Apparently the Offspring could keep 'em separated no longer. Greatest Hits gathers every one of the band's modern rock radio warhorses into one place. It also tacks on a new song called "Can't Repeat," which despite its name is a repeat of the 1998 single "Kids Aren't Alright." After the new opener the set moves chronologically, so its songs are like bullet points on a time line of radio and MTV in the 1990s. The breakthrough Smash hits start it out: the surf guitar wrangle "Come Out and Play," the Nirvana-baiting of "Self Esteem," and "Gotta Get Away." "All I Want" from 1997's Ixnay on the Hombre is next, and then it's the sluggish, echoing arena punk of "Gone Away." ("And it FEELS! And it FEELS LIKE! Heaven's so far away!") With that comes the switch, when Offspring tailed away from punk relativism into hyper, referential snark. "Pretty Fly (For a White Guy)" and "Why Don't You Get a Job?" get points for anticipating U.S. pop culture's slide into reality TV madness and unsafe I Want a Famous Face-style obsessions -- they have the shouty sheen of a daytime talk show and revel in empty trends and opportunism. As actual songs they're somewhat gimmicky, but in a greatest-hits context they're noteworthy snapshots. The swaggering guitars, Latin inflections, and references to Prozac and Chino make 2000's "Conspiracy of One" Los Angeles product, and Offspring fans will note the inclusion of 2001's "Defy You," originally part of the Orange County soundtrack. Greatest Hits ends with two tracks from 2003's Splinter, and "Hit That"'s boppy baby daddy drama combines the Offspring's smart alecky cultural cynicism with a raucous distortion chorus. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide
loftus hits the nail on the head. on a side note, why does no one pay attention to they're debut album? that disc has some tracks that are on par with material from ignition and even smash...
The offspring may not have been known if not for nirvana, but neither would a bunch of other bands. And just because of that doesn't make nirvana godly, that just means they made music that would appeal to the public and get them looking at otherm usic that was simmilar. They do that nowadays too. It's called pop.
Johnny Loftus is a tool! I have read a few reviews of his, and his "lofty" name says it all! He is pretentious and over-achieving . He seemingly has nothing good to say about bands that are "mainstream" , yet praises "indie" bands. There is a reason "mainstream" is the dominating form of music. More people like it. So, does not having a large following make an opinion better? I don't know, ask the Manson Family!
Ixnay on The Hombre has "All I Want" and then Americana has "The Kids Are not Allright", oh and let's not forget such songs as "Have You Ever", "She's Got Issues", "End of The Line" and "Americana". Every Offspring album is f**king brilliant because they all have at least one good song on them. The Offspring have tons of filler songs though, I mean "No Brakes" is a good song but it's filler compared to the sheer hardcore awesomeness of "All I Want". And "Ixnay" had some s**tty songs on it too.
Ever notice you can't write f**k, s**t, b**ch, but you can write cocksuckers on this site weird huh? Yeah Ignition is awesome and somewhat rare. That and smash and that's pretty much what you need.
Offspring fans need to pick up "Ignition." It came out before Smash and with better distribution would have put them on the map earlier. After Ixnay, I fell off the wagon. The offspring wagon that is, not the booze wagon. Still on that one.