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Rank #385
Mindless Self Indulgence
From Wikipedia
Mindless Self Indulgence is an American electropunk band formed in New York City in 1997. Their music has a mixed style which includes punk rock, alternative rock, electronica, techno, industrial, hip hop, and breakbeat hardcore. The band features Jimmy Urine on vocals, Steve, Righ? on guitar, Lyn-Z on bass guitar, and Kitty on drums.
Members
- James Euringer
- Jennifer Dunn
- Lindsey Way
- Steve Montano
Discography & Previews
Browse through and click an album to open and play 30-second previews streamed from Apple Music.
Mindless Self‐Indulgence
1995 · 14 tracks
- 1 Witness ↗ 3:17
- 2 F**k Machine ↗ 3:24
- 3 It Gets Worse ↗ 2:56
- 4 I Want To Be Black ↗ 2:10
- 5 Hey Tomorrow F**k You and Your Friend Yesterday ↗ 2:40
- 6 You're No Fun Anymore Mark Trezona ↗ 2:53
- 7 Ala Mode ↗ 2:32
- 8 Casio ↗ 2:14
- 9 Anonymous ↗ 2:03
- 10 Kill You All In a Hip Hop Rage ↗ 2:30
- 11 Stalkers (Slit My Wrists) ↗ 2:39
- 12 Jack You Up ↗ 3:34
- 13 Ass Backwards ↗ 2:55
- 14 The Logical Song ↗ 4:02
Tight
1999 · 27 tracks
- 1 Grab the Mic ↗ 1:20
- 2 Bring the Pain ↗ 3:39
- 3 Mindless Self Indulgence ↗ 0:22
- 4 Tight ↗ 2:47
- 5 Diabolical ↗ 1:43
- 6 Molly ↗ 1:45
- 7 Tornado ↗ 1:51
- 8 Daddy ↗ 1:20
- 9 P***y All Night ↗ 2:22
- 10 Apple Country ↗ 1:07
- 11 D**Kface ↗ 2:08
- 12 Bite Your Rhymes ↗ 2:38
- 13 Tornado (Live At CBGB) [Live] ↗ 1:57
- 14 Ecnegludni Fles Sseldnim ↗ 0:18
- 15 Jx-47 ↗ 3:35
- 16 Shnooze ↗ 0:10
- 17 Cake ↗ 1:26
- 18 I Hate Everyone ↗ 1:04
- 19 If I Only Didn't Want to F theOnes Who Didnt Want to F Me ↗ 1:40
- 20 Agents ↗ 0:19
- 21 Bring the Pain (New Wave) ↗ 4:15
- 22 Tornado (Cassingle Version) ↗ 2:17
- 23 This Isn't Good ↗ 1:58
- 24 D**Kface (Demo) ↗ 1:56
- 25 Tight 8-Bit ↗ 2:41
- 26 I Think I Turned 22 ↗ 1:24
- 27 Free As a Birdie ↗ 1:38
Frankenstein Girls Will Seem Strangely Sexy
1999 · 30 tracks
- 1 Backmask ↗ 2:39
- 2 Bitches ↗ 2:46
- 3 Boomin' ↗ 1:20
- 4 Clarissa ↗ 1:54
- 5 Cocaine and Toupees ↗ 1:49
- 6 Dicks Are for My Friends ↗ 1:14
- 7 F ↗ 0:13
- 8 F****t ↗ 2:44
- 9 Futures ↗ 1:22
- 10 Golden 1 ↗ 2:04
- 11 Harry Truman ↗ 1:35
- 12 Holy Shit ↗ 1:52
- 13 I Hate Jimmy Page ↗ 3:35
- 14 I'm Your Problem Now ↗ 1:55
- 15 J ↗ 0:09
- 16 Keepin' Up With the Kids ↗ 1:42
- 17 Kick the Bucket ↗ 1:42
- 18 Kill the Rock ↗ 2:01
- 19 Last Time I Tried to Rock Your World ↗ 1:43
- 20 London Bridge ↗ 1:50
- 21 M ↗ 0:24
- 22 Masturbates ↗ 2:49
- 23 Planet of the Apes ↗ 2:09
- 24 Played ↗ 2:15
- 25 Ready for Love ↗ 2:03
- 26 Royally F****d ↗ 1:49
- 27 Seven-Eleven ↗ 1:27
- 28 Step Up, Ghettoblaster ↗ 2:19
- 29 Whipstickagostop ↗ 2:36
- 30 Z ↗ 0:21
You’ll Rebel to Anything
2005 · 11 tracks
If
2008 · 15 tracks
- 1 Never Wanted To Dance ↗ 3:09
- 2 Evening Wear ↗ 3:32
- 3 Lights Out ↗ 2:37
- 4 Prescription ↗ 3:06
- 5 Issues ↗ 3:05
- 6 Get It Up ↗ 2:36
- 7 Revenge ↗ 3:09
- 8 Animal ↗ 2:44
- 9 Mastermind ↗ 3:00
- 10 On It ↗ 3:02
- 11 Pay For It ↗ 3:34
- 12 Due ↗ 2:10
- 13 Money ↗ 2:53
- 14 Bomb This Track ↗ 3:20
- 15 Mark David Chapmen ↗ 3:14
How I Learned to Stop Giving a Shit and Love Mindless Self Indulgence
2013 · 14 tracks
- 1 Witness ↗ 3:17
- 2 F**k Machine ↗ 3:24
- 3 It Gets Worse ↗ 2:56
- 4 I Want To Be Black ↗ 2:10
- 5 Hey Tomorrow F**k You and Your Friend Yesterday ↗ 2:40
- 6 You're No Fun Anymore Mark Trezona ↗ 2:53
- 7 Ala Mode ↗ 2:32
- 8 Casio ↗ 2:14
- 9 Anonymous ↗ 2:03
- 10 Kill You All In a Hip Hop Rage ↗ 2:30
- 11 Stalkers (Slit My Wrists) ↗ 2:39
- 12 Jack You Up ↗ 3:34
- 13 Ass Backwards ↗ 2:55
- 14 The Logical Song ↗ 4:02
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Mindless Self‐IndulgenceMindless Self Indulgence199514 tracks -
TightMindless Self Indulgence199927 tracks -
Frankenstein Girls Will Seem Strangely SexyMindless Self Indulgence199930 tracks -
You’ll Rebel to AnythingMindless Self Indulgence200511 tracks -
IfMindless Self Indulgence200815 tracks -
How I Learned to Stop Giving a Shit and Love Mindless Self IndulgenceMindless Self Indulgence201314 tracks
Deep Dive
Overview
Mindless Self Indulgence is an American electropunk band that emerged from New York City in 1997, operating at the intersection of punk rock, electronica, industrial music, and hip-hop. The band’s refusal to settle into a single sonic lane—mixing breakbeat hardcore with synthesizer-driven arrangements and aggressive vocal delivery—positioned them as one of the era’s most unclassifiable acts. Over three decades, they have maintained artistic autonomy while building a devoted audience through constant touring and uncompromising album releases.
Formation Story
Mindless Self Indulgence coalesced in New York City in 1997, drawing from the city’s thriving underground electronic and punk scenes. The founding core included James Euringer on vocals, Steve Montano on guitar, Lindsey Way on bass, and Jennifer Dunn on drums. Their emergence coincided with the rise of electroclash and digital punk aesthetics in the mid-1990s, a moment when rock musicians were increasingly raiding electronic music’s toolkit. The band’s New York origins meant proximity to both underground clubs that championed experimental electronic acts and the remnants of the city’s noise-rock and industrial traditions.
Breakthrough Moment
Mindless Self Indulgence’s early discography—beginning with their self-titled 1995 release and continuing through Tight (1999) and Frankenstein Girls Will Seem Strangely Sexy (1999)—established their sonic profile but circulated primarily within underground and college radio markets. The twin releases in 1999 marked a transitional period, capturing the band’s energetic live intensity and eclectic genre-blending approach. However, their initial audience remained limited to underground devotees and electronic music enthusiasts until broader recognition followed in the subsequent decade.
Peak Era
The period from 2005 onward represented Mindless Self Indulgence’s most commercially visible chapter. You’ll Rebel to Anything (2005) and If (2008) consolidated their reputation as prolific, boundary-pushing artists. The 2013 album How I Learned to Stop Giving a Shit and Love Mindless Self Indulgence marked both a creative statement and a commentary on their own status within the rock music landscape. Throughout this span, the band maintained a relentless touring schedule while refusing to moderate their genre-mixing impulses, building a cult following that valued their unpredictability and refusal to chase mainstream trends.
Musical Style
Mindless Self Indulgence’s sound defies easy categorization, a deliberate position that separates them from acts content to occupy a single genre box. At their core lies electropunk—the collision of punk rock’s energy and DIY ethos with synthesizer-based electronic production. Their arrangements layer distorted guitars against drum machines, industrial percussion, and digital samples. Vocalist James Euringer’s delivery ranges from rapid-fire rap-inflected verses to shouted choruses, drawing equally from hip-hop delivery and punk aggression. The rhythm section grounds the chaos: the bass and drums anchor songs that might otherwise dissolve into pure noise experimentation. Guitar work by Steve Montano oscillates between angular, minimalist lines and abrasive textures. The cumulative effect owes debts to industrial acts like Nine Inch Nails, punk-electronic hybrids like Kill the Messenger, and the breakbeat culture of UK hardcore rave, yet remains distinctly their own.
Major Albums
Mindless Self‐Indulgence (1995)
The band’s debut established their genre-mixing blueprint, introducing the core elements that would define their output: chaotic energy, electronic instrumentation, and Euringer’s confrontational vocal approach.
Frankenstein Girls Will Seem Strangely Sexy (1999)
Released the same year as Tight, this album showcased the band’s maturation and refined their abrasive sound, featuring some of their most widely recognized material among underground audiences.
You’ll Rebel to Anything (2005)
A landmark release that expanded their reach, this album demonstrated the band’s continued evolution while maintaining their refusal to compromise on avant-garde production and structural experimentation.
If (2008)
A sprawling statement of artistic intent, If solidified their position as a uncompromising act unwilling to dilute their vision for commercial appeal.
Signature Songs
- “Faggot” — A provocative track that exemplified the band’s willingness to deploy inflammatory language and shock tactics as artistic tools.
- “Shut Me Up” — Captured the high-energy chaos of their live performances within a song structure.
- “Bitches” — Demonstrated their command of hip-hop-inflected production and aggressive vocal delivery.
- “PCP” — Showcased the collision of electronic experimentation with punk velocity that defined their core sound.
Influence on Rock
Mindless Self Indulgence occupied a unique position in early-2000s rock music: too experimental for mainstream rock radio, too aggressive for electronic purists, and too rock-oriented for club DJs. Yet their willingness to traverse genre boundaries influenced subsequent acts working at similar intersections. Bands emerging in the 2000s onward who combined punk attitudes with electronic instrumentation—particularly those rejecting neat genre categorization—inherited territory mapped by MSI’s fearless eclecticism. Their touring ethos, emphasizing direct fan connection over gatekeeping, became influential among underground bands building sustainable touring careers outside traditional industry structures.
Legacy
Mindless Self Indulgence remains active and touring, a testament to their ability to sustain a devoted fanbase without major label support or mainstream radio play. The band’s refusal to moderate their aesthetic or break character for broader appeal has preserved their artistic credibility within underground communities. Their consistent presence in the touring circuit and continued album releases have cemented them as enduring figures in alternative rock, particularly for audiences valuing artistic autonomy and genre fluidity. The rise of digital distribution and streaming has allowed their catalog to reach new listeners unmoored from geographic or radio limitations, expanding their influence beyond the New York underground scenes that birthed them.
Fun Facts
- The band’s name itself reflects their confrontational aesthetic and philosophy of artistic self-determination over audience appeasement.
- Mindless Self Indulgence has maintained remarkable lineup stability since their 1997 formation, a rarity for bands navigating changing industry conditions and shifting underground music scenes.
- Their Elektra Records tenure represented an unusual arrangement: a major label willing to distribute an act that resisted commercial softening or radio-friendly reworking.