only told him about what I read in the almanac because I wanted him to put down those plastic battleaxes for his Instagram photos, and get his shoveling arms ready! He kept going on about a ‘Harvest Blood Wolf Moon’ that comes every 80 years or something. I don’t know, he’s a good kid, plus I never have to worry about him hounding me to borrow my car because he never leaves the house.”

According to some experts, the forecasts told in the Farmer’s Almanac have played an important role in the genre’s subculture.

“True black metal has always been anti-Bible, and very pro-Farmer’s Almanac,” scene veteran and expert Peter Andersson explained. “The contrast between a book of lies like the Bible and a tome that grants the power of predicting the harsh weather conditions in which we in the black metal scene feed on is vast. That’s why it is so popular amongst grease-painted black metal warriors across the United States. ‘Sons of Northern Darkness’ by the band Immortal was actually a full album response to the 2002 winter prediction, and that’s their best album!”

At press time, Rubenstein became excited after learning the almanac also predicts a hefty sweet corn crop this year, despite not quite knowing what to with that information.

How I Stopped My Addictive Cigarette Habit by Spending 18 Hours a Day on Instagram

I don’t know why everyone always complains about how hard it is to quit smoking, I did it the first time no problem. All I had to do was spend every waking hour, minute, and second, staring at Instagram. Look at me now, I’m no longer bound by the chains of smoking, and am free to scroll until the end of time. Like a cigarette that doesn’t go out.

My lungs have never felt so strong, and my sense of taste and smell hasn’t been this good since I was a kid. Sure my neck always hurts from looking down, and my entire hand is one giant cramp, also my back always hurts because I don’t stand up anymore, but at least I don’t stink like cigarettes.

I’ve gained a few pounds since I stopped smoking, which is understandable. Cigarettes are an appetite suppressant, and plus I have to constantly eat junk food to fill the void in my oral fixation caused by stopping smoking. But hey: three bags of Doritos, six packs of Kit Kats, and gallons of Dr. Pepper a day is a lot better than smoking a few cigarettes.

My friends complain that they never see me anymore since I quit, but I send them dozens of memes on Instagram every hour so they should shut up. Besides, I’m too tired to go see them since I’ve replaced sleep with an endless supply of Reels tailored to my exact tastes. When you spend as much time on Instagram as I do, the algorithm really dials it and satisfies me much more than smoking does. Or my friends, for that matter.

Speaking of satisfying needs, ever scroll for an hour after sex? Not only can you stay in bed, but you don’t have to talk to the other person either. A lot of times they’re gone before you know it, which leaves me more time to feed the algorithm.

Rather than smoking while I drive like I used to, I simply crack the window and pull up Instagram while driving to and from work. It barely distracts me, and I’ve only gotten in three or four accidents since I quit last month.

So if you want to quit smoking but haven’t had success with replacements like gum, vaping, or the patch (if it even still exists), just do what I did: dedicate your life to the infinite dopamine loop known as Instagram.

Disturbed Reveal “Down with the Sickness” Also a Simon and Garfunkel Cover

CHICAGO — Nu-Metal band Disturbed revealed their 2000 hit “Down with the Sickness” was also a Simon and Garfunkel cover much like their 2015 hit “The Sound of Silence,” surprised sources reported.

“Yeah, not very many people know that a good 75% of our songs are just covers of old folk songs,” frontman David Draiman provided. “True fans of Simon and Garfunkel will recognize ‘Down with the Sickness’ from a rare collection of B-sides that they released in the late sixties as part of the ‘Bookends’ sessions, but I can understand how the casual listener may not have heard the original version. Being a native of New York City, I of course grew up on Simon and Garfunkel, and consider them one of my biggest influences. Obviously, Disturbed makes their songs better when we decide to cover them, so it makes total sense that our versions completely overshadow theirs.”

Fan Audrey Enapay was taken aback at the revelation from one of her favorite bands.

“I couldn’t believe that ‘Down with the Sickness’ was also a Simon and Garfunkel cover,” Enapay admitted. “I just listened to the original for the first time, though, and it totally tracks. I was really shocked to hear Paul Simon randomly start ranting about his mother in the middle of the song, too, especially because I’ve never heard him swear like that. The song is incredibly sonorous and touching, and Art Garfunkel’s voice sounds so beautiful when he hits the ‘oh wahh ahh ahh ahh’ at the beginning. I’m surprised so few people have heard this track. Disturbed really did the world a favor by bringing such a work of art into the mainstream.”

Singer Art Garfunkel reflected on Disturbed’s rendition of his work.

“I was initially flattered with all these covers, but I really wish Disturbed would write some of their own songs,” Garfunkel said. “I don’t think their style really lends itself to our music that well, but they’ve been insisting on covering us routinely since they formed back in the early 2000s. I discovered that I’d really had enough when I first heard their cover of ‘The Sound of Silence,’ and I hope you can understand why. I don’t think I’ve ever cringed so hard in my life. I haven’t been able to listen to the original since, which is a shame because that’s one of our most popular songs. They must be stopped before they get their hands on the ‘Bridge Over Troubled Water’ album.”

At press time, Fred Durst had revealed that “Break Stuff” was also a George Michael cover.

Nazi Saluting Elon Musk Sees Spike in Approval Rating Amongst School Shooters

WASHINGTON — Elon Musk’s double Nazi salute during today’s inauguration parade led to a tidal wave of approval amongst the nation’s potential school shooters, online forums indicated.

“It’s been hard dealing with being called an ‘unfuckable incel loser’ by my peers, even after I’ve used their class photos for target practice. But seeing Elon today celebrating the swearing-in of our Daddy in Chief with not one but two Nazi salutes just validated the entire existence for those of us who are just one manifesto away from spraying the school cafeteria with bullets,” said Jeff Wilder from his mother’s basement. “Everyone in the forum I run about final solutions for the woke mind virus agree as well. I know we have to put in some work telling the libs online it was a ‘Roman salute,’ but we all know what’s really going on. Tomorrow at school when I wear my swastika armband and a 9mm tucked into my pants, everyone better know it’s our time now.”

As of press time, Wilder accidentally shot and killed himself after attempting to perfectly mimic Musk’s Sieg Heil with a loaded handgun. Nobody is expected to attend the funeral.

Voldemort Found Hiding Under Melania’s Hat

WASHINGTON — Famed Harry Potter villain Lord Voldemort was spotted at Donald Trump’s Presidential Inauguration, hiding under First Lady Melania Trump’s hat, multiple sources confirmed.

“It was horrifying to witness a wet, wrinkly face peeking out from behind Melania’s head, and it’s something I won’t soon forget,” said BBC Journalist Terry Clarins. “I felt something was off the minute Trump started his speech. Melania was staring daggers at the back of his head, which I first assumed was due to fake tanner dripping onto his collar. But then she started hissing some sort of snake-like language under her breath and her eyes flickered red. It felt almost like she was cursing him, or like she was controlling his every move. I followed her backstage when no one was watching, where I saw her remove her hat and reveal this misshapen, humanoid growth pulsating at the back of her head. It was so grotesque I fear I may never have a solid night’s rest again. I could hear her talking with it—they were discussing murdering this teenage boy and taking over some school with dark magic. I could only hear every other word, but I definitely heard them say, ‘There are only two pronouns,’ and, ‘Build a wall.’ Also, I have no idea what it means, but there was a mention of a ‘Horcrux’ inside J.D. Vance? Didn’t sound great!”

At press time, the First Lady denied all claims of “assisting the Dark Lord with his bidding,” while donning a large Pharell hat to accommodate what she said was “just a really bad headache.”

Every Cradle of Filth Album Ranked Worst to Best

Some might say Cradle of Filth has too many albums. In fact, we’d say that. So here we go: Cradle of Filth has too many albums. Seriously. We’re fans, but there’s like 3 or 4 in here that we completely forgot existed. And prior to making this list, several albums here had gotten maybe, MAYBE, one full listen. The thing is, their good stuff is great. They have like 7 really solid albums. This is pretty incredible considering how many bands can barely put out one. Something that the band is both praised and hated for is their willingness to embrace the whole camp of it all. And in that, they can come off really cheesy, which works. It can make some of their harder to swallow stuff actually much more digestible. But let us not pretend it’s something it’s not: it’s cheese. And as we all know, some cheese is better than others.

Also, let’s be real: they were never trve kvlt black metal. They’re theater kids from Shropshirefordbagginsworthmouthfordport or wherever in England. So the whole “their early stuff is the only REAL metal they made” nonsense doesn’t work. And just a reminder, we only rank full-length OG albums and they have like a billion EPs, live albums, compilations, and re-rereleases, so there’s a good chance your favorite release isn’t on the list. Alas.

13. Thornograpy (2006)

“Thornography” was one of the band’s more obvious attempts at breaking into the mainstream. Unfortunately what makes it so obvious is that it sucks. No shade for trying to sell out. We’d do it if anyone was buying. Healthcare is expensive, and capitalism is a death cult. We all gotta pay bills. But if you’re gonna sell out and pander, please make it better than this album. It’s not like it’s terrible or anything. Honestly, none of their albums are unlistenable. But when you have 40-something releases out, you gotta give us a reason to care about specific albums. And with this one, we don’t.

Play it again: “I Am the Thorn”
Skip it: “Temptation”

12. Darkly, Darkly Venus Aversa (2010)

More like “Boring, Boring Venus Aversa.” This album sounds like a generic CoF album, and not in a particularly good (or bad?) way. It’s got some songs. It has some spooky sounds. Dani Filth screeches a bunch. It’s fine. But there is literally nobody on earth who has this listed as their favorite album of all time. Literally nobody. Also, the Tim Burton/Hot Topic album art isn’t helping.

Play it again: “The Cult of Venus Aversa”
Skip it: “Forgive Me Father (I Have Sinned)” is just bad

11. Cryptoriana – The Seductiveness of Decay (2017)

Cradle of Filth seemingly has two types of album covers: A.) Fucking sick! Or B.) I’m embarrassed to own this. So while supposedly “Cryptoriana – The Seductiveness of Decay” is probably an ok album, it is solidly in the B category, because we couldn’t get past the cover. It’s bad. Sure the art is competently done, but so was “Young Sheldon.” So no, we didn’t listen to this album. At all. The only reason it’s not last is because it seems to be a popular one of the modern era. But we’re not getting past the cover. Seriously, everything about this cover feels like the band is watching you change without your consent. And I don’t know about you, but here at Hard Times Incorporated, we won’t watch you change without your consent.

Play it again: Couldn’t tell you
Skip it: agreed

10. The Manticore and Other Horrors (2012)

Kinda forgot this one existed. Lots of people like it, but the production feels off and Dani’s vocals are even less appealing than usual. Like most of the albums on this half of the list, there’s just nothing pulling us in besides name recognition. That said, because we’re not nerds, we had never heard the word “manticore” prior to this album coming out. But the Merriam-Webster dictionary defines a manticore as “a legendary animal with the head of a man, the body of a lion, and the tail of a dragon or scorpion” and honestly that’s pretty dope.

Play it again: “The Abhorrent”
Skip it: “Frost on Her Pillow”

9. Godspeed on the Devil’s Thunder (2008)

This album is overall pretty meh. It’s pretty rare that we come back to this one at all. In fact it would be lower on this list if not for one song title that cracks our shit up, every. damn. time. “Shat out of Hell” will never not be funny. If you’re not laughing, then you’re not picturing Meat Loaf bellowing “SHAT OUT OF HELL I’LL BE GONE WHEN THE MORNING COMES!” Incredible. Otherwise the album is whatevs. And it definitely loses points for having a track called “Tragic Kingdom” despite it not being a No Doubt cover. Bogus.

Play it again: “Shat out of Hell”
Skip it: “Tragic Kingdom”

8. Nymphetimine (2004)

This album came out in between “Damnation and a Day” and “Thornography,” and it sounds like it. There are epic moments and some actual bangers, but overall it feels like the band is stretched a little thin. It almost feels like they threw everything they had at “Damnation and a Day” and then when it didn’t do well they kinda just slapped a bunch of leftover “Damnation” riffs together and tried to make things a little more palatable for the mainstream. This album teeters right on the edge of being good and bad, depending on our mood.

Play it again: “Nemesis”
Skip it: “Nymphetimine Fix”

7. The Principle of Evil Made Flesh (1994)

Starting with this album, everything from now on is a “good” CoF album. This one is kind of like the classic film “Nosferatu.” Not the new remake. The old-ass one. It’s classic and honestly pretty great. But are you gonna watch it more than once a year? Nah. That’s this album. It’s miles better than some of their more recent and boring stuff, but it still feels like nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake.

Play it again: “The Forest Whispers My Name”
Skip it: “One Final Graven Kiss”

6. Existence is Futile (2021)

From the jump, great title. And for being their newest release, “Existence is Futile” is pretty solid. It’s kinda like the AFC Bournemouth of CoF albums. It’s never gonna be number one. It’s just not gonna happen. But it’s not even close to being in last place. And honestly, when it comes down to it, this album goes pretty hard. The cover art is… trying. It’s trying its best. It’s like almost scary? The problem is unless you’re looking at it close up, it kinda looks like a giant ant in a chair. Which I guess is cool. Ants are actually pretty neat.

Play it again: “Unleash the Hellion”
Skip it: “Discourse Between a Man and His Soul”

5. Hammer of the Witches (2015)

First off, the album title rules. Easily their most metal-sounding album title. For a band that puts out a lot of cutesy, winky, spooky album titles, this one is just so sick. On top of it, this album rips. Out of all the “modern era” CoF albums, this one is easily the most re-listenable. It blends the riffs and the orchestral/keyboard shit in a way that harkens back to the heyday of the band. And speaking of riffs: they got some riffs. We can’t exactly put our finger on why the riffs riff so hard on this album, compared to their other newer stuff, but they do. They riff. Hard. Hard Riffs. The hardest. Of riff. So hard, those riffs. Hard riffs, riffing hard. I’m having a stroke.

Play it again: “Yours Immortally…”
Skip it: “Blooding the Hounds of Hell”

4. Dusk… and Her Embrace (1996)

We know. It should be number one or whatever. We never get album rankings right. Do we even listen to CoF? Etc etc etc. Look, It’s a good album and there are some all-time tracks on here, but it’s just not as good as the other ones on this list. If “The Principle of Evil Made Flesh” was “Nosferatu” then this album is Coppola’s Dracula with Keanu Reeves and Winona Ryder. It’s kinda corny, but it’s also super awesome. And you’re pretty much never not in the mood for it. It’s a solid reminder of where the band came from. And thankfully the albums ranked higher prove that the promise of this album wasn’t a fluke. Plus the last minute of the title track absolutely rips.

Play it again: “Funeral in Carpathia,” and “Dusk and Her Embrace”
Skip it: We can get down with some of their intros, but “Humana Inspired to Nightmare” is a bridge too far for us.

3. Cruelty and the Beast (1998)

This album should be number one. But the drum production is embarrassingly bad. It makes Lars’ “St. Anger” drum sound seem ahead of its time and punchy. Speaking of Metallica, the drum production on this album feels like a prank on the level of the bass on “…And Justice for All.” Like the band were intentionally being dicks, thinking it was funny, and now the album sucks. The drums on this album sound like Nick Barker played on a cardboard box. Which is wild, considering he is EASILY a top 5 metal drummer of all time. He’s rumored to have quit the band over what they did to his drums, and we don’t blame him. They recently remastered “Cruelty and the Beast,” and so obviously it sounds better now. But at Hard Times, it’s OG or go home. And the OG version of the drums on this album suck a butt. In a bad way.

Play it again: “Cruelty Brought Thee Orchids”
Skip it: “Portrait of a Dead Countess” is entirely unneeded.

2. Damnation and a Day (2003)

Here’s the thing: People hate this album, and it doesn’t make sense. This album fucking shreds. It’s over-the-top, out of control and pompous. It’s genuinely everything we love about Cradle of Filth. Is it too long? Yeah, but literally every single one of their albums is. That’s like saying you don’t like this album because Dani Filth makes a screechy sound. This album has the riffs, it has the moody vibes, it has a concept. But most importantly it has a budget. DaaD is the band’s one and only major label album, and they milked that shit for everything it’s worth. Some bands sound better when they’re recorded on a phone behind a dive bar. Cradle of Filth sounds best with the 101-piece Budapest Film Orchestra. It’s their longest album and it’s their most epic album. And were it not for how good number 1 is, it’d be the pinnacle of what this band does.

Play it again: “Presents from the Poison-Hearted,” “Hurt and Virtue,” and “The Promise of Fever”
Skip it: “Babylon A.D. (So Glad for the Madness)

1. Midian (2000)

If you’re a fan, you already know. This is it. This is the most “Cradle of Filth” Cradle of Filth album. It’s gothic and scary but also so corny in the best way. They take it so seriously and yet the whole album feels like a giant wink. But then the riffs are so killer this whole album is a paradox. It’s a heavy, heavy album that also heavily features the harpsichord setting on the Casio. Why does it work so well? Who knows. But it does, and its their best. HARD TIMES HAVE SPOKEN!

Play it again: yes.
Skip it: don’t

Stephen Miller Unwinds After Long Day by Rewatching the Horse Death Scene From “The NeverEnding Story”

WASHINGTON — White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller capped off his day by rewatching the death of horse Artax in beloved 1984 children’s fantasy film “The NeverEnding Story,” appalled sources confirmed.

“Spending my day fighting to enact policies requiring mass deportation and family separation of migrants is exhausting,” Miller said as he reclined in his loveseat and giggled at the sobs of character Atreyu. “It feels great to come home every night and watch Atreyu struggle futilely to pull his beloved horse out of the muck as he succumbs to the crippling depression pervading the Swamps of Sadness. I’m not even a big fan of the movie as a whole; I just like this and the scene depicting children bullying the character whose mother just died. There’s just something about the gut-wrenching despair enveloping Atreyu that makes me feel so warm and content.”

Wife Katie Miller reacted to her husband’s behavior.

“Look, I love misery and suffering as much as the next God-fearing American,” Miller confided as she watched her husband squeal delightedly and clap his hands before restarting the scene. “I just think he should branch out and watch something different every now and then. I work in the Department of Government Efficiency, which I know is a complete joke. Nevertheless, I’d still like to be able to relax and watch something else at the end of the day, but Stephen is always watching that stupid horse die. As much as I enjoy seeing my husband revel in a child’s anguish, it’d be nice to be able to play an episode of ‘Yellowjackets.’”

Psychologist Chike Adeoye weighed in on the situation.

“Malevolent government leaders love to revisit upsetting scenes from childhood movies in their downtime,” Adeoye offered. “I see this all the time in my case studies. Whether it’s Vladimir Putin rewatching the old lady die in the beginning of ‘Up’ or Ronald Reagan having Charlotte’s death scene in ‘Charlotte’s Web’ played on repeat during White House holiday parties, the psychopaths running the world all have a specific taste for childhood trauma. Dick Cheney had a 65-inch TV set up in the US Naval Observatory just so he could watch the funeral scene from ‘My Girl,’ so Stephen Miller’s proclivities are certainly nothing new.”

At press time, Miller was beginning his nightly bedtime routine by rereading the end of “Where the Red Fern Grows.”