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Dookie

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Dookie
a cartoon picture of dogs throwing bombs and feces on people and buildings and a huge mushroom cloud explosion with the band's name on top of the cloud. A blimp on the left in the sky says "Bad Year" and on the right, a man sits on a cloud with a harp in hand.
Studio albumby
ReleasedFebruary 1, 1994(1994-02-01)
RecordedSeptember–October 1993
Studio
Genre
Length39:35
LabelReprise
Producer
Green Daychronology
Kerplunk
(1991)
Dookie
(1994)
Insomniac
(1995)
SinglesfromDookie
  1. "Longview"
    Released: February 1, 1994
  2. "Basket Case"
    Released: August 1, 1994
  3. "Welcome to Paradise"
    Released: October 17, 1994
  4. "When I Come Around"
    Released: December 1994

Dookieis the third studio album by the AmericanrockbandGreen Day,released on February 1, 1994, byReprise Records.The band'smajor labeldebut and first collaboration with producerRob Cavallo,it was recorded in late summer 1993 atFantasy StudiosinBerkeley, California.Written mostly by frontman and guitaristBillie Joe Armstrong,the album is largely based on his personal experiences and includes themes such as boredom, anxiety, relationships, and sexuality. It was promoted with four singles: "Longview","Basket Case",a re-recorded version of"Welcome to Paradise"(which originally appeared on the band's second studio album, 1991'sKerplunk), and "When I Come Around".

After several years ofgrunge's dominance in popular music,Dookiebrought a livelier, more melodic rock sound to the mainstream and propelled Green Day to worldwide fame. Considered one of the defining albums of the 1990s and ofpunk rockin general, it was also pivotal in solidifying the genre's mainstream popularity. Its influence continued into the new millennium and beyond, being cited as an inspiration by manypunkandpop-punkbands, as well as artists from other genres.

Dookiereceived critical acclaim upon its release, although some early fans accused the band of beingselloutsfor leaving its independent label (Lookout! Records) and embracing a more polished sound. The record won aGrammy AwardforBest Alternative Albumat the37th Annual Grammy Awardsin 1995. It was a worldwide success, peaking at number two on theBillboard200in the United States and reaching top ten positions in several other countries.Dookiewas later certifiedDiamondby theRecording Industry Association of America(RIAA). It has sold over 20 million copies worldwide, making it the band's best-selling album and one of thebest-selling albums of all time.It has been labeled by critics and journalists as one of the greatest albums of the 1990s and one of the greatest punk rock and pop-punk albums of all time.Rolling StoneplacedDookieon all four iterations of its "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time"list,[1]and at number 1 on its "The 50 Greatest Pop-Punk Albums" list in 2017.[2]In 2024, the album was selected for preservation in the United StatesNational Recording Registryby theLibrary of Congressas being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[3]

Background[edit]

The exterior of924 Gilman Streetin West Berkeley. Green Day played the venue until they were banned in September 1993 for signing with a major label.

With the success in the independent world of the band's first two albums,39/Smooth(1990) andKerplunk(1991), which sold 30,000 units each,[4][5]a number of major record labels became interested in Green Day.[6]Among those labels wereSony,Warner Bros.,GeffenandInterscope.[4][5]Representatives of these labels attempted to entice the band to sign by inviting them for meals to discuss a deal, with one manager even inviting the group toDisneyland.[7]The band declined these advances; Armstrong believed that the labels were more than likely looking for something that resembled agrungeband, namely "second- and third-rateNirvanasandSoundgardens",[8]and they did not want to conform to a label's vision. That changed when they met producer andA&RrepresentativeRob CavalloofReprise,a subsidiary of Warner Bros.[5][9]The band playedBeatlescovers for him for 40 minutes, then Cavallo picked up his own guitar and jammed with them.[9][10]They were impressed byhis workwith fellow Californian bandThe Muffs,and later remarked that Cavallo "was the only person we could really talk to and connect with".[7]

Eventually, the band left theirindependent record label,Lookout! Records,on friendly terms. They signed a five-album deal withReprisein April 1993. The deal secured Cavallo as the producer of the first record and allowed the band to retain the rights to its albums on Lookout!.[11][12][9]Signing to a major label caused many of Green Day's original fans to label themsell-outs,including the influential punk fanzineMaximumrocknroll[9][10]and the independent music club924 Gilman Street.[13][14]After Green Day's September 3 gig at 924 Gilman Street,[15]the venue banned the group from entering or playing.[7][16]Reflecting back on the period, lead vocalistBillie Joe ArmstrongtoldSpinmagazine 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."[17]The group later returned in 2015 to play a benefit concert.[18]

Recording[edit]

Fantasy StudiosinBerkeley, California,where most ofDookiewas recorded

Following the band's last Gilman Street performance, Green Daydemoedthe songs "She","Sassafras Roots "," Pulling Teeth "and" F.O.D. "on Armstrong's four-tracktape recorderand sent it to Cavallo. After listening to it, Cavallo sensed that "[he] had stumbled on something big."[6][8]However, he recognized that the band members were struggling to play their best; he reasoned that they were anxious because the most time they had previously spent recording an album was three days while recordingKerplunk.To lighten the mood, he invited them to a Mexican restaurant and bar down the street fromFantasy Studios,even though drummerTré Coolwas not of legal drinking age at the time.[19]Armstrong confirmed the band's anxiety in an interview years later, describing the group feeling "like little kids in a candy store" and fearing that the band would lose money on work being scrapped by the label for not meeting standards. Despite this, they focused on making the most of the new production resources at their disposal; unlike their previous albums where the band had to rush to complete them to save money, the band took their time to perfect the quality of their output. Armstrong noted that he learned "how to dial in good sounds, get the best guitartones.I was able to take a little time doing vocals. "[8]

Recording took place over the course of three weeks at Fantasy, and the album was mixed twice by Cavallo and then-rookie producerJerry Finn.[7][19]Though the band took their time to make a quality product as a whole, Armstrong's vocals were still recorded very quickly; he recorded about 16 or 17 songs in two days, most of them in a single take.[20][21]Armstrong said the band at first "wanted it to sound really dry, the same way theSex Pistolsrecordor the earlyBlack Sabbathrecords sounded ",[22]but the band found the result of this approach to be an unsatisfactory original mix. Cavallo agreed, and it was remixed atDevonshire Sound StudiosinNorth Hollywood, Los Angeles.[23]During the remixing process, the band took to Music Grinder Studio in Los Angeles to re-record the tracks "Chump" and "Longview" as the original recordings had been "plagued by an inordinate amount oftape hiss".[23]Armstrong later said of their studio experience, "Everything was already written, all we had to do was play it."[7][22]Among the material recorded but not included on the album was "Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)",which would later be re-recorded for the band's 1997 albumNimrodand become a hit in its own right.[24]The band also recorded new versions of the songs "Welcome to Paradise","2000 Light Years Away "[23]and "Christie Rd." from their second albumKerplunkand "409 in your Coffeemaker" from their second EPSlappy,though only "Welcome to Paradise" would make it onto the final album.[25]

Writing and composition[edit]

Much ofDookie's content was written by Armstrong, except "Emenius Sleepus", which was written by bassistMike Dirnt,and the hidden track, "All by Myself", which was written by drummerTré Cool.The album touched upon various experiences of the band members and included subjects such asanxietyandpanic attacks,masturbation,sexual orientation,boredom,mass murder,divorce,domestic abuse,and ex-girlfriends.[7]PopMatterssummarized the album's theme as "a record that speaks of the frustrations, anxieties, and apathy of young people".[26]Stylistically, the album has been categorized primarily aspunk rock,[27][28][29]but also aspop-punk[26][30][31]and as a "power poptake "onskate punk.[32]Influences fromthe Ramonesand the Sex Pistols were noted in Armstrong's guitar technique throughout the album; he recorded the album almost entirely with hisFernandesStratocaster, which he named "Blue".[31]

Songs 1–7[edit]

Dookieopens with "Burnout", a "speedy, antsy rocker" centered around a central character's feelings of general apathy toward life.[26]Armstrong wrote the song "Having a Blast" when he was in Cleveland in June 1992.[33]The song revolves around a mentally ill character who plans to use explosives to kill himself and others. This was not regarded as a serious issue at the time, as the social climate could allow the song to be viewed as "mere cathartic fantasy", but later incidents such as the 1999Columbine High School massacrehave made the song the "most uncomfortable track" on the album.[34]On "Chump", Armstrong takes the perspective of someone who shows prejudice, insulting another person without actually knowing them. At the end of the song, it is revealed that the disliked person in question matches Armstrong's description of himself.[35]"Chump" is also the first of three songs that allude to "Amanda", a former girlfriend of Armstrong's.[22]The album's first single, "Longview",had a signature bass line that bassist Dirnt wrote while under the influence ofLSD.[36]In an interview withGuitar Worldin 2002, Armstrong described the character in the song as based on himself when he lived inRodeo, California:"There was nothing to do there, and it was a real boring place."[37]To entertain himself, the character does nothing but watch television, smokemarijuana,and masturbate, and has little motivation to change these habits despite tiring of the same cycle of behaviors.[37]

"Welcome to Paradise",the third single fromDookie,originally appeared on the band's second studio album,Kerplunk!.The newer version has better sound quality. The song was written about Armstrong's experiences living in bad neighborhoods aroundOakland, California.[38]"Pulling Teeth", one of the album's slower songs, uses dark humor aboutdomestic violence.The typical victim and perpetrator are reversed; the male narrator is at the mercy of his partner.[24]The band's inspiration for this song came from a pillow fight between Dirnt and his girlfriend that ended with the bassist breaking his elbow.[39][40]The second single, "Basket Case",which appeared on many singles charts worldwide,[41][42]was also inspired by Armstrong's personal experiences. The song deals with Armstrong's anxiety attacks and feelings of "going crazy" before being diagnosed with apanic disorder.[22]Using apalm mute,Armstrong is the only one who plays on the song until halfway through the song's first chorus, with the other instruments' arrival representing panic setting in.[43]In the third verse, "Basket Case" mentions soliciting a male prostitute; Armstrong said, "I wanted to challenge myself and whoever the listener might be. It's also looking at the world and saying, 'It's not as black and white as you think. This isn't your grandfather's prostitute – or maybe it was.'"[8]The music video was filmed in an abandoned mental institution. It is one of the band's most popular songs.[44]

Songs 8–14[edit]

"She"was written about Amanda, who showed him a feminist poem entitled" She ".[22]In return, Armstrong wrote the lyrics of "She" and showed them to her.[22]When Amanda broke up with Armstrong in early 1994 and moved toEcuadorto join thePeace Corps,Armstrong decided to put "She" on the album.[45]Musically, "She" is similar to "Basket Case", although it is slightly faster, and draws inspiration from the Beatles. The song's beginnings mirror those of "Basket Case"; whereas Armstrong was the only one to play as "Basket Case" began, Armstrong's guitar does not enter until later in "She" while his bandmates provide a musical backdrop. The song tells the story of a young woman who feels trapped in an unsatisfactory life.[40][46]Amanda is also referenced in the next track, "Sassafras Roots".[22]Sonically closer to the band's material onKerplunk!,[40]it is an unconventional love song that uses irony and sarcasm in an effort to avoid being direct, and centers on a couple wasting time together in a romantic relationship.[47]The tenth track, "When I Come Around",was the album's final single. It was inspired by Adrienne Nesser, Armstrong's girlfriend and now wife. Following a dispute between the couple, Armstrong left Nesser to spend some time alone.[6]Described as the closest thing to aballadon the album,[40]"When I Come Around" is driven by a recognizable two-bar, palm-muted guitar riff of four chords, while Dirnt's bass part stands out by adding additionalpulled-offandhammered-onportions to the guitar's accompaniment. The song's lyrics highlight two meanings of its title: the narrator begins by talking to someone they believe they could address the needs of, having literally come around; in the second verse, the singer realizes they aren't what the other person needs, having "come around" figuratively.[48]

The song "Coming Clean" deals with Armstrong's coming to terms with hisbisexualityas a teenager. At the time, he was still looking for himself sexually and had no well-defined sexual orientation.[24]In his interview withThe Advocatemagazine, he said that although he has never had a relationship with a man, his sexuality has been "something that comes up as a struggle in me".[49]"Emenius Sleepus", written by Dirnt, is about two old friends who meet by chance, and the narrator realizes that they have both changed a lot as people.[24]Played in a quickstaccato-styled rhythm,[50]Armstrong wrote the song "In the End" about his mother and stepfather, and the reproach Armstrong felt toward his mother for choosing his stepfather as a partner.[24]"F.O.D.", an acronym for "Fuck Off and Die", begins calmly with Armstrong alone on acoustic guitar, before the band suddenly arrives in a louder, full-force fashion. The theme of the song centers around the singer's grudge for another individual, and wishing misfortune upon them.[51] Ahidden track,"All By Myself", with vocals and guitar by Cool, plays after "F.O.D." ends, and is themed on masturbation.[52]

Packaging[edit]

Telegraph Avenue in downtown Berkeley, circa 2010. The street is the setting of the album cover artwork, drawn by East Bay artist Richie Bucher.[53]

Dookieis American slang for feces. It is a reference to thediarrhea— "liquid dookie" —that the band members suffered while eating spoiled food on tour. Initially, the band aimed to name the albumLiquid Dookie,but this was shortened toDookie.[22]Asked in 2014 if the choice was a mistake in hindsight, Armstrong said it had been an impulsive "stoner thing": "We were smoking a lot of weed [and said] 'Hey, man, wouldn't it be funny if...'"[8]

For its cover art, the band commissioned artist Richie Bucher, who created a cartoon-like work depicting bombs being dropped on people and buildings. Bucher says Armstrong only told him the album's title, so he worked around the theme of fecal matter. As a child, Bucher had associated feces with dogs and monkeys, both of which appear prominently on the album's cover.[19]

The setting is a replica ofBerkeley'sTelegraph Avenue. In the center, there is an explosion with the band's name at the top.[53]The cover depictsPatti Smithshowing off her armpit as shown on the cover of her albumEaster(1977), a shootout surroundingBlack Panther Partyco-founderHuey P. Newton,the woman onBlack Sabbath'sself-titled debut album,Angus YoungofAC/DC,and theSather Tower.Friends of the band members are among the foreground figures on whom dogs and monkeys throw their excrement. A dog pilots the plane that drops bombs with the words Dookie written on them, while the name of the group is written in brown in the center of the explosion. Oil refineries in Rodeo, California, can be seen in the distance.[54][19][8]

Armstrong has since explained the meaning of the artwork:

I wanted the art work to look really different. I wanted it to represent theEast Bayand where we come from, because there's a lot of artists in the East Bay scene that are just as important as the music. So we talked to Richie Bucher. He did a 7-inch cover for this band called Raooul that I really liked. He's also been playing in bands in the East Bay for years. There's pieces of us buried on the album cover. There's one guy with his camera up in the air taking a picture with a beard. He took pictures of bands every weekend atGilman's.The robed character that looks like theMona Lisais the woman on the cover of thefirst Black Sabbath album.AC/DCguitaristAngus Youngis in there somewhere too. The graffiti reading "Twisted Dog Sisters" refers to these two girls from Berkeley. I think the guy saying "The fritter, fat boy" was a reference to a local cop.[6]

When the trio went to Warner's offices in Los Angeles to discuss marketing for the album, label officials initially wanted the cover to feature a photograph of the comely young men, but the band refused. George Weiss, Warner's marketing director, noted that the band came from a distinctly different culture than most of their artists, and Green Day had gained the leverage with the label to insist on a different choice.[19]The back cover on early prints of the CD featured a plush toy ofErniefromSesame Street,which was airbrushed out of later prints for fear of litigation;[54]however, Canadian and European prints still feature Ernie on the back cover.[7]Some rumors suggest that it was removed because it led parents to think thatDookiewas a child's lullaby album or that the creators ofSesame Streethad sued Green Day.[6]

Release[edit]

While rehearsing in the house they rented in Berkeley at the end of 1993 in anticipation of a tour forDookie,[19]the band was invited to the Warner offices in Los Angeles to discuss the marketing strategy around the album with Weiss. The latter expected to meet three scornful young men with reputations in punk music, when in reality the band members were intimidated to even be invited to the meeting. They discussed the first single, "Longview", as well as projected goals for the album's sales: Cavallo hoped to sell at least 200,000 units, while Cool looked higher toward 500,000.[55]Demand was well underestimated; whenDookiewas released on February 1, 1994, the album's first 9,000 produced copies quickly sold out.[54][56]"Longview" was released as the album's lead single simultaneously with the album.[57]Despite promising demand from the quick depletion of the album's initial supply, it initially resulted in modest total sales as strategies were adjusted to meet demand, and only after the music video for "Longview" debuted onMTVon February 22 did the album begin to attract stronger attention, first entering theBillboard 200rankings at number 127.[54]

In March, the group made appearances onLate Night with Conan O'Brien,The Jon Stewart Showand120 MinutesonMTV.[54][58]Sales forDookierose greatly following these performances, peaking at number two on theBillboard200in the United States.[13]The record became an international success as well; the album peaked in the top ten of theGerman,[59]Finnish,[60]Norwegian,[61]Dutch,[62]Swedish,[63]andSwiss[64]charts, while it topped theAustralian,[65]Canadian,[66]andNew Zealandcharts.[67]By June 14,Dookiewas certified gold by theRecording Industry Association of America(RIAA), having sold more than 500,000 copies in the United States.[68]That month, an issue ofTimehailed the album as a work creating an impact comparable toNirvana'sNevermind(1991).[58]

On August 1, "Basket Case" was released as the album's second single.[69]The song's music video quickly became anMTVstaple.[70][58]The following month, "Longview" was nominated in three categories at the1994 MTV Video Music Awards.Green Day performed the unreleased song "Armatage Shanks" at the ceremony, which would later appear on their following albumInsomniac(1995), but did not win any of the categories which they were nominated for.[71][72]In October, Warner proposed "Welcome to Paradise" to be the third single, noting potential to make good sales. However, Armstrong refused because the song evoked a part of his life and he did not feel capable of promoting it with a music video. The song was ultimately only broadcast on the radio domestically, being met with great success despite not being sold to the public.[73]An exclusive United Kingdom single release for the song did proceed on October 17.[74]Near the end of 1994,Don Pardoinvited the band to perform onSaturday Night Live.[58]

Ahead of the37th Annual Grammy Awards,"When I Come Around" was released to radio as the album's final single in December 1994.[75]The band had been nominated in four Grammy Award categories:Best Alternative Music Album,Best New Artist,Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocalwith "Basket Case", andBest Hard Rock Performancewith "Longview". They won only the former of the categories.[76]In the meantime, "When I Come Around" had been quickly climbing the charts; it held the top of theBillboardModern Rock Chartfor seven weeks and peaked at number six of theHot 100 Airplaychart,[77][78]becoming the band's most successful single from the album.[48]Throughout the 1990s,Dookiecontinued to sell well, eventually receivingdiamond certificationfrom the RIAA in 1999, signifying ten million copies sold.[68]By 2014,Dookiehad sold over 20 million copies worldwide and remains the band's best-selling album.[79][80]

Reception[edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[27]
Alternative Press[81]
Billboard[82]
Chicago Sun-Times[83]
Chicago Tribune[84]
NME7/10[85]
Pitchfork8.7/10[86]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[87]
Spin Alternative Record Guide8/10[88]
The Village VoiceA−[89]

Dookiewas released to critical acclaim. In early 1995, Jon Pareles ofThe New York Timeswrote, "Punk turns into pop in fast, funny, catchy, high-powered songs about whining and channel-surfing; apathy has rarely sounded so passionate."[90]Rolling Stone's Paul Evans described Green Day as "convincing mainly because they've got punk's snotty anti-values down cold: blame, self-pity, arrogant self-hatred, humor,narcissism,fun ".[91]Jesse Raub, writing forAlternative Press,praised "Burnout" for immediately opening with a "huge, polished production value without abandoning their scrappy, loose punk playing" which consistently shines through the rest of the album's tracks.[81]In a 20th anniversary retrospective review forBillboard,Chris Payne highlighted how Armstrong's "sugary, almost bubblegum choruses" were unique for punk at the time, and forcefully brought mainstream attention to punk rock music.[82]

TheChicago Tribune'sGreg Kotwas appreciative of the loudness and urgency in the album's sound, detecting influences fromthe Whoandthe Zombies.[84]NMEshowcased the record's "crashing drums" and "razor-wire guitars", concluding, "being dumb has never been so much fun."[85]A 2017 review fromPitchfork's Marc Hogan summarized the album's material as "buzzing, hook-crammed tracks that acted like they didn't give a shit", but resounded so well with its audience because in truth "on a compositional and emotional level they were actually gravely serious," praising the album's outlandish artwork for helping ease the tense nature of the music.[86]Robert Christgau,writing forThe Village Voice,opined that "punk lives, and these guys have the toons and sass to prove it to those who can live without," praising their themes of apathy, insanity, poverty, and "the un-American way".[89]

Neil Straussofthe New York Times,while complimentary of the album's overall quality, followed up Pareles' review by noting thatDookie's pop sound only remotely resembledpunk music.[92]The band did not respond initially to these comments, but later claimed that they were "just trying to be themselves" and that "it's our band, we can do whatever we want".[7]Dirnt claimed that the follow-up album,Insomniac,one of the band's most aggressive albums lyrically and musically, was the band releasing their anger at all the criticism and distaste from critics and former fans.[7]On the other hand, Thomas Nassiff atFusecited it as the most importantpop-punkalbum.[30]

Legacy[edit]

Green Day'sDookie—along withthe Offspring'sSmash,released two months later—has been credited for helping bringpunk rockback into mainstream music culture.[28][29][93][94]NMEargues, "Dookie's success proved to record label, film and TV [executives] that the teen rock revolution they had been witnessing for much of the early '90s didn't have to be all gloomy nihilism and angsty sonics.Dookiemade rock fun again. "[95]In 2012,Stephen Thomas ErlewineofAllMusicdescribedDookieas "a stellar piece of modern punk that many tried to emulate but nobody bettered".[27]On the album's twentieth anniversary,The Daily Beastwrote that before its release "rock meant grunge: heavy, monotonic, humorless, and bleak", but the lighter tone ofDookiechanged the public's general understanding of the term. It "made the entire pop-punk movement possible...it shaped the way people looked, dressed, danced, and spent their summers.Odeley[sic] is fantastic. So isOK Computer.But neither record triggered the sort of commercial tsunami of compatriots and copycats that followed inDookie's wake. "[94]Berkeley-basedRancidwas one of the first bands to capitalize on the hype created by Green Day and the Offspring with...And Out Come the Wolves,giving the new punk rock movement stability.[29]In 2024, the album was selected for preservation in the United StatesNational Recording Registryby theLibrary of Congressas being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[3]

Some critics claim thatDookieallowed numerous similar artists to enjoy long careers, including Rancid,New Found Glory,Fall Out Boy,Panic! At The Disco,Blink-182,Simple Plan,andYellowcard.[94][96][29]Good CharlotteguitaristBilly Martin,Something CorporatefrontmanAndrew McMahon,andSum 41frontmanDeryck Whibleyall claim stylistic influence from the album.[29]NMEbelieves Blink-182'sEnema of the State(1999), Sum 41'sAll Killer No Filler(2001),My Chemical Romance'sThe Black Parade(2006), and evenLady Gaga'sThe Fame(2008) could not have been created withoutDookie.Gaga has said that the album was the first she ever purchased.[95]

In 2014, the year of its twentieth anniversary, the album received several list accolades. In April 2014,Rolling Stoneplaced the album at No. 1 on its "1994: The 40 Best Records From Mainstream Alternative's Greatest Year" list, ahead ofNine Inch Nails'The Downward SpiralandWeezer'sself-titled debut.[97]A month later,LoudwireplacedDookieat No. 1 on its "10 Best Hard Rock Albums of 1994" list.[98]Guitar WorldrankedDookieat number thirteen in their list "Superunknown: 50 Iconic Albums That Defined 1994" that July.[99]Rolling Stonecited it as one of the greatest punk rock albums of all time in 2016,[100]andNMEranked it as the 18th-best album of 1994, alongside "Welcome to Paradise" as a top-50 song for the year.[101]

A 30th-anniversary deluxe edition of the album, released on September 29, 2023, includes outtakes, demos, and two live concert recordings.[102]

Accolades[edit]

Deryck Whibley and his band, Sum 41, are said to have been influenced byDookie.

Dookiehas appeared on many prominent "must have" lists compiled by the music media, including:

Publication Country Accolade Year Rank
Robert Dimery United States 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die[103] 2005
Rolling Stone The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time[104][1] 2020 375
Best Albums of 1994(Readers Choice)[105] 1994 1
40 Greatest Punk Albums of All Time[100] 2016 18
1994: The 40 Best Records From Mainstream Alternative's Greatest Year[97] 2014 1
Loudwire 10 Best Hard Rock Albums of 1994[98] 1994 1
Rolling Stone 100 Best Albums of the Nineties[106] 2010 30
Spin 100 Greatest Albums, 1985–2005[107] 2005 44
Pitchfork The 150 Best Albums of the 1990s[108] 2022 111
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame The Definitive 200[109] 2007 50
Kerrang! United Kingdom 51 Greatest Pop Punk Albums Ever[110] 2015 2
Revolver United States 50 Greatest Punk Albums of All Time[111] 2018 13
LouderSound United Kingdom The 50 Best Punk Albums of All Time[112] 2018 11
LA Weekly United States Top 20 Punk Albums in History: The Complete List[113] 2013 13

Live performances[edit]

In mid-1993, while recording and mixing the album, Green Dayopenedfor severalBad Religionconcerts, allowing them to play new songs to a live audience.[114][115][21]However, unlike their previous shows, the band was now playing before audiences of two to three thousand people.[55]Two weeks after the release ofDookie,the band embarked on an international tour. In the United States, they traveled between shows in abookmobilebelonging toTré Cool's father.[7]From late April to early June 1994, the band toured Europe, playing around 40 concerts in the United Kingdom, Germany, Denmark, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain and Sweden. The band's popularity was still rising slowly when they arrived in Europe; in Belgium, the audience numbered about 200 people.[116]Cavallo recorded a few performances during the tour, to show the three young men their evolution on stage, and for use asB-sideson later releases.[117]

Scene of a concert amphitheater
The Hatch Shell in Boston, where Green Day played a free concert that resulted in a riot.

After the European tour, Armstrong proposed to Nesser after four years of on-and-off relationships. Because the tour prevented them from properly planning their wedding and their honeymoon, the two married in a small ceremony on July 2, 1994, attended only by Green Day's two other members and their girlfriends. Adrienne discovered she was pregnant the next day, and Armstrong was upset about being unable to help and care for her.[7]The trio then joined the second leg ofLollapaloozaas the main attraction, and program directors set them to play the opening of the main stage.[118][119][70]They missed a date of the traveling festival to perform on August 14 atWoodstock '94.This event, the 25th anniversary of theoriginal 1969festival inSaugerties, New York,saw a mud "fight" between the band and the crowd. Although organizers hoped that Green Day would be a big draw, their punk rock style stuck out at the event and the band's performance was poorly received by the crowd. When they opened their set with "Welcome to Paradise" after three days of rain, the audience was provoked by theironyand threw mud at them. Armstrong responded by taunting the crowd, and the event escalated into a mud fight among the audience and the band. During the fight, Dirnt was mistaken for a fan by a security guard, who tackled him and then threw him against a monitor, injuring his arm and breaking two of his teeth. Broadcast on pay-per-view to millions of people, this performance was widely noticed internationally and sales of the album rose sharply.[58][120][70][121]

Further controversy followed the band only weeks later at a free concert inBoston.Alternative radio stationWFNXhosted a free Green Day concert at theHatch Memorial Shellconcert venue on September 9, 1994. However, the promoters were accustomed to hostingreggaeand acts of similar softness that drew smaller crowds, and were unprepared for the audience of 70,000 to 100,000 people. The fans in attendance were already chanting for Green Day during the show's opening act. After several calls for calm, including some from Armstrong, the group began their performance, but the singer let himself be carried away by the energy of the audience and jumped into the middle of it during "Longview", the seventh song of the set. The security forces, overwhelmed and fearing that the lighting fixtures would collapse, forcibly ended the concert by cutting off the power. A riot ensued and spilled into the streets, leading to numerous arrests and injuries.[58][122][123]TheMassachusetts State Policewere called. Roughly 100 people were injured and 31 were arrested in the aftermath of the concert. TheBoston Phoenixwould list the Green Day Hatch Shell "riot" concert as the sixth-greatest concert in Boston history.[124]

When the band returned to Europe in October 1994, the venues in which they played were much larger, and the band was met with much more enthusiasm. Despite their new notoriety for live performances, the trio continued to sell tickets at affordable prices: $5 to $20 (equivalent to $10 to $40 in 2023[125]).[117]Warner proposed several groups to play as opening acts on this tour, but the band rejected these; instead, the band invited German punk bandDie Toten Hosenand the AmericanqueercoregroupPansy Divisionto join their shows. Following the European shows, the band returned home for one last show at theZ100Acoustic Christmas atMadison Square GardeninNew York.An AIDS benefit show, Armstrong performed the song "She"naked, using his guitar to cover himself.[126][127][128]

In 2013, the band playedDookiein its entirety at some European dates as a celebration of the album's upcoming 20th anniversary.[80][129]On October 19, 2023, at the Fremont Country Club in Las Vegas,Dookiewas played in its entirety as part of the evening's 29-song set, including "All by Myself". The album was played in celebration of its upcoming 30th anniversary and announcement of the 2024 tour.[130][131]

Track listing[edit]

All lyrics written byBillie Joe Armstrong,except where noted; all music composed byGreen Day.

Original compact disc release
No.TitleLength
1."Burnout"2:07
2."Having a Blast"2:44
3."Chump"2:53
4."Longview"3:59
5."Welcome to Paradise"3:44
6."Pulling Teeth"2:30
7."Basket Case"3:02
8."She"2:13
9."Sassafras Roots"2:37
10."When I Come Around"2:57
11."Coming Clean"1:34
12."Emenius Sleepus" (Mike Dirnt)1:43
13."In the End"1:46
14."F.O.D." (includes hidden track[note 1])5:46
Total length:39:35
Digital Edition
No.TitleLength
14."F.O.D."2:50
15."All by Myself" (written and performed byTré Cool)1:40
Total length:38:19

30th Anniversary Box Set[edit]

LP 2: Demos
No.TitleLength
1."Burnout"2:07
2."Chump"2:14
3."Pulling Teeth"2:18
4."Basket Case"3:07
5."She"2:15
6."Sassafras Roots"2:32
7."When I Come Around"2:01
8."In the End"1:53
9."F.O.D."2:55
10."When It's Time"2:34
11."When I Come Around"2:59
12."Basket Case"2:56
13."Longview"3:53
14."Burnout"2:06
15."Haushinka"3:32
16."J.A.R."3:00
17."Having a Blast"2:48
Total length:45:09
LP 3: Outtakes
No.TitleLength
1."Christie Rd"3:44
2."409 in Your Coffeemaker"2:49
3."J.A.R."2:51
4."On the Wagon"2:47
5."Tired of Waiting for You"(The Kinkscover)2:32
6."Walking the Dog"(Rufus Thomascover; demo)2:49
Total length:17:32
LP 4:Woodstock (1994)
No.TitleLength
1."Welcome to Paradise" (live)5:14
2."One of My Lies" (live)3:05
3."Chump" (live)2:34
4."Longview" (live)3:37
5."Basket Case" (live)3:13
6."When I Come Around" (live)2:45
7."Burnout" (live)2:54
8."F.O.D." (live)2:41
9."Paper Lanterns" (live)8:09
10."Shit Show" (live)5:54
Total length:40:06
LP 5: Live at the Garatge Club, Barcelona (June 5 '94) (Side A/B)
No.TitleLength
1."Welcome to Paradise" (live)4:17
2."One of My Lies" (live)2:38
3."Chump" (live)2:35
4."Longview" (live)3:21
5."Burnout" (live)2:04
6."Only of You" (live)3:10
7."When I Come Around" (live)2:49
8."2000 Light Years Away" (live)3:05
9."Going to Pasalacqua" (live)3:39
10."Knowledge"(Operation Ivycover; live)3:11
LP 6: Live at the Garatge Club, Barcelona (June 5, 1994) (Side C/D)
No.TitleLength
11."Basket Case" (live)2:47
12."Paper Lanterns" (live)8:24
13."Dominated Love Slave" (live)1:55
14."F.O.D" (live)2:30
15."Road to Acceptance" (live)6:39
16."Christie Road" (live)3:26
17."Disappearing Boy" (live)3:46
Total length:60:16

Notes

  1. ^"F.O.D." ends at 2:52, followed byhidden track"All by Myself" written and performed byTré Cool,which starts at 4:09. Digital editions list a distinct Track 15.

Personnel[edit]

Green Day

Technical personnel

Artwork

Charts[edit]

Certifications and sales[edit]

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Argentina (CAPIF)[186] Platinum 60,000^
Australia (ARIA)[187] 5× Platinum 350,000^
Austria (IFPIAustria)[188] Platinum 50,000*
Belgium (BEA)[189] Gold 25,000*
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[190] Gold 100,000*
Canada (Music Canada)[191] Diamond 1,000,000^
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[192] 4× Platinum 80,000
Finland (Musiikkituottajat)[193] Gold 35,205[193]
France (SNEP)[194] Gold 100,000*
Germany (BVMI)[195] 3× Gold 750,000^
Ireland (IRMA)[196] 4× Platinum 60,000^
Italy
sales in 1995
250,000[197]
Italy (FIMI)[198]
sales since 2009
Platinum 50,000
Japan (RIAJ)[199] Platinum 200,000^
Mexico 50,000[200]
Netherlands (NVPI)[201] Gold 50,000^
New Zealand (RMNZ)[202] Platinum 15,000^
Poland (ZPAV)[203] Gold 50,000*
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[204] Platinum 100,000^
Sweden (GLF)[205] Gold 50,000^
Switzerland (IFPISwitzerland)[206] Gold 25,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[207] 3× Platinum 900,000^
United States (RIAA)[208] Diamond 10,000,000^
Summaries
Europe (IFPI)[209] Platinum 1,000,000*

*Sales figures based on certification alone.
^Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

References[edit]

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Sources[edit]

External links[edit]