Blink-182 have released a 20th anniversary reissue of their 2001 album ‘Take Off Your Pants And Jacket’, and it features six bonus tracks.
- READ MORE: Blink-182’s Mark Hoppus on death, defiance and dick jokes: “I’m very thankful to be alive”
The reissue of the pop-punk icons’ fourth studio album is out now via Geffen Records, and features the original 13 songs from the tracklist, as well as six tracks that haven’t been featured all together on one release before.
Titled ‘Time to break up’, ‘Mother’s day’, ‘What Went Wrong’, ‘Fuck a Dog’, ‘Don’t Tell Me It’s Over’, and ‘When You Fucked Grandpa’, fans may have heard these songs separately already. This comes as, around the time of the 2001 release, they featured in different physical editions.
This 2026 release will mark the first time that they have ever featured together in a single release.
‘Take Off Your Pants And Jacket’ featured fan favourites like ‘Stay Together For The Kids’ and ‘The Rock Show’, and became the first punk-rock album to debut at Number One in the US.
As well as being re-released on streaming platforms, the 25th anniversary edition of ‘Take Off Your Pants And Jacket’ is also getting a vinyl release.
Available to pre-order from today (Friday June 12), the 2LP set will be pressed on black vinyl and either a plane, pants or jacket emblem – like seen on the album cover – will be individually etched onto Side D of each vinyl set at random.
Visit here to pre-order the vinyl, stream the album above, and check out the tracklist below.
The ‘Take Off Your Pants and Jacket’ tracklist is:
‘Anthem Part Two’
‘Online Songs’
‘First Date’
‘Happy Holidays, You Bastard’
‘Story of a Lonely Guy’
‘The Rock Show’
‘Stay Together for the Kids’
‘Roller Coaster’
‘Reckless Abandon’
‘Every Time I Look for You’
‘Give Me One Good Reason’
‘Shut Up’
‘Please Take Me Home’
Vault Tracks
‘Time To Break Up’
‘Mother’s Day’
‘What Went Wrong’
‘Fuck A Dog’
‘Don’t Tell Me It’s Over’
‘When You Fucked Grandpa’
The band’s last album was 2023’s ‘One More Time…’, which was their first record in over a decade with the original trio of Mark Hoppus, Tom DeLonge and Travis Barker. Their last major tour was the ‘Missionary Impossible’ tour last year.
In February, the band played what they declared what was their only show of 2026 at the Innings Festival in Tempe, Arizona, although they have since played a private show for Mercedes in Los Angeles on May 19, and now announced their first dates for 2027, with headline shows at Rock Am Ring and Rock Im Park.
Last year, Mark Hoppus spoke to NME about his emotional memoir Fahrenheit-182, and also opened up about how the band have grown since forming the band in the early ‘90s.
“When we started Blink, our biggest goal in the whole world was to sell out a small club in San Diego called Soma. The big time of playing the big room there was 1,200 people. When we sold out that room in 1995, I thought we’d made it by playing the biggest punk rock club in our hometown. What else is there?,” the bassist explained.
“Then you go on and get signed to a label, then a major label, then you have your song on the radio, then you’re playing larger venues. Last year, we were selling out stadiums in Los Angeles, Boston and New York. I’m like, ‘Holy hell, this is our band that we started in Tom’s garage’.”
He also spoke about having Green Day open for them in 2002 – around the time they released ‘Take Off Your Pants And Jacket’.
“That was very strange because I grew up listening to Green Day,” Hoppus said. “I literally waited for the day that ‘Dookie’ [1994] came out, and I was in line waiting to buy it. I was a huge fan, then we’re touring with them, but it was a weird thing where Green Day were dipping at the time and Blink were ascendant.
“We were billed as co-headliners, but Blink were closing every night, and that was a strange sensation for us. Headlining over your idols is a little strange.”
