The Ramones - Discography [verified] -
The late 1980s and 1990s represented a creative and popular renaissance, albeit one that came too late for significant reward. Animal Boy (1986) and Halfway to Sanity (1987) were uneven, but Brain Drain (1989) featured the prescient environmental anthem "Pet Sematary," written for Stephen King’s film adaptation. The band’s swan song, however, is their most underrated masterpiece. Mondo Bizarro (1992), Acid Eaters (1993—a covers album), and ¡Adios Amigos! (1995) find the Ramones finally comfortable in their own skin. Mondo Bizarro is a vibrant, confident record; "Censorshit" and "Poison Heart" are late-era classics that marry their classic sound with a newfound lyrical maturity. ¡Adios Amigos! , their final studio album, is a bittersweet farewell. It contains no grand finale, but rather a defiant shrug: "I don’t want to be buried / in a pet sematary / I don’t want to live my life again." The final track, a cover of Tom Waits’s "I Don’t Want to Grow Up," serves as the perfect epitaph for a band that never did.
With Richie Ramone (1983–1987) behind the kit, the band became physically faster than ever. The Ramones - Discography