The Front Bottoms have an extensive catalog of unreleased and self-released songs that fans generally regard as the of their discography. These tracks are praised for their raw, lo-fi energy and the "awkward witticisms" that defined the band's early folk-punk sound. 💿 The Grandma EP Series
Named after Brian’s grandmother, including "Lonely Eyes" and the studio debut of "Today Is Not Real".
Brian ejected the disc and handed it back to Mat. They didn't upload it. Instead, they took the stage twenty minutes later and played "The Beers" with more energy than they had in years, knowing that somewhere in a dusty box in a van, t
Contains 12 tracks, many of which were later re-recorded. Notable originals include "Twelve Feet Deep," "Lipstick Covered Magnet," and "Taking My Uzi to the Gym". My Grandma vs. Pneumonia (2009):
The Front Bottoms have an extensive history of "unreleased" music, much of which consists of early self-released albums and demos that fans have unearthed over the years . This includes the "Grandmother Series" EPs (like , Ann , and Theresa ), which are essentially professional re-recordings of these older, rarer tracks. The Early "Unreleased" Albums
For fans of , the hunt for music doesn't end with their Spotify discography. Long before they signed with major labels like Bar/None Records or Fueled By Ramen, the band built a massive underground library of self-released demos and deep cuts that remain "unreleased" by official streaming standards. The Early "Lost" Albums