Fifty years ago, on April 23, 1976, Ramones dropped their debut Ramones and set off a shift that still runs through punk and hard rock. Built on speed, volume, and stripped-down songwriting, the record cut through the excess of the time with a direct approach. The lineup — Joey Ramone, Johnny Ramone, Dee Dee Ramone and Tommy Ramone — delivered short, sharp tracks like “Blitzkrieg Bop” and “Judy Is A Punk” that reshaped the sound and attitude of rock.
Reflecting on the album’s impact, Rolling Stone wrote: “Punk rock started in 1976 on New York’s Bowery, when four cretins from Queens came up with a mutant strain of blitzkrieg bubblegum,” when naming Ramones the No. 1 “Greatest Punk Album Of All Time” (later naming it the No. 1 “Best Debut Album Of All Time”). “But even if punk rock began as a kind of negation — a call to stark, brutal simplicity — its musical variety and transforming emotional power was immediate and remains staggering.”
Decades later, the record still carries weight. As The New York Times put it: “the album’s influence has been incalculable”, and the reach of Ramones continues to expand. To mark the anniversary, the band’s camp has teamed up with Rhino Entertainment to roll out a year-long series of events focused on the album’s legacy and the wider impact of punk.
One of the key pieces is an official exhibition organized by The Punk Foundation alongside Linda Ramone and Ramones Productions Inc. The exhibit will debut at The Punk Rock Museum on July 4, 2026, bringing together music, memorabilia, and the broader cultural footprint of the band. The program will include live performances, artist talks, interactive elements, guided tours, and workshops tied to the band’s influence across music, art, and design. The museum will also host a 4th of July bash featuring the Ramones tribute band Mama’s Boy.
Additional releases and tribute events are planned through the end of 2026. A set of remastered and upgraded videos is already available, covering tracks like “I Wanna Be Sedated”, “Psycho Therapy”, “Rock N Roll High School”, “Sheena Is A Punk Rocker”, “Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight)”, “We Want The Airwaves”, “Time Has Come Today”, “I Wanna Live”, “Something To Believe In”, “Howling At The Moon” and “Do You Remember Rock And Roll Radio?”.


