Descendents - Discography -19 Albums-

Descendents - Discography -19 Albums- <FHD • HD>

(2021): Recorded with the original lineup, featuring songs written between 1977–1980. Live Albums & Compilations

The second official live album, recorded during the Everything Sucks tour in 1997. The sound quality is superior to Hallraker , featuring tight renditions of Suburban Home and Thank You .

The band’s studio output is often divided by their hiatuses. After a mid-80s burst that produced I Don't Want to Grow Up and Enjoy! , the band released ALL in 1987. When Milo left again, the remaining members formed the band ALL, but the Descendents returned triumphantly in 1996 with Everything Sucks . This album introduced the band to a new generation of fans during the 90s punk explosion, featuring hits like "I'm the One." Descendents - discography -19 albums-

The journey begins with what is arguably the perfect hardcore album: Milo Goes to College . At only 15 songs in 21 minutes, it is a blur of rage and insecurity. Tracks like "Suburban Home" ("I want to be stereotyped / I want to be classified") and "Myage" defined the teenage condition. But it was "I'm Not a Loser" and "Silly Girl" that introduced the band's secret weapon: vulnerability. While their contemporaries sang about anarchy, the Descendents sang about getting rejected at the roller rink. This album set the blueprint for every pop-punk band that followed (from the Offspring to blink-182), though none would match its raw, unpolished desperation.

: Considered a seminal pop-punk work , this debut captures the tension between punk rebellion and academic expectations. (2021): Recorded with the original lineup, featuring songs

The Descendents’ discography is not a story of reinvention, but of refinement. They have played essentially the same style of music for 40 years—blistering drums, shouted harmonies, and lyrics about food and frustration. Yet, by refusing to abandon their "nerd" persona as they aged, they turned the mundane tragedy of adult life into epic punk poetry. From "Myage" to "Smile," the Descendents remind us that growing up is a scam, but laughing about it with your friends is the only real rebellion. Few bands have earned the right to be grumpy; the Descendents earned it by never pretending to be cool in the first place.

A companion live piece featuring different tracks. Somery (1991): The definitive "best of" for early fans. The band’s studio output is often divided by

Descendents discography, 19 albums, Milo Goes to College, Everything Sucks, Hypercaffium Spazzinate, 9th and Walnut, pop-punk bands, Bill Stevenson, punk rock EPs.

A turning point. All was intended to be a solo project for bassist Karl Alvarez before it became a Descendents record. It is darker, more experimental, and features the proto-emo anthem Clean Sheets . After this album, the band dissolved and most members went on to form (the band). For five years, the Descendents name went silent.

A live album recorded in 1986. It is chaotic, loud, and features a hilarious cover of Wendy by The Beach Boys. It captures the "sweaty gymnasium" vibe perfectly.