Blink 182 Discography -320- (2026)

| Album | Year | Key Tracks | Sound Profile | Chart Peak (US) | |-------|------|------------|---------------|----------------| | Cheshire Cat | 1994 | “Carousel,” “M+M’s” | Raw, fast, DIY skate punk | — | | Dude Ranch | 1997 | “Dammit,” “Josie” | Refined production, major label debut (MCA) | #67 |

Critical Note: Dude Ranch was the blueprint. “Dammit” became a MTV Buzz Bin hit, proving the band could write hooks beneath the fart jokes. Production by Mark Trombino kept the snare tight and the tempo high (averaging 190–220 BPM).


| Album | Year | Key Shift | Sales (US) | Notes | |-------|------|-----------|------------|-------| | Neighborhoods | 2011 | Digital recording, long-distance (Tom in San Diego, Mark in London) | Gold | Uneven, overproduced. “Ghost on the Dance Floor” as highlight. | | California | 2016 | Matt Skiba (Alkaline Trio) replaces Tom; John Feldmann production | Platinum | Return to Enema sound—back to 180°, intentionally safe. | | Nine | 2019 | More electronics, less guitar | Gold | Polarizing; “Darkside” video viral. | | One More Time... | 2023 | Tom returns; Travis produces | #1 debut | Nostalgia-driven but mature. “Anthem Part 3” closes the 1999 arc. |


Alkaline Trio's Matt Skiba replaces a departing Tom DeLonge. Blink 182 Discography -320-

  • Nine (2019)
  • B-sides (“What Went Wrong,” “Don’t Tell Me That It’s Over”) showed Tom DeLonge’s increasing interest in acoustic melancholy—a premonition of 2003.


    The True 320° – This album is not a 360° return. It is a 320° reorientation into post-punk, art rock, and emo.

    NINE saw the band leaning further into electronic elements and pop sensibilities, while One More Time marked the triumphant return of Tom DeLonge. The 2023 record is a poignant reflection on mortality, brotherhood, and trauma. The production is crisp, emphasizing the emotional weight of Hoppus’s battle with cancer and Barker’s recovery from his plane crash. | Album | Year | Key Tracks |

    For listeners preferring 320 kbps MP3, prioritize official releases or personal lossless rips encoded properly, select consistent masters, and use the representative playlist above to sample Blink-182’s evolution from raw pop-punk to polished modern releases.


    If you want, I can:

    Blink-182’s discography is a roadmap of pop-punk’s evolution, moving from raw, high-energy skate punk to polished radio hits and experimental, mature rock. Often associated with the "320" bitrate for high-quality digital audio, the band's catalog spans over 30 years and multiple eras. The Formative Era (1995–1997) | Album | Year | Key Shift |

    Cheshire Cat (1995): The debut album captures the band's initial potential with a fast, unrefined sound.

    Dude Ranch (1997): Considered by many purists to be "peak Blink," this album features a fuzzy, authentic skate-punk sound and contains their first major hit, "Dammit". The Mainstream Explosion (1999–2001)

    Enema of the State (1999): The breakthrough record that skyrocketed them to global stardom with a radio-friendly sheen and tracks like "All the Small Things".

    Take Off Your Pants and Jacket (2001): This album refined the successful formula of its predecessor, delivering high-energy anthems like "The Rock Show". Maturity and Experimentation (2003–2011)

    This report is structured to analyze commercial performance, sonic evolution, and cultural impact.


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