Discography -2000-2010- 6 Albums- 14 Singles- 136 Songs — Gorillaz
Between 2000 and 2010, the Gorillaz discography included 4 studio albums 2 major compilation albums 14 major singles
. While there isn't a single official "136 songs" count for this specific era, their total output during this decade—including album tracks, B-sides, and remixes—totals approximately 130 to 140 unique pieces of music. Albums (2000–2010)
The band released six prominent full-length projects in this period, split between studio recordings and collections of rare material: Between 2000 and 2010, the Gorillaz discography included
Singles (14)
A representative list of the era’s principal singles (radio/promotional/commercial), roughly matching the count of 14:
- “Clint Eastwood” (2001)
- “19-2000” (2001)
- “Tomorrow Comes Today” (2000/2001)
- “Rock the House” (2001)
- “Feel Good Inc.” (2005)
- “DARE” (2005)
- “Dirty Harry” (2005)
- “Kids with Guns” / “El Mañana” (double A-side, 2006)
- “Stylo” (2010) — though stylistically tied to later activity, included here when counting singles around The Fall era and bridged releases/sessions
- “On Melancholy Hill” (often released later as single/promotional track)
- Additional promotional singles, radio edits and reissues across this decade round out the count to 14 (including region-specific singles and double A-sides).
VI. Legacy of the 2000–2010 Era
- Pioneered virtual band IP – before K/DA, before Hatsune Miku in West
- Bridged alternative and mainstream – Feel Good Inc. won Grammy, but album also had spoken word by Dennis Hopper
- Pre-streaming “deep cuts” culture – D-Sides and G Stage encouraged fan archival digging
- Influenced 2010s acts (Tyler the Creator, Billie Eilish, JPEGMAFIA) in eclectic guest curation and lofi-digital production
If you want, I can now generate:
- A track-by-track thematic map of all 136 songs
- A timeline of singles & music videos from 2000–2010
- A chart of all featured artists across the 6 albums
Here’s a helpful review of Gorillaz’s discography from 2000 to 2010, covering the 6 albums, 14 singles, and 136 songs you mentioned — though note that the song count includes B-sides, bonus tracks, and non-album singles.
Catalog composition (how totals arise)
- Studio albums (2001, 2005, 2010) contain core album tracks.
- Two B-sides compilations (G-Sides, D-Sides) add dozens of non-album tracks, remixes, and alternate versions.
- Live release(s), promotional singles, soundtrack and compilation appearances, plus numerous remixes, instrumentals, and collaborations contribute to the ~136 track count across 2000–2010.
4. D-Sides (2007) – 2 Discs, 21 Total Tracks (But Only 15 “New” Songs in 2000-2010 context?)
Wait – let’s be precise.
Release date: November 19, 2007 (UK), December 4, 2007 (US)
Phase: 2 B-side/remix compilation.
Disc 1 = previously unreleased B-sides and demos from Demon Days. Disc 2 = remixes. Singles (14) A representative list of the era’s
For the 136 songs count (2000-2010), we include Disc 1 (15 B-sides) as original songs. Disc 2 (remixes) are not counted as new compositions.
Disc 1 – B-sides (15 tracks):
- 68 State
- People
- Hongkongaton
- We Are Happy Landfill
- Hong Kong
- The Swagga
- Highway (Under Construction)
- Bill Murray
- The Last Living Souls (Demo – sometimes excluded but officially on D-Sides) – Let’s skip demo counting – official D-Sides B-side list actually has 15 unique songs. For accuracy, the widely accepted list: 68 State, People, Hongkongaton, We Are Happy Landfill, Hong Kong, The Swagga, Highway, Bill Murray, Murdoc is God, Spitting Out the Demons, Don’t Get Lost in Heaven (Original Demo), Stop the Dams, The Swagga (alternate – no), wait – the official correct list of 15 B-side tracks (non-remix) is:
(Corrected official D-Sides Disc 1 from EMI)
- 68 State
- People
- Hongkongaton
- We Are Happy Landfill
- Hong Kong
- The Swagga
- Highway (Under Construction)
- Bill Murray
- Murdoc Is God
- Spitting Out the Demons
- Don't Get Lost in Heaven (Original Demo)
- Stop the Dams
- *** actually that’s 12 – the remaining 3 are “Demon Days (Live)", “Kids with Guns (Live)” – live tracks not counted, and “Dirty Harry (Live) – also not counted. For studio songs, D-Sides adds roughly 12 new original Phase 2 B-sides. But let’s refer to the total 136 number.
⭐ Critical Highlights
- Most influential: Demon Days — cohesive, eerie, brilliant.
- Best single: Feel Good Inc. (Damon Albarn + MF DOOM + De La Soul).
- Hidden gem: Hong Kong (from D-Sides) — melancholic masterpiece.
- Most underrated album: Plastic Beach — initially divisive, now seen as a synth-pop classic.
- Biggest leap: From Gorillaz’s lo-fi charm to Demon Days’ cinematic production.