| The album that jump-started the Nineties punk-pop revival. The California 
        trio Green Day sold plenty of tickets and indie records on their own, 
        but nothing they did before or since had the impact of their major-label 
        debut. The skittish Dookie was recorded in little more than three weeks, 
        and singer-guitarist Billy Joe Armstrong blazed through all the vocals 
        in two days. "Right from getting the drum sound, everything seemed 
        to click," their A&R man Rob Cavallo marveled. Nowhere did it 
        click better than on the infectious smash "Longview" (which 
        Armstrong described as "cheap self-therapy from watching too much 
        TV"). (Rolling Stone)
 Total album sales: 10 millionPeak chart position: 2
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    | Green Day couldn't have had a blockbuster without Nirvana, but Dookie 
        wound up being nearly as revolutionary as Nevermind, sending a wave of 
        imitators up the charts and setting the tone for the mainstream rock of 
        the mid-'90s. Like Nevermind, this was accidental success, the sound of 
        a promising underground group suddenly hitting its stride just as they 
        got their first professional, big-budget, big-label production. Really, 
        that's where the similarities end, since if Nirvana were indebted to the 
        weirdness of indie rock, Green Day were straight-ahead punk revivalists 
        through and through. They were products of the underground pop scene kept 
        alive by such protagonists as All, yet what they really loved was the 
        original punk, particularly such British punkers as the Jam and Buzzcocks. 
        On their first couple records, they showed promise, but with Dookie, they 
        delivered a record that found Billie Joe Armstrong bursting into full 
        flower as a songwriter, spitting out melodic ravers that could have comfortable 
        sat alongside Singles Going Steady, but infused with an ironic self-loathing 
        popularized by Nirvana, whose clean sound on Nevermind is also emulated 
        here. Where Nirvana had weight, Green Day are deliberately adolescent 
        here, treating nearly everything as joke and having as much fun as snotty 
        punkers should. They demonstrate a bit of depth with "When I Come 
        Around," but that just varies the pace slightly, since the key to 
        this is their flippant, infectious attitude -- something they maintain 
        throughout the record, making Dookie a stellar piece of modern punk that 
        many tried to emulate but nobody bettered. (by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AMG) |