For the (2000-2010), we include Disc 1 (15 B-sides) as original songs. Disc 2 (remixes) are not counted as new compositions.
Even today, Phase 1-3 Gorillaz remains a benchmark for how virtual artistry, cross-genre collaboration, and animated storytelling can revolutionize popular music. The 6 albums, 14 singles, and 136 tracks are not just a discography – they are a decade-long virtual odyssey that changed music forever. Whether you’re a new fan or a seasoned collector, revisiting the 2000-2010 era of Gorillaz reveals a wealth of creativity that has rarely been matched. From the lo-fi charm of “Re-Hash” to the synthetic deserts of “Plastic Beach,” every one of those 136 songs is a piece of Albarn and Hewlett’s twisted, brilliant vision.
The decade from 2000 to 2010 was Gorillaz’s formative golden era. During this period, they released exactly (including a B-side/remix project), spawned 14 official singles , and delivered a staggering 136 unique songs (including album tracks, B-sides, bonus cuts, and key non-album singles). This article breaks down every major release, tracklist, and hidden gem from Phase 1 to Phase 3. The 6 Albums (2000–2010) While casual fans recall three main studio LPs, the official Gorillaz discography from 2000-2010 includes 6 major album-length projects when counting compilations and remix albums tied to their narrative phases. 1. Gorillaz (2001) – 15 Tracks Release date: March 26, 2001 (UK) Phase: 1 – “Celebrity Harvest” After a buzz-building EP in 2000, the self-titled debut arrived. Produced by Dan the Automator, Tom Girling, and Jason Cox, it was a lo-fi, genre-bending masterpiece.
To avoid drowning in minutiae: if you collect every Gorillaz CD single, promo, and album from Phase 1, 2, and 3 (2000-2010), you’ll own exactly as verified by the fan-maintained Gorillaz-Italia and G-Uno discographies. The Legacy: Why These 6 Albums, 14 Singles, and 136 Songs Matter Gorillaz between 2000 and 2010 didn’t just make music; they built a mythology. Each album was a narrative phase: from the dingy Kong Studios ( Gorillaz ), to the floating windmill island and apocalypse ( Demon Days ), to the polluted paradise of Plastic Beach , and the iPad-recorded American road trip of The Fall .