To rejoice the 30th anniversary of Green Day’s traditional pop-punk album “Dookie,” Los Angeles artwork studio Brain has constructed extraordinarily lo-fi variations of the songs in varied codecs and is promoting one-off variations of them.
On the web site Dookie Demastered you may also enter a drawing for $49 wi-fi doorbell that may play the intro of “Longview” in what feels like tubular bells, a $39 8-bit model of “Welcome to Paradise” contained on a GameBoy cartridge, or a $49 wax cylinder model of “When I Come Around.” Perhaps the most effective is a $99 Teddy Ruxpin doll that sings “Chump.”
You may take heed to samples — ideally at prime quantity in a crowded workplace setting to harass all of your coworkers, or at the very least make them pine for his or her wasted teenage years.
Dookie Demastered: 15 tracks. 15 codecs. The manner it was by no means meant to be heard. 30 years later. Now out there at https://t.co/MD6KjVSIus pic.twitter.com/1YlPUMyFSY
— Green Day (@GreenDay) October 9, 2024