Green Day
Green Day is a musical trio from
California, consisting of
Billie Joe Armstrong (acoustic & electric guitar, lead vocals),
Mike Dirnt (bass guitar, backing vocals) and
Tré Cool (drums, backing vocals). Green Day is widely credited, along with fellow California bands
The Offspring and
Rancid, with reviving mainstream interest in and popularizing
punk rock in the
United States during the mid 1990s.
[DeRogatis, Jim. Milk It!: Collected Musings on the Alternative Music Explosion of the 90's. Cambridge: Da Capo, 2003. Pg. 357, ISBN 0-306-81271-1] Their success has influenced prominent
pop punk bands like
Sum 41,
Good Charlotte, and
blink-182.
The band has sold over 24.2 million albums in the United States, and over 54 million records worldwide. Green Day's breakthrough album
Dookie has been certified
diamond in the
United States since its 1994 release, and won the
Grammy Award for
Alternative Album. Their second best-selling album
American Idiot (
2004), has been certified quadruple platinum in the U.S., and won the 2005
Grammy Award for "
Best Rock Album".
Green Day has won three Grammy Awards, and several MTV
Video Music Awards and other industry and fan-based awards. They are also second to the
Red Hot Chili Peppers for most number-ones on
Billboard's
Modern Rock Tracks chart with eight (the Red Hot Chili Peppers currently have nine).
Formation and Lookout! years (1986–1992)
|
An early shot of Green Day, before Tré Cool joined as the new drummer. |
At the age of twelve,
Tré Cool became a member of the band
The Lookouts. Their album
One Planet One People, released in 1986, attracted some attention, and Tré began performing at an early age at the
Berkeley, California punk-rock all-ages venue
924 Gilman Street. In 1986,
Billie Joe Armstrong and
Mike Dirnt (both aged 14) formed
Sweet Children, with Armstrong on lead vocals and
guitar and Dirnt on
bass and backing vocals. Despite rumor to the contrary, John Kiffmeyer (also known as
Al Sobrante) was not a part of this endeavor. Their first show was on
October 17,
1988, at Rod's Hickory Pit in
Vallejo, California where Armstrong's mother was working.
In 1989, Kiffmeyer's band
Isocracy broke up. Kiffmeyer sought out Armstrong and Dirnt to form Green Day, while other members went on to form
Samiam. They chose the name Green Day, after a
marijuana slang reference.
Larry Livermore, who played guitar for The Lookouts and ran the Berkeley independent label
Lookout! Records, offered the band a record deal after having hearing the band play. The band, he said, played like "
The Beatles at
Shea Stadium"
In early 1989 they recorded their first
EP,
1,000 Hours. The first Green Day show was played at Contra Costa College in San Pablo where Kiffmeyer attended as a journalism student.
In
1990, Green Day released their first full-length album
39/Smooth. Earleir that year,
I.R.S. Records had made an attempt to sign Green Day, but the band made it clear that they were loyal to Lookout! Records and that I.R.S. was a "cheesy" and "washed up" label
[Their letter of response is printed on the lyrics sheet of 39/Smooth]. They recorded two EPs later that year:
Slappy, and
Sweet Children, the latter of which included some older songs for the
Minneapolis, Minnesota indie label
Skene! Records. In 1991, Lookout! Records released
1,039/Smoothed Out Slappy Hours, a compliation that fused
39/Smooth with the
Slappy and
1,000 Hours EPs. In late 1990, shortly after the band's first nationwide tour, John left the band to attend college in
Arcata, California. By this time the Lookouts had become mostly inactive, and
Tré Cool, now 17 and living in Berkeley, began playing with Green Day after Armstrong and Dirnt were introduced to his drumming via Livermore's reference.
In January
1991, Green Day wrote and recorded their second album,
Kerplunk!, the first featuring Tré Cool on drums, and released it on
Lookout! Records in
1992. The band toured for most of
1992 and
1993, and tour even expanded to
Europe, which was surprising for an album released on an
independent label. The album, quoted as Tré "really, really" liking it, sold about 650,000 units in the U.S., which was considered quite a large amount for the independent punk scene in 1992. It eventually topped 2 million albums sold worldwide. The booklet of
Kerplunk! features a completely fictional 'diary entry' by the fictional Laurie L. entitled "My Adventure with Green Day". It can be found in its entirety
here.
Reprise Records and the 90's (1992–1999)
Kerplunk!'s underground success led to a wave of interest coming from major record labels, and eventually they left Lookout! on friendly terms and signed with
Reprise Records after attracting the attention of producer
Rob Cavallo, who would produce all of the band's albums from then on. Signing to Reprise caused some problems, as they had long since said that they would never sign to a major label. Reflecting on the period, Armstrong told
SPIN magazine in 1999, "I couldn't go back to the punk scene, whether we were the biggest success in the world or the biggest failure ... The only thing I could do was get on my bike and go forward."
[Smith, RJ. "Top 90 Albums of the 90's". SPIN. August 1999.]. They spent the greater part of the year recording their major label debut,
Dookie.
Released in February of 1994, and recorded in a mere 3 weeks,
Dookie was a commercial sensation, helped by extensive
MTV airplay for the videos "
Longview", "
When I Come Around", and "
Basket Case", all of which sat in the #1 position on the
Modern Rock Tracks.
Later that year, Green Day embarked on a nationwide tour with
queercore band
Pansy Division as their opening act. The band also joined the lineups of both the
Lollapalooza Festival and
Woodstock 1994, where they partook in the infamous mud fight, further adding to Green Day's growing publicity and recognition, and only helped push the album to eventual
diamond status. During Woodstock, a security guard mistook bassist
Mike Dirnt for a stage-invading fan and punched out some of his teeth.
Dookie had a received a positive reponse, with
All Music calling it, "...a stellar piece of modern punk that many tried to emulate but nobody bettered."
[Erlewine, Stephen. "Dookie Overview". All Music Guide. August 1994.] Dookie appeared in the book
1,001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die, and in
Rolling Stone Magazine's
500 Greatest Albums of All Time issue,
Dookie was placed at number 193, in the top 39%, and making it the highest placed punk album released since 1979. It beat out favorites such as
Wish You Were Here by
Pink Floyd, and
Black Sabbath's
eponymous debut album.
In 1995, Dookie won the prestigous
Grammy for
Best Alternative Album, as well as the video for
Basket Case was nominated for 9 MTV Video Music Awards including Video of the Year, Best Group Video, Best Hard Rock Video, Best Alternative Video, Breakthrough Video, Best Direction, Best Editing, Best Cinematography, and Viewer's Choice, while winning none. Green Day won the Outstanding Album, Outstanding Bassist, Outstanding Drummer and Outstanding Group at the Bay Area Music in San Fransisco at Warfield Theatre. The music video for
Longview was nominated at the MTV Video Music Awards for Best Group Video, Best New Artist and Best Alternative Video. [
1]
|
Tré Cool, the band's drummer. As well as drumming, Cool has played a minor role in songwriting and singing, most notably on the Homecoming suite. |
In 1995, a new single for the
Angus soundtrack was released, titled
J.A.R.. The single went straight to #1 on the Billboard
Modern Rock Tracks chart. The song was followed by their new album,
Insomniac, which was released in the fall of 1995.
Insomniac was a much darker response to the poppy, more melodic
Dookie. Insomniac opened to a warm critical reception, earning 4 out of 5 stars from
Rolling Stone Magazine, raving "In punk, the good stuff actually unfolds and gains meaning as you listen without sacrificing any of its electric, haywire immediacy. And Green Day are as good as this stuff gets."
[Coleman, Mark. "Insomniac". Rolling Stone. November 1995.]Insomniac also had one particular song, "86", which was about never being able to return to the local punk scene. "Eighty-sixed" is a term commonly used to describe banishment or firing. As Gilman has a strict "no major label" policy, this is an appropriate title for a song of such subject matter. Following the release and immense success of
Dookie, and cries of "sell-out" and "mainstream" from the band's former admirers and friends, Green Day as a band realized that its former home at Gilman Street had been lost. "86"`s lyrics include lines such as "There's no return from 86," indicating this realization, the ceaseless need to move forward, and the band's new attitude towards their music and their fans, old and new.
Although it did go double-platinum in the U.S.,
Insomniac did not have the sales endurance of its predecessor, and also had no signature track like
Basket Case,
Longview, or
When I Come Around, all of which found a recognizable home on Dookie. Still, the album managed to sell 8 million units worldwide and is still considered musically successful. Singles released from
Insomniac were
Geek Stink Breath, the radio favorite
Brain Stew/
Jaded,
Walking Contradiction, and
Stuck With Me. Insomniac won the band many award nominations, such as Favorite Artist, Favorite Hard Rock Artist, and Favorite Alternative Artist at the 1996
American Music Awards. The video for
Walking Contradiction got the band a Grammy nomination for Best Video, Short Form, in addition to a Best Special Effects nomination at the MTV Viedeo Music Awards, for
Walking Contradiction. [
2]
After taking break in 1996, Green Day was back in the studio by 1997, at work on a new album. The result was
nimrod., an experimental deviation from the band's standard pop-punk brand of music. The new album was released in October 1997. It provided a variety of music, with everything from upbeat pop-punk, laid-back surfer rock, and peppy, silly ska, to an acoustic ballad.
nimrod. entered the charts at number 10, thanks to the surprise hit
Good Riddance (Time of Your Life).
Reject, the 14th track on the album is based on a letter
Billie Joe received from an angry mother who said the album
Insomniac offended her, and her 8-year old son. He replied by saying "I write for myself, not for 8 year old boys and their mothers."
The first single released from
nimrod. was
Hitchin' a Ride which sported a violin introduction and has become a staple of Green Day's live performances. During the instrumental parts of the song, Billie Joe often interacts with the crowd, most notably at
Milton Keynes, when the song length was extended by over 8 minutes, as seen in
Bullet in a Bible. The music video is somewhat strange and has the band acting in a dark-themed play featuring a cast of quirky characters as fellow actors.
Nice Guys Finish Last, the second single from the album, is a straightforward punk rock song with an accompanying music video featuring the band on a football field (a parody of the
football team from '
Green Bay').
Good Riddance (Time of Your Life) was released next and is often seen as the force behind the albums'
double platinum certification from the
RIAA and success. It is an acoustic ballad, with no rhythm section (
drums, bass), instead featuring a mellow and delicate
string composition. Despite being a break-up song about going on with your life (as evidenced in chorus:
I hope you had the time of your life.), it became the number one most played song at weddings for
1998, somewhat strange considering just 4 years ago they were writing songs about masturbation (
Longview). It went straight to the number two spot on the
Modern Rock charts, the highest position for Green Day in 3 years and the highest off of
nimrod.
Redundant was the last single released. The success of
Good Riddance (Time of Your Life) won the band an MTV Video Award for Best Alternative Video for the song's video, which depicted people undergoing major changes in their lives while Bille Joe Armstrong strummed his acoustic guitar. [
3]
After the release of
nimrod., Green Day took a two-year break, deciding to step back from the spotlight and spend some time with their new families.
The New Millennium (2000–Present)
In 2000, Green Day released
Warning:, a step further in the style that they had hinted at with
nimrod. The album's recording and definitive sound coincided with a general maturation, characterized, in part, by their decreased marijuana use. Changes in their personal lives were reflected in the more mature and straightforward approach they took to their music, replacing nearly adolescent mantras of masturbation with more introspective statements. Critics' reviews of the album were fairly postive, although the album was greeted with mixed reviews within their fan base, who had grown accustomed to their 1990's
Punk-pop sound. Though it produced the #1 hit
Minority and a smaller hit with
Warning, some observers were coming to the conclusion that the band was losing relevance, and a decline in popularity followed. While all of Green Day's past albums had reached a status of at least double platinum,
Warning: was only certified gold. Although the band felt this was some of their strongest work to date, the lack of success fueled questions regarding the band's future.
The release of a Greatest Hits compilation,
International Superhits!, and the token complementary assemblage of B-sides,
Shenanigans, only fueled the theory that Green Day's career was on the rocks. A 2002 co-headlining tour with
blink-182 helped to resurrect some of the band's popularity, and earned the group many positive concert reviews. The band decided to take some more time off after the Pop Disaster Tour closed, to spend time with their families.
At the 2001 California Music Awards, Green Day won all eight awards that they were nominated for. The won the awards for Outstanding Album (
Warning:), Outstanding Punk Rock/Ska Album (
Warning:), Outstanding Group, Outstanding Male Vocalist, Outstanding Bassist, Outstanding Drummer, Outstanding Songwriter and Outstanding Artist. [
4]
Fighting burnout after
Warning:, the band went into a studio to write and record new material for a new album, believed to be tentatively titled
Cigarettes and Valentines. After completing 20 tracks, the
master tapes were stolen from the studio. The band, understandably upset, chose not to try to re-create the stolen album (Armstrong feared that it would take their fan base "back to about 50"), but instead started over with a vow to be even better than before. In addition, they underwent serious "band therapy," engaging in several long talks to work out the members' differences after accusations from Dirnt and Cool that Armstrong was "the band's Nazi"
and a show-off bent on taking the limelight from the other band members.
|
Billie Joe Armstrong, the band's lead guiarist, vocalist and principle lyricist. |
After a restoration of band democracy, the creative floodgates opened as well, with each member trying different things every day in the studio — most notably the creation of two 9-minute tracks for the forthcoming Green Day record. Billie Joe also stated he previously feared playing "corny" guitar solos if he let loose, but eventually decided "I'm gonna play the fucking thing..."
[Di Perna, Alan. "Combat Rock". Guitar World. Holiday 2004.] on this album whenever needed. The resulting 2004 album,
American Idiot, debuted at #1 on the
Billboard charts, the band's first ever album to reach #1, backed by the success of the album's first single, "American Idiot." The album was billed as a "punk
rock opera"
which follows the journey of the fictitious "
Jesus Of Suburbia". Also the album marked a significant growth in the band as musicians. On the background of their pop punk landmark albums
Kerplunk and
Dookie,
American Idiot was noted by critics as far more mature and musically eclectic than its predecessors and is often cited as their best work to date. The two multi-movement suites that both exceed 9 minutes in length, "Jesus of Suburbia" and "Homecoming", composed in 5 different parts. In Armstrong's words, "One day Mike was at the studio and he wrote a thirty-second song. I don't know, I liked it so I wanted to do one too. The one that I did, I connected to his and then Tré did one and he connected it to mine and so on and so forth until we had about ten minutes. It was just purely out of having a good time."
American Idiot won a
Grammy in 2005 for "Best Rock Album" and was nominated for Best Album, Record of the Year, Best Rock Song (
American Idiot, Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group, and Best Music Video, Short Form (
American Idiot). The music video for "American Idiot" was voted 'The Greatest Rock Video Ever' in a
Kerrang! Magazine Poll. In the Australian
Triple J's Hottest 100 for 2005,
Jesus of Suburbia entered at #61 making it the longest song ever to place in the chart at 9 minutes and 8 seconds. Green Day also won two
Kids Choice Awards Blimps in 2006 for Favorite Musical Group and Favorite Song (
Wake Me Up When September Ends). They swept the 2005 MTV music awards, winning a total of seven of the eight awards they were nominated for, including the coveted Viewer's Choice Award. For a complete listing of awards that
American Idiot has won or was nominated, see [
5].
Reflecting on the decade since Green Day's debut
Dookie, Billie Joe Armstrong was reported saying the Green Day song that he is most proud of was
Jesus of Suburbia, in his words, "I'd have to say 'Jesus of Suburbia'. It always feels brand new, and with that song, we can say that we've done something that no one else has in rock music, that is make a nine-minute anthem that's considered punk rock." [
6]
American Idiot also marked a major change of the band's image. Before, they dyed their hair wacky colors like pink, or green, and were getting into
mud fights with the audience.
American Idiot saw the band dying their hair more bland colors, such as black or white, and wearing eyeliner and makeup to concerts. Another change was the band's wardrobe. Instead of wearing t-shirts, the band constantly wore black and red clothes after the release of
American Idiot, leading many to accuse Green Day of stealing
The Icarus Line's "anti"-fashion statement by wearing black clothes with red ties, or vice-versa, while others think the band is following up with the colors of
American Idiot's cover.
Through 2005, the band toured, promoting the album with about 150 dates — their longest tour in their career — visiting Japan, Australia, South America and England, where they drew a crowd of 130,000 people over a span of two days - one of the largest crowds ever drawn for a rock concert. While touring for
American Idiot, they filmed and recorded the two concerts at the
Milton Keynes National Bowl in England, which was voted 'The Best Show On Earth' in a
Kerrang! Magazine Poll. These recordings were released as a live CD and DVD called
Bullet in a Bible on
November 15,
2005. This CD/DVD featured hits from
American Idiot as well as older songs from
Dookie and
nimrod., among others. The DVD featured behind-the-scenes footage of the band, and showed how the band prepared to put on the show. The final shows of their 2005 world tour were in
Sydney,
Australia, and
Melbourne, Australia, on December 14 and 17 respectively. On
January 10,
2006 the band was awarded with a
People's Choice Award for favorite group.
On
August 1,
2005, it was announced that Green Day had rescinded the master rights to their pre-
Dookie material from Lookout! Records, citing
breach of contract regarding unpaid royalties that had been ongoing for some time, and with other Lookout! bands as well. As of October 2005, it is unknown whether a label affiliated with the band (
Reprise, Armstrong's own
Adeline), a reissue specialist like
Rhino, or another label entirely will reissue the Lookout!-era material.
Next album
The band has emerged from their half-year rest and said that they are working through demos and new songs. In an interview with
MTV News on
June 2, Green Day said that their next album will be "an event" when it is released. Armstrong stated, "At this point, to put a record out with like 12 songs on it and turn it in sounds a bit boring for us. So we want to definitely make something that is well thought-out and [that] all of our blood is put into."
Green Day's sound is often compared to first wave punk rock bands such as the
Ramones,
The Clash, and the
Buzzcocks. They also have considerable influence from
Elvis Costello. The majority of their song catalogue is composed of distorted guitar, fast, manic drums, and low, heavy bass. Most of their songs are fast-paced and under the average song length of 4:00. Billie Joe Armstrong has however said his biggest influences are seminal
hardcore punk/
alternative rock bands
Hüsker Dü and
The Replacements, and that their influence is particularly noted in the band's chord changes in songs.
[Di Perna, Alan. "Young, Loud, and Snotty". Guitar World. August 1996.] In fact, Green Day has covered Hüsker Dü's "Don't Want to Know If You Are Lonely" as a b-side for the song "Warning", and the character "Mr. Whirly" in the song "Misery" is a reference to the Replacements song of the same name. Armstrong's lyrics describe alientation, anger, angst (
Jesus of Suburbia), insomnia, hysteria, and hallucinations (
Brain Stew/Jaded), boredom, doing drugs and/or smoking (
Longview), and purely having fun (
King for a Day); The Ramones (one of the band's influences) had similar lyrical themes, like drugs (
I Wanna Be Sedated) alienation, (
Outsider), and havng fun (
Rockaway Beach,
Bop 'Till You Drop). However, Green Day's songs since signing to Reprise have slicker production and a cleaner sound compared to previous punk rock bands, like the
Sex Pistols, or
The Clash, leading some to believe that Green Day's style is a cross genre of Pop punk. Another factor that contributes to the band's "pop punk" classification is that the majority of Green Day's albums were released on a major-label with better recording technology, whereas punk rock was originally a cry out against the producer-driven sounds of
disco, and early "real" punk rock songs were recored and released on an independent label with lesser technology.
Music Samples
Beginning with the release of
Dookie, and the subsequent explosion of
MTV Airplay it received, Green Day has received considerable criticism from those who prefer to see the punk genre as a social movement independent of corporate sponsorship. With the release of
American Idiot and the subsequent draw of many new fans, much of this criticism has been revived.
The official studio album releases by Green Day are as follows:
Image:1,039 Smoothed Out Slappy Hour.jpg|1. 1,039/Smoothed Out Slappy Hours (July 1, 1991)
Image:Kerplunk.jpg|2. Kerplunk! (January 7, 1992)
Image:GreenDayDookie.jpg|3. Dookie (February 1, 1994)
Image:D83688tuj0c.jpg|4. Insomniac (October 10, 1995)
Image:Green Day Nimrod.jpg|5. nimrod. (October 14, 1997)Image:Greenday warning.png|6. Warning: (October 3, 2000)Image:Greenday internationalsuperhits.png|7. International Superhits! (November 13, 2001) Image:Greenday shenanigans.png|8. Shenanigans (July 2, 2002) Image:Greenday americanidiot.png|9. American Idiot (September 21, 2004)Image:Bulletinabible.jpg|10. Bullet in a Bible (November 15 2005) *
Billie Joe Armstrong: Lead Guitar, Lead Vocals (1989-present)
*
Mike Dirnt: Bass, Backup Vocals (1989-present)
*
Tré Cool: Drums, Backup Vocals (1990-present)
Former members
*
John Kiffmeyer, also known as Al Sobrante: Drums (1989-1990)
Backing members
*
Jason White: Guitar, Backup Vocals (1999-present)
*
Jason Freese: Piano, Keyboard, Trombone, Saxophone, Accordion, Acoustic Guitar, Backup Vocals (2004-present)
*
Ronnie Blake: Trumpet, Timpani/Percussions, Backup Vocals (2004-present)
*
Mike Pelino: Third Guitar, Backup Vocals (2005-present)
*
Rob Cavallo: Piano (for the 2004 Recording of American Idiot)
|
The Wake Me Up When September End music video, which featured Jason White as a back up performer of the band. |
Since the 1999 recording of
Warning:, Jason White has been a backing "4th" member of Green Day, providing back-up guitar on the albums
Warning: and
American Idiot, as well as touring with Green Day on their respective Warning: and American Idiot tours. In the music video for
When I Come Around, White can be seen making-out with his girlfriend on the hood of a car, at this point in time only a friend of the band. In the music video for
Wake Me Up When September Ends, White can cleary be seen on-stage playing back up guitar, making him the first musician outside of the band performing music along with the band in a Green Day music video. For a brief moment, White can be spotted in the epic
Jesus of Suburbia music video. Often in tours, most notably for American Idiot, White frequently plays lead-guitar with Mike Pelino on back-up guitar when Billie Joe Armstrong is interacting with the crowd while singing lead vocals, only playing back up guitar when Armstrong takes control of the lead guitar, as seen in the live performance for "Wake Me Up When September Ends" on
Bullet in a Bible. When asked about his "membership" to the band, he stated, although he was offered a position in the band, "It's all about them three, and I'm just a helping hand." White, being a close friend of Billie Joe Armstrong, helps run his independent label
Adeline Records as a co-founder. Since 1997 White has also been a member of
Pinhead Gunpowder, along with Billie Joe, Green Day Roadie
Bill Schneider, and underground legend and zine publisher
Aaron Cometbus, although it is primarily a "studio only" project. White plays in
The Network as well, in a role very similar to his part in Green Day, playing back up guitar under the name Balducci, as seen in The Network's DVD,
Disease is Punishment. Notable previous bands include: Chino Hoarde, The Kicks/Ashtray Babyhead, The Influents and The Big Cats.
The Frustrators
Mike Dirnt also plays bass for the band The Frustrators, who are signed to Billie Joe's Adeline Records. In a shameless act of self promotion, Dirnt has a Frustrators sticker on his bass that is very visible in Green Day's more recent videos.
The Network
In 2003, during time Green Day spent time in the studio, a
New Wave band known as
The Network appeared on the scene. Three of the five members of the band are allegedly the three members of Green Day. The frontman, known only as "Fink", is believed to be Billie Joe Armstrong. Armstrong has referred to himself as Wilhelm Fink in the past, and a
Pinhead Gunpowder fansite bio of Billie Joe Armstrong confirms Fink's identity. Armstrong's voice is also unmistakable on The Network's albums. The Network's bass player, known as "Van Gough," is supposedly Mike Dirnt; and The Network's drummer, "The Snoo," is thought to be Tré Cool. John Roecker, director of
Live Freaky Die Freaky, starring Green Day and other East Bay punk alumni, and Green Day's DVD Documentary
Heart Like a Hand Grenade, has spoken of various projects recorded at Studio 880, including a New Wave album and a Christmas album, during the sessions of their latest album. Studio 880 is the credited studio in The Network's
Money Money 2020 album and Green Day's
American Idiot. No official connection has been made between the two bands, and both bands have defended, sometimes aggressively (in a probably staged press conference where some members from both bands engaged in a heated argument that broke into a minor conflict), the lack of connection between the two. Green Day's management has always declined to comment on the ongoing situation between Green Day and The Network. On
October 6, The Network agreed to support Green Day with
Jimmy Eat World on the American Idiot tour. Sources close to Green Day have been quoted as commenting, "That's a really bad idea," and, "Can we just make them go away?"
The end of the American Idiot tour saw The Network support Green Day three times, along with Jimmy Eat World,
Simple Plan, and
Taking Back Sunday, playing the opening slot.
American Idiot: The Motion Picture
|
An article in Metal Hammer magazine about the band's upcoming American Idiot motion picture. |
In 2005, a 12-minute video for
Jesus of Suburbia was completed, as well as a live video for
St. Jimmy. The video of
Jesus of Suburbia is stated to be a prequel to their upcoming film,
American Idiot: The Motion Picture. In an interview with
Billboard magazine, Billie Joe Armstrong revealed that the group are still considering turning their punk rock opera into a film, in much the same spirit as the Beatles'
Yellow Submarine,
Marillion's
Brave,
Pink Floyd's
The Wall and
the Who's
Tommy and
Quadrophenia. Shooting of the movie is planned to start in 2006.
The band has stated they have no intentions of acting in the movie, although they may make an appearance.
Lou Taylor Pucci and
Kelli Garner from the "Jesus of Suburbia" music video could make an appearance if the motion picture does go into production. Frontman Billie Joe Armstrong has said "It's definitely unfolding. Every single week there's more ideas about doing a film for American Idiot, and it's definitely going to happen."
Charity events
* Green Day performed at the 1999 Bridge School Benefit.
* Armstrong was part of an ensemble of musicians that sang
The Beatles' "Across the Universe" at the 47th Annual Grammy Awards as part of a tsunami relief production. The band also pledged to give the profits from the downloading of their song "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" to the tsunami relief fund.
* Green Day performed at the
Live 8 concert on
July 2,
2005, in
Berlin, Germany, where they played "Holiday," "American Idiot," "Minority," and a rendition of
Queen's "
We Are the Champions."
* The band also contributed a prerecorded performance to the
Hurricane Katrina Benefit relief event on
September 10,
2005 from their performance the prior week at
Gillette Stadium in Foxboro,
Massachusetts. The televised portion (shown on
MTV and
VH1) showed the trio performing their single "Wake Me Up When September Ends."
*
The Lookouts*
Punk rock*
Pop punk*
Best selling music artists*
The Green Day Story (Broadcast on
Radio 1 Mon
20 June 2005) (Alternate
Link)
*
Green Day Biography
*
Green Day Official site
*
Green Day Concerts *
Green Day at
All Music Guide*
RIAA Top Bestselling artists*
Green Day Authority*
Green Day's video vault