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Travis Barker discography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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American drummer Travis Barker has released one studio album, five extended play (EP), and 60 singles under his own name. Barker, best known for his work with Blink-182, has been a part of various punk rock bands throughout his career, including the Aquabats, Box Car Racer, Transplants, +44, and Goldfinger. Outside of his work in rock music, Barker has worked prolifically in hip hop; he was a member of the supergroup Expensive Taste and the drummer-and-DJ duo TRV$DJAM, and has released extended plays with Yelawolf, and Asher Roth and Nottz. He has also produced music for musicians such as Machine Gun Kelly, Fever 333, Avril Lavigne and Trippie Redd. He holds many guest appearances on songs from a variety of musicians, including many rappers such as Lil Wayne, Paul Wall, the Game, and Run the Jewels. Barker became well known in the late 2000s for creating rock remixes to rap songs.[1] His debut studio album, Give the Drummer Some, was released in 2011 and debuted at number nine on the Billboard 200 in the United States.[2]
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Albums
Studio albums
Mixtapes
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Extended plays
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Singles
As lead artist
As a featured artist
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Other charted songs
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Guest appearances
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Videos
Music videos
Appearances
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Production discography
Albums
EPs
Singles
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See also
Notes
- United States sales figures for Give the Drummer Some as of March 2011.[10]
- United States sales figures for Psycho White as of November 2012.[14]
- The solo version of "Drop Dead" is included as an album track on Death of an Optimist, while the remix featuring Kesha and Travis Barker isn't.
- "Thought It Was" did not enter the Billboard Hot 100, but peaked at number 23 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart.[19]
- "Cudi the Kid" did not enter the Dance/Electronic Songs chart, but peaked at number five on the Dance Singles Sales chart.[52]
- "Bad Man" did not enter the Bubbling Under R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, but peaked at number 20 on the Rap Digital Songs Sales chart.[54]
- "11 Minutes" did not enter the Billboard Hot 100, but peaked at number one on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart.[19]
- "Sick and Tired" did not enter the Billboard Hot 100, but peaked at number 15 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart.[19]
- "Warrior" did not enter the Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart, but peaked at number 19 on the Hot Hard Rock Songs chart.[72]
- "Hollywood Sucks" did not enter the Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart, but peaked at number 26 on the Alternative Airplay chart.[77]
- "Let's Go" did not enter the Billboard Hot 100, but peaked at number 19 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart.[19]
- "Let's Go" did not enter the Hot Rap Songs chart, but peaked at number 29 on the Rap Digital Songs Sales chart.[54]
- "Cool Head" did not enter the Hot Rap Songs chart, but peaked at number 45 on the Rap Digital Songs Sales chart.[54]
- "Dead Desert" did not enter the Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart, but peaked at number 12 on the Hot Hard Rock Songs chart.[72]
- "The Way It Is" was initially slated to appear on Blestenation's debut album Welcome to MBugout City, scheduled to be released by Geffen Records between 2007 and 2008. The album went unreleased.
References
External links
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