How The Offspring Became One Of The Biggest Punk Bands In The World

In this 2001 interview, Dexter and Noodles reflect on years of touring, getting stabbed, playing gigs in caves and sleeping in drug dens

The Offspring at London's Brixton Academy, 1995

It’s the summer of 1993 and I’m congratulating Dexter Holland, the fresh-faced and braided-hair singer with The Offspring. He’s just stepped off stage after playing a blinding set – consisting of pretty much the entire Ignition album – in Newport’s TJs. “Hey thanks man,” says Dexter, grinning all over. “I didn’t think anyone here would have known us…” The Offspring played that toilet circuit of the UK just once. The next time they came back, their third album, Smash , had gone nuclear.

Fast forward to this year’s Conspiracy Of One world tour and they’re playing their biggest ever show to 15,000 in Paris. Americana sales wordwide have reached over 12 million, while Smash is pushing the 13 million mark. The Offspring are officially the biggest punk band. Ever.

But let’s go back. Way back. How did it all start? “I’d known Dexter for some time because he lived round the corner from us,” says guitarist Noodles, known to his mum as Kevin Wasserman. Singer/guitarist Dexter Holland, bassist Greg Kriesel and Noodles all grew up in Garden Grove – a conservative town with the world’s first drive-in church – in south-east LA’s Orange County – a suburb renowned for both Disneyland and as a bastion of right-wing politics. The ideal place to start a punk band, then.

Sticksman Ron Welty came from a bit further down the road in Cyprus. Ron replaced original drummer James Lilja – the ‘Pete Best’ of The Offspring – who was more interested in staying in UCLA and going to parties with his fraternity chums than wasting time jamming with some two-bit punk band who were going nowhere fast… doh!

In the mid-80s, Noodles started his own band called Clowns of Death. Dexter joined for a while but then started up his own band with school friend Greg (that Noodles later joined) called the Manic Subsidals, after seeing Orange County punk legends Social Distortion live. Being three years older than Dexter and Greg, it’s rumoured Noodles was enlisted for his ability to procure alcohol, rather than his guitar skills.

The Offspring live at the Metropolis festival in Rotterdam on September 4 1994

Plagued by their awful moniker, they decided it was time for a change. “It was just a horrible name,” says Noodles, who was working as a school janitor at the time –a job he continued until sales of Smash took off. “The Offspring was the only name everyone could agree on,” he tells us. “I think it was actually James our original drummer who came up with it.”

Ron Welty joined in 1986, just after The Offspring recorded their first self-financed seven inch I ’ll Be Waiting . Influences that shaped their early sound were wide-ranging. “I was listening to bands like Ramones and The Clash,” says Noodles. “They showed me I didn’t have to be Jimi Hendrix or Eddie Van Halen to play the guitar. I just started jamming with friends; taking guitars down the park and having a few beers.”

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Dexter was a punk fan from the word go. “There was something about the punk bands when I was a kid that inspired me, rather than wanting to be in a band,” he says. “Bands like Ramones and Dead Kennedys. I think it was more the idea that these bands put forward: anyone can do it. It was music that really related to average kids and music that the average kid could do.”

It was that DIY spirit that kicked off the entire SoCal – not to mention the US – punk scene. Dexter: “Jello Biafra from Dead Kennedys once said that after Ramones did this one US tour in 1978, almost every town they played in, all of a sudden, five new bands sprung up.”

So what was the Orange County punk scene like when Offspring were starting out in the mid-late 80s? “It was kind of in a lull,” says Dexter. “It was a really exciting time about four years before we started. There were a lot of great bands like Social Distortion, TSOL and The Adolescents that sprung up in the early 80s but that whole scene died out.”

That lack of a real scene in their hometown had other consequences for the band. Dexter: “When we started out there weren’t really places to have concerts and there wasn’t too much of a scene happening like there was in San Francisco. But that just made us look elsewhere. So we started playing more shows further afield.

“We used to do shows out in the desert. There was this guy in Las Vegas who used to put on shows but he couldn’t find a venue. So he’d rent out generators then pass out flyers, and he would go about 50 miles out into the desert and just set up and have concerts. It was amazing.

“We once played a show at a house that was going to be demolished. This guy goes, ‘come and do a show here, we can just mess up the house!’ So we played the show and the people there destroyed the house!”

“One of the bands we played with the most was Guttermouth,” says Noodles of the Huntington Beach urchins, who Dexter would later sign to his own label, Nitro. “We’d take turns in who would headline the show. We played with Agnostic Front one time in San Bernardino. We played with DI and TSOL on their reunion tour in 1989.”

The Offspring in 1995

Now that The Offspring are travelling the world in buses and staying at fancy-schmancy hotels, they remember the early days with fond nostalgia. I remind Noodles of the time when The Offspring played at a mutual friend’s house up on Palos Verdes Peninsula – a middle class suburb between LA’s South Bay and Orange Country – in 1990. Held on St Patrick’s weekend with green-coloured beer provided by the teenage promoter (and held in his parent’s house), the bill went like this: Citizen Fish/Cringer/ Neurosis/Offspring.

“I remember that show!” he laughs. “That was a crazy weekend. We went from that show to playing in Santa Monica with Youth Brigade. We did four gigs in one weekend! We did Gilman Street [legendary San Francisco punk venue] on Friday night, then we played a barn in Santa Barbara on the Saturday afternoon. Before the gig in Palos Verdes on the Sunday,” says Noodles with amazing memory on the highlights of pegging it around Southern California in the early days.

“That was the whole nature of it – going by the seat of your pants and just rolling with it,” reflects Dexter. “That what made it so much fun – it was an adventure. You never knew where you were gonna play or who you were gonna play for.”

Like so many other bands, The Offspring took the DIY ethic out onto the road within their first US tour. “We did it in the back of my pick-up truck,” says Dexter. “I had this 1979 Toyota pick-up. Really beat-up. Didn’t run very well. It had this grandpa fisherman camper shell on the back of it. So we put all of us – and one roadie – plus all our equipment in the back of this truck. We did a tour all the way across the country from LA across to the east coast and back for three and a half weeks.”

With one cramped pick-up to sleep in, the guys would take desperate measures to get a good night’s sleep. “Usually we would beg on stage and ask ‘is there anybody here who can put us up tonight?” laughs Dexter. “And usually people were really nice so we’d get to sleep on people’s floors.”

“Once when we were playing in Berkeley we drank beers til we passed out in the van, which was parked by a school,” adds Noodles. “The cops would come along in the morning and wake us up.”

Making it all the way to the east coast, the band plays venues in the backass of nowhere – with some scary results. “There was this one place we played in North Carolina that was just like a pool hall,” says Dexter. “The promoter guy said we could stay there so we slept on the pool tables. The whole place was a bit shady because at about five in the morning the guy would be up and blaring the jukebox. People would be coming in and out all night. I think he was dealing drugs in the back at the same time.”

It wasn’t all fun on the road. Being a relatively unknown band and playing in unlicensed venues like so many punk venues in the States, there’s always an element of danger to proceedings. “People would be crammed into tiny spaces with no fire escapes and one small door,” says Dexter. “Then the police would turn up to break up the shows, making it even more dangerous as people start to panic.

“Once we played this show in Prague, Czechoslovakia,” he says. “We played this underground club that was down four flights of stairs into the ground then it opens up into this cave that holds 400 people and the only way out is that one tiny staircase that goes all the way up. And we’re playing at the very back and you know that if anything happens that it’s all over and there’s no way you’re gonna get out.”

“Once Noodles was stabbed at a show in the early 90s,” Dexter reveals. We were playing a show with Final Conflict [hardcore LA anarcho-punks]. Some skinheads turned up to mess up their show – we were playing right before them. They tried to break in and the people on the door put up a table as a barricade that the skinheads were trying to get over. Noodles, being the pacifist he is, tried to get in between and mellow everything out. This skinhead jumped over the table and punched him in the arm. Noodles was like, ‘God, that really hurt – for a punch!’ Then he looked down and his jacket was covered in blood and it turned out that the guy had punched him with a knife in between the knuckles.”

Offspring's artwork for Igniton and Smash

After their second album, Ignition , in 1992, The Offspring took off on that first European tour. To their surprise, they realised they’d created an equally big fanbase outside of the US as well as at home. But again, the sleeping arrangements weren’t ideal. “We slept on NOFX’s bus and really messed it up,” laughs Noodles. “There only enough bunks for three of us,” says Dexter. “So we had to take turns sleeping on the floor in the aisle every night. But it was a great tour: 31 shows in 35 days across Europe. Those trips were tough to manage and gruelling. We did five shows in the UK that went really well. That made us really fond of the UK ‘cos we always have a great shows and a good time there,” says Dexter, ever the diplomat.

The year later, Smash was unleashed on a nation of unsuspecting music fans, still groggy from the stale and wheezing gasp of the decrepit grunge era. The release date of The Offspring’s third album was April 8, 1994. The very same day Kurt Cobain’s body was discovered and he was pronounced dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Grunge was officially dead and disaffection had a new soundtrack. This time it wasn’t a pessimistic dirge, but sunny, uplifting Californian power pop-punk. Bored by the media circus of Britpop, UK kids snapped up Smash as well. Worldwide sales quickly reached 11 million. The Offspring had arrived.

It was a shock to the system for The Offspring with the obvious benefits – but downsides too. “We were on tour with Smash back in 1994’,” says Noodles, trying to pinpoint a time when they realised they were hitting the big time. “We were drinking beer outside. We got a call from Epitaph and they told us that Smash had just gone platinum [one million US sales]. It was a weird feeling. I guess it was good, but it’s a life-changing thing.”

“We were on tour in Europe and they sent us a rough cut of the video for Self Esteem ,” says Dexter. “It just looked it was gonna work. Even the guy who was doing the t-shirt stall for us was like, ‘you guys are gonna be stars!’ There was something about that moment when it felt like things were starting to go.

“It was exciting – but scary at the same time. When you’re struggling, it’s actually kinda nice not to be noticed in a lot of ways. As things accelerate, in a lot ways it’s great -– don’t get me wrong, I’m not complaining – but there’s an increase in bad attention as well. Things are looked at a lot more critically. You have a lot of people in other bands who hate you because they don’t like the music or they’re jealous.”

Success certainly has it downsides and that was the tour when Noodles starting drinking to excess. “Way more than anybody,” as he puts it. Especially when he found out that his girlfriend back home was cheating on him while he was out on the road. “But then we played some great shows,” says Noodles, looking on the bright side, as ever. “The audiences were wild.”

“You have to develop a thick skin,” says Dexter. “If I see that there’s a review of an Offspring record inside a magazine, I won’t even read it. Even if it’s good, I won’t read it because of the nature of critical writing is that there’s always gonna be a jab in there.

“Also, you lose a certain amount of your privacy. I was driving home from somewhere two days ago. I pulled into the parking lot of a liquor store on the way home and a car pulled up next to me. As I was walking into the store, I hear ‘excuse me!’ It was a mom and her 10-year-old son. She goes, ‘my son recognised you in the car so we followed you until you stopped, can we have your autograph?’. It was amazing that these people fucking followed me!”

So, with the success of Smash , did The Offspring make Epitaph big, or vice-versa? “I think it’s a little bit of both,” says Noodles defensively. “You’re opening up a can of worms there.” The Offspring’s signing to the Sony-owned Columbia may have sacrificed friends at Epitaph Records HQ – not to mention in the underground scene. But Noodles maintains they were already under criticism from the punk police when they were still on Epitaph.

Epitaph subsequently became so successful that it’s grown to such proportions that it now has subsidiaries of its own – like Rancid’s Hellcat Records. Fanzines and underground punk mags like MaximumRockNRoll – the holy bible of the US punk scene – stopped taking ads from Epitaph as they were no longer considered an underground punk label.

Unbelievably, people would picket Offspring’s gigs, even when they were touring for Smash . “We’d go out and talk to these kids,” says Noodles. “We’d say ‘what do you guys think of bands like TSOL? Crass?’ They hadn’t even heard of them.

“We had a friend who worked at a record store,” he says. “Kids would come in and buy like Smash or Dookie , then a week later they’d come in and buy Operation Ivy and Bad Religion. Then the next week they’re coming in and getting Crass or Conflict. Then our friend would go, ‘I remember the first time you came in here and bought Offspring and Green Day’. And they’d be like, ‘ah, Offspring and Green Day suck!’ But then it’s bands like us and Green Day who sparked their original interest in the scene.”

But has that scene peaked? Has it burnt itself out over the past 10 years? “I think there’s way more punk bands still playing today than there ever was,” says Noodles. “I think the scene’s really solid because of what’s going on in the mainstream. It all reminds me of what was going on in Gilman Street 10 years ago.

“But those bands like Pennywise and Guttermouth – they’re doing well. I love those bands. They’re some of my favourite bands today. I think it’s good that there’s competition. And we all know we’re the better band anyway,” jokes Noodles.

All the same, isn’t it strange that the Offspring have got huge when bands like Guttermouth and Pennywise – both who have been playing for as long – are still relatively unknown by comparison? “I think it’s stranger that bands like Ramones never got the amount of attention that we have,” says Noodles of his punk rock idols, speaking shortly before the tragic death of Joey Ramone. “Iggy Pop as well – he never got the attention we had.”

That amount of attention came to a head when The Offspring were once scheduled to play with Ramones in Europe – following them on stage. “We weren’t comfortable with that,” says Noodles. “They’re huge, they’re legendary – they should be on after us, headlining the show.”

After a chat with Joey and the boys, who maintained that The Offspring were huge and the skinny leather-clad punkers didn’t want to go on after, the Offspring relented. “They were really cool about it,” remembers Noodles. “They’re such a great band.”

Before long, the task of following up Smash came about. No mean feat, as Dexter recalls. “Everyone was saying ‘look out for the sophomore slump’ so you’re half expecting it,” he says of the band’s fourth album and Columbia debut, Ixnay On The Hombre . “The other thing is, you can’t really expect another record to sell as Smash does because that’s a once-in-a-lifetime thing.”

“How many musicians get to have a record as do as well as Smash ? Not many,” adds Noodles. “So we counted ourselves lucky to have something that’s done as well as that one record. We still got to go out and tour for 15 months off the back of it,” he says. “Let’s see, Ixnay ? Only did, around, three million? No good, right?” jokes Noodles, taking a pop at the critics who lambasted Ixnay when it came out for not living up to their high expectations of Smash . “But we redeemed ourselves in the eyes of the record labels with Americana ,” says Noodles.

“Luckily for us it was twice in a lifetime thing because Americana did really well,” says Dexter. We also knew that in order to have a life after Smash , we couldn’t just repeat what was on it, we had to expand the horizons of the band. I wasn’t terribly surprised.

“For the real fans, it’s inversely proportional. The worse a record does, that’s the one that the diehard fans like the most. People come up to me all the time and say ‘I hate your most popular song but I like the ones that only me and my friends know about!’”

The Offspring and MTV's Carson Daly present Ashley Hitchcock of Georgia with $1 million dollars.

With the release of Conspiracy Of One , The Offspring pulled something even more special out of the bag by giving away $1 million of their own cash as a promotion. Everyone who downloaded the single Original Prankster from their website was entered into the prize draw.

“We wanted to give away something of our own to celebrate having the new record out and give something back to the fans,” says Noodles. “I thought giving away a million dollars would fuck that kid up! The winner was a 14-year-old girl from Atlanta. We weren’t even her favourite band!” he shouts. “We were her second favourite band and Slipknot were her favourite! And she’s gone! Nobody knows what’s actually happened to her. Maybe she’s run away with Slipknot…”

So what’s next? The Offspring still have one album left to fulfill their contract with Columbia. But what’ll happen after that? After all, they’ve all got families and let’s face it, they’re not the spring chickens they once were… “I can’t see us not getting together and making music,” says Noodles. “I know Dexter is the same. Not sure about Greg…” says Noodles, on the wind-up again. “No, Greg just gets tired of touring, but he’s still into it. We’ve all known each other since childhood and we all get one really well.”

The Offspring all still live in their native South LA homestead of Orange County. But in way bigger houses than you used to, right? “Yeah,” admits Noodles, laughing. “But none of us live in mansions or gated communities or anything like that.”

Seems like The Offspring have mellowed somewhat though. Especially since when they’d write political and social comments on their self-titled debut and Ignition like Kill The President and LAPD . Are The Offspring still angry or have they been swallowed by the Orange County conservatism they were originally kicking against?

“I don’t think we have,” says Noodles. “I still love that first record. And I love the fact that we still have a president that I hate.”

This feature was taken from Metal Hammer issue 88 in 2001.

The Offspring are on tour now . They play three UK dates with Bad Religion from June 19.

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Alex Burrows

A regular contributor to Louder/Classic Rock and The Quietus, Burrows began his career in 1979 with a joke published in Whizzer & Chips. In the early 1990s he self-published a punk/comics zine, then later worked for Cycling Plus, Redline, MXUK, MP3, Computer Music, Metal Hammer and Classic Rock magazines. He co-wrote Anarchy In the UK: The Stories Behind the Anthems of Punk with the late, great Steven Wells and adapted gothic era literature into graphic novels. He also had a joke published in Viz. He currently works in creative solutions, lives in rural Oxfordshire and plays the drums badly.

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The offspring reissues ‘conspiracy of one’ for 20th anniversary.

Posted by Buddy Iahn | Oct 23, 2020

The Offspring reissues ‘Conspiracy of One’ for 20th anniversary

Limited edition deluxe color vinyl available Dec 11th

To commemorate its 20th anniversary, Conspiracy of One , the sixth album by punk rock trailblazers the Offspring, will once again be available on vinyl — the first time since its release in 2000. On December 11th, Round Hill Records/UMe will release a deluxe version of Conspiracy of One pressed to yellow and red splatter vinyl , which includes spot gloss on the cover and a custom turntable slipmat featuring the Offspring’s flaming skull silhouette logo. A non-deluxe, limited edition canary yellow vinyl variant will be available on uDiscover & The Sound of Vinyl. A standard black vinyl version will be released in early 2021.

All editions will feature the bonus track “Huck It.” The anthemic, sub-three-minute blast was featured on their 2000 VHS/DVD Huck It and used to soundtrack various skateboard stunts, including longtime Offspring drummer Ron Welty doing a successful board-to-board leap over two of his bandmates. “Huck It” will be released as a stand-alone digital single on November 13th. In addition, the official videos for Conspiracy’s first two singles – “Original Prankster” and “Want You Bad” – will be available on the Offspring’s Official YouTube channel in newly remastered HD.

Conspiracy of One , the first Offspring album of the 21st Century, was the fourth album from the game-changing punk group to be certified platinum, a feat completed only a month after its release on November 14, 2000. The album is best known for its lead single, “Original Prankster,” a song that broke the Billboard Top 100 and hit No. 2 on the U.S. Alternative Airplay charts. The song and its mischievous video by director Dave Meyers included a funky sample from War’s “Low Rider” and a cameo from hip hop legend Redman. The album’s follow-up single, “Want You Bad,” could be heard in the film American Pie 2 and the video game Crazy Taxi 3: High Roller.

“When we put Conspiracy of One out in 2000, Bill Clinton was still President, and September 11th hadn’t happened yet. However, it was obvious that tensions were rising in the Middle East, and we could all sense that acts of terrorism were on the rise, both domestically and internationally,” frontman Dexter Holland shares. “In the U.S., we had all experienced the tragedy of the Oklahoma City bombing and had only recently apprehended the Unabomber, while internationally, there were instances of terrorism such as the sarin nerve gas attack in Japan, suicide bombing attacks in Chechnya, and the bombing of the USS Cole. It occurred to us that this was going to be a new way of waging war going forward. While in the past, nations were generally attacked by other nations – army vs. army – we realized that the world was changing and that future attacks against our country were just as likely to occur by an individual or a small group…a ‘Conspiracy of One.’ Of course, we had no idea what was in store for us on September 11, 2001, or how our title portended things to come.”

“ Conspiracy of One seemed to come together pretty quickly, compared to some of other records,” says Noodles. “It was our first time recording with Brendan O’Brien, and we learned a lot from him about how to get the sounds we were looking for. We still play ‘Prankster’ & ‘Want You Bad’ from this record, almost every show, and we’d like to add more to the set. ‘Come Out Swinging’ & ‘Million Miles Away’ always stoke the fans, and ‘Special Delivery’ was such a dynamic and fun part of our set when we played it back then. I still love all these songs.”

For Conspiracy of One , the Offspring used their flaming skull logo on an album cover for the first time — the now-iconic Alan Forbes illustration has since appeared on no small number of T-shirts, stickers, tattoos, and, recently, a custom tank in the multiplayer online game World of Tanks. The Offspring’s first collaboration with producer Brendan O’Brien (Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Rage Against the Machine), Conspiracy of One captures both the Offspring’s trademark locomotive pop-punk (“Come Out Swinging”, the 99-second “All Along”) and their genre-crossing experiments (the bridge of mid-tempo “Special Delivery” borrows the ooga-chaka from Blue Swede’s 1974 version of “Hooked on a Feeling”).

“Alan Forbes is a fantastic graphic artist who did the artwork on Conspiracy of One and ‘Huck It,'” Holland adds. “We had been fans of his work for years and were thrilled to have him help us with our album package. Part of our conversations with Alan were about how it would be cool to have an official Offspring band logo. We worked together and came up with the ‘flaming skull.’ It’s been our logo ever since!”

With more than 40 million albums sold worldwide, The Offspring are one of punk rock’s most significant ambassadors. Since 1985, their lineup has featured vocalist Dexter Holland and guitarist Noodles, with the entirety of the 1990s, spent with the Conspiracy of One rhythm section of bassist Greg K and drummer Ron Welty. Featuring “Come Out And Play (Keep ‘Em Separated)” and “Self Esteem,” their 1994 breakthrough Smash remains the largest selling album ever released on an independent label, certified six times platinum. The group currently has festival dates scheduled across Europe for the summer of 2021.

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Buddy Iahn

Buddy Iahn founded The Music Universe when he decided to juxtapose his love of web design and music. As a lifelong drummer, he decided to take a hiatus from playing music to report it. The website began as a fun project in 2013 to one of the top independent news sites. Email: [email protected]

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A deluxe reissue celebrates the 20th anniversary of the band’s Platinum-selling sixth album.

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The Offspring - Conspiracy of One

Next month marks the 20th anniversary of The Offspring’s best-selling sixth album, Conspiracy of One . To celebrate, the legendary Southern California punk band is reissuing the LP on vinyl for the first time since its release. A deluxe, limited-edition of the record will drop December 11 via Round Hill Records/UMe, with a classic, black vinyl reissue to follow in the new year.

The limited, anniversary edition of Conspiracy of One will come pressed on yellow and red splatter vinyl and features a custom turntable slipmat featuring the Offspring’s flaming skull silhouette logo. Fans can also pick up a non-deluxe, limited-edition canary yellow vinyl variant exclusively on uDiscover and The Sound of Vinyl.

All formats of Conspiracy of One will feature the bonus track “Huck It.” The title track of The Offspring’s 2000 VHS/DVD Huck It, the anthemic song could be heard behind various skateboard stunts, including one by drummer Ron Welty, who did a successful board-to-board leap over two of his bandmates. Additionally, “Huck It” will be available as a stand-alone digital single on November 13.

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Originally released on November 14, 2000, Conspiracy of One debuted at No.9 on the Billboard 200 and marked the group’s fourth Platinum album – certified by the RIAA just one month later. Produced by Brendan O’Brien (Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Bruce Springsteen), the album featured such fan favorites as “Want You Bad,” “Million Miles Away,” and the hit single “Original Prankster.”

Offspring Conspiracy of One Deluxe Edition

In a statement, lead guitarist Noodles recalled that Conspiracy of One “seemed to come together pretty quickly, compared to some of our other records. It was our first time recording with Brendan O’Brien, and we learned a lot from him about how to get the sounds we were looking for.” He added that many of the songs off the record continue to be favorites at their live shows.

The album also marked the band’s first use of their now-iconic flaming skull logo, designed by Alan Forbes. “We had been fans of his work for years and were thrilled to have him help us with our album package,” said frontman Dexter Holland. “Part of our conversations with Alan were about how it would be cool to have an official Offspring band logo. We worked together and came up with the ‘flaming skull.’ It’s been our logo ever since!”

Holland also reflected on the meaning behind the album, and how timely it became less than a year later. “When we put Conspiracy of One out in 2000, Bill Clinton was still president, and September 11 hadn’t happened yet. However, it was obvious that tensions were rising in the Middle East, and we could all sense that acts of terrorism were on the rise, both domestically and internationally.”

Holland continued, “It occurred to us that this was going to be a new way of waging war going forward. While in the past, nations were generally attacked by other nations – army vs. army – we realized that the world was changing and that future attacks against our country were just as likely to occur by an individual or a small group…a ‘Conspiracy of One.’ Of course, we had no idea what was in store for us on September 11, 2001, or how our title portended things to come.”

Conspiracy of One [20th Anniversary Vinyl Reissue] will be available on December 11. Scroll down to view the tracklist and pre-order it here .

Conspiracy of One [20th Anniversary Vinyl Reissue] tracklist: Side A 1. Intro 2. Come Out Swinging 3. Original Prankster 4. Want You Bad 5. Million Miles Away 6. Dammit, I Changed Again 7. Living In Chaos

Side B 1. Special Delivery 2. One Fine Day 3. All Along 4. Denial, Revisited 5 Vultures 6. Conspiracy Of One 7. Huck It

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The Offspring: Conspiracy Of One

The Offspring makes three kinds of songs, in ascending order of toxicity: There's the two-and-a-half-minute speedball spit out so quickly it leaves little effect beyond making your knee reflexively bounce. There's the slick, overblown love song that could be mistaken for a Winger hit (1997's inexplicable "Gone Away" being the most egregious example). And then you have "Pretty Fly (For A White Guy)" and the new "Original Prankster," which sound unnervingly like The Offspring parodying a "Weird Al" Yankovic parody of The Offspring, the unbearable result being the kind of stupidity that thinks it's clever. Those hopped-up novelty songs abound on 1998's Americana , a leading reason it warrants consideration for the title of Worst Album Of The '90s, a record bad enough to create a backlash against not only pop-punk, but also novelty songs, guitars, smug thirtysomethings, and the human race. So it qualifies as some sort of faint praise to say that the new Conspiracy Of One fares a bit better. Setting aside the abhorrent "Original Prankster," which plumbs new depths of Yankovic appropriation—and throws in a stupid Rob Schneider sample to boot—the bulk of the album indulges The Offspring's preferable loud-fast-shrill side, breezing through harmlessly speedy fare like "Come Out Swinging." "Denial, Revisited" is the closest to a "Gone Away"-style mid-tempo power-ballad, and it's awful, but it's far from a career low point. Conspiracy Of One 's crowd-pleasing novelty idiocy doesn't run much deeper than its single, and while that may disappoint those who enjoyed Americana , it makes it The Offspring's most tolerable record in years.

Related Content

When punk rock heavyweights The Offspring released their fourth studio album, Conspiracy Of One, in November of 2000 the world looked much different than it does today. Smartphones weren’t nearly as smart, social media as we know it was nonexistent, and Drake hadn’t even made his debut as Jimmy Brooks on Degrassi: The Next Generation . 

It was the turn of the millennium and pop-punk was trending with bands like Blink-182, Green Day , and Sum 41 dominating alternative radio with their defiant adolescent antics. And right there in the middle of it all was The Offspring’s single, “ Original Prankster ;” a song that broke the Billboard Top 100 and hit Number 2 on the US Alternative Airplay charts. The track boasted a sample from War’s “Low Rider” and a cameo from hip-hop legend Redman, a pairing that sparked many future punk-rap collabs by other bands. 

While there might have been a care-free spirit in the air, things were still serious for The Offspring’s frontman Dexter Holland and his longtime collaborator/guitarist Noodles. “When we put Conspiracy of One out in 2000, Bill Clinton was still President and September 11 hadn’t happened yet. However, it was obvious that tensions were rising in the Middle East, and we could all sense that acts of terrorism were on the rise, both domestically and internationally,” Holland says. “We realized the world was changing and that future attacks against our country were just as likely to occur by an individual or a small group—a ‘ Conspiracy of One .’”

With more than 40 million albums sold worldwide, The Offspring have earned their title as punk rock ambassadors while the music industry continues to evolve around them, even when Holland took a break in 2016-2017 to complete his doctorate in molecular biology, specializing in immunodeficiency viruses. With his Ph.D. now secured, a new album on the calendar for 2021, and a cheeky Christmas single released just before the holidays, the band is ready to get back to business.

We sat down with Holland and Noodles to look back on The Offspring’s legacy and ended up getting some scientific insight into the current pandemic in the process.

Congratulations on 20 years of Conspiracy Of One . How do you guys feel looking back on it? 

Noodles: We’ve just been trying to remember what it was like making the record. Conspiracy of One came together pretty quickly. We were in between a lot of records at the time. We’d already done Smash , Ixnay On The Ombre, and Americana within the five years before that. And then right after Americana we went into the studio and did Conspiracy of One . We had toured on all of those records for almost a year each and we’d go straight from touring into the studio to work on the next record.

Do the sentiments of Conspiracy of One still hold true today?

Noodles: Part of it is this deranged idea that one lone genius could go out and make a difference in the world. This was right before 9/11, but there were people who didn’t really have a lot of resources or political power who were changing the world [negatively].

Dexter : It wasn’t even international. Look at the Oklahoma City bombing. It just felt like [the world] was shifting. Looking back on it a couple of years later, September 11 really eclipsed all of that.

Obviously 9/11 affected everybody, but how did it affect the band?  

Dexter : I think there was an effect on the American psyche. Americans felt vulnerable in a way they hadn’t before. Like, ‘yeah shit, this can really happen.’ I never thought that could go on here.

What is your favourite conspiracy?

Noodles: The lizard people for sure. 

Dexter: I like the moon hoax. 

Noodles: The moon hoax is good. Or whoever said that the pyramids “have to be [the work of] aliens.” Just because white people couldn’t do it doesn’t mean other people couldn’t do it. Doesn’t mean the Mayans couldn’t do it, or the Egyptians couldn’t do it. White people couldn’t do it, so they think “oh, it must be aliens.”

Looking at the current pandemic from a scientific perspective, how is the world doing?

Dexter: It’s hard to say, I’m certainly not an expert. I’m thrilled that there are a lot of promising vaccines in the works and very hopeful that they will do the job. I think there’s reason to be hopeful. But I think more than what the virus is, it’s the perception that’s shaping what’s going on, right? There’s a real threat—we’re talking about thousands of people dying, that’s terrible. And there’s a perceived threat, which may be under-reacting or overreacting, it’s hard to say, but that’s having a real toll as well. So it’s hard to not talk about one without talking about the other.

Noodles: First of all, Dexter is being humble, because I read on Twitter so it must be true, that he [ puts on a fake posh accent ] is one of the foremost leading virologists in the country. 

Dexter, are you privy to any scientific insights through your community that you can share? 

Dexter: These ideas evolve, right? They thought, why are children not getting as sick as older people? It’s often people with weak immune systems who are most vulnerable, which tends to be children and seniors. Whereas [COVID-19] is much more skewed towards seniors. And one school of thought is that there’s a certain receptor in your respiratory tract, meaning it’s a little molecule that sticks out of your cells that doesn’t really appear until you get older. And they think that could be the reason; it could just be this weird molecular fluke in the way we grow up. So it’s not necessarily related to the immune system, but this has only been around for eight months or so. It’s going to have to be really looked at and it’s going to take years.

Sorry if we strayed too far. What else can we say about the record? It sort of felt like a follow-up to Americana and Americana had been so successful for us. We were stoked and everything was going great. We thought let’s keep it going, so we went in kind of quickly.

I’m interested to hear more about the band’s 10th studio album. What more can you tell us? 

Noodles: Well, we drank tequila after listening to the final mixes last week.

Dexter: That’s right, symbolically that means we’re done. We sort of finished it eight months ago and since we’ve had some time to think about it, we might go back in and tweak a little bit more, but I feel really good about it. We’re basically done at this point. 

Does the album have a name? 

Noodles: We’re still thinking about it.

Dexter: We’re pretty sure, but we’re not ready to tell.

Last question. What is the secret to aging gracefully in punk rock?

Noodles: I don’t know, we just do it. We’re just incredibly good looking, energetic, smart dudes. [laughs]. I’m just kidding, we don’t ever think about that. We just love doing what we do. We get to go out and play for a living, we come into the studio where we’re at and we play guitars, hash out ideas, and then we go out and play those ideas for the world. I think that’s the key.

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Conspiracy Of One by The Offspring

the offspring conspiracy of one tour

Songfacts®:

  • According to guitarist Noodles, the title track from the Offspring's sixth album is about "this kind of lone rebel madman guy." He told Kool magazine: "Now that there are really no superpowers that are threatening the planet with annihilation, this is about a lone guy who does it - just gets a bomb in the back of his car and brings the whole world to its knees, just starts the spark that sets the whole thing aflame."
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‘Criminal Minds: Evolution’ Sets Season 2 Premiere Date at Paramount+

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L-R: Kirsten Vangsness as Penelope Garcia, Ryan-James Hatanaka as Tyler Green, A.J. Cook as Jennifer ‘JJ’ Jareau, Joe Mantegna as David Rossi and Paget Brewster as Emily Prentiss in Criminal Minds: Evolution, episode 1, season 17 streaming on Paramount+, 2024. Photo Credit: Michael Yarish /Paramount+

Season 2 of “ Criminal Minds: Evolution ” has set its premiere date at Paramount+ .

The new 10-episode season will debut its first two episodes on June 6, with new episodes dropping weekly on Thursdays thereafter.

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The series stars original “Criminal Minds” cast members Joe Mantegna, A.J. Cook, Kirsten Vangsness, Aisha Tyler, Zach Gilford, Ryan-James Hatanaka with Adam Rodriguez and Paget Brewster. Felicity Huffman will guest star in the new season as well as Dr. Jill Gideon, the ex-wife of Jason Gideon (Mandy Patinkin).

Erica Messer serves as showrunner and executive producer on “Criminal Minds: Evolution.” Breen Frazier, Chris Barbour, Glenn Kershaw, and Mark Gordon also executive produce. ABC Signature and CBS Studios produce.

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IMAGES

  1. The Offspring: 20 Jahre Conspiracy Of One

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  2. The Offspring Reissues 'Conspiracy Of One' As Limited-Edition Deluxe

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  3. Vintage 2000 the Offspring conspiracy of One Tour T Shirt

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  4. The Offspring Conspiracy of One Full album

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  5. The Offspring

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  6. The Offspring

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COMMENTS

  1. Conspiracy of One

    Conspiracy of One is the sixth studio album by American rock band the Offspring, released on November 14, 2000, by Columbia Records. ... The Offspring spent much of 1999 on tour promoting the Americana album. They also appeared at the infamous Woodstock 1999, ...

  2. The Offspring's 2000 Concert & Tour History

    The Offspring's 2000 Concert History. The Offspring is a punk rock band formed in Huntington Beach, California, United States in 1984. From 1987 to 2003, the band's line-up included Dexter Holland (lead vocals, guitar), Noodles (lead and rhythm guitars, back vocals), Greg K. (bass, back vocals), and Ron Welty (drums, percussion), who was fired ...

  3. How The Offspring Became One Of The Biggest Punk Bands In The ...

    Fast forward to this year's Conspiracy Of One world tour and they're playing their biggest ever show to 15,000 in Paris. Americana sales wordwide have reached over 12 million, while Smash is pushing the 13 million mark. The Offspring are officially the biggest punk band. Ever.

  4. The Offspring Concert Setlist at Manchester Evening News Arena

    Get the The Offspring Setlist of the concert at Manchester Evening News Arena, Manchester, England on January 19, 2001 from the Conspiracy of One Tour and other The Offspring Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  5. 'Conspiracy of One' 20th Anniversary Vinyl

    To commemorate the 20th anniversary of 'Conspiracy of One' we will be making the album available on vinyl for the first time since its release in 2000! On December 11th, we will release a deluxe version of the album pressed to yellow and red splatter vinyl (and a special online only canary yellow color), including spot gloss on the cover and a ...

  6. The Offspring

    About "Conspiracy of One". "Conspiracy of One" is the sixth album released by The Offspring. It was produced by Brendan O'Brien, who's known for working with Red Hot Chili Peppers, AC/DC ...

  7. The Offspring Setlist at Wembley Arena, London

    Use this setlist for your event review and get all updates automatically! Get the The Offspring Setlist of the concert at Wembley Arena, London, England on January 20, 2001 from the Conspiracy of One Tour and other The Offspring Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  8. The Offspring

    80. On 'Conspiracy Of One' The Offspring straddle the line of continuing as a serious sounding punk band with something to say/an evolving rock band undiscovered and the countering parody moments introduced on predecessor 'Americana' that would later define them as a dispensable and gimmicky pop act first and a punk band second.

  9. Conspiracy of One

    Listen free to The Offspring - Conspiracy of One (Intro, Come Out Swinging and more). 13 tracks (37:41). Conspiracy of One is the sixth studio album by the American punk rock band The Offspring, released on November 14, 2000 through Columbia Records. Following a worldwide tour in support of its previous album, Americana, The Offspring commenced work on a new album. By the time of its release ...

  10. Conspiracy of One

    Sign up for the mailing list to get all of the latest news and updates!

  11. The Offspring reissues 'Conspiracy of One' for 20th anniversary

    Conspiracy of One, the first Offspring album of the 21st Century, was the fourth album from the game-changing punk group to be certified platinum, a feat completed only a month after its release on November 14, 2000.The album is best known for its lead single, "Original Prankster," a song that broke the Billboard Top 100 and hit No. 2 on the U.S. Alternative Airplay charts.

  12. The Offspring Average Setlists of tour: Conspiracy of One

    View average setlists, openers, closers and encores of The Offspring for the tour Conspiracy of One!

  13. Conspiracy Of One

    Provided to YouTube by Universal Music GroupConspiracy Of One · The OffspringConspiracy Of One℗ 2000 Round Hill RecordsReleased on: 2000-11-14Producer: Brend...

  14. The Offspring's 'Conspiracy of One' Returning To Vinyl

    The Offspring are readying to release a deluxe, 20th-anniversary vinyl edition of their best-selling album, 'Conspiracy of One.'

  15. The Offspring: Conspiracy Of One

    The Offspring makes three kinds of songs, in ascending order of toxicity: There's the two-and-a-half-minute speedball spit out so quickly it leaves little effect beyond making your knee ...

  16. The Offspring Look Back On 20 Years Of Conspiracy Of One

    When punk rock heavyweights The Offspring released their fourth studio album, Conspiracy Of One, in November of 2000 the world looked much different than it does today. Smartphones weren't nearly as smart, social media as we know it was nonexistent, and Drake hadn't even made his debut as Jimmy Brooks on Degrassi: The Next Generation.. It was the turn of the millennium and pop-punk was ...

  17. The Offspring ~ Conspiracy of One

    All Songs from the Album ''Conspiracy of One'' by The Offspring

  18. The Offspring

    'Conspiracy of One' 20th Anniversary vinyl - OUT NOW! https://theoffspring.lnk.to/COO20To commemorate the 20th anniversary of 'Conspiracy of One' we will be ...

  19. Conspiracy of One by The Offspring

    'Conspiracy of One' continues very much in the vein of its three high energy predecessors. Dexter Holland still sings as if every muscle in his neck were taut, guitarist Noodles cranks out the rivet gun riffs, the band knows a good hook when it latches onto one, and, in the venerable tradition of the Ramones, nearly every one of its fast paced songs sounds pretty much the same.

  20. Conspiracy Of One by The Offspring

    According to guitarist Noodles, the title track from the Offspring's sixth album is about "this kind of lone rebel madman guy." He told Kool magazine: "Now that there are really no superpowers that are threatening the planet with annihilation, this is about a lone guy who does it - just gets a bomb in the back of his car and brings the whole world to its knees, just starts the spark that sets ...

  21. Conspiracy of One (Re-issue) Deluxe Vinyl

    20th-anniversary edition of The Offspring's sixth studio album, Conspiracy of One , featuring Original Prankster, Want You Bad" & more as well as a bonus track, Huck It!;" previously only heard in a 2000 video album by the same name. Deluxe package features yellow & red splatter vinyl & includes custom Offspring Logo turntable slip mat & spot gloss on the cover. Due to the production ...

  22. The Offspring

    referencing Conspiracy Of One (LP, Album, Limited Edition, Reissue, Yellow [Canary Yellow], 20th Anniversary Edition) B0032639-01 Offspring's web store still has these for $29.99. Don't get ripped off!!!

  23. The Offspring Tour Statistics: Conspiracy of One

    View the statistics of songs played live by The Offspring. Have a look which song was played how often on the tour Conspiracy of One! setlist.fm Add Setlist. Search Clear search text. follow. Setlists; Artists ... Years on tour. Show all. 2023 (50) 2022 (74) 2021 (29) 2020 (1) 2019 (72) 2018 (64) 2017 (64) 2016 (41)

  24. List of members of the Offspring

    The Offspring is an American punk rock band from Garden Grove, California, formed in 1984. Originally formed under the name Manic Subsidal, the group originally included vocalist and guitarist Dexter Holland (real name Bryan Holland), bassist Greg K. (real name Greg Kriesel) and drummer James Lilja.The bands current line-up includes Holland, alongside lead guitarist Noodles (real name Kevin ...

  25. Box Office: Ryan Gosling's 'The Fall Guy' Earns Soft Opening Day

    Based on the '80s TV series of the same name, "The Fall Guy" stars Gosling as a stuntman who helps his director and previous fling, played by Blunt, to investigate a conspiracy involving the ...

  26. 'Criminal Minds: Evolution' Sets Season 2 Premiere Date at ...

    Season 2 of "Criminal Minds: Evolution" has set its premiere date at Paramount+. The new 10-episode season will debut its first two episodes on June 6, with new episodes dropping weekly on ...