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Wikipedia

Dookie

Dookie is the third studio album and major-label debut by the American rock band Green Day, released on February 1, 1994, by Reprise Records. The band's major label debut and first collaboration with producer Rob Cavallo, it was recorded in late summer 1993 at Fantasy Studios in Berkeley, California. Written mostly by frontman and guitarist Billie 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's Kerplunk), and "When I Come Around".

Dookie
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 1, 1994 (1994-02-01)
RecordedSeptember–October 1993
StudioFantasy, Berkeley, California
Genre
Length39:35
LabelReprise
Producer
Green Day chronology
Kerplunk
(1991)
Dookie
(1994)
Insomniac
(1995)
Singles from Dookie
  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

After several years of grunge's dominance in popular music, Dookie brought 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 of punk rock in 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 many punk and pop-punk bands as well as artists from other genres.

Dookie received critical acclaim upon its release, although some early fans called the band a sellout for leaving its independent label (Lookout! Records) and embracing a more polished sound. The record won a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Album in 1995. It was a worldwide success, peaking at number two on the Billboard 200 in the United States and reaching top ten positions in several other countries. Dookie was later certified Diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). It has sold over 20 million copies worldwide, making it the band's best-selling album and one of the best-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 Stone placed Dookie on three iterations of its "500 Greatest Albums of All Time" list,[1] and at number 1 on its "50 Greatest Pop-Punk Albums" list.[2] In 2024, the album was selected for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[3]

Background edit

 
The exterior of 924 Gilman Street in 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) and Kerplunk (1991), which sold 30,000 units each,[4][5] a number of major record labels became interested in Green Day.[6] Among those labels were Sony, Warner Bros., Geffen and Interscope.[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 to Disneyland.[7] The band declined these advances; Armstrong believed that the labels were more than likely looking for something that resembled a grunge band, namely "second- and third-rate Nirvanas and Soundgardens",[8] and they did not want to conform to a label's vision. That changed when they met producer and A&R representative Rob Cavallo of Reprise, a subsidiary of Warner Bros.[5][9] The band played Beatles covers for him for 40 minutes, then Cavallo picked up his own guitar and jammed with them.[9][10] They were impressed by his work with fellow Californian band The Muffs, and later remarked that Cavallo "was the only person we could really talk to and connect with".[7]

Eventually, the band left their independent record label, Lookout! Records, on friendly terms. They signed a five-album deal with Reprise in 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 them sell-outs, including the influential punk fanzine Maximumrocknroll[9][10] and the independent music club 924 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 vocalist Billie Joe 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."[17] The group later returned in 2015 to play a benefit concert.[18]

Recording edit

 
Fantasy Studios in Berkeley, California, where Dookie was recorded

Following the band's last Gilman Street performance, Green Day demoed the songs "She", "Sassafras Roots", "Pulling Teeth" and "F.O.D." on Armstrong's four-track tape recorder and 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 recording Kerplunk. To lighten the mood, he invited them to a Mexican restaurant and bar down the street from Fantasy Studios, even though drummer Tré Cool was 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 guitar tones. 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 Jerry 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 the Sex Pistols record or the early Black Sabbath records sounded",[22] but the band found the result of this approach to be an unsatisfactory original mix. Cavallo agreed, and it was remixed at Fantasy Studios in Berkeley, California.[22] 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 album Nimrod and become a hit in its own right.[23] The band also recorded new versions of the songs "Welcome to Paradise" and "Christie Rd." from their second album Kerplunk and "409 in your Coffeemaker" from their second EP Slappy, though only "Welcome to Paradise" would make it onto the final album.[24]

Writing and composition edit

Much of Dookie's content was written by Armstrong, except "Emenius Sleepus", which was written by bassist Mike Dirnt, and the hidden track, "All by Myself", which was written by drummer Tré Cool. The album touched upon various experiences of the band members and included subjects such as anxiety and panic attacks, masturbation, sexual orientation, boredom, mass murder, divorce, domestic abuse, and ex-girlfriends.[7] PopMatters summarized the album's theme as "a record that speaks of the frustrations, anxieties, and apathy of young people".[25] Stylistically, the album has been categorized primarily as punk rock,[26][27][28] but also as pop-punk[25][29][30] and as a "power pop take" on skate punk.[31] Influences from the Ramones and the Sex Pistols were noted in Armstrong's guitar technique throughout the album; he recorded the album almost entirely with his Fernandes Stratocaster, which he named "Blue".[30]

Songs 1–7 edit

Dookie opens with "Burnout", a "speedy, antsy rocker" centered around a central character's feelings of general apathy toward life.[25] Armstrong wrote the song "Having a Blast" when he was in Cleveland in June 1992.[32] 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 1999 Columbine High School massacre have made the song the "most uncomfortable track" on the album.[33] 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.[34] "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 of LSD.[35] In an interview with Guitar World in 2002, Armstrong described the character in the song as based on himself when he lived in Rodeo, California: "There was nothing to do there, and it was a real boring place."[36] To entertain himself, the character does nothing but watch television, smoke marijuana, and masturbate, and has little motivation to change these habits despite tiring of the same cycle of behaviors.[36]

"Welcome to Paradise", the third single from Dookie, 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 around Oakland, California.[37] "Pulling Teeth", one of the album's slower songs, uses dark humor about domestic violence. The typical victim and perpetrator are reversed; the male narrator is at the mercy of his partner.[23] 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.[38][39] The second single, "Basket Case", which appeared on many singles charts worldwide,[40][41] 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 a panic disorder.[22] Using a palm 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.[42] 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.[43]

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 to Ecuador to join the Peace Corps, Armstrong decided to put "She" on the album.[44] 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.[39][45] Amanda is also referenced in the next track, "Sassafras Roots".[22] Sonically closer to the band's material on Kerplunk!,[39] 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.[46] 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 a ballad on the album,[39] "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 additional pulled-off and hammered-on portions 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.[47]

The song "Coming Clean" deals with Armstrong's coming to terms with his bisexuality as a teenager. At the time, he was still looking for himself sexually and had no well-defined sexual orientation.[23] In his interview with The Advocate magazine, 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".[48] "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.[23] Played in a quick staccato-styled rhythm,[49] 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.[23] "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.[50] A hidden track, "All By Myself", with vocals and guitar by Cool, plays after "F.O.D." ends, and is themed on masturbation.[51]

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.[52]

Dookie is American slang for feces. It is a reference to the diarrhea—"liquid dookie"—that the band members suffered while eating spoiled food on tour. Initially, the band aimed to name the album Liquid Dookie, but this was shortened to Dookie.[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 of Berkeley's Telegraph Avenue. In the center, there is an explosion with the band's name at the top.[52] The cover depicts Patti Smith showing off her armpit as shown on the cover of her album Easter (1977), a shootout surrounding Black Panther Party co-founder Huey P. Newton, the woman on Black Sabbath's self-titled debut album, Angus Young of AC/DC, and the Sather 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.[53][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 the East Bay and 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 at Gilman's. The robed character that looks like the Mona Lisa is the woman on the cover of the first Black Sabbath album. AC/DC guitarist Angus Young is 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 of Ernie from Sesame Street, which was airbrushed out of later prints for fear of litigation;[53] 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 that Dookie was a child's lullaby album or that the creators of Sesame Street had 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 for Dookie,[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.[54] Demand was well underestimated; when Dookie was released on February 1, 1994, the album's first 9,000 produced copies quickly sold out.[53][55] "Longview" was released as the album's lead single simultaneously with the album.[56] 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 on MTV on February 22 did the album begin to attract stronger attention, first entering the Billboard 200 rankings at number 127.[53]

In March, the group made appearances on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, The Jon Stewart Show and 120 Minutes on MTV.[53][57] Sales for Dookie rose greatly following these performances, peaking at number two on the Billboard 200 in the United States.[13] The record became an international success as well; the album peaked in the top ten of the German,[58] Finnish,[59] Norwegian,[60] Dutch,[61] Swedish,[62] and Swiss[63] charts, while it topped the Australian,[64] Canadian,[65] and New Zealand charts.[66] By June 14, Dookie was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), having sold more than 500,000 copies in the United States.[67] That month, an issue of Time hailed the album as a work creating an impact comparable to Nirvana's Nevermind (1991).[57]

On August 1, "Basket Case" was released as the album's second single.[68] The song's music video quickly became an MTV staple.[69][57] The following month, "Longview" was nominated in three categories at the 1994 MTV Video Music Awards. Green Day performed the unreleased song "Armatage Shanks" at the ceremony, which would later appear on their following album Insomniac (1995), but did not win any of the categories which they were nominated for.[70][71] 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.[72] An exclusive United Kingdom single release for the song did proceed on October 17.[73] Near the end of 1994, Don Pardo invited the band to perform on Saturday Night Live.[57]

Ahead of the 37th Annual Grammy Awards, "When I Come Around" was released to radio as the album's final single in December 1994.[74] 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 Vocal with "Basket Case", and Best Hard Rock Performance with "Longview". They won only the former of the categories.[75] In the meantime, "When I Come Around" had been quickly climbing the charts; it held the top of the Billboard Modern Rock Chart for seven weeks and peaked at number six of the Hot 100 Airplay chart,[76][77] becoming the band's most successful single from the album.[47] Throughout the 1990s, Dookie continued to sell well, eventually receiving diamond certification from the RIAA in 1999, signifying ten million copies sold.[67] By 2014, Dookie had sold over 20 million copies worldwide and remains the band's best-selling album.[78][79]

Reception edit

Dookie was released to critical acclaim. In early 1995, Jon Pareles of The New York Times wrote, "Punk turns into pop in fast, funny, catchy, high-powered songs about whining and channel-surfing; apathy has rarely sounded so passionate."[89] 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".[90] Jesse Raub, writing for Alternative 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.[80] In a 20th anniversary retrospective review for Billboard, 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.[81]

The Chicago Tribune's Greg Kot was appreciative of the loudness and urgency in the album's sound, detecting influences from the Who and the Zombies.[83] NME showcased the record's "crashing drums" and "razor-wire guitars", concluding, "being dumb has never been so much fun."[84] A 2017 review from Pitchfork'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.[85] Robert Christgau, writing for The 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".[88]

Neil Strauss of the New York Times, while complimentary of the album's overall quality, followed up Pareles' review by noting that Dookie's pop sound only remotely resembled punk music.[91] 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 at Fuse cited it as the most important pop-punk album.[29]

Legacy edit

Green Day's Dookie—along with the Offspring's Smash, released two months later—has been credited for helping bring punk rock back into mainstream music culture.[27][28][92][93] NME argues, "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. Dookie made rock fun again."[94] In 2012, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic described Dookie as "a stellar piece of modern punk that many tried to emulate but nobody bettered".[26] On the album's twentieth anniversary, The Daily Beast wrote that before its release "rock meant grunge: heavy, monotonic, humorless, and bleak", but the lighter tone of Dookie changed 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 is OK Computer. But neither record triggered the sort of commercial tsunami of compatriots and copycats that followed in Dookie's wake."[93] Berkeley-based Rancid was 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.[28] In 2024, the album was selected for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[3]

Some critics claim that Dookie allowed numerous similar artists to enjoy long careers, including Rancid, New Found Glory, Fall Out Boy, Panic! At The Disco, Blink-182, Simple Plan, and Yellowcard.[93][95][28] Good Charlotte guitarist Billy Martin, Something Corporate frontman Andrew McMahon, and Sum 41 frontman Deryck Whibley all claim stylistic influence from the album.[28] NME believes Blink-182's Enema of the State (1999), Sum 41's All Killer No Filler (2001), My Chemical Romance's The Black Parade (2006), and even Lady Gaga's The Fame (2008) could not have been created without Dookie. Gaga has said that the album was the first she ever purchased.[94]

In 2014, the year of its twentieth anniversary, the album received several list accolades. In April 2014, Rolling Stone placed the album at No. 1 on its "1994: The 40 Best Records From Mainstream Alternative's Greatest Year" list, ahead of Nine Inch Nails' The Downward Spiral and Weezer's self-titled debut.[96] A month later, Loudwire placed Dookie at No. 1 on its "10 Best Hard Rock Albums of 1994" list.[97] Guitar World ranked Dookie at number thirteen in their list "Superunknown: 50 Iconic Albums That Defined 1994" that July.[98] Rolling Stone cited it as one of the greatest punk rock albums of all time in 2016,[99] and NME ranked it as the 18th-best album of 1994, alongside "Welcome to Paradise" as a top-50 song for the year.[100]

A 30th-anniversary deluxe edition of the album, released on September 29, 2023, includes outtakes, demos, and two live concert recordings.[101]

Accolades edit

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

Dookie has 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[102] 2005
Rolling Stone The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time[103][1] 2020 375
Best Albums of 1994 (Readers Choice)[104] 1994 1
40 Greatest Punk Albums of All Time[99] 2016 18
1994: The 40 Best Records From Mainstream Alternative's Greatest Year[96] 2014 1
Loudwire 10 Best Hard Rock Albums of 1994[97] 1994 1
Rolling Stone 100 Best Albums of the Nineties[105] 2010 30
Spin 100 Greatest Albums, 1985–2005[106] 2005 44
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame The Definitive 200[107] 2007 50
Kerrang! United Kingdom 51 Greatest Pop Punk Albums Ever[108] 2015 2
Revolver United States 50 Greatest Punk Albums of All Time[109] 2018 13
LouderSound United Kingdom The 50 Best Punk Albums of All Time[110] 2018 11
LA Weekly United States Top 20 Punk Albums in History: The Complete List[111] 2013 13

Live performances edit

In mid-1993, while recording and mixing the album, Green Day opened for several Bad Religion concerts, allowing them to play new songs to a live audience.[112][113][21] However, unlike their previous shows, the band was now playing before audiences of two to three thousand people.[54] Two weeks after the release of Dookie, the band embarked on an international tour. In the United States, they traveled between shows in a bookmobile belonging to Tré 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.[114] Cavallo recorded a few performances during the tour, to show the three young men their evolution on stage, and for use as B-sides on later releases.[115]

 
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 of Lollapalooza as the main attraction, and program directors set them to play the opening of the main stage.[116][117][69] They missed a date of the traveling festival to perform on August 14 at Woodstock '94. This event, the 25th anniversary of the original 1969 festival in Saugerties, 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 the irony and 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.[57][118][69][119]

Further controversy followed the band only weeks later at a free concert in Boston. Alternative radio station WFNX hosted a free Green Day concert at the Hatch Memorial Shell concert venue on September 9, 1994. However, the promoters were accustomed to hosting reggae and 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.[57][120][121] The Massachusetts State Police were called. Roughly 100 people were injured and 31 were arrested in the aftermath of the concert. The Boston Phoenix would list the Green Day Hatch Shell "riot" concert as the sixth-greatest concert in Boston history.[122]

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[123]).[115] Warner proposed several groups to play as opening acts on this tour, but the band rejected these; instead, the band invited German punk band Die Toten Hosen and the American queercore group Pansy Division to join their shows. Following the European shows, the band returned home for one last show at the Z100 Acoustic Christmas at Madison Square Garden in New York. An AIDS benefit show, Armstrong performed the song "She" naked, using his guitar to cover himself.[124][125][126]

In 2013, the band played Dookie in its entirety at some European dates as a celebration of the album's upcoming 20th anniversary.[79][127] On October 19, 2023, at the Fremont Country Club in Las Vegas, Dookie was 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.[128][129]

Track listing edit

All lyrics written by Billie Joe Armstrong, except where noted; all music composed by Green 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 by Tré 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 Kinks cover)2:32
6."Walking the Dog" (Rufus Thomas cover; 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 Ivy cover; 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 by hidden track "All by Myself" written and performed by Tré 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

‹See Tfd›‹See Tfd›
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Argentina (CAPIF)[181] Platinum 60,000^
Australia (ARIA)[182] 5× Platinum 350,000^
Austria (IFPI Austria)[183] Platinum 50,000*
Belgium (BEA)[184] Gold 25,000*
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[185] Gold 100,000*
Canada (Music Canada)[186] Diamond 1,000,000^
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[187] 4× Platinum 80,000
Finland (Musiikkituottajat)[188] Gold 35,205[188]
France (SNEP)[189] Gold 100,000*
Germany (BVMI)[190] 3× Gold 750,000^
Ireland (IRMA)[191] 4× Platinum 60,000^
Italy
sales in 1995
250,000[192]
Italy (FIMI)[193]
sales since 2009
Platinum 50,000
Japan (RIAJ)[194] Platinum 200,000^
Mexico 50,000[195]
Netherlands (NVPI)[196] Gold 50,000^
New Zealand (RMNZ)[197] Platinum 15,000^
Poland (ZPAV)[198] Gold 50,000*
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[199] Platinum 100,000^
Sweden (GLF)[200] Gold 50,000^
Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[201] Gold 25,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[202] 3× Platinum 900,000^
United States (RIAA)[203] Diamond 10,000,000^
Summaries
Europe (IFPI)[204] 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

Citations edit

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Sources edit

External links edit

  • Dookie at YouTube (streamed copy where licensed)
  • Dookie at Discogs
  • Dookie on Rate Your Music site

dookie, other, uses, disambiguation, sassafras, roots, redirects, here, roots, genus, trees, sassafras, third, studio, album, major, label, debut, american, rock, band, green, released, february, 1994, reprise, records, band, major, label, debut, first, collab. For other uses see Dookie disambiguation Sassafras Roots redirects here For the roots of the genus of trees see Sassafras Dookie is the third studio album and major label debut by the American rock band Green Day released on February 1 1994 by Reprise Records The band s major label debut and first collaboration with producer Rob Cavallo it was recorded in late summer 1993 at Fantasy Studios in Berkeley California Written mostly by frontman and guitarist Billie 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 s Kerplunk and When I Come Around DookieStudio album by Green DayReleasedFebruary 1 1994 1994 02 01 RecordedSeptember October 1993StudioFantasy Berkeley CaliforniaGenrePunk rockpop punkskate punkLength39 35LabelRepriseProducerRob Cavallo Green DayGreen Day chronologyKerplunk 1991 Dookie 1994 Insomniac 1995 Singles from Dookie Longview Released February 1 1994 Basket Case Released August 1 1994 Welcome to Paradise Released October 17 1994 When I Come Around Released December 1994 After several years of grunge s dominance in popular music Dookie brought 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 of punk rock in 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 many punk and pop punk bands as well as artists from other genres Dookie received critical acclaim upon its release although some early fans called the band a sellout for leaving its independent label Lookout Records and embracing a more polished sound The record won a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Album in 1995 It was a worldwide success peaking at number two on the Billboard 200 in the United States and reaching top ten positions in several other countries Dookie was later certified Diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America RIAA It has sold over 20 million copies worldwide making it the band s best selling album and one of the best 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 Stone placed Dookie on three iterations of its 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list 1 and at number 1 on its 50 Greatest Pop Punk Albums list 2 In 2024 the album was selected for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress as being culturally historically or aesthetically significant 3 Contents 1 Background 2 Recording 3 Writing and composition 3 1 Songs 1 7 3 2 Songs 8 14 4 Packaging 5 Release 6 Reception 7 Legacy 7 1 Accolades 8 Live performances 9 Track listing 9 1 30th Anniversary Box Set 10 Personnel 11 Charts 11 1 Weekly charts 11 2 Year end charts 11 3 Decade end charts 12 Certifications and sales 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 External linksBackground edit nbsp The exterior of 924 Gilman Street in 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 and Kerplunk 1991 which sold 30 000 units each 4 5 a number of major record labels became interested in Green Day 6 Among those labels were Sony Warner Bros Geffen and Interscope 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 to Disneyland 7 The band declined these advances Armstrong believed that the labels were more than likely looking for something that resembled a grunge band namely second and third rate Nirvanas and Soundgardens 8 and they did not want to conform to a label s vision That changed when they met producer and A amp R representative Rob Cavallo of Reprise a subsidiary of Warner Bros 5 9 The band played Beatles covers for him for 40 minutes then Cavallo picked up his own guitar and jammed with them 9 10 They were impressed by his work with fellow Californian band The Muffs and later remarked that Cavallo was the only person we could really talk to and connect with 7 Eventually the band left their independent record label Lookout Records on friendly terms They signed a five album deal with Reprise in 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 them sell outs including the influential punk fanzine Maximumrocknroll 9 10 and the independent music club 924 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 vocalist Billie Joe 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 17 The group later returned in 2015 to play a benefit concert 18 Recording edit nbsp Fantasy Studios in Berkeley California where Dookie was recorded Following the band s last Gilman Street performance Green Day demoed the songs She Sassafras Roots Pulling Teeth and F O D on Armstrong s four track tape recorder and 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 recording Kerplunk To lighten the mood he invited them to a Mexican restaurant and bar down the street from Fantasy Studios even though drummer Tre Cool was 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 guitar tones 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 Jerry 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 the Sex Pistols record or the early Black Sabbath records sounded 22 but the band found the result of this approach to be an unsatisfactory original mix Cavallo agreed and it was remixed at Fantasy Studios in Berkeley California 22 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 album Nimrod and become a hit in its own right 23 The band also recorded new versions of the songs Welcome to Paradise and Christie Rd from their second album Kerplunk and 409 in your Coffeemaker from their second EP Slappy though only Welcome to Paradise would make it onto the final album 24 Writing and composition editMuch of Dookie s content was written by Armstrong except Emenius Sleepus which was written by bassist Mike Dirnt and the hidden track All by Myself which was written by drummer Tre Cool The album touched upon various experiences of the band members and included subjects such as anxiety and panic attacks masturbation sexual orientation boredom mass murder divorce domestic abuse and ex girlfriends 7 PopMatters summarized the album s theme as a record that speaks of the frustrations anxieties and apathy of young people 25 Stylistically the album has been categorized primarily as punk rock 26 27 28 but also as pop punk 25 29 30 and as a power pop take on skate punk 31 Influences from the Ramones and the Sex Pistols were noted in Armstrong s guitar technique throughout the album he recorded the album almost entirely with his Fernandes Stratocaster which he named Blue 30 Songs 1 7 edit nbsp Longview source source Longview the fourth track on Dookie was the band s debut single and its music video was played frequently on MTV in late 1994 as a promotional tool Problems playing this file See media help Dookie opens with Burnout a speedy antsy rocker centered around a central character s feelings of general apathy toward life 25 Armstrong wrote the song Having a Blast when he was in Cleveland in June 1992 32 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 1999 Columbine High School massacre have made the song the most uncomfortable track on the album 33 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 34 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 of LSD 35 In an interview with Guitar World in 2002 Armstrong described the character in the song as based on himself when he lived in Rodeo California There was nothing to do there and it was a real boring place 36 To entertain himself the character does nothing but watch television smoke marijuana and masturbate and has little motivation to change these habits despite tiring of the same cycle of behaviors 36 Welcome to Paradise the third single from Dookie 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 around Oakland California 37 Pulling Teeth one of the album s slower songs uses dark humor about domestic violence The typical victim and perpetrator are reversed the male narrator is at the mercy of his partner 23 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 38 39 The second single Basket Case which appeared on many singles charts worldwide 40 41 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 a panic disorder 22 Using a palm 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 42 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 43 nbsp Basket Case source source track Sample of Basket Case the third single from Dookie which was about Armstrong s panic attacks Problems playing this file See media help 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 to Ecuador to join the Peace Corps Armstrong decided to put She on the album 44 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 39 45 Amanda is also referenced in the next track Sassafras Roots 22 Sonically closer to the band s material on Kerplunk 39 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 46 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 a ballad on the album 39 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 additional pulled off and hammered on portions 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 47 The song Coming Clean deals with Armstrong s coming to terms with his bisexuality as a teenager At the time he was still looking for himself sexually and had no well defined sexual orientation 23 In his interview with The Advocate magazine 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 48 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 23 Played in a quick staccato styled rhythm 49 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 23 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 50 A hidden track All By Myself with vocals and guitar by Cool plays after F O D ends and is themed on masturbation 51 Packaging edit nbsp Telegraph Avenue in downtown Berkeley circa 2010 The street is the setting of the album cover artwork drawn by East Bay artist Richie Bucher 52 Dookie is American slang for feces It is a reference to the diarrhea liquid dookie that the band members suffered while eating spoiled food on tour Initially the band aimed to name the album Liquid Dookie but this was shortened to Dookie 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 of Berkeley s Telegraph Avenue In the center there is an explosion with the band s name at the top 52 The cover depicts Patti Smith showing off her armpit as shown on the cover of her album Easter 1977 a shootout surrounding Black Panther Party co founder Huey P Newton the woman on Black Sabbath s self titled debut album Angus Young of AC DC and the Sather 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 53 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 the East Bay and 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 at Gilman s The robed character that looks like the Mona Lisa is the woman on the cover of the first Black Sabbath album AC DC guitarist Angus Young is 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 of Ernie from Sesame Street which was airbrushed out of later prints for fear of litigation 53 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 that Dookie was a child s lullaby album or that the creators of Sesame Street had sued Green Day 6 Release editWhile rehearsing in the house they rented in Berkeley at the end of 1993 in anticipation of a tour for Dookie 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 54 Demand was well underestimated when Dookie was released on February 1 1994 the album s first 9 000 produced copies quickly sold out 53 55 Longview was released as the album s lead single simultaneously with the album 56 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 on MTV on February 22 did the album begin to attract stronger attention first entering the Billboard 200 rankings at number 127 53 In March the group made appearances on Late Night with Conan O Brien The Jon Stewart Show and 120 Minutes on MTV 53 57 Sales for Dookie rose greatly following these performances peaking at number two on the Billboard 200 in the United States 13 The record became an international success as well the album peaked in the top ten of the German 58 Finnish 59 Norwegian 60 Dutch 61 Swedish 62 and Swiss 63 charts while it topped the Australian 64 Canadian 65 and New Zealand charts 66 By June 14 Dookie was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America RIAA having sold more than 500 000 copies in the United States 67 That month an issue of Time hailed the album as a work creating an impact comparable to Nirvana s Nevermind 1991 57 On August 1 Basket Case was released as the album s second single 68 The song s music video quickly became an MTV staple 69 57 The following month Longview was nominated in three categories at the 1994 MTV Video Music Awards Green Day performed the unreleased song Armatage Shanks at the ceremony which would later appear on their following album Insomniac 1995 but did not win any of the categories which they were nominated for 70 71 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 72 An exclusive United Kingdom single release for the song did proceed on October 17 73 Near the end of 1994 Don Pardo invited the band to perform on Saturday Night Live 57 Ahead of the 37th Annual Grammy Awards When I Come Around was released to radio as the album s final single in December 1994 74 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 Vocal with Basket Case and Best Hard Rock Performance with Longview They won only the former of the categories 75 In the meantime When I Come Around had been quickly climbing the charts it held the top of the Billboard Modern Rock Chart for seven weeks and peaked at number six of the Hot 100 Airplay chart 76 77 becoming the band s most successful single from the album 47 Throughout the 1990s Dookie continued to sell well eventually receiving diamond certification from the RIAA in 1999 signifying ten million copies sold 67 By 2014 Dookie had sold over 20 million copies worldwide and remains the band s best selling album 78 79 Reception editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 26 Alternative Press nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 80 Billboard nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 81 Chicago Sun Times nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 82 Chicago Tribune nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 83 NME7 10 84 Pitchfork8 7 10 85 The Rolling Stone Album Guide nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 86 Spin Alternative Record Guide8 10 87 The Village VoiceA 88 Dookie was released to critical acclaim In early 1995 Jon Pareles of The New York Times wrote Punk turns into pop in fast funny catchy high powered songs about whining and channel surfing apathy has rarely sounded so passionate 89 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 90 Jesse Raub writing for Alternative 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 80 In a 20th anniversary retrospective review for Billboard 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 81 The Chicago Tribune s Greg Kot was appreciative of the loudness and urgency in the album s sound detecting influences from the Who and the Zombies 83 NME showcased the record s crashing drums and razor wire guitars concluding being dumb has never been so much fun 84 A 2017 review from Pitchfork 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 85 Robert Christgau writing for The 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 88 Neil Strauss of the New York Times while complimentary of the album s overall quality followed up Pareles review by noting that Dookie s pop sound only remotely resembled punk music 91 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 at Fuse cited it as the most important pop punk album 29 Legacy editGreen Day s Dookie along with the Offspring s Smash released two months later has been credited for helping bring punk rock back into mainstream music culture 27 28 92 93 NME argues 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 Dookie made rock fun again 94 In 2012 Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic described Dookie as a stellar piece of modern punk that many tried to emulate but nobody bettered 26 On the album s twentieth anniversary The Daily Beast wrote that before its release rock meant grunge heavy monotonic humorless and bleak but the lighter tone of Dookie changed 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 is OK Computer But neither record triggered the sort of commercial tsunami of compatriots and copycats that followed in Dookie s wake 93 Berkeley based Rancid was 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 28 In 2024 the album was selected for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress as being culturally historically or aesthetically significant 3 Some critics claim that Dookie allowed numerous similar artists to enjoy long careers including Rancid New Found Glory Fall Out Boy Panic At The Disco Blink 182 Simple Plan and Yellowcard 93 95 28 Good Charlotte guitarist Billy Martin Something Corporate frontman Andrew McMahon and Sum 41 frontman Deryck Whibley all claim stylistic influence from the album 28 NME believes Blink 182 s Enema of the State 1999 Sum 41 s All Killer No Filler 2001 My Chemical Romance s The Black Parade 2006 and even Lady Gaga s The Fame 2008 could not have been created without Dookie Gaga has said that the album was the first she ever purchased 94 In 2014 the year of its twentieth anniversary the album received several list accolades In April 2014 Rolling Stone placed the album at No 1 on its 1994 The 40 Best Records From Mainstream Alternative s Greatest Year list ahead of Nine Inch Nails The Downward Spiral and Weezer s self titled debut 96 A month later Loudwire placed Dookie at No 1 on its 10 Best Hard Rock Albums of 1994 list 97 Guitar World ranked Dookie at number thirteen in their list Superunknown 50 Iconic Albums That Defined 1994 that July 98 Rolling Stone cited it as one of the greatest punk rock albums of all time in 2016 99 and NME ranked it as the 18th best album of 1994 alongside Welcome to Paradise as a top 50 song for the year 100 A 30th anniversary deluxe edition of the album released on September 29 2023 includes outtakes demos and two live concert recordings 101 Accolades edit nbsp Deryck Whibley and his band Sum 41 are said to have been influenced by Dookie Dookie has 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 102 2005 Rolling Stone The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time 103 1 2020 375 Best Albums of 1994 Readers Choice 104 1994 1 40 Greatest Punk Albums of All Time 99 2016 18 1994 The 40 Best Records From Mainstream Alternative s Greatest Year 96 2014 1 Loudwire 10 Best Hard Rock Albums of 1994 97 1994 1 Rolling Stone 100 Best Albums of the Nineties 105 2010 30 Spin 100 Greatest Albums 1985 2005 106 2005 44 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame The Definitive 200 107 2007 50 Kerrang United Kingdom 51 Greatest Pop Punk Albums Ever 108 2015 2 Revolver United States 50 Greatest Punk Albums of All Time 109 2018 13 LouderSound United Kingdom The 50 Best Punk Albums of All Time 110 2018 11 LA Weekly United States Top 20 Punk Albums in History The Complete List 111 2013 13Live performances editIn mid 1993 while recording and mixing the album Green Day opened for several Bad Religion concerts allowing them to play new songs to a live audience 112 113 21 However unlike their previous shows the band was now playing before audiences of two to three thousand people 54 Two weeks after the release of Dookie the band embarked on an international tour In the United States they traveled between shows in a bookmobile belonging to Tre 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 114 Cavallo recorded a few performances during the tour to show the three young men their evolution on stage and for use as B sides on later releases 115 nbsp 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 of Lollapalooza as the main attraction and program directors set them to play the opening of the main stage 116 117 69 They missed a date of the traveling festival to perform on August 14 at Woodstock 94 This event the 25th anniversary of the original 1969 festival in Saugerties 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 the irony and 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 57 118 69 119 Further controversy followed the band only weeks later at a free concert in Boston Alternative radio station WFNX hosted a free Green Day concert at the Hatch Memorial Shell concert venue on September 9 1994 However the promoters were accustomed to hosting reggae and 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 57 120 121 The Massachusetts State Police were called Roughly 100 people were injured and 31 were arrested in the aftermath of the concert The Boston Phoenix would list the Green Day Hatch Shell riot concert as the sixth greatest concert in Boston history 122 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 123 115 Warner proposed several groups to play as opening acts on this tour but the band rejected these instead the band invited German punk band Die Toten Hosen and the American queercore group Pansy Division to join their shows Following the European shows the band returned home for one last show at the Z100 Acoustic Christmas at Madison Square Garden in New York An AIDS benefit show Armstrong performed the song She naked using his guitar to cover himself 124 125 126 In 2013 the band played Dookie in its entirety at some European dates as a celebration of the album s upcoming 20th anniversary 79 127 On October 19 2023 at the Fremont Country Club in Las Vegas Dookie was 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 128 129 Track listing editAll lyrics written by Billie Joe Armstrong except where noted all music composed by Green Day Original compact disc releaseNo TitleLength1 Burnout 2 072 Having a Blast 2 443 Chump 2 534 Longview 3 595 Welcome to Paradise 3 446 Pulling Teeth 2 307 Basket Case 3 028 She 2 139 Sassafras Roots 2 3710 When I Come Around 2 5711 Coming Clean 1 3412 Emenius Sleepus Mike Dirnt 1 4313 In the End 1 4614 F O D includes hidden track note 1 5 46Total length 39 35 Digital EditionNo TitleLength14 F O D 2 5015 All by Myself written and performed by Tre Cool 1 40Total length 38 19 30th Anniversary Box Set edit LP 2 DemosNo TitleLength1 Burnout 2 072 Chump 2 143 Pulling Teeth 2 184 Basket Case 3 075 She 2 156 Sassafras Roots 2 327 When I Come Around 2 018 In the End 1 539 F O D 2 5510 When It s Time 2 3411 When I Come Around 2 5912 Basket Case 2 5613 Longview 3 5314 Burnout 2 0615 Haushinka 3 3216 J A R 3 0017 Having a Blast 2 48Total length 45 09 LP 3 OuttakesNo TitleLength1 Christie Rd 3 442 409 in Your Coffeemaker 2 493 J A R 2 514 On the Wagon 2 475 Tired of Waiting for You The Kinks cover 2 326 Walking the Dog Rufus Thomas cover demo 2 49Total length 17 32 LP 4 Woodstock 1994 No TitleLength1 Welcome to Paradise live 5 142 One of My Lies live 3 053 Chump live 2 344 Longview live 3 375 Basket Case live 3 136 When I Come Around live 2 457 Burnout live 2 548 F O D live 2 419 Paper Lanterns live 8 0910 Shit Show live 5 54Total length 40 06 LP 5 Live at the Garatge Club Barcelona June 5 94 Side A B No TitleLength1 Welcome to Paradise live 4 172 One of My Lies live 2 383 Chump live 2 354 Longview live 3 215 Burnout live 2 046 Only of You live 3 107 When I Come Around live 2 498 2000 Light Years Away live 3 059 Going to Pasalacqua live 3 3910 Knowledge Operation Ivy cover live 3 11 LP 6 Live at the Garatge Club Barcelona June 5 1994 Side C D No TitleLength11 Basket Case live 2 4712 Paper Lanterns live 8 2413 Dominated Love Slave live 1 5514 F O D live 2 3015 Road to Acceptance live 6 3916 Christie Road live 3 2617 Disappearing Boy live 3 46Total length 60 16 Notes F O D ends at 2 52 followed by hidden track All by Myself written and performed by Tre Cool which starts at 4 09 Digital editions list a distinct Track 15 Personnel editGreen Day Billie Joe Armstrong lead vocals guitar Mike Dirnt bass backing vocals Tre Cool drums guitar and lead vocals on All by Myself Technical personnel Rob Cavallo Green Day producer mixing 130 Jerry Finn mixing 131 Neill King engineer 132 Casey McCrankin engineer Artwork Richie Bucher cover artist 133 Ken Schles photography 134 Pat Hynes booklet artwork 135 Charts editWeekly charts edit Weekly chart performance for Dookie Chart 1994 2006 Peakposition Australian Albums ARIA 136 1 Austrian Albums O3 Austria 137 4 Belgian Albums Ultratop Flanders 138 13 Belgian Albums Ultratop Wallonia 139 13 Canada Top Albums CDs RPM 140 1 Dutch Albums Album Top 100 141 5 Europe European Top 100 Albums 142 3 Finnish Albums Suomen virallinen lista 143 5 German Albums Offizielle Top 100 144 4 Greek Albums IFPI 145 33 Hungarian Albums MAHASZ 146 8 Irish Albums IRMA 147 38 Italian Albums FIMI 148 10 New Zealand Albums RMNZ 149 1 Norwegian Albums VG lista 150 9 Scottish Albums OCC 151 17 Spanish Albums AFYVE 152 6 Swedish Albums Sverigetopplistan 153 3 Swiss Albums Schweizer Hitparade 154 6 UK Albums OCC 155 13 US Billboard 200 156 2 US Heatseekers Albums Billboard 157 1 US Top Catalog Albums Billboard 158 10 US Vinyl Albums Billboard 159 9 Year end charts edit 1994 year end chart performance for Dookie Chart 1994 Position Canada Top Albums CDs RPM 160 32 US Billboard 200 161 24 1995 year end chart performance for Dookie Chart 1995 Position Australian Albums ARIA 162 10 Austrian Albums O3 Austria 163 4 Belgian Albums Ultratop Flanders 164 36 Belgian Albums Ultratop Wallonia 165 28 Canada Top Albums CDs RPM 166 2 Dutch Albums Album Top 100 167 32 European Top 100 Albums Music amp Media 168 7 German Albums Offizielle Top 100 169 6 New Zealand Albums RMNZ 170 4 Spanish Albums AFYVE 171 26 Swedish Albums amp Compilations Sverigetopplistan 172 26 Swiss Albums Schweizer Hitparade 173 5 UK Albums OCC 174 53 US Billboard 200 175 7 2001 year end chart performance for Dookie Chart 2001 Position UK Albums OCC 176 199 2002 year end chart performance for Dookie Chart 2002 Position Canadian Alternative Albums Nielsen SoundScan 177 159 Canadian Metal Albums Nielsen SoundScan 178 79 2005 year end chart performance for Dookie Chart 2005 Position UK Albums OCC 179 154 Decade end charts edit Decade end chart performance for Dookie Chart 1990 1999 Position US Billboard 200 180 33Certifications and sales edit See Tfd See Tfd Region Certification Certified units sales Argentina CAPIF 181 Platinum 60 000 Australia ARIA 182 5 Platinum 350 000 Austria IFPI Austria 183 Platinum 50 000 Belgium BEA 184 Gold 25 000 Brazil Pro Musica Brasil 185 Gold 100 000 Canada Music Canada 186 Diamond 1 000 000 Denmark IFPI Danmark 187 4 Platinum 80 000 Finland Musiikkituottajat 188 Gold 35 205 188 France SNEP 189 Gold 100 000 Germany BVMI 190 3 Gold 750 000 Ireland IRMA 191 4 Platinum 60 000 Italysales in 1995 250 000 192 Italy FIMI 193 sales since 2009 Platinum 50 000 Japan RIAJ 194 Platinum 200 000 Mexico 50 000 195 Netherlands NVPI 196 Gold 50 000 New Zealand RMNZ 197 Platinum 15 000 Poland ZPAV 198 Gold 50 000 Spain PROMUSICAE 199 Platinum 100 000 Sweden GLF 200 Gold 50 000 Switzerland IFPI Switzerland 201 Gold 25 000 United Kingdom BPI 202 3 Platinum 900 000 United States RIAA 203 Diamond 10 000 000 Summaries Europe IFPI 204 Platinum 1 000 000 Sales figures based on certification alone Shipments figures based on certification alone Sales streaming figures based on certification alone References editCitations edit a b 500 Greatest Albums of All Time Rolling Stone s definitive list of the 500 greatest albums of all time Rolling Stone 2020 Retrieved September 28 2020 The 50 Greatest Pop Punk Albums Rolling Stone November 15 2017 a b The Notorious B I G The Chicks Green Day amp More Selected for National Recording Registry Full List Billboard April 16 2024 Retrieved April 16 2024 a b Gaar 2009 p 79 a b c Spitz 2006 p 96 a b c d e Hildebrandt Jason narrator March 17 2002 Ultimate Albums Green Day s Dookie Ultimate Albums Season 1 Episode 2 VH1 a b c d e f g h i j k Green Day Behind the Music Season 4 Episode 34 July 15 2001 VH1 a b c d e f Fricke David February 3 2014 Dookie at 20 Billie Joe Armstrong on Green Day s Punk Blockbuster Rolling Stone Archived from the original on March 5 2023 Retrieved April 5 2023 a b c d Myers 2005 pp 80 83 a b Spitz 2006 pp 101 105 Gaar 2009 p 80 Spitz 2006 p 97 a b Green Day Biography Billboard Retrieved July 16 2007 Anon What Happened Next Guitar Legends Archived from the original on September 27 2006 Retrieved September 26 2006 Ozzi Dan 2021 Sellout The Major Label Feeding Frenzy That Swept Punk Emo and Hardcore 1994 2007 HarperCollins Publishers p 19 ISBN 9780358244301 Retrieved December 29 2022 Green Day The Early Years 2017 Archived from the original on November 14 2021 Retrieved January 22 2021 via YouTube Smith 1999 p 146 Grow Kory May 18 2015 See Green Day s Manic Surprise Return to 924 Gilman Rolling Stone Retrieved July 11 2021 a b c d e f Spitz 2006 p 113 Egerdahl 2010 p 46 a b Myers 2005 p 85 a b c d e f g h i Anon Billie Joe Confessions of a Basket Case VH1 Archived from the original on August 9 2002 Retrieved July 16 2007 a b c d e Gaar 2009 pp 85 86 Breihan Tom September 8 2023 Green Day share three Dookie outtakes from 30th anniversary reissue Stereogum Retrieved September 12 2023 a b c Ramirez AJ November 24 2009 Green Day All About Dookie Burnout PopMatters Archived from the original on March 20 2018 Retrieved April 6 2023 a b c Erlewine Steven Thomas Dookie Green Day Allmusic Archived from the original on June 14 2012 Retrieved January 1 2024 a b Crain Zac October 23 1997 Green Day Family Values Page 1 Music Miami Miami New Times Archived from the original on May 22 2014 Retrieved September 2 2013 a b c d e D Angelo Joe September 15 2004 How Green Day s Dookie Fertilized A Punk Rock Revival MTV Retrieved June 17 2014 a b Nassiff Thomas January 31 2014 Green Day s Dookie Turns 20 Musicians Revisit the Punk Classic Features Fuse Fuse Archived from the original on February 23 2015 Retrieved February 14 2015 a b Price Andy November 23 2022 The Genius Of Dookie by Green Day Guitar Archived from the original on August 10 2023 Retrieved September 30 2023 Griffith JT Unwritten Law Oz Factor Allmusic Archived from the original on March 5 2023 Retrieved March 7 2023 billiejoe February 9 2011 I wrote having a blast in cleveland Tweet Retrieved February 12 2011 via Twitter Ramirez AJ November 26 2009 Green Day All About Dookie Having a Blast PopMatters Archived from the original on March 20 2018 Retrieved April 7 2023 Ramirez AJ November 29 2009 Green Day All About Dookie Chump PopMatters Archived from the original on November 24 2012 Retrieved April 6 2023 Mundy Chris January 26 1995 Green Day Best New Band Rolling Stone Archived from the original on April 6 2023 Retrieved April 6 2023 When Billie gave me a shuffle beat for Longview I was flying on acid so hard I was laying up against the wall with my bass lying on my lap It just came to me I said Bill check this out Isn t this the wackiest thing you ve ever heard Later it took me a long time to be able to play it but it made sense when I was on drugs a b Ramirez AJ December 4 2009 Green Day All About Dookie Longview PopMatters Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved April 7 2023 Ramirez AJ December 11 2009 Green Day All About Dookie Welcome to Paradise PopMatters Archived from the original on November 1 2012 Retrieved April 6 2023 Egerdahl 2010 p 47 a b c d Spitz 2006 pp 110 112 Green Day single chart history Billboard Archived from the original on November 19 2021 Retrieved July 16 2007 UK album chart archives everyhit com Archived from the original on July 17 2007 Retrieved July 16 2007 Ramirez AJ December 30 2009 Green Day All About Dookie Basket Case PopMatters Archived from the original on March 20 2018 Retrieved August 9 2023 Buskin Richard Green Day Basket Case Sound on Sound Archived from the original on November 1 2013 Retrieved October 30 2013 Spitz 2006 p 70 Ramirez AJ January 12 2010 All About Dookie She PopMatters Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved August 9 2023 Armstrong tenderly paints the scenario of a girl unsatisfied with the predetermined life she s trapped in Ramirez AJ January 13 2010 All About Dookie Sassafras Roots PopMatters Archived from the original on March 22 2018 Retrieved August 9 2023 a b Ramirez AJ January 27 2010 All About Dookie When I Come Around PopMatters Archived from the original on June 30 2018 Retrieved August 11 2023 Wieder Judy Interview with The Advocate magazine The Advocate Archived from the original on March 9 2005 Retrieved July 27 2007 Ramirez AJ February 11 2010 All About Dookie In the End PopMatters Archived from the original on November 1 2020 Retrieved August 11 2023 Ramirez AJ February 27 2010 All About Dookie F O D and All By Myself PopMatters Archived from the original on June 30 2018 Retrieved August 11 2023 Pearlman Mischa January 6 2021 The 11 best hidden tracks in rock history Kerrang Archived from the original on January 22 2022 Retrieved January 28 2023 a b Cizmar Martin February 18 2014 Where s Angus Willamette Week Archived from the original on October 19 2016 Retrieved October 14 2016 a b c d e Gaar 2009 pp 93 94 a b Spitz 2006 pp 114 118 Spitz 2006 pp 119 120 Borzillo Carrie April 9 1994 As Reprise Set Rises It s Easy Being Green Day Billboard Vol 106 no 15 p 72 The single and videoclip were serviced Feb 1 simultaneous with the album s street date a b c d e f Spitz 2006 pp 129 135 Discographie von Green Day in German GfK Entertainment Retrieved February 13 2020 Green Day Dookie in Finnish Musiikkituottajat IFPI Finland Retrieved January 1 2024 Norwegiancharts com Green Day Dookie Hung Medien Retrieved January 1 2024 Green Day Dookie Hung Medien Retrieved January 1 2024 Discography Green Day swedishcharts com Hung Medien Retrieved October 20 2012 Green Day Dookie Hung Medien Retrieved January 1 2024 Discography Green Day Hung Medien Retrieved January 1 2024 Top Albums CDs Volume 60 No 25 January 23 1995 RPM Retrieved October 20 2012 Discography Green Day Hung Medien Retrieved January 1 2024 a b Gold amp Platinum Recording Industry Association of America Retrieved January 1 2024 Single Releases Music Week July 30 1994 p 25 a b c Myers 2005 pp 93 97 Myers 2005 p 98 VMAs 1994 MTV September 8 1994 Archived from the original on June 17 2016 Retrieved January 1 2024 Spitz 2006 pp 125 126 Single Releases Music Week October 15 1994 p 27 Billboard 1994 p 2 37th Annual GRAMMY Awards GRAMMY Awards March 1 1995 Retrieved September 26 2023 Myers 2005 p 111 Green Day Billboard Archived from the original on November 17 2021 Retrieved January 1 2024 Adam Chandler February 1 2014 Green Day s Album Dookie Is 20 Years Old Today Yahoo Music Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved October 3 2014 a b Galbraith Alex August 23 2013 Green Day Dookie Set Billie Joe Armstrong amp Rockers Perform 1994 Album In Entirety For London Show WATCH Music News Mstarz Archived from the original on October 17 2015 Retrieved September 2 2013 a b Raub Jesse June 22 2010 Green Day Dookie Alternative Press Archived from the original on August 29 2010 Retrieved August 22 2015 a b Payne Chris February 1 2014 Green Day s Dookie at 20 Classic Track By Track Review Billboard Retrieved August 22 2015 DeRogatis Jim February 20 1994 Green Day Dookie Warner Bros Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on November 18 2018 Retrieved September 24 2015 a b Kot Greg March 4 1994 Green Day Dookie Reprise Chicago Tribune Retrieved September 24 2015 a b Barker Emily January 29 2014 25 Seminal Albums From 1994 And What NME Said At The Time NME Archived from the original on July 9 2015 Retrieved July 8 2015 a b Hogan Marc May 7 2017 Green Day Dookie Pitchfork Retrieved May 8 2017 Catucci 2004 p 347 Eddy 1995 pp 170 171 a b Christgau Robert October 18 1994 Consumer Guide The Village Voice Retrieved August 22 2015 Pareles Jon January 5 1995 The Pop Life New York Times Retrieved July 21 2007 Evans Paul February 2 1998 Green Day Dookie Rolling Stone Archived from the original on September 17 2012 Retrieved February 14 2015 Strauss Neil February 5 1995 Pop View Has Success Spoiled Green Day New York Times Retrieved July 21 2007 Bienstock Richard April 8 2014 The Offspring s Smash The Little Punk LP That Defeated the Majors Rolling Stone Archived from the original on March 24 2023 Retrieved January 2 2024 a b c Romano Andrew July 12 2017 How Green Day s Dookie Defined the 1990s and Changed Music Forever The Daily Beast Archived from the original on 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2023 Green Day Celebrating 30th Anniversary of 1994 Breakthrough With Massive Dookie Deluxe Edition Billboard Retrieved August 18 2023 Dimery Robert 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die page 855 The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time Rolling Stone December 10 2003 Archived from the original on January 20 2013 Retrieved July 16 2007 subscription required Rocklist net Rolling Stone USA End of Year Lists Rolling Stone Archived from the original on June 28 2011 100 Best Albums of the Nineties Green Day Dookie Rolling Stone April 27 2011 Retrieved August 3 2011 Spin Magazine 100 Greatest Albums 1985 2005 Archived from the original on August 11 2007 Retrieved July 16 2007 The Definitive 200 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Archived from the original on August 13 2007 Retrieved August 18 2007 51 Greatest Pop Punk Albums Ever Kerrang 1586 18 25 September 16 2015 Staff May 24 2018 50 Greatest Punk Albums of All Time Revolver Retrieved May 20 2022 Staff March 15 2018 50 Greatest Punk Albums of All 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Gallery Retrieved February 22 2024 Hoos Kate February 1 2022 Dookie Track by Track Full Time Aesthetic Full Time Aesthetic Retrieved February 22 2024 Australiancharts com Green Day Dookie Hung Medien Retrieved April 13 2021 Austriancharts at Green Day Dookie in German Hung Medien Retrieved April 13 2021 Ultratop be Green Day Dookie in Dutch Hung Medien Retrieved April 13 2021 Ultratop be Green Day Dookie in French Hung Medien Retrieved April 13 2021 Top RPM Albums Issue 2714 RPM Library and Archives Canada Retrieved August 2 2021 Dutchcharts nl Green Day Dookie in Dutch Hung Medien Retrieved April 13 2021 Eurochart Top 100 Albums September 23 1995 PDF Music amp Media Vol 12 no 38 September 23 1995 p 17 Retrieved November 18 2021 Green Day Dookie in Finnish Musiikkituottajat IFPI Finland Retrieved April 13 2021 Offiziellecharts de Green Day Dookie in German GfK Entertainment Charts Retrieved April 13 2021 Top 50 3enwn Almpoym Ebdomada 11 17 6 2006 in Greek IFPI Greece Archived from the original on June 17 2006 Retrieved February 7 2021 Album Top 40 slagerlista 1995 25 het in Hungarian MAHASZ Retrieved November 25 2021 Irish charts com Discography Green Day Hung Medien Retrieved April 13 2021 Classifica settimanale WK 12 dal 17 03 1995 al 23 03 1995 in Italian Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana Charts nz Green Day Dookie Hung Medien Retrieved April 13 2021 Norwegiancharts com Green Day Dookie Hung Medien Retrieved April 13 2021 Official Scottish Albums Chart Top 100 Official Charts Company Retrieved April 13 2021 Hits of the World Spain Billboard May 13 1995 p 68 Swedishcharts com Green Day Dookie Hung Medien Retrieved April 13 2021 Swisscharts com Green Day Dookie Hung Medien Retrieved April 13 2021 Official Albums Chart Top 100 Official Charts Company Retrieved April 13 2021 Green Day Chart History Billboard 200 Billboard Retrieved April 13 2021 Green Day Chart History Heatseekers Albums Billboard Retrieved June 1 2021 Green Day Chart History Top Catalog Albums 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Recorded Music NZ Retrieved May 23 2021 LOS 50 TITULOS CON MAYORES VENTAS EN LAS LISTAS DE VENTAS DE AFYVE EN 1995 PDF in Spanish Anuarios SGAE Archived from the original PDF on August 18 2012 Retrieved May 31 2023 Arslista Album inkl samlingar 1995 in Swedish Sverigetopplistan Retrieved May 23 2021 Schweizer Jahreshitparade 1995 in German hitparade ch Retrieved April 13 2021 End of Year Album Chart Top 100 1995 Official Charts Company Retrieved April 13 2021 Top Billboard 200 Albums Year End 1995 Billboard Retrieved April 13 2021 The Official UK Albums Chart Year End 2001 PDF UKchartsplus co uk Official Charts Company p 6 Retrieved May 31 2021 Canada s Top 200 Alternative albums of 2002 Jam Archived from the original on September 2 2004 Retrieved March 28 2022 Top 100 Metal Albums of 2002 Jam Archived from the original on August 12 2004 Retrieved March 23 2022 The Top 200 Artist Albums of 2005 PDF Chartwatch 2005 Chart Booklet Zobbel de pp 40 41 Retrieved June 29 2021 Mayfield 1999 p 20 Discos de oro y platino in Spanish Camara Argentina de Productores de Fonogramas y Videogramas Archived from the original on July 6 2011 Retrieved September 6 2019 ARIA Charts Accreditations 2011 Albums PDF Australian Recording Industry Association Retrieved September 6 2019 Austrian album certifications Green Day Dookie in German IFPI Austria Retrieved September 6 2019 Ultratop Goud en Platina albums 1995 Ultratop Hung Medien Retrieved September 6 2019 Brazilian album certifications Green Day Dookie in Portuguese Pro Musica Brasil Retrieved September 6 2019 Canadian album certifications Green Day Dookie Music Canada Retrieved September 6 2019 Danish album certifications Green Day Dookie IFPI Danmark Retrieved November 18 2020 a b Green Day in Finnish Musiikkituottajat IFPI Finland Retrieved September 6 2019 French album certifications Green Day Dookie in French Syndicat National de l Edition Phonographique Retrieved September 6 2019 Gold Platin Datenbank Green Day Dookie in German Bundesverband Musikindustrie Retrieved September 6 2019 The Irish Charts 2005 Certification Awards Multi Platinum Irish Recorded Music Association Retrieved September 6 2019 Rock Da Domani Green Day In Tour in Italia in Italian Adnkronos March 18 1996 Retrieved April 5 2023 Italian album certifications Green Day Dookie in Italian Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana Retrieved August 2 2021 Japanese album certifications Green Day Dookie in Japanese Recording Industry Association of Japan Retrieved September 6 2019 Select 1997年5月 on the drop down menu Vaya con esta Gente La Opinion in Spanish December 8 1995 p 18 Retrieved February 29 2024 Dutch album certifications Greenday Dookie in Dutch Nederlandse Vereniging van Producenten en Importeurs van beeld en geluidsdragers Retrieved September 6 2019 EnterDookie in the Artiest of titel box Select 1995 in the drop down menu saying Alle jaargangen New Zealand album certifications Green Day Dookie Recorded Music NZ Retrieved June 2 2021 Wyroznienia Zlote plyty CD Archiwum Przyznane w 1996 roku in Polish Polish Society of the Phonographic Industry December 30 1996 Retrieved September 6 2019 Solo Exitos 1959 2002 Ano A Ano Certificados 1991 1995 Solo Exitos 1959 2002 Ano A Ano 2005 ISBN 84 8048 639 2 Guld och Platinacertifikat Ar 1987 1998 PDF in Swedish IFPI Sweden Archived from the original PDF on May 17 2011 Retrieved September 6 2019 The Official Swiss Charts and Music Community Awards Dookie IFPI Switzerland Hung Medien Retrieved September 6 2019 British album certifications Green Day Dookie British Phonographic Industry Retrieved September 6 2019 American album certifications Green Day Dookie Recording Industry Association of America Retrieved September 6 2019 IFPI Platinum Europe Awards 1996 International Federation of the Phonographic Industry Retrieved September 6 2019 Sources edit Anon December 3 1994 Woodstock 94 Billboard Vol 106 no 49 ISSN 0006 2510 Catucci Nick 2004 Green Day In Brackett Nathan Hoard Christian eds The New Rolling Stone Album Guide 4th ed Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 7432 0169 8 Dimery Robert 2006 Les 1001 albums qu il faut avoir ecoutes dans sa vie in French Groupe Flammarion ISBN 2 0820 1539 4 Eddy Chuck 1995 Green Day In Weisbard Eric Marks Craig eds Spin Alternative Record Guide Vintage Books ISBN 0 679 75574 8 Egerdahl Kjersti 2010 Green Day A Musical Biography ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0313365973 Gaar Gillian 2009 Green Day Rebels With a Cause Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0857120595 Mayfield Geoff December 25 1999 1999 The Year in Music Totally 90s Diary of a Decade The listing of Top Pop Albums of the 90s amp Hot 100 Singles of the 90s Billboard Vol 111 no 52 ISSN 0006 2510 Myers Ben 2005 Green Day American Idiots amp The New Punk Explosion London Independent Music Press ISBN 0953994295 Salaverri Fernando 2005 Solo exitos ano ano 1959 2002 in Spanish Iberautor Promociones Culturales ISBN 8480486392 Smith RJ September 1999 Top 90 Albums of the 90 s Spin 15 9 ISSN 0886 3032 Spitz Marc 2006 Nobody Likes You Inside the Turbulent Life Times and Music of Green Day Hachette Books ISBN 1401309127 Verlant Gilles Causse Thomas 2009 La Discotheque parfaite de l odyssee du rock in French Hors collection ISBN 978 2 2580 8007 2 External links editDookie at YouTube streamed copy where licensed Dookie at Discogs Dookie on Rate Your Music site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dookie amp oldid 1220888473, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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