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The discography of Rancid, an American punk rock band, includes ten studio albums, two extended plays, two compilations, twenty-seven singles and thirty-seven music videos.
- … And Out Come the Wolves (1995) This is the worst to best of Rancid, but, to be perfectly honest, were we to do the worst to best of Epitaph Records, or even punk rock, …And Out Come the Wolves would still be sitting here at the top of the pile.
- Life Won’t Wait (1998) Rancid have been compared to The Clash a lot. Back when their fourth album was released, with the band having gone to Kingston, Jamaica to record parts of it, the naysayers lined up to sneer that it was more Clash cosplay, just a riff on that band’s 1980 effort Sandinista.
- Let’s Go (1994) The first Rancid album to feature the talents of former UK Subs guitarist Lars Frederiksen, Let’s Go is the moment where the Rancid that we know and love were truly born.
- Indestructible (2003) In the aftermath of Armstrong’s well publicised split from his then-wife, Brody Dalle of The Distillers, Rancid returned with an album that musically harked back to the most beloved period of their career.
A personal compilation of some of my favourite songs courtesy of one of the most influential punk rock bands in my life....Rancid.
- Paul Brannigan
- Ruby Soho (1995) At their best, Tim Armstrong’s lyrics conjure up wonderfully vivid portraits of life on the margins, with bruised hearts and wandering souls seeking out connections as the world swirls around them.
- Time Bomb (1995) The biggest single of Rancid’s career, this ridiculously catchy ska-punk anthem, powered by a vamping Hammond organ, taps into both gangster movie imagery and ska iconography to tell a tale of a rebellious kid fighting his way up from the streets to become a respected, feared and ultimately marked for death underworld king-pin.
- Radio (1994) Co-written by Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong and Rancid bassist Matt Freeman (surely the finest four-stringer in punk since Mike Watt), Radio is perhaps Rancid’s signature composition, a pure love song to the power of music, which will strike a chord with anyone who’s ever had their life transformed by a spinning black vinyl disc.
- Roots Radicals (1995) Drawing an explicit line from Jimmy Cliff and Desmond Dekker through to Stiff Little Fingers and beyond, this joyous hymn to roots reggae, punk rocker and “moon stompers” is an evocative sketch of a formerly lost teenager realising he’s found his spiritual home in music, and sharing that new-found sense of wonder and awe with his best friends.
- And Out Come the Wolves (1996) Seriously, what else was going to be number one? You might be pissed off that “Let’s Go” is so low, and while I can be a bit of a contrarian, I also have functioning ears.
- Indestructible (2003) Hell hath no fury like a recently divorced Tim Armstrong. Turns out the guy can write the shit out of a song when he’s heartbroken.
- Life Won’t Wait (1998) Much like their idols The Clash did with “Sandinista,” the Rancid lads went global on their fourth album. However, unlike “Sandinista,” “Life Won’t Wait” is enjoyable to listen to all the way through.
- Rancid (2000) Apparently nobody was more angry about the ’90s coming to a close than Rancid. They were seemingly so angry they couldn’t even bother to come up with a title for this record.
Sep 16, 2023 · The album’s three singles all fall during that first nine, but all nine of them feel like they belong on a Rancid greatest hits album.
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Rancid is a punk band from Berkeley, California. Formed in 1991 from the ashes of Operation Ivy—a seminal ska-punk outfit featuring singer Tim Armstrong and bassist Matt Freeman—.