Green Day Songs - Old

I’m talking about the 39/Smooth era. The Kerplunk! era. The time when Billie Joe Armstrong’s voice cracked with genuine teenage anxiety, Mike Dirnt’s bass sounded like a rusty chainsaw, and Tré Cool (or even John Kiffmeyer) played drums in a sweaty garage in Berkeley.

Listen to “Welcome to Paradise” (the Kerplunk! version, not the polished Dookie re-record). That intro bass fill is frantic, jittery, and sounds like a guy running away from a cop. On “Christie Road,” the bass groove is so melodic that Billie Joe hangs back just to let Mike shine. You don't get that on American Idiot . You get that in a cramped van on the way to a show nobody showed up to. Later Green Day wrote about politics, war, and mass media. Old Green Day wrote about being bored, broke, and high. old green day songs

They remind you that punk rock isn't about the size of the arena. It’s about the volume of the amp when your mom isn't home. I’m talking about the 39/Smooth era