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    Kerplunk

    Kerplunk
    Artist: Green Day
    Label: Reprise / Wea
    Category: Music

    List Price: $11.98
    Buy New: $5.72
    You Save: $6.26 (52%)



    New (39) Used (14) from $5.71

    Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
    Sales Rank: 1654

    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.5

    MPN: 43281
    UPC: 093624328124
    EAN: 0093624328124
    ASIN: B000JMKKG8

    Release Date: January 9, 2007
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Tracks:

      • 2,000 Light Years Away
      • One for the Razorbacks
      • Welcome to Paradise
      • Christy Road
      • Private Ale
      • Dominated Love Slave
      • One of My Lies
      • 80
      • Android
      • No One Knows
      • Who Wrote Holden Coulfield?
      • Words I Might Have Ate
      • Sweet Children
      • Best Thing in Town
      • Strangeland
      • My Generation

    Similar Items:

      • 1,039/Smoothed Out Slappy Hours
      • Insomniac
      • Warning
      • Nimrod
      • 21st Century Breakdown

    Editorial Reviews:

    Album Description
    Reissue of Green Day's second album that defined the band's sound with memorable riffs, metal-strength momentum and a decade's worth of attitude.


    Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

    4 out of 5 stars Green Day' second album remastered   January 10, 2007
    S. Failla (Michigan, USA)
    2 out of 2 found this review helpful

    You may have had a hard time finding this, or the album 1,039 Smoothed Out Slappy hours for the past few months. This is because these album were originally recorded for, and have been distributed since their release, by indie label Lookout Records. So why would that give you trouble finding them? Well, in 2005, Green Day rescinded their masters from the label, giving copyright control to their current label Reprise/Warner Bros.

    So now we have this Kerplunk reissue. How does it measure up? In terms of artwork/packaging, everything is exactly the same as it used to be except it says Reprise instead of Lookout on the back. There is no mention of this being a reissue. Pop the disc in though, and you will find the sound has been remastered. Kerplunk always had sort of a quiet sound to it. With this remaster, the volume is louder and all of the instruments and vocals have been enhanced, making them stand out more and sound more crisp.

    The album opens with 2,000 Light Years Away which is a Green Day classic and features their signature pop punk sound. The version of Welcome To Paradise on here is a different recording than what would wind up on 1994's Dookie (They re-recorded it for that album). The song is a classic though. One Of My Lies is another pop punk highlight and then there's the underrated No One Knows in all of its teenage confusion glory. The inclusion of the last 4 songs are also interesting because you get to hear Billie and Mike in the band Sweet Children before they had fully laid out the Green Day blueprint.

    I'm not going to review every song. Basically, if you have heard Green Day on the Dookie - Nimrod albums, the songs on here will sit at home with you. The only difference is, they are more raw sounding. Billie Joe's voice is also more kidlike sounding. You can tell they were still perfecting their craft on here, but it's a fun listen and is a must for any fan of Green Day or pop punk.



    5 out of 5 stars Awesome CD!   July 17, 2007
    Nicole (Buffalo, NY)
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    Got this CD a little bit ago and have not stopped listening to it! Nothing compares to the early Green Day music.


    5 out of 5 stars One of their best   October 10, 2007
    Nathaniel E. Largo (Scottsbluff, NE)
    3 out of 4 found this review helpful

    Kerplunk Review
    ---------------

    The album is fantastic and it has some of my all time favorite Green Day songs on it. "Christie Road," "No One Knows," "80," "One of My Lies," "2000 Light Years Away," and the first glance at one of their stadium anthems, "Welcome to Paradise." Their budget to record this CD was not stellar at all, I believe I read that they only got a couple thousand from their label at the time for it, but it is a step up from the quality of their first full length (which is also QUITE fantastic!).

    I have always been a big believer of getting every album from a band that I love, and I got this album in an interesting order. I had "Dookie" first, then "Nimrod", then "Insomniac", then I bought this album, "1,039 / Smoothed Out Slappy Hours," and "Warning" all on the same day. There is a logical progression between each album (until you get to Warning that is), and Kerplunk showed some early signs of "Nimrod" with the guys not always using tons of overdrive (as was the case on "Dookie" and "Insomniac"). This album holds up very well with their later work though, and I recommend it to anyone really wanting to get to know the band. I do however know a few people that listen to "American Idiot" and nothing else, and that is a bummer, because they have some other work out there that is really amazing!

    My Defense of the Band
    -----------------------

    I would just like to say to the MAJORITY of nay-sayers out there that are bashing Green Day for their success derived from "American Idiot": KNOCK IT OFF. It's ridiculous! The band has not sold out, at all. The music on "American Idiot" is amazing, and is the next logical progression for the band! They lost a lot of fans when they released "Warning," but come on--Billie was writing an album while thinking more of his children, do we have any right to say there is something wrong with that? "Warning" happens to be one of my favorite Green Day albums--maybe the one I have listened to the most. It really has some amazing lyrics to it and some REALLY underrated songs, but enough about that album.

    The issue is, people don't like it when a band that used to fit in their pocket gets too big to hide anymore. There is already a review on here on someone bragging about how no one knows about "Kerplunk," so owning it and liking it is like being a part of a special club. THAT'S RIDICULOUS! The DREAM of any band is to make it big, and these boys have not sacrificed anything in their music. Don't believe me? Let's try this then: take "American Idiot" (the song), that song could easily be put on "Insomniac" (unfortunately it kind of already is, haha, if you listen to the riff on "Walking Contradiction," the songs are really similar); "Letterbomb" really seems like it should be a B-Side to a single from "Nimrod," seeing as the distortion Billie Joe uses is VERY similar to that of the "Nimrod" album's guitar work; then we have the Green Day standards in "3 minute and under" rock songs with "St. Jimmy" and "She's A Rebel", jumping back to their roots and rocking better than any other punk band out there.

    The fact is, these boys made a very bold move putting out the album that they did. People whine about how they aren't playing the "skateboarding" music anymore or how they're not singing about masturbation, like on "Dookie", but honestly--there is 10 YEARS between "Dookie" and "American Idiot," do you really expect them to never grow up? It is necessary for musicians to grow to stay alive and the REALLY admirable thing about this band is how they haven't sacrificed who they are to put out great music.

    My advice to all you nay-sayers-why don't you just drop it? People just complain about bands when they get to big and it's ridiculous. Half the people that complain about Fall Out Boy now used to be the biggest fans of them, same with Good Charlotte and Blink 182--once the band gets "too big", there becomes a point where it's "cool" to disagree with everyone and say that they are not cool. Well, here's the truth--I have every studio album from Green Day, three live albums, their greatest hits and rarities CD, either 4 or 5 vinyls from the band, and a slew of singles--I'd like to consider myself an authority on the band, and they are FANTASTIC. If all you are doing is whining because they are too big to fit in your pocket, then be honest with yourself and drop it.



    5 out of 5 stars This is my favorite all time album   January 22, 2007
    K. Cope (Pennsylvania)
    5 out of 7 found this review helpful

    Someone asked me the other day, if I was stranded on a desert island, and I could only have one CD to listen to which one would it be? I asked, how would I listen to it if I was on a desert island? Then he changed the question to all the other CD's in the world were destroyed. There was one CD you could save, which one would it be? I asked, why were the cd's destroyed? Then, he turned and asked me, Dude, what's your favorite album? I said oh.... it's Green Day's Kerplunk.
    What makes it great? I don't know.... For one, the recording isn't that great. There isn't much bass on the album. I think what makes it for me is the re-listen-ability of it. I can put this CD in and listen to it over and over and never get tired of it. The song writing is really catchy, and although it's hard to understand what he's saying half the time (I was singing the wrong words to "It's just one of my lives" for like two years), you find yourself mumblinging along. The songs are in perfect play order, they all flow into the next one.

    Maybe because it has emotional connection to it. This is corny, and I know I roll my eyes when other people say it, but I connect with what he is saying in some of the songs. Eh... I'll stop there. But when it comes down to it, it's about girls and skateboarding (not their new political garbage....man give someone a microphone and suddenly they know all the answers)which all good punk albums should be. It's also cool because no-one has ever heard of it, so it's like an exclusive club.

    If you like punk, and are a fan of Green Day then pick this album up. You won't be disappointed. If you like rock then I'd recommend trying it out as well.



    5 out of 5 stars Green Day as they once were!   April 11, 2007
    Gogol (England)
    3 out of 5 found this review helpful

    Great to hear this CD especially as it has the sweet children Ep on it. This was how Green Day used to be, playing great corny pop-punk before they turned into that God awful eye make up wearing, MTV 3rd rate 'political punk' band (If you consider meaningless lyrics and cameos with U2 as political)

    Its still great to hear that raw sound that they had, pity they turned into what they are now. Still, they have their first 2 albums to look back on.



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