ALBUMTafelmuzik Means More When You’re AloneThe Dandy Warhols
ALBUMWhy You so CrazyThe Dandy Warhols
ALBUMLive Sonic DisruptionThe Dandy Warhols
ALBUMDistortlandThe Dandy Warhols
ALBUMThis MachineThe Dandy Warhols
ALBUMEarth to the Dandy WarholsThe Dandy Warhols
ALBUMOdditorium Or Warlords of MarsThe Dandy Warhols
ALBUMThe Black AlbumThe Dandy Warhols
ALBUMWelcome To the Monkey HouseThe Dandy Warhols
The Dandy Warhols's Popular Music Videos
We Used To Be Friends
The Dandy Warhols
You Were the Last High
The Dandy Warhols
I'd Like To Help You With Your Problem (feat. Slash) [Studio]
The Dandy Warhols
Danzig With Myself (feat. Frank Black) [Lyric Video]
The Dandy Warhols
Artist Playlists
The Dandy Warhols Essentials
Sole survivors of the '90s Portland scene.
Artist Biography
Like their iconic quasi-namesake, indie mainstays The Dandy Warhols live by the philosophy that art is most provocative when it makes fun of itself. The Portland, Oregon band packs a whole lot of irony and disillusionment into a deliriously catchy mix of hooks that bounce along alt-rock’s fringes. Formed in 1994, the Warhols snatched a major-label deal just a few years later and released 1997's The Dandy Warhols Come Down, a shambolic set of psych rock, shoegaze, and power pop, featuring the alternative hit “Not If You Were the Last Junkie On Earth.” Fronted by Courtney Taylor-Taylor—the breathy-voiced, keen observer of hipster culture—the band had a prolific run in the 2000s, highlighted by the punchy Stones-esque groover “Bohemian Like You” from 2000’s Thirteen Tales From Urban Bohemia and the electrifying electro-disco bop “We Used to Be Friends” from 2003’s Welcome to the Monkey House. The 2004 documentary Dig!, which chronicles the group’s love-hate rivalry with The Brian Jonestown Massacre, further cemented their place in indie rock. In the years since, they’ve kept their youthful, sardonic vigor intact, indulging every musical impulse with expansive psych-pop oddities, decadent New Wave grooves, country-fried electronic experiments, and plenty of wit, whimsy, and pop-culture parody.