Green Day saving rock ‘n’ roll with ‘Saviors’— 30 years after ‘Dookie’

Sometimes, dookie happens.

And when you name an album “Dookie,” clearly you’re not taking yourselves too seriously.

But here we are — 30 years after Green Day released its blockbuster breakthrough on Feb. 1, 1994 — and the Cali trio of singer-guitarist Billie Joe Armstrong, bassist Mike Dirnt and drummer Tré Cool is still punking us.

But three decades after the group’s major-label debut “Dookie” — featuring the now-classic rock hits “Longview,” “Basket Case” and, biggest of all, “When I Come Around” — wrestled rock from grunge’s grasp in the mid-’90s, Green Day is still, against the odds, very much “around.”

And when they performed “Basket Case” near the end of their SiriusXM concert — airing Saturday at 9 p.m. ET on their own damn Green Day Radio channel — for an exclusive audience at New York’s Irving Plaza on Thursday night, it was as if they were all 51 going on 21 again.

Green Day’s Tré Cool, Billie Joe Armstrong and Mike Dirnt are still rocking with “Saviors,” their best album in years. Emmie America

Taking place 30 years after Green Day first played the Manhattan club — before they hit their usual stadiums on tour his summer — the pogo-propelling party was ostensibly an album-release show a couple hours before “Saviors,” their 14th studio LP, was released on Friday.

And it says a lot about their follow-up to 2020’s lukewarmly received “Father of All Motherf—kers” that new tracks such as “Look Ma, No Brains,” “Dilemma” and “One Eyed Bastard” — killer singles all — were not just pee-break filler until you could get to forever faves such as “American Idiot,” “Holiday” and “Boulevard of Broken Dreams.”

You could just feel that Green Day knew it had some good stuff on what is easily the band’s best album since 2009’s chart-topping, Grammy-winning “21st Century Breakdown.” They tore into the new tunes with the swag, stomp and perfected snarl of the Rock & Roll Hall of Famers that they are.

Billie Joe Armstrong and Green Day rocked both classics and new “Saviors” songs at Sirius XM’s Irving Plaza show. Getty Images for SiriusXM
Billie Joe Armstrong and Green Day performed at the 1994 MTV Video Music Awards at NYC’s Radio City Music Hall. FilmMagic

The new LP reunites the trio with producer Rob Cavallo, who also helmed “Dookie” 1995’s “Insomniac” and 1997’s “Nimrod,” which spawned their biggest hit in “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life).”

And it was Cavallo who was behind the boards for 2004’s “American Idiot” — perhaps Green Day’s greatest triumph. Not only did that ambitious concept album score them their first No. 1 LP on the Billboard 200, but it inspired a freaking Broadway musical in 2010.

Now ain’t that some dookie.

Green Day performed in the NYC subway on Wednesday with Jimmy Fallon as part of their “Tonight Show” appearance. Youtube/@jimmyfallon

And as we launch into a presidential election year fraught with foreboding, Green Day nails the spiked uncertainty on “The American Dream Is Killing Me,” the politically charged opener of “Saviors.”

But perhaps the album’s biggest statement comes in the punk-pop perfection of “Bobby Sox,” on which the bisexual Armstrong casually shifts from “Do you wanna be my girlfriend?” to “Do you wanna be my boyfriend?” in a way that would have been hard to imagine 30 years ago.

As if Green Day needed to do any more to save rock ’n’ roll — just when it needed it — on “Saviors,” they went ahead and made queer punks cool.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Nick Nolte addresses ‘absurd’ Julia Roberts drama on set

It seems they’ve put the “trouble” behind them.

After nearly three decades, actor Nick Nolte is addressing the alleged behind-the-scenes beef he had with Julia Roberts while filming the ’90s flick “I Love Trouble.”

“It was absurd what we went through,” Nolte, 81, admitted to Insider while promoting his new drama “Rittenhouse Square.”

In a 1993 interview with the New York Times ahead of the release of “I Love Trouble,” Roberts accused Nolte of exhibiting off-putting behavior during production.

“From the moment I met him we sort of gave each other a hard time, and naturally we get on each other’s nerves,” Roberts said when asked about her co-star’s reputation for behaving crudely on set. While he can be “completely charming and very nice,” she said, “he’s also completely disgusting.”

Julia Roberts and Nick Nolte in “I Love Trouble” (1994).

Actor Nick Nolte is seen filming on set of the movie “Rittenhouse” on October 25, 2021 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Just like their rival reporter characters in “I Love Trouble,” it appears that Nolte and Roberts have put aside their differences.

The “Pretty Woman” star added, “He’s going to hate me for saying this, but he seems [to] go out of his way to repel people. He’s a kick.”

Nolte reportedly responded in an interview with the Los Angeles Times at the time, “It’s not nice to call someone ‘disgusting.’ But she’s not a nice person. Everyone knows that.”

"It was absurd what we went through," Nolte, 81, said describing his feud with Roberts while on the set of "I Love Trouble."
“It was absurd what we went through,” Nolte, 81, said describing his feud with Roberts on the set of “I Love Trouble.”
Buena Vista Pictures

It was a lot of drama for a critically-panned romantic comedy about rival Chicago reporters who join forces to investigate corruption.

It appears Nolte no longer harbors ill will toward his former co-star. When asked if he’d “buried the hatchet,” the Nebraska native said, “No, I haven’t. Though it’s buried.”

He also took part of the blame for the supposed on-set feud. “It was partly my fault and a little bit of hers,” Nolte admitted. “Julia got married at the beginning of that film, and it was one of those things where I just approached it all wrong.”

He was referencing Roberts’ highly-publicized 1993 marriage to Lyle Lovett, which ended in divorce less than two years later.

Julia Roberts arrives at the premiere of Universal Pictures’ “Ticket To Paradise” at Regency Village Theatre on Oct. 17, 2022 in Los Angeles.
FilmMagic

The “Runaway Bride” star is married to Danny Moder, a cameraman she met on the set of “The Mexican” in 2000, and with whom she shares three children: twins Hazel and Phinnaeus, who turn 18 this month; and 15-year-old Henry.

Roberts recently claimed her secret to maintaining a successful marriage is copious smooching. “I always say the same thing, and I’m sticking with it,” the Academy Award winner told E! News in October. “It’s making out. Lots of making out.”

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Exit mobile version