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They are currently giving a tour that began in March in their country.
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The name came from the band's visit to the Imperial War Museum while in England, after seeing a bullet through a Bible that saved the life of its owner.
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The album's story tells the life of "Jesus of Suburbia", a kind of anti-hero created by Billie Joe Armstrong.
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They incorporated acoustic elements and pop and folk styles. Lyrically, the album contains more upbeat and inspiring themes compared to the band's previous releases.
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After the tour after the album was released, the trio decided to take some time off, until in the summer of 1997 they recorded "Nimrod", an album that hit stores on October 14 of that year.
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It was the next album for the trio, which, despite not obtaining the resounding success of the previous one, managed to sell more than a million copies in the United States.
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It was their third album, an album of just 39 minutes and fourteen songs. It hit stores in April 1994, and in a couple of months it sold over a million copies.
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The band's popularity grew unusually, and the trio amicably left Lookout Records for Reprise Records in April 1993.
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The release of their second album "Kerplunk" arrived, recorded in five days and released on Lookout Records.
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Entitled 1000 Hours, in 1989. This was followed a year later by the album 39 / Smooth, after the edition of which Kiftmeyer decided to leave the group.
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The band was formed in 1988 in Berkeley. It is made up of Billie Joe Armstrong (vocals, guitar), Mike Dirnt (bass) and Tre Cool (drums).