| 1. Tracklist: |
| 2. 1. Ok, But This Is The Last Time |
| 3. 2. The Kids Aren't Alright |
| 4. 3. You're Gonna Go Far, Kid |
| 5. 4. Come To Brazil |
| 6. 5. Pretty Fly |
| 7. 6. Why Don't You Get A Job |
| 8. 7. Light It Up |
| 9. 8. Want You Bad |
| 10. 9. Gone Away |
| 11. 10. Looking Out For #1 |
| 12. 11. Hit That |
| 13. 12. Original Prankster |
| 14. 13. The Fall Guy |
| 15. 14. All I Want |
| 16. 15. Staring At The Sun |
| 17. 16. Make It All Right |
| 18. Head Around You |
| 19. 18. Let The Bad Times Roll |
| 20. 19. Half-Truism |
| 21. 20. Truth In Fiction |
| 22. 21. Slim Pickens Does The Right Thing And Rides The Bomb To Hell |
| 23. 22. Americana |
| 24. 23. Million Miles Away |
| 25. 24. Coming For You |
| 26. 25. She's Got Issues |
| 27. 26. No Brakes |
| 28. 27. Can't Repeat |
| 29. 28. The Meaning Of Life |
| 30. 29. Spare Me The Details |
| 31. 30. Have You Ever |
| 32. MTV hit in the beginning of 1995. recorded a version of the Damned's "Smash It Up" for the Batman Forever soundtrack in the summer of that year; it kept the group on the charts as the bandmembers worked on their third album |
| 33. Following a prolonged bidding war and much soul-searching, the Offspring decided to leave Epitaph Records in 1996 for Columbia. The move was particularly controversial within the punk community, and many artists on the Epitaph roster, including Pennywise and owner Brett Gurewitz, criticized the band. After much delay, the Offspring finally released their Columbia debut, Ixnay on the Hombre, in February of 1997. Expectations for the record were high and it did receive good reviews, but Ixnay on the Hombre failed to become a crossover hit on the level of Smash, and the group also lost a significant portion of its hardcore punk audience due to the album's major-label status. Americana followed in 1998, scoring the hit "Pretty Fly ." In mid-2000, the Offspring made controversial headlines with their decision to offer Conspiracy of One free of charge on the Internet prior to the initial November release date. Sony Music did not adhere to such a move and threatened a lawsuit, so the band nixed the plan to release the album in such a manner. Individual singles, however, were made available on the band's official website and other music-related sites such as MTV Online |
| 34. returned in 2003 with Splinter. The album was released through Columbia, proving the band's flouting of the record biz hadn't soured the major labels. It also featured the single "Hit That," which returned to the smarmy, pop-referential feel of "Pretty Fly." toured the world in support of Splinter, and in the process they hit nearly every continent at least once. They returned in June 2005 with a greatest-hits set; in addition to their major hits, it included the new track "Can't Repeat." In 2008, after several delays, the band released its first studio release in four-and-a-half years, the highly anticipated Rise and Fall, Rage and Grace. While touring for in support, the Offspring set to work writing new material and recording when they could. After three years of work, their ninth album, Days Go By, arrived in the summer of 2012 |
| 35. then entered an extended period of touring, recording, lineup changes, and battling their record label. Summer Nationals, a digital EP of covers, appeared in 2014, the same year they negotiated a deal for the rights to the music they made at Columbia; in 2016, they sold these masters and all their publishing rights to Round Hill. began working on a new album in earnest in 2018, reuniting with producer Bob Rock. The resulting Let the Bad Times Roll appeared on Concord in the spring of 2021, its release delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Upon release, the set topped charts in Austria, the U.K., and the U.S. Seizing their newfound momentum, they returned to the studio after touring concluded, delivering their eleventh album Supercharged in 2024 |
| 36. Biography by Stephen Thomas Erlewine |
| 37. SUPERCHARGED: WORLDWIDE IN '25.rar - 720.9 MB |