Smashing Pumpkins Discography [UPDATED]

If Gish was the promise, was the devastating fulfillment. Born from immense personal turmoil (Corgan’s depression, the band’s near-implosion, and a bitter feud with the rising grunge scene), the album is a masterpiece of layered suffering and sonic excess. From the opening, multi-tracked guitar avalanche of "Cherub Rock," a venomous indictment of indie-rock hypocrisy, to the tear-streaked balladry of "Disarm" and the celestial shoegaze of "Mayonaise," Siamese Dream achieves an almost impossible feat: it makes grand, symphonic production feel utterly intimate and raw. Chamberlin’s jazz-inflected drumming dances around Corgan’s meticulously constructed guitar orchestras, creating a sound that is both impossibly heavy and heartbreakingly fragile. It is the definitive Pumpkins album, a perfect encapsulation of their core identity: romantic, angry, beautiful, and bruised.

The journey begins not with a bang, but with a jagged, hypnotic whisper. , their debut, is a document of pure, psychedelic hunger. Produced by Butch Vig (pre- Nevermind ), it fuses the dirge-like weight of Black Sabbath with the shimmering, dreamlike guitar textures of My Bloody Valentine. Tracks like "Rhinoceros" and "Siva" showcase a band already in command of dynamic shifts—from quiet, arpeggiated verses to walls of distorted, cascading guitar leads. Gish is a cult classic, a blueprint of everything the Pumpkins would later perfect: Corgan’s nasal, vulnerable wail, the thunderous rhythm section of D’arcy Wretzky and Jimmy Chamberlin, and a guitar vocabulary that prioritized emotional texture over bluesy riffs. smashing pumpkins discography

The original band’s final act was the abrasive, willfully difficult , a concept album about a rock star’s crisis of faith that was too meta, too messy, and too compressed to fully cohere. Yet, scattered within its distorted guitars and fractured narratives are gems like "Stand Inside Your Love" and the cosmic "Age of Innocence." Machina felt like a band dismantling itself in real-time, a process completed by the perfunctory, b-sides collection Machina II/The Friends & Enemies of Modern Music (released for free online), which marked the original lineup’s quiet, unceremonious end. If Gish was the promise, was the devastating fulfillment

And then came the fall. The tumultuous recording of , marked by Chamberlin’s firing after the drug-related death of touring keyboardist Jonathan Melvoin, resulted in a stark, gothic, electronica-tinged departure. Stripped of its drummer’s powerhouse engine, Adore is a haunted, rain-streaked album of loss, grief, and digital experimentation. Songs like "Ava Adore" and the breathtaking "For Martha"—a piano elegy for Corgan’s mother—reveal a songwriter wrestling with silence and new technology. While a commercial disappointment after Mellon Collie , Adore has aged remarkably well, standing as a brave, wounded, and deeply beautiful outlier in their catalog. , their debut, is a document of pure, psychedelic hunger