Adios Amigos (Ramones album)

(in Spanish, "Goodbye Friends") is the fourteenth and final studio album by the American punk rock band Ramones.

[1] Long-time friend Daniel Rey was once again recruited to produce, as he was liked by the entire band and knew how to provide a comfortable, pleasant experience for them in the studio.

He added, "I had asked that they put the name of the record company on the backs of the firing squad executing us, and they wouldn't go with that.

"[2] The sleeping Mexican man seated next to the band is their longtime road manager Monte Melnick.

"[1] According to Melnick, Marky Ramone loved the album, due to Daniel Rey's production, but thought the cover was "terrible".

"[1] Melnick explained that several of the Ramones' later album covers were designed by manager Gary Kurfirst, with no input from the band, due to a dispute over merchandising royalties.

Evelyn McDonnell of Entertainment Weekly gave the album an "A−", stating, "their blitzkrieg bop not only hasn't aged but is timelier than ever.

He added that it recaptured some of the inspiration of Too Tough to Die and was an improvement upon their previous two albums Brain Drain and Mondo Bizarro, but also veered close to self parody.