The Ramones - Discography Updated Jun 2026
The Ramones didn’t invent punk rock—they were the invention. Across 14 studio albums released between 1976 and 1995, the band of brothers (none of whom were actually brothers, taking the surname Ramone as a totem) built a discography that is surprisingly complex. While the template was simple—buzzsaw guitars, "snare, kick, snare, kick" drums, doo-wop melodies, and lyrics about sniffing glue and lobotomies—their artistic arc tells a story of burnout, betrayal, mainstream rejection, and ultimate vindication.
It’s a vacation album. A bar-beer record. Nothing more, nothing less. The Ramones - Discography
Major-label years and production shifts (1978–1985) Road to Ruin (1978) introduced briefer tempos and a few nods to hard rock, including Johnny Ramone’s guitar crunch and Dee Dee Ramone’s songwriting craft on songs such as “I Want You Around” and “I Believe in Miracles.” Following Joey Ramone’s throat injury and the temporary addition of drummer Marky Ramone, the band navigated personnel shifts and changing production approaches. The Ramones didn’t invent punk rock—they were the
Here is the essential guide to the holy trinity, the weird middle period, and the sad, loud finale. It’s a vacation album
The band moved toward a power-pop sound. While the production is clean, the lyrics began to reflect the growing internal tension between Joey and Johnny Ramone.