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Show and media reviews
This section of the site is where you can find reviews of albums, songs, shows, and anything else reviewable.
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Make Believe
Perfect Situation:
I'm not sure what to say about this song. Every time I listen to it now, I think of baseball. Not just the reference that is in the song about it, but for some reason the piano recalls a Little League game, for me. The intro totally reminds me of something off of Blue, with some Pinkerton pulls in there and a bit of that easy Green feel. It's still got that really raw, unfinished sound, and I feel like I'm waiting for In the Garage or something to come on...And then all of the sudden, something completely different starts up. An easy eighth note piano rhythm harmonizes with a repetitive vocal melody, as Rivers sings about how he is pretty much desperate for love, but hasn't much hope. Big surprize there, hehe. Anyway, the chorus consists of nothing more than some "aaaahhhh-HOOOAAAHHHH....aaaahhhh-HOOOAAAHHHH"s, which are somewhat lacking in the meaningful words department, but pretty soothing. This is a good song to take a relaxing bath to. This is one of my favorite songs off of Make Believe. I love how it's melancholy, but still keeps up the beat, with a few new additions like the piano and occasional clapping in the background. As far as fan reaction so far, this song won my poll of the best new song off the album.
This is Such A Pity
When the album was released on the internet, I refrained from listening to it before the release date, and refused to download any of the songs off of it...except for this one. I heard it at the show, as well as a clip of the recording, and I couldn't stop thinking about it. It just became ingrained in my head. I love the cheesy 80's new wave sort of vibe it has...the crappy keyboards and simple guitar rhythms are totally loveable. Rivers's vocals are very, very good. I shudder every time I hear "How is your heart, little darlin'?". And the high stretches in the chorus are awesome. I personally like Rivers's singing the best when it's visibly at its limits, and he does get into a little of that falsetto in a few parts, as well as taking the chorus at a higher octave. Overall, the lyrics are the usual sad Weezer vibe about bad relationships, with a chorus of, "This is such a pity, we should give our love to each other, not this hate that destroys". Rivers apparently tried to make up for his past mistakes in life on a lot of this album, which is visible in his lyrics. This is a favorite of mine because it's really different than any other Weezer song. Listen for the nerdy keyboard harmonies in the background!
Hold Me
I'd heard the demo before the album came out, and I didn't think much of it. It was just another song. And when I got the album, I kind of skipped over this song. But as I found it stuck in my head, I decided to turn it on again. The song reminds completely of his earlier recordings of "Annie's Song", the John Denver song he covered and placed on his Myspace. It just has a more electric chorus. It's got a lot of emotion in it, while still remaining simple. I now find myself singing it constantly...It's a really great slower song. It's got a lot of Rivers in it; it isn't one of those songs that feels like it was written from a distance. He put himself into the song. It is something I can personally relate to, so I feel even more when I listen to it. This song is a wonderful ballad.
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Seattle show review: The Moore Theater 4/27/05
So, here's a rundown of the Seattle Weezer show: My friend Royce and I left right after school to get to the Moore Theater. After circling the block many a time, we finally found a parking lot that didn't ask for you first born to park in it. We thought we had parked far away, but then turned and realized that the line was across the street. So we went over there, and there was a kid playing some Weezer songs on an acoustic guitar. I joined in singing with him, but I think he thought I was weird. I later discovered he was Canadian, so I didn't feel so bad (just kidding!).
The next 3 1/2 hours were actually some of the most exciting parts of the show: I made friends with people in line, gave out promo stickers for Make Believe, got some guy to buy me a cookie, ate free brownies, met and took my picture with Karl, the weezer.com webmaster and friend of the band (see the photo page), and stood about 15 feet away as Brian, Scott and Pat got off the tour buses. Rivers was a sneaky little man, and he apparently got out of a crappy blue car in the alley behind the theater. Anyway, it was great to see Karl out there with the fans. He later ran down the line of fans with a video camera. Pat's wife and new baby were also wandering around in line, as was the man himself. Pat managed to walk right by everyone and across the street to the tour bus with only about 3 people noticing. I, along with a friend, screamed,"PATRICK WILSON!" but he didn't turn around.
After a long wait in line, we were finally allowed into the theater a little after 7:00 p.m. There was no security check at all, which was rather surprising. Made smuggling a camera into the venue much easier, and as soon as my friend gives me the pictures she took, I will post them. So we were directed to either the floor, first balcony, or second balcony, where we filtered in and took our seats. The lobby had a merch table, with CDs and some great shirts that said things like, "Yes, there's a Weezer in my pocket...and I'm happy to see you", and "Rockin' the bitches since 1994". My friend and I entered and took our seats in the front row, anxiously waiting for the opening band, Ringside. Right before the show started, the security guards let everyone come up to the barrier, and there was a mad rush to the stage. I made it right up to the front and center, but it was very squished.
Ringside came on stage and, I must say, they were much better than I had anticipated. Their live playing sounded nothing like the recordings I had heard. Very reminiscent of a darker Franz Ferdinand. They played quite a few songs, including a very nice acoustic song, and then we waited. After an enormous amount of anticipation, Weezer finally came onstage. The crowd went wild. They could barely get everyone to calm down so they could launch into "Tired of Sex". There was a keyboard onstage played by Brian, so the intro was done on that. Bobby, a guitar tech, played guitar for Brian and accoustic backup on many songs, with no problems. It was great to see. The setlist was as follows:
Tired Of Sex In The Garage Hash Pipe No One Else This Is Such A Pity Buddy Holly Photograph Getchoo Hold Me Say It Ain't So We Are All On Drugs Island In The Sun My Name Is Jonas Peace Beverly Hills Haunt You Every Day --- Undone The Good Life
The overall sound was pretty good. Rivers's vocals were very loud and clear, bass and drums were fairly balanced. However, despite the fact that there were two and, at times, three guitars, a lot of it was hard to hear. Many of Rivers's solos weren't even audible until he was halfway through them. Also, the backup vocals were pretty much nonexistant on almost every song. Pity, because I think that is really a main thing that sets Weezer apart from everyone else; they have backup on virtually every song they have ever created. But overall, the guys rocked the place. Almost every fan was singing along with every word of it. I was screaming so loud that I choked! It was an amazing feeling to be jam-packed in with hundreds of other people who share the same love of Weezer that I do. The show-goers also seems very happy that the setlist was mostly comprised of songs from Make Belive, Pinkerton and Blue. I myself really enjoyed it, but I would have also liked to hear at least one song from Maladroit, and I had dreamed of hearing "El Scorcho". I can only hope they play it on the second North American tour.
By far, the most exciting moment of the show was When Rivers introduced the band. He started with Scott, who got some big cheers due to the fact the he had been giving his pics to the fans throughout the show. Then Pat, and then Brian, who was given an even louder welcome. And then the frontman we all know and love said, "And my name is Rivers...but just for this song, it's Jonas." The crowd went wild, probably due more to the fact that Rivers spoke more than the song being played. The crowd actually surged towards the stage, making it impossible to breathe. Then, as the guitar solo in "My Name Is Jonas" started up, the amazing flashing =W= lowered from the ceiling onto the stage. If we weren't excited before, we were then. There was an amazing amount of energy. The band went through their set, and after a large amount of Muppet/Keep Fishing style "Weezer!" chanting, the guys came back to do two encore songs, "Undone" and "The Good Life".
It was, overall, an incredible show. The only real downsides were: There was barely any talking from any of the band members. The whole show seemed to be very planned, and it was really rushed. There were no accoustic songs or B-sides, demos, anything. It was obvious that it had all been thought out, and I hope that the guys loosen up next time around. I know it's only the second date of the tour, but you know... All in all, the experience was amazing, and I left in a Weezer-induced daze. I just hope to hear "El Scorcho" next time around!
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Single: Beverly Hills
Personally...I kind of enjoy Beverly Hills. A lot of people are complaining about how the lyrics aren't deep enough, it lacks musical depth, etc. But honestly...how deep was the Macarena? Eveyone liked that song; I don't think it was about being intense and thoughtful...Beverly Hills is a fun, catchy song that made a really good single. It's something to appeal to the masses. But, just for s-words and giggles, here are the lyrics: Where I come from isn't all that great My automobile is a piece of crap My fashion sense is a little whack And my friends are just as screwy as me
I didn't go to boarding schools Preppie girls never looked at me Why should they? I ain't nobody Got nothing in my pocket
Beverly Hills That's where I want to be Livin' in Beverly Hills Beverly Hills Rolling like a celebrity Livin' in Beverly Hills
Look at all those movie stars They're all so beautiful and clean When the housemaids scrub the floors They get the spaces in between I wanna live a life like that I wanna be just like a king Take my picture by the pool 'cause I'm the next big thing
Beverly Hills That's where I want to be Livin' in Beverly Hills Beverly Hills Rolling like a celebrity Livin' in Beverly Hills
The truth is I don't stand a chance It's something that you're born into And I just don't belong
No I don't I'm just a no-class beat down fool And I will always be that way I might as well enjoy my life And watch the stars play
Beverly Hills That's where I want to be Livin' in Beverly Hills Beverly Hills Rolling like a celebrity Livin' in Beverly Hills
The repetitive nature of the rhythm guitar reminds me of Hash Pipe, the biggest Weezer hit (as far as sales) ever; It's catchy, it's easy to sing to, and it's got a classic Rivers geek rock theme. And it was something different as far as vocals. Since when does Rivers rap? (Note: I use the dictionary definition of "rap" in labeling this vocal style; back up, y'all don't know me...) The way the most of the words were spoken made Rivers's singing that much more savory. Simply the way he says "pool" gave me the shivers. Plus, I love the female vocals on the "gimmie gimmie" part. It really adds to the stuck-in-your-head factor. Now, I'm not saying that this song will be lasting classic in the hearts of all Weezer fans. In fact, I'm already beginning to tire of it a bit myself. But it has been a good hit, it has gotten some people's attention, and I think if one were to let it get dusty for a while in the old CD case, a few month's time might reveal a new found love.
The Guys of Weezer Discuss "Make Belive"!
BEVERLY HILLS Rivers: I was at the opening of the new Hollywood Bowl and I flipped through the program and I saw a picture of Wilson Phillips. And for some reason I just thought how nice it would be to marry, like, an “established” celebrity and live in Beverly Hills and be part of that world. And it was a totally sincere desire. And then I wrote that song, Beverly Hills. For some reason, by the time it came out—and the video came out—it got twisted around into something that seemed sarcastic. But originally it wasn’t meant to be sarcastic at all.
Pat: I think that’s - that happens a lot with Weezer songs. People think we’re being funny, and then somehow it changes into something [else]. And I’d also like to say that Rick said, ‘why don’t you have a boom-boom-chop song?’ And that’s how it turned into that.
Scott: For me, two things I want to say about it. One is that I kept trying to think that it was supposed to be like a swing beat, with kind of a lot of upbeats, and a lot of jingly kind of thing, but as much as I kept trying to make that happen, it just never worked and it wound up being totally, totally straighter than straight, which I think wound up being the best thing for the song, all said and done. And then the next thing was, is that, when I heard all of the different mixes—cuz we had like four different people mix it—it just, it sounded good and I kind of dug one version of it, but when I heard the mix that Rich Costey did, somehow he put the kind of magic on that song that I was kind of expecting to get out of it.
Brian: When I first heard the song, it was a Rivers demo of it, and I think I called him and said, ‘Congratulations, you wrote a hit song.’ It had a hit immediately, regardless of—even more from its original version than from something else. To me, it was like - whatever “hit song” means - that’s what it evoked [for] me. I thought it would be a great - there was a reality haircutting show called “blow out” or “blow up” or something like that, about this salon in Beverly Hills, and I was trying to sell Rivers on letting that be that show’s theme song. But luckily we never did that.
PERFECT SITUATION
Pat: It sounds like it could have been on the Green Album. I think of it as, like, classic Weezer.
Scott: To me it’s just an epic drama, and I felt really strong about it being on the album. The lyrics of the first verse always just really killed me, so I really pushed hard for that song to make the record.
Brian: Yeah, I like it lyrically a lot: “Here’s the pitch, slow and straight”, bla bla bla bla bla bla bla, and yeah, like Pat said, it’s classic Weezer Green Album style, a lot of downstrokes, the big intro, it could have gone on that album. But I think it’s more than that now—it’s uh, you know, Green Plus!
Rivers: I sincerely hope that it’s the last song I write about being frustrated and angry with myself for being shy…because I’ve written way too many of those songs already.
THIS IS SUCH A PITY
Scott: That song was tough, and it was the first song we tried to track at Grandmaster, I think, it was like the first night, and we probably retracked the basic drums for that, like four or five different times and it was almost going to get thrown out. But somehow, at the last minute, it came together, and it sounds absolutely magical to me. And that’s one of my favorite songs on the album.
Pat: Yeah, it sounds awesome. Wicked melody.
Rivers: Yeah, that might be my favorite song on the record. I really like the solo Brian came up with too.
Brian: Ironically [laughs], I don’t play any of the guitars on it—but most all the guitars on it in the studio—and I don’t play of them live, which I think it kind of funny. It’s really fun to watch Bobby and Rivers play that song every night. It feels like—
Rivers: You’re the composer and we’re the performers
Brian: Yeah, yeah! It’s neat, it’s really cool. I love the notes that Rivers added to the solo. I feel that that song could be—that Weezer might—things that Weezer can do and go in the future, as far as texture, and the use of clean guitars. I don’t think there’s any distorted guitars on that song.
Rivers: All the keyboard sounds are from a $75 Casio.
Brian: We even tried using expensive Moogs and things, to try to, like, “this can’t be good enough, a $75 Casio?” and the tones just didn’t blend. And we ended up using the Casio.
Scott: It’s got a really cool, super consistent, like, kind of level from start to finish, which I think is really neat.
HOLD ME
Pat: It’s just beautiful; it’s huge-sounding
Rivers: I think I was trying a foolish experiment of fasting and seeing how that would affect my songwriting. So, I think I was extremely hungry when I wrote that song.
Brian: I can’t say anything better than that! But it’s a powerful song dynamically. It’s really ballsy to play that song, to have Rivers do an intro that long before the band kicks in is a little bit frightening. And it seems to work; it has a very grandiose impact.
Rivers: When the back-up vocals come in in the second verse, that’s one of my favorite moments ever on a Weezer record.
Scott: It’s just an example, for me, of playing as little as possible and it sounds so much bigger by playing the tiniest amount of bass. As light and small as I could, winds up being just twice as big.
Brian: For some reason I liken it to ‘Say It Ain’t So’….and I don’t know why. I think it’s just the mellow verse into the huge chorus. It’s a great change.
PEACE
Scott: I still don’t know how the acoustic guitar really goes. [laughter] I just always think of Rick Rubin in the studio, just moving his head back and forth, rockin’ in the control room. You know, that’s the picture I have about this song. And it felt like it was important for this song to be on the album, as well.
Brian: It’s a great sentiment. It doesn’t come across as being, like…you know, too hippie-ish, which is good, but musically it’s such a simple chord progression that a child could play it and that’s always a good sign, first off, when we don’t have to think about it too much when we play it. I think it’s just a great message. I think we need a song like that these days.
Rivers: Yeah, it’s actually not coming from a “hippie” place at all. So people shouldn’t be worried that now I’m Mr. Peace, or whatever. [laughs] If you listen to the lyrics, I’m actually - I was actually in a place of war, not peace, just total inner struggle and decadence. I was just exasperated and longing for some kind of escape from that sort of lifestyle. So the song is actually not coming from a place of peace at all.
WE ARE ALL ON DRUGS
Rivers: I was living in an apartment above the Sunset Strip, and every Friday and Saturday night I’d hear people cruising and partying, and hooting and hollering. And I went to sleep one night and I heard those sounds all through the night, in my dreams. I had this dream about a kid on the Metro bus, blasting hip hop into his brain through his headphones. And the music sounded so decadent and overstimulating, and I woke up in the midst of that dream, in a haze, and immediately said to myself, “Man, we’re all on drugs!” And I instantly knew that would be a cool song.
Brian: I remember the first time Rivers played it for me, and just felt this, like, ‘can we do this?’ You know, I mean, this is a hit song, without a doubt. Just singing that chorus the first time, when we played these songs acoustically in the office, it was just a riot because it was just so much—it was like I felt like we were doing something illegal by saying that. And there were thoughts like, how are parents going to like this? Or you know, are we going to be banned from kids, you know, listening, whatever, their album collections? I think it’s a great song because it’s not saying anything positive or negative about drugs. It’s one of those ambivalent songs. I’m just glad that my guitar intro got used. [laughs]
Pat: Yeah, I had to fight for that, man! You guys had this other thing going on, where you wanted it to be all mellow, when it was so obvious to me that it should be the big rock track. I love that intro.
Rivers [to Brian]: Yeah, I loved your intro from the first time you brought it in. On this album you’ve come up with so many great intros and musical interludes.
Brian: Well, that’s what great about our music, too, is there’s different ways to interpret it., and I think all of them should be explored, because I actually liked—Rivers had a different version of it that worked equally as well. I think everything should be explored, or else we’re cheating ourselves.
Rivers: And also, it’s interesting that we’ve found that sometimes one of the other guys will start singing a line that I came up with, and it sounds a million times better. Like on this song, when Scott sings “never get enough” in the chorus, it’s just, it’s so right, it’s obvious that he has to sing that.
Scott: Right on! It’s funny, and I remember you talking about - when you were living in that apartment—it’s like, ‘I always hear these people going, ‘WHOOO! WHOO! All night long, a whole car full of girls are like, ‘WHOO!’’ and that’s exactly what we sing in that song. [laughter] It’s really cool. After the first chorus at these shows, even though nobody knows the song yet, people are so into it. Out of all the new songs, that song seems to hit people the fastest, to me.
Pat: Yeah, Kevin and Bean talk about that song all the time, I guess. They’re like, ‘that’s the best title ever!’
THE DAMAGE IN YOUR HEART
Brian: “The Damage in Your Heart” was actually a song that me, Scott, and Pat kind of fought for, or wanted, from Rivers’ demo. When he went back to school, we kind of finished the album, had our twelve songs, and that was one of the ones that we thought we should look at again. For some reason, the three of us were drawn to it…
Pat: I think it was Rivers’ 13th favorite, right?
Rivers: Something like that
Brian: And he was really open to the idea of trying anything we wanted to try on this album, so, you know, we tried lots of songs that didn’t make it. But the fact that we persisted on that—just took his demo and kind of redid it while he was gone, and then he finished it up—was kind of an interesting process. I don’t know if the song, for me, turned out as well as I wanted it to, but it certainly is a nice song.
Rivers: Yeah, I have to say I’m really grateful to these guys for believing in this song and pushing for it to be on the album. And in so many other ways, just like this, they helped me stay on course while we were making the album, and keep me from going too far in one direction or the other, either with my songwriting, or my singing, or my guitar-playing. This album wouldn’t even exist if it weren’t for the other three guys in this band really keeping me on course, and supporting me, pushing me, encouraging me. So it was a real band effort.
Scott: Cool
Pat: That’s huge
PARDON ME
Scott: It’s funny, in the studio it seemed like a lot of chord changes and when we play it live, it really takes on its own, kind of, life form which never ceases to amaze me. To me, it almost seems complicated, but then again it’s so simple and so clear and people really seem to get off on it.
Brian: I think this was a song that I fought for at Rick Rubin’s house. [laughs] ‘Wait, we forgot about this song!’ I remember running out to my car, and grabbed—we must have, 75 to 100 - not even exaggerating - CD’s of demos and B-sides—or what we consider might be B-sides, A-Lists that turn into B-Lists, B-Lists that turn into A-Lists…it gets really confusing and it’s easy to forget about things. But I made everyone listen to it, and I think 3/4ths of the way into the song it comes back around to that one moment..and everything sounds so good at Rick Rubin’s house, because he has this uber-sound-system, and it just was, like, apparent that we had to do it. And I thought it was just an unbelievably sincere message that Rivers was conveying and that - I don’t know if he knew the weight of what he was saying. It was really great.
Pat: Yeah, I love the way when I listen to that song I hear someone really being very..it just sounds like, okay, this guy has something he wants to say, I love that. It sounds very truthful.
Brian: Also, it’s a personal lyric but it’s extremely universal because, you know, it’s hard to say “I’m sorry” in any sense, it’s hard to admit fault, and I just think it’s a song for all guys that don’t know how to express themselves, so that they can at least sing that lyric to whoever they harm—their girlfriend, or whatever.
[laughter] Pat: Yeah, like George Bush could go to North Korea and say, “I’m really sorry”
MY BEST FRIEND
Scott: That’s a wild…that’s one song that’s, like, kind of, like a wild card on the record, I gotta say. Cuz…that was…yeah, that’s a wild track. And we left it -
Pat: No one thought about that song for the longest time, the next thing I know, ‘we’re doing that song!’
Scott: Yeah, and when we kind of went back and tightened everything up, it was one of the songs that I think I left all of the bass from when we tracked it. That’s just nuts.
Pat: It’s on fire. That song sounds like it’s on fire to me.
Rivers: I’m trying to think of something interesting…
Pat: That it didn’t go with Shrek?
Rivers: It’s such a complicated story, I don’t know if it’s that interesting.
Scott” I’m glad that it didn’t, I can say that much.
Rivers: Yeah, that song has some weird karma with Shrek. I remember I originally wrote it about some guy I met, and then Shrek asked us if we had a song, and then I thought, ‘oh yeah, I remember that song, let me think about showing it to them’, and they actually thought it sounded too much like it was written for Shrek. ‘Cuz this guy was kind of ogre-ish, and he made me laugh…
Brian: And you changed the lyrics for them, right?
Rivers: So I had to change the lyrics so it sounded less Shrek-like
Pat: Shrek-y?
Rivers: Shrek-ish!
Pat: Shrek-ish? Puck-ish?
Scott: It will live on longer than Shrek 2 will.
Rivers: I don’t know if it’s that interesting.
Brian: But it was also…I think at the moment when the Shrek people wanted it, it wasn’t complete either. And that would have been the version that would have been the first Weezer song people heard in 3 years, and it wasn’t actually finished to the best it could have been, so it’s a blessing that we got to work on it a little longer.
Rivers: Yeah, I feel the same way. It got so much better. I resang it, put the organ on it, it sounds way better. We put the drum sounds on it…
THE OTHER WAY
Pat: That song sounds like every note is placed exactly where it’s supposed to go, like…it’s one of those songs where nothing sounds out of place, it just sounds great to me.
Rivers: I wrote that song for Jennifer Chiba after Elliot died, and I wanted to console her, but I was confused and skeptical about my own motives for wanting to do so, so I wrote that song about that.
FREAK ME OUT
[laughter]
Brian: I’m already on the record saying it’s about a spider, that’s all I know about it. But it’s some of the coolest guitar stuff ever, and I can say that because Rivers came up with it, so I don’t sound conceited. But I think that Rivers didn’t want the harmonics on it—[to Rivers] right, at one point?
Rivers: Uhhhh…probably. [laughs]
Brian: But there’s three guitars playing those harmonics. There were notes that I didn’t know even made harmonics. It took me a long time to figure out what was going on, and how to play it. It was a song, for me, that I discovered things about the guitar I didn’t know about. And that’s always amazing when you’ve been playing an instrument for 20 years, and you find a new sound it makes - it’s cool, you know?
Scott: It reminds me of the apartment that Rivers had above the Sunset Strip, with like, a yoga mat, a spoon, a bowl, a bar of soap, and a towel—that’s about all that was in there.
Rivers: I didn’t have a bowl!
[laughter]
I didn’t!
Scott: …and just sitting in there…and it was just, I don’t know…
Brian: It’s probably the most un-Weezer-like track that’s ever been on an album, whatever that means, and I think, you know, that that could be good.
Rivers: I think, it didn’t work until Pat put the drum-beat on there. Cuz when I originally wrote it, and recorded the demo, it was some weird, New Age drum beat that I found in the Casio.
Scott: Oh yeah, it was total, like, “In the Air”…
Rivers: “This song’s kinda cool, but…”
Scott: It was like a Phil Collins beat!
Rivers: And then as soon as Pat put his beat on it, it sounded like Weezer.
Scott: Yeah, Pat’s beat is correct on that song.
Brian: It was a good…it was fun song to track live as a band too. I felt like something special happened while tracking it.
HAUNT YOU EVERY DAY
Rivers: Rick said, write a song like Billy Joel or Elton John, so…
Brian: But no pressure!
[laughter]
Rivers: So, I didn’t really accomplish that at all, but I did write a song on the piano. So that’s about as close as I could come.
Brian: I think it’s a beautiful chord progression. It’s deceptively simple too. It sounds a little more complex than it is, and it’s great fun to play live - I wish we would’ve tracked it more, and played it - approached it more how we do now. But I think it came across pretty well. But I think - any regrets, I wish we could re-record that song how we do it right now.
Scott: It’s another one of those songs where the less bass notes I play on it, the better it works. I remember switching back and forth from trying to do it on piano, or Rivers playing it on guitar, and then going back and back and back, and it turned out to be just right.
Rivers: It’s the first song I wrote entirely on piano.
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Video Capture Device (DVD)
Review coming soon!
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Blue Album Deluxe Remastered Edition
There is a lot of bantering about why this album isn't worth it to buy, but let me tell you my opinion on why it is worth it: First of all, it never hurts to have a second copy of the Blue Album. I have discovered that it's nice to not have to burn copies and have one for at home, one to take in the car, on vacation, lend to a friend, etc. The differences in the sound are minor in almost every song; I'm not saying that there will be a magic clarity when you listen to it. However, I would reccommend buying the album if for nothing more than the second disc. The second disc track listing is as follows:
Mykel and Carli Suzanne My Evaline My Name is Jonas Surf Wax America Jamie No One Else Undone Paperface
All of the songs listed above that are on another album are either live or earlier recordings. Now, for those who are uneducated about Weezer's vast and amazing catalogue of b-sides, demos, etc., this is a great intro. Some songs like "Jamie" are completely captivating on their own, but the live recordings are even better. Let me tell you, you are not losing anything by getting a different recording of a song you may have already heard. They are on there for a reason. These recordings are really great, and give something new to each song.
Plus, some of the songs on here show a completely different side to the kind of recordings Weezer has done. "My Evaline" is a neat little ditty that captures the boys doing a barber shop quartet that is so cool, you can almost imagine them in their matching shirts, bow-ties and slacks, a la the Buddy Holly era (the real Buddy Holly). And, in my opinion, this CD is worth it merely to hear "Paperface". This is a song unlike any other Weezer song I have ever heard. It is a mix of fast paced rock, done to an almost punk rock tempo/drum beat, with a ton of force in the lyrics, especially when the end of the song escalates into an unidentifiable mass of absolute screaming madness. The intensity is insane! I can listen to this song on repeat for days and not get tired.
I also like listening to songs like Mykel and Carli, a ballad for two friends of the band who died in a tragic accident after Pinkerton was released. It's not as depressing as it might sound, and it is a very moving song, without bringing the sorrow of a song like "Butterfly" into the mix.
"Suzanne" can also be found on the soundtrack for the movie "Mallrats", but it was nice to have it added into this project so you don't have to go buy another CD for one song.
All in all, I would highly, highly recommend buying the Blue Deluxe. It's worth the or so that it costs in the U.S., and although I was reluctant to buy it as first, it's like having a brand new album.
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