

Latest Release

- FEB 27, 2023
- Cracker Island (Deluxe)
- 15 Songs
- Demon Days · 2005
- Gorillaz · 2001
- Demon Days · 2005
- Plastic Beach · 2010
- Plastic Beach · 2010
- Humanz (Deluxe) · 2017
- Demon Days · 2005
- Humanz (Deluxe) · 2017
- Humanz (Deluxe) · 2017
- Humanz (Deluxe) · 2017
Essential Albums
- A-list guests and King Kong-sized hits: Gorillaz get serious.
- Toon in, turn on: Gorillaz reset pop’s possibilities on their 2001 debut.
Albums
- 2018
- 2017
- 2010
- 2005
Artist Playlists
- A cartoon prankster and a Britpop heartthrob take you on a genre-bending journey.
- Zane talks to Gorillaz co-founder Damon Albarn about their latest album, Cracker Island.
- 2021
Live Albums
- 2010
Compilations
- 2001
Radio Shows
- The mastermind behind Gorillaz joins to talk Cracker Island.
- Gorillaz co-founder Damon Albarn on 'Cracker Island.'
- Damon Albarn talks making and collaborating on Cracker Island.
- Damon Albarn talks through the band’s LP Cracker Island.
- Songs from Joan Jett and Against Me!, plus a Gorillaz encore.
- Strombo celebrates Gorillaz’s self-titled album as it turns 20.
- A deep dive into the songbooks of two ever evolving artists.
More To See
About Gorillaz
One day in the late '90s, comic-book artist Jamie Hewlett and Blur singer Damon Albarn were sitting around in their West London flat watching TV—a brand-new Panasonic, eight channels on screen at once. Their eyes were glazed, their minds empty. The images just kept coming. This was the dawn of reality TV—shows that turned so-called real life into prepackaged stories and people into cartoons. The question hit them: If culture was already fake, why keep pretending it was real? At first glance, the idea of an animated “virtual band”—the sprightly 2-D, rogue Murdoc Niccals, gangsta Russel Hobbs, and sweet outsider Noodle—seemed a little gimmicky, an art-school shot at mainstream pop. But in retrospect, Gorillaz’s work—the electro-indie pop of “Feel Good Inc.” and “Dare,” the leftfield hip-hop of “Clint Eastwood” and “Dirty Harry,” the bits of American gospel, African folk, and dub—reflected a rootless, fragmented world that has only gotten more familiar with time. That they had no fixed lineup and an ever-rotating series of vocalists and collaborators (from Elton John to De La Soul, Clash bassist Paul Simonon to Afro-Cuban singer Ibrahim Ferrer) not only undercut old ideas of what it meant to be a “band,” it projected a vision that felt communal, even a little utopian, unbound by borders cultural, stylistic, or otherwise. Even when they projected dystopia, they made the future sound bright (“On Melancholy Hill”). Bands are bands. In Gorillaz, we got a living, breathing playlist.
- HOMETOWN
- London, England
- FORMED
- 1998