The Offspring "Smash" (1994) - got it
One of a group of more polished, catchy “pop punk” bands to emerge in the mid 90s (along with bands such as Green Day and Rancid).  
The band had signed to Epitaph records and were recording this, their 
third album on a tight budget.  Money was so tight that they had to 
constantly call the studio to utilise downtime between other bands' sessions in 
order to get a discounted rate of their studio time.  Several of the songs were worked out in
 the space of a couple of nights to make economical use of the time they
 had.
The band’s previous album had only sold around 15,000 copies, so they 
were under no illusions of their music finding a place on mainstream 
radio or MTV.   Lead single “Come Out and Play” changed all that, becoming a
 hit.  The album sold millions of copies, effectively setting up Epitaph
 and the Offspring (though they would soon depart for a major label) 
for the next few  years.  Guitarist Noodles was working as a school 
janitor and promised his boss not to quit until the end of the year.  He
 said that kids who had seen him on MTV would be surprised to see him cleaning.
When the band first started, singer Dexter Holland was on drums... which
 I find odd, because his high-pitched yell is so distinctive, it makes 
sense to have him on vocals.
The first track proper "Nitro (Youth Energy)" starts with a surf-rock 
style drum intro but then kicks into fast punk rock with mildly 
nihilistic lyrics.  Tracks like "Bad Habit" and "Self Esteem" show the 
band's humorous, slightly puerile side.   Track "Genocide"
 has a chord sequence that they seem to have reused on at least the 
subsequent couple of albums, so I'm not sure if that was an intentional 
through-line for their albums, or just plagiarising themselves. 
While the band would come to be known for a string of novelty pop-punk 
hits (Pretty Fly for a White Guy, Original Prankster, Hit That), on 
Smash they were still pretty serious, if catchy, punk business.   

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