Top Songs
- December - Single · 2016
- Love Sux · 2022
- Re-Entry (feat. Mark Hoppus) - Single · 2022
- Nonfiction · 2021
- We Made Plans & God Laughed · 2022
- Future Hearts · 2015
- Heartwork · 2020
- The Midsummer Station · 2012
- Living Proof · 2018
- Love Monster · 2018
- What Are You So Scared Of? (Deluxe Edition) · 2011
- it’s fine · 2022
- Almost Alice (Music Inspired By the Motion Picture) · 2010
Music Videos
Appears On
- A Day to Remember
Radio Shows
- A closer look at alternative music—from one of its defining voices.
- Mark and the panel highlight songs from the late aughts.
- Mark talks with punk supergroup L.S. Dunes.
- Mark chats with Kele Okereke of Bloc Party.
- Wishing the blink-182 and After School Radio host a Happy 50th.
- Mark dives into “art” and “rock”—and talks with curator Roger Gastman.
- The Blink-182 vocalist gives his 420 and punk-influenced picks.
- Mark talks with Adam DeVine about music, comedy, and more.
More To See
About Mark Hoppus
Mark Hoppus first rose to musical prominence in the ’90s as the bassist/vocalist of pop-punk jokesters blink-182. Although the California native wrote angsty songs such as “Dammit” and sang on the goofy romantic tale “The Rock Show,” he also was the somber voice of “Adam’s Song,” which addresses teen suicide. Born in 1972, Hoppus taught himself to play bass by listening to favorite bands such as The Cure and The Descendents, and he joined blink-182 after a short-lived stint in college. Once the band became a success, Hoppus branched out and started dabbling in extracurricular activities; namely, he formed the synth-heavy side project +44 with bandmate Travis Barker and produced Motion City Soundtrack’s 2005 album Commit This to Memory. His schedule has remained busy even as blink-182 continue to tour and record. Among other things, he formed the group Simple Creatures with All Time Low’s Alex Gaskarth; they released their debut EP, Strange Love, in 2019.
- FROM
- Ridgecrest, CA, United States
- BORN
- March 15, 1972
- GENRE
- Soundtrack