is an American rock trio formed in 1987.
The band has consisted of Billie Joe Armstrong (vocals, guitar), Mike Dirnt
(bass guitar, vocals), and Tré Cool (drums, percussion) for the majority of its
existence.
Green Day was originally part of the punk rock scene at 924 Gilman
Street in Berkeley, California. Its early releases for independent record label
Lookout! Records earned them a grassroots fanbase, some of whom felt alienated
when the band signed to a major label.[2]
Nevertheless, its major label debut Dookie (1994) became a breakout
success and eventually sold over 10 million copies in the U.S. alone, and 15
million copies sold worldwide.[3]
As a result, Green Day was widely credited, alongside fellow California punk
bands The Offspring and Rancid, with reviving mainstream interest in and
popularizing punk rock in the United States.[4][5]
Green Day's three follow-up albums, Insomniac, Nimrod and
Warning did not achieve the massive success of Dookie, but they were
still successful, reaching double platinum, double platinum, and gold status
respectively.[6] Green Day's 2004
rock opera American Idiot reignited the band's popularity with a younger
generation, selling five million copies in the U.S.[7]
Band history
Formation and Lookout years: 1987–1993
In 1987, friends Billie Joe Armstrong and Mike Dirnt, 15 years old at the
time, formed a band called Sweet Children. The first Sweet Children show took
place on October 17, 1987, at Rod's Hickory Pit in Vallejo, California where
Armstrong's mother was working.[1]
In 1988, Armstrong and Dirnt began working with former Isocracy drummer, John
Kiffmeyer (also known as Al Sobrante). Kiffmeyer served as both the band's
drummer and business manager, handling the booking of shows and helping the band
establish a fan base.[9]
Larry Livermore, owner of Lookout! Records, saw the band play an early show
and signed them to his label. In 1989 they recorded their first EP, 1,000
Hours. Before 1,000 Hours was released, the band dropped the name Sweet
Children, according to Livermore this was done in order to avoid confusion with
another local band Sweet Baby.[10]
The band adopted the name Green Day, allegedly due to their fondness of
marijuana.[11]
Lookout! would release Green Day's first LP, 39/Smooth in early 1990.
Green Day would record two EPs later that year: Slappy and Sweet
Children, the latter of which included some older songs they had recorded
for Minneapolis indie label Skene! Records. In 1991, Lookout! Records released
1,039/Smoothed Out Slappy Hours, a compilation of the 39/Smooth,
Slappy, and 1,000 Hours EPs. In late 1990, shortly after the
band's first nationwide tour, Sobrante left the East Bay area to attend college.[9]
The Lookouts drummer Tré Cool began filling in as a temporary replacement, and
when it became clear that Sobrante did not plan on committing to the band full
time, Tré Cool's position as Green Day's drummer became permanent. The band went
on tour for most of 1992 and 1993, and played a stretch of shows overseas in
Europe. The band's second full length album Kerplunk sold about 50,000
copies in the U.S.,[12] which was
considered quite a large amount for the independent punk scene in 1992.
Breakthrough success: 1994–1996
Kerplunk's underground success led to a wave of interest coming from
major record labels, and eventually they left Lookout! on friendly terms and
signed with Reprise Records after attracting the attention of producer Rob
Cavallo. Signing to Reprise caused many punk rock fans to regard Green Day as
sell-outs.[2]Reflecting
on the period, Armstrong told SPIN magazine in 1999, "I couldn't go back
to the punk scene, whether we were the biggest success in the world or the
biggest failure ... The only thing I could do was get on my bike and go
forward."[13] After signing with
Reprise, the band went to work on recording its major label debut, Dookie.
Released in February 1994, and recorded in 3 weeks,[14]
Dookie became a commercial success, helped by extensive MTV airplay for
the videos of the songs "Longview", "Basket Case", and "When I Come Around", all
of which reached the number one position on the Modern Rock Tracks charts. That
year, Green Day embarked on a nationwide tour with queercore band Pansy Division
as its opening act. At a September 9, 1994 concert at Boston Esplanade, mayhem
broke-out during the band's set (cut short to seven songs) and by the end of the
rampage, 100 people were injured and 45 arrested.[15]
The band also joined the lineups of both the Lollapalooza festival and Woodstock
1994, where they started an infamous mud fight. During the concert, a security
guard mistook bassist Mike Dirnt for a stage-invading fan and punched out some
of his teeth. Viewed by millions via pay-per-view television, the Woodstock 1994
performance further aided Green Day's growing publicity and recognition,[16]
and helped push its album to eventual diamond status. In 1995, Dookie won
the Grammy Award for Best Alternative Album and the band was nominated for 9 MTV
Video Music Awards including Video of the Year.[17]
In 1995, a new single for the Angus soundtrack was released, titled "J.A.R.".
The single went straight to number one on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks
chart. The song was followed by the band's new album, Insomniac, which
was released in the fall of 1995. Insomniac was a much darker and heavier
response by the band, compared to the poppier, more melodic Dookie.[16]
Insomniac opened to a warm critical reception, earning 4 out of 5 stars
from Rolling Stone, which said "In punk, the good stuff actually unfolds
and gains meaning as you listen without sacrificing any of its electric, haywire
immediacy.
And Green Day are as good as this stuff gets."[18]
Insomniac used a piece of art by Winston Smith entitled God Told Me to
Skin You Alive for its album cover. The singles released from Insomniac
were "Geek Stink Breath", "Brain Stew/Jaded", "Walking Contradiction", and
"Stuck With Me". Though the album did not approach the success of Dookie,
it still sold two million copies in the United States.[19]
Insomniac won the band award nominations for Favourite Artist, Favourite
Hard Rock Artist, and Favorite Alternative Artist at the 1996 American Music
Awards, and the video for "Walking Contradiction" got the band a Grammy
nomination for Best Video, Short Form, in addition to a Best Special Effects
nomination at the MTV Video Music Awards.[20]
After that, the band abruptly cancelled a European tour, citing exhaustion.[21]
Middle era: 1997–2002
After taking a break in 1996, Green Day began to work on a new album in 1997.
From the outset, both the band and Cavallo agreed that the album had to be
different from its previous records.[22]
The result was Nimrod, an experimental deviation from the band's standard
pop-punk brand of music. The new album was released in October 1997. It provided
a variety of music, from pop-punk, surf rock, and ska, to an acoustic ballad.
Nimrod entered the charts at number 10. The success of "Good Riddance (Time
of Your Life)" won the band an MTV Video Award for Best Alternative Video for
the song's video, which depicted people undergoing major changes in their lives
while Billie Joe Armstrong strummed his acoustic guitar.[23]
The song was also used in the second "clip show" episode of Seinfeld and on two
episodes of ER. The other singles released from Nimrod were "Nice Guys
Finish Last", "Hitchin' a Ride" and "Redundant". The band made a guest
appearance in an episode of King of the Hill entitled "The Man Who Shot
Cane Skretteberg", which aired in 1997.
In 2000, Green Day released Warning, a step further in the style that
they had hinted at with Nimrod. Critics' reviews of the album were
varied.[24] Allmusic
gave it 4.5/5 saying "Warning may not be an innovative record per se, but
it's tremendously satisfying."[25]
Rolling Stone was more critical, giving it 3/5, and saying "Warning...
invites the question: Who wants to listen to songs of faith, hope and social
commentary from what used to be snot-core's biggest-selling band?"[26]
Though it produced the hit "Minority" and a smaller hit with "Warning", some
observers were coming to the conclusion that the band was losing relevance,[24]
and a decline in popularity followed. While all of Green Day's past albums had
reached a status of at least double platinum, Warning was only certified
gold.
At the 2001 California Music Awards, Green Day won all eight awards that they
were nominated for. They won the awards for Outstanding Album (Warning),
Outstanding Punk Rock/Ska Album (Warning), Outstanding Group, Outstanding
Male Vocalist, Outstanding Bassist, Outstanding Drummer, Outstanding Songwriter
and Outstanding Artist.[27]
The release of a Greatest Hits compilation, International Superhits!,
and an assemblage of B-sides, Shenanigans, followed Warning.
International Superhits and its companion collection of music videos,
International Supervideos!, sold reasonably well, going platinum in the U.S.
Shenanigans contained some of the band's b-sides, including "Espionage"
which was featured in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me and was
nominated for a Grammy for Best Rock Instrumental Performance.
In the spring of 2002, Green Day co-headlined the Pop Disaster Tour with
Blink-182. Despite the co-headlining title, Green Day would play each show
before Blink-182, who at the time were experiencing more success. The tour was
documented on the DVD Riding In Vans With Boys.
American Idiot and renewed popularity:
2003–2006
In the summer of 2003 the band went into a studio to write and record new
material for a new album, tentatively titled Cigarettes and Valentines.[28]
After completing 20 tracks, the master tapes were stolen from the studio. The
band, understandably upset, chose not to try to re-create the stolen album, but
instead started over with a vow to be even better than before. In this same
year, Green Day collaborated with Iggy Pop on two tracks for his album Skull
Ring. And they underwent serious "band therapy," engaging in several long
talks to work out the members' differences after accusations from Dirnt and Cool
that Armstrong was "the band's Nazi"[29]
and a show-off bent on taking the limelight from the other band members.
The resulting 2004 album, American Idiot, debuted at number one on the
Billboard charts, the band's first ever album to top the chart, backed by the
success of the album's first single, "American Idiot." The album was billed as a
"punk rock opera" which follows the journey of the fictitious "Jesus of
Suburbia".[30] American Idiot
won the 2005 Grammy for "Best Rock Album" and the band swept the 2005 MTV music
awards, winning a total of seven of the eight awards they were nominated for,
including the coveted Viewer's Choice Award.[31]
Through 2005, the band toured in support of the album with about 150 dates —
the longest tour in its career — visiting Japan, Australia, South America and
the UK, where they drew a crowd of 130,000 people over a span of two days. While
touring for American Idiot, they filmed and recorded the two concerts at
the Milton Keynes National Bowl in England, which was voted 'The Best Show On
Earth' in a Kerrang! Magazine Poll.
These recordings were released as a live CD and DVD called Bullet in a
Bible on November 15, 2005. This CD/DVD featured hits from American Idiot
as well as a few songs from all its previous albums, except "Kerplunk" and
"1,039/Smoothed Out Slappy Hours". The DVD featured behind-the-scenes footage of
the band, and showed how the band prepared to put on the show. The final shows
of its 2005 world tour were in Sydney, Australia, and Melbourne, Australia, on
December 14 and 17 respectively. On January 10, 2006 the band was awarded with a
People's Choice Award for favorite group.
On August 1, 2005, Green Day announced that that it had rescinded the master
rights to its pre-Dookie material from Lookout! Records, citing a
continuing breach of contract regarding unpaid royalties, a complaint shared
with other Lookout! bands.[32] The
pre-Dookie material, which remained out of print for about a year, was
reissued by the band's current label, Reprise, on January 9, 2007.[33]
In 2006, Green Day won the Grammy Award for Record of the Year for "Boulevard
of Broken Dreams"[34] which spent
16 weeks at the number one position of Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks, a
record it shared along with Red Hot Chili Peppers' "Scar Tissue" and Staind's
"It's Been Awhile," (the record has been since been beaten by Foo Fighters' 2007
hit "The Pretender" which reigned at the top spot for 18 weeks).
Foxboro Hot Tubs and eighth studio album:
2007-present
Green Day recently released a new album under the name Foxboro Hot Tubs
entitled Stop Drop and Roll!!!. In an interview with Kerrang!,
Billie Joe revealed that 2008 would "be a fair estimate of the release date of
their new untitled eighth studio album."[35]
In a recent interview with Carson Daly, Garbage lead singer Shirley Manson
revealed that Butch Vig would be producing Green Day's forthcoming album.[36]
In October 2008 Green Day returned to the studios with Butch Vig, to start
recording the new studio album. Two videos showing the band in the studio were
posted on Youtube.[37][38]
In the tour section of the band's official website, the message "World Tour
coming soon!" is shown.[39] In the
December ninth issue of Alternative Press, in-depth details about the new
album were released. According to the interview, Green Day are recording in the
same studio as they did for American Idiot, Ocean Way Recording in
Hollywood, California. "This album is more... religious", and is influenced by
Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, and The Beatles, to name a few.[40]
Green Day's new album is expected to be released in April 2009, and Billie Joe
Armstrong said when he was being interviewed for Kerrang!'s readers poll,
that it will be more power pop than punk rock.[41]
In mid-January, the Green Day Authority fan site published a rumour that
recording for the new album had finished.[42]
Music style and influences
Green Day's sound is often compared to first wave punk bands such as the
Ramones, The Clash, Sex Pistols, The Jam, and the Buzzcocks.[43][21]
The majority of their song catalog is composed of distorted guitar, fast, manic
drums, and relatively high-treble bass. Most of their songs are fast-paced and
under the average song length of four minutes (4:00), yet some of their songs
run on for much longer - Jesus of Suburbia is approximately nine minutes long.
Billie Joe Armstrong has mentioned that some of his biggest influences are
seminal alternative rock bands Hüsker Dü and The Replacements, and that their
influence is particularly noted in the band's chord changes in songs.[21]
In fact, Green Day has covered Hüsker Dü's "Don't Want to Know If You Are
Lonely" as a b-side for the "Warning" single, and the character "Mr. Whirly" in
their song "Misery" is a reference to the Replacements song of the same name.[44]
Among other influences, Green Day have also cited Queen,[45]
and proto-punks The Who. Armstrong's lyrics commonly describe alienation,
("Jesus of Suburbia", "Boulevard of Broken Dreams", "Road to Acceptance",
"Disappearing Boy", "Castaway") hysteria ("Basket Case", "Panic Song"), girls
("She", "80" "Only of You","Maria" "She's a Rebel"), growing up (Longview and
Welcome to Paradise), and the effects of doing drugs ("Geek Stink Breath",
"Green Day"). The Ramones had similar lyrical themes such as hysteria
("Anxiety", "Psycho Therapy"), alienation ("Outsider", "Something To Believe
In"), girls ("I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend", "Sheena Is a Punk Rocker"), and drugs
("Now I Wanna Sniff Some Glue", "Chinese Rocks"). Green Day has covered Ramones
songs several times, including recording "Outsider" for the tribute album
We're a Happy Family, and performing "Blitzkrieg Bop" and "Teenage Lobotomy"
when the Ramones were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2002.
Criticism and controversy
Beginning with the release of Dookie, and the subsequent explosion of
MTV airplay it received, Green Day has received considerable criticism from
those who see the punk genre as a social movement independent of corporate
sponsorship. With the release of American Idiot and the subsequent draw
of many new fans, much of this criticism has been revived.
One of the more contentious issues is genre labelling. In reaction to both
the style of music and the background of the band, many fans and musicians have
taken heavy objection to the usage of the term "punk" when applied to Green Day.
This is evidenced by the following comments issued by John Lydon (Johnny
Rotten), former front man of both the 1970s punk band the Sex Pistols and the
1980s post-punk, Public Image Ltd.:
Brandon Flowers of The Killers went on record in 2007 claiming that Green
Day's politically driven concept album American Idiot displays
"calculated Anti-Americanism." He explained that he has problems with the album
content itself and also the fact that the band's recent live DVD, Bullet in a
Bible, was filmed in England. The taping of the concert, featured on
Bullet in a Bible, shows thousands of Europeans singing along to "American
Idiot." Stating that he felt Green Day's DVD is a bit of a stunt, he said, "I
just thought it was really cheap. To go to a place like England or Germany and
sing that song - those kids aren't taking it the same way that he meant it. And
he (Billie Joe Armstrong) knew it."[47]
More recently, Oasis guitarist Noel Gallagher has accused the band of ripping
off his song "Wonderwall" for "Boulevard of Broken Dreams".[48]
Related projects
Ever since 1991, some members of the band have branched out past Green Day
and have started other projects with other musicians. Notable related projects
of Green Day include Billie Joe Armstrong's Pinhead Gunpowder (which also
features Green Day's live backup guitarist Jason White), The Frustrators in
which Mike Dirnt plays bass, and The Network, in which all three members of
Green Day play under fake stage names.[49]
Billie Joe Armstrong has also confirmed that the main members of Green Day are
in the band Foxboro Hot Tubs. A Foxboro Hot Tubs album titled Stop, Drop and
Roll was released on 2008-05-20.[50]
Charity projects that the band have been involved with include the
collaboration with U2 ("The Saints Are Coming") to help raise money for musical
instruments lost in Hurricane Katrina, and teaming with the Natural Resources
Defense Council for the "Move America Beyond Oil" campaign and other
environmental concerns.
In September 2006, Green Day teamed up with U2 and producer Rick Rubin to
record a cover of the song "The Saints Are Coming", originally recorded by The
Skids, with an accompanying video. The song is to benefit Music Rising, an
organization to help raise money for musicians' instruments lost during
Hurricane Katrina, and to bring awareness on the eve of the one year anniversary
of the disaster.[51]
In December 2006, Green Day and NRDC opened a web site in partnership to
raise awareness on America's dependency on oil.[52][53]
(See related projects.)
Green Day released a cover of the John Lennon song "Working Class Hero", that
was featured on the album Instant Karma: The Amnesty International Campaign
to Save Darfur. The band performed the song on the season finale of
American Idol. The song was nominated for a Grammy in 2008, but lost to The
White Stripes' "Icky Thump".
That summer, the band appeared in a cameo role in The Simpsons Movie,
where they perform the show's theme song. Their version was released as a single
on July 24, 2007.
Band members
- Current
- Billie Joe Armstrong – lead vocals, lead & rhythm guitars (1987–present)
- Mike Dirnt – bass, backing vocals (1987–present)
- Tré Cool – drums, percussion, backing vocals (1990–present)
with
- Jason Freese – keyboards, piano, acoustic guitar, trombone, saxophone,
accordion, backing vocals (2003–present)
- Jason White – lead & rhythm guitars, backing vocals (1999–present)
- Mike Pelino – rhythm guitars, backing vocals (2004–present)[54]
- Ronnie Blake – trumpet, timpani, percussion, backing vocals
(2004–present)
- Former
- John Kiffmeyer – drums, percussion, backing vocals (1987–1990)
- Former touring musicians
- Gabrial McNair – trombone, tenor saxophone (1999–2001)
- Garth Schultz – trombone, trumpet (1997–1999)
- Kurt Lohmiller – trumpet, timpani, percussion, vocals (1999–2004)
- Session
- Gabrial McNair – trombone on Nimrod (1997)
- Petra Haden – violin on Nimrod (1997)
- Rob Cavallo – piano on American Idiot (2004)
- Stephen Bradley – trumpet on Warning (2000) and Nimrod
(1997)
Discography
- 1990: 39/Smooth
- 1992: Kerplunk
- 1994: Dookie
- 1995: Insomniac
- 1997: Nimrod
- 2000: Warning
- 2004: American Idiot