E13 Cigarettes and Valentines, by Green Day

In the early 2000's, industry espionage robbed us of "Maximum Green Day."

After the mediocre release of "Warning" (2000), Green Day needed a top-notch followup. The Anaheim punk trio set to work on their seventh studio album: "Cigarettes and Valentines," a deviation from the acoustic/folk-punk sound that fans rejected in "Warning." Before its 2003 release, band members claim the album's master-tapes were stolen, never to be recovered. In lieu of doing it all over again, the band would write and release "American Idiot" (2004), a smash-hit that rocketed them to more fame than they knew how to waste.

Blunderphonics is a weekly show by Jack Derbak and Spencer Foust, diving into music's most-troubled productions. Intro/outro by Jack Derbak, logo by Spencer Foust.

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