Rancid - Discography -1992-2008- - 320 Kbps May 2026
The collection closes with B Sides and C-Sides (2007) and Let the Dominoes Fall (2008). While Dominoes felt like a band coming back to earth after sobriety and side projects, the 320 rip reveals the nuance. The acoustic tones on "Last One to Die" have a brittle, folk-punk texture that gets lost in low-res torrents.
A sprawling, ambitious, and divisive record. Rancid went global, incorporating bossa nova, Afrobeat, and ska-punk. “Bloodclot,” “Hooligans,” and the title track “Life Won’t Wait” show a band unafraid to experiment. Because of its dense production, this album suffers most at low bitrates. At 320 Kbps, each layer—from the horn sections to the Latin percussion—has its own space. Rancid - Discography -1992-2008- - 320 Kbps
| Year | Title | Notes | |------|-------|-------| | 1992 | Rancid (EP) | Self-titled 7" / CD EP | | 1993 | Rancid (1st album) | Often called "the '93 album" | | 1994 | Let’s Go | Breakthrough album | | 1995 | ...And Out Come the Wolves | Their most famous album | | 1998 | Life Won’t Wait | Experimental ska/punk | | 2000 | Rancid (5th album) | Self-titled, shorter songs | | 2003 | Indestructible | Major label comeback | | 2005 | Let the Dominoes Fall | Note: This actually released in 2009 — so might be mislabeled or excluded | | 2008 | B Sides and C Sides (compilation) | Rarities collection (released Dec 2008) | The collection closes with B Sides and C-Sides
So the 2008 endpoint likely includes B Sides and C Sides as the final entry. A sprawling, ambitious, and divisive record
Often confused with the debut, this second self-titled release (featuring the iconic skull logo) marked the arrival of drummer Brett Reed and a darker, more hardcore-leaning sound. Tracks like “Salvation” and “Journey to the End of the East Bay” became live staples. At 320 Kbps, the aggression is palpable; every downstroke hits like a hammer.