Punk in Drublic


Punk in Drublic is the fifth studio album by the American punk rock band NOFX. It was released on July 19, 1994, through Epitaph Records. The title is a spoonerism of "Drunk in Public".
Punk in Drublic is NOFX's most successful album to date, peaking at number 12 on Billboard's Heatseekers chart. The album has received positive reviews and is now considered a classic punk album by fans and critics alike. Six years after its release, it became the band's only gold record for sales of over 500,000 copies in the United States. Worldwide, the record has sold over 1 million copies.

Reception and legacy

The AllMusic review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine stated: "The quartet didn't change their approach at all — at their core, they remain a heavy, speed-addled, hook-conscious post-hardcore punk group — but their songwriting has improved, as has their attack."

Accolades

* denotes an unordered list
The album was a big influence on Blink-182's Cheshire Cat, Unwritten Law's Oz Factor, Lagwagon's Let's Talk About Feelings, Sum 41's All Killer No Filler and Anti-Flag's The General Strike.

Track listing

Personnel

Weekly charts

Certifications

Album notes

  • The song "Jeff Wears Birkenstocks" was written about Jeff Abarta, an Epitaph Records employee. In 2017, the Birkenstock company produced a short-form documentary about how the song came together that includes new interviews on the subject with Jeff and Fat Mike.
  • Track 17 contains a hidden track starting at 5:29, after three minutes of silence; guitarist El Hefe performs impressions of cartoon characters, such as Yosemite Sam and Popeye.
  • "Linoleum" is covered by hardcore-punk band Shai Hulud, Russell and the Wolf Choir, post-third wave ska band Streetlight Manifesto on their 2010 album 99 Songs of Revolution, Bad Astronaut, August Burns Red and Frank Turner
  • The song "Lori Meyers" was covered by Aiden as a hidden track on their album Knives.
  • The song "Dying Degree" was covered by Evergreen Terrace on their cover album Writer's Block.
  • The song "Leave It Alone" references another song, "Bringing In the Sheaves", written in 1874 by Knowles Shaw. It is a popular American gospel song strongly associated with Protestant Christians. Despite this fact, both credited songwriters, Fat Mike and Eric Melvin are Jewish.