Tag Archives: weezer

This Retro Clip Of Weezer Explaining ‘The Sweater Song’ Is Really Weezer-y

Check out this vintage clip of Weezer explaining “Undone (The Sweater Song).”

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This Retro Clip Of Weezer Explaining ‘The Sweater Song’ Is Really Weezer-y

This Retro Clip Of Weezer Explaining ‘The Sweater Song’ Is Really Weezer-y

Check out this vintage clip of Weezer explaining “Undone (The Sweater Song).”

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This Retro Clip Of Weezer Explaining ‘The Sweater Song’ Is Really Weezer-y

Mikey Welsh, Former Member of Weezer, Dead at 40

Mikey Welsh, a former member of the band Weezer, was found dead in a Chicago hotel room yesterday. He was 40 years old. The cause of death is unknown at this time, but The Chicago Tribune quotes authorities who believe narcotics were involved . Welsh, a native of Burlington, Vermont performed with Weezer from 1998 to 2001. The group reported that he left after suffering a nervous breakdown and Welsh later made a successful living as a painter. He was in Chicago to attend a performance by his former band.

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Mikey Welsh, Former Member of Weezer, Dead at 40

Fabulous Muppets: The Green Album Raises the Question: What are the Best Muppet Covers?

The wonderful trailers for Jason Segel’s Muppets movie already have me torqued for a reboot of Kermit the Frog’s kingdom, but now consider me extra-amped: This new disc of Muppet cover songs featuring Weezer, OK Go, the Fray, and Rachael Yamagata is so solid and original that I can’t believe an alternative version like it has never been attempted before. You can listen to the whole Green Album online now, but first, think: What are your favorite Muppet covers? And do these live up?

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Fabulous Muppets: The Green Album Raises the Question: What are the Best Muppet Covers?

Weezer Take Fans Down Memory Lane On First Night Of Tour

Band opens Memories Tour with set of songs from 1994’s Blue Album. By Matt Elias Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo performs in San Francisco on Monday Photo: Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images “You guys ready to take a ride on the Weezer time machine?” shouted Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo as he and his band took the stage at the Nob Hill Masonic Center on the first night of Weezer’s Memories Tour , in San Francisco. Night one was billed as the “Blue” evening, with the band playing its 1994 self-titled debut (a.k.a. the Blue Album ) in its entirety. But there was much more in store for the Weezer faithful than Rivers had clued us in on back in August on the set of the foursome’s “Memories” music video . Before the Blue tunes got under way, the trip down memory lane began with a retrospective set of hits. Kicking things off appropriately with the Hurley single “Memories,” the band worked its way backward through its catalog. Rivers began most of the songs by shouting out the year and the album it was from, trekking all the way back to “Falling for You” from 1996’s Pinkerton. The show itself was loose and fun, with Rivers racing up and down the isles, eventually making his way up to the soundboard on the balcony. By “Pork and Beans,” the fourth song of the 10-song mini-set, Rivers was streaming toilet paper rolls into the crowd and anointing people with water. Although there were 3,000 fans in attendance, Rivers made sure each one felt as if he or she had a front-row seat — and likely gave them a high five too. As the set — which also included “Beverly Hills,” “Keep Fishin’ ” and “Hash Pipe” — wound down, the band broke for intermission. During the break, fans were treated to a treasure trove of artifacts courtesy of Weezer’s resident historian/ photographer/ jack of all trades, Karl Koch. The slide show, narrated by Koch, highlighted Weezer’s early days: a flier from L.A.’s Club Dump (now the Viper Room), an early set list that pretty much would come to be the Blue Album, a photo of the actual garage described in “In the Garage” off the Blue Album (yes, it exists), just to name a few. With intermission over, it was time for the evening’s main course. A simple blue background with the band’s name, similar to the Blue Album cover, replaced the lighted flying W. It was as if the band were saying “let the music speak for itself.” They kept it pretty simple for the Blue Album portion of the night. There were fewer antics — the band were anchored in their positions — but by no means was it a subdued performance. It probably was the most sing-along portion of the night, especially during “Buddy Holly” and “Say It Ain’t So.” At one point during “Surf Wax America,” a fan made his way onstage and mingled with the band. They kept it cool, showing not an ounce of frustration. As the band hammered away onstage, the audience stayed on its feet for the entire night. There was a special feeling in the air, a feeling that you were being treated to a once-in-a-lifetime experience. When it was all over, as the final notes of “Only in Dreams” hung in the air, the band grouped at the foot of the stage and took a simple bow to thunderous applause. A modest gesture to make, but it speaks volumes to the band’s longevity and devoted fanbase. And of course, Rivers couldn’t get away without high-fiving a few fans on his way offstage. Related Artists Weezer

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Weezer Take Fans Down Memory Lane On First Night Of Tour

This Weekend on Cable: Be Afraid. Be Very Afraid. (Still.)

Did you read about those scientists who just created a synthetic life form in the lab? Don’t these guys watch movies? Maybe they missed Splice , but David Cronenberg’s The Fly should not be overlooked on cable this weekend, for a stomach-acidy dose of what can happen when you toke around with alleles and recombinative genes and shit like that. Plus: Paul Newman, Mel Gibson, Paul Robeson and Isabelle Huppert in a power suit…

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This Weekend on Cable: Be Afraid. Be Very Afraid. (Still.)

Gossip Garbles: A Season’s Worth of Gossip Girl Bloopers

Are Weezer Planning A Pinkerton Tour?

Bassist Brian Bell expresses interest in touring around the 1996 album’s reissue. By James Montgomery Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo Photo: Tim Mosenfelder/ Getty Images From the sound of things, it’s looking like it might be 1996 all over again for Weezer (minus Matt Sharp, more than likely). Because they’re planning to launch a tour in support of the reissue of Pinkerton, their willfully difficult sophomore album that sputtered out of the gate but has since gone on to be regarded as a classic and a touchstone of so-called “second wave” emo. That’s according to Weezer guitarist Brian Bell, who gave an interview this past weekend at the Mile High Music Festival in Colorado, saying the band were kicking around the idea of doing a tour where they’ll play Pinkerton in its entirety. “We … have a reissue of Pinkerton coming out with new packaging,” he said. “And, I’m praying, a Pinkerton tour, where we’ll play all the songs on [the album] soon.” That’s good news for fans of Weezer’s classic lineup — Rivers Cuomo, Bell, Patrick Wilson and bassist Sharp, who left the group in 1998 and has since released solo albums and music with the Rentals — though, at the moment, the idea of doing a Pinkerton tour might just be that: an idea. When contacted by MTV News, a spokesperson for Weezer had no comment about Bell’s interview, and though Amazon lists an October 5 release date for the reissue of Pinkerton, a spokesperson for Geffen Records — the band’s former home and the label that will apparently be putting the album out — could not be reached for comment. In the meantime, Weezer are gearing up for the September 14 release of Hurley, their in-no-way-based-on-“Lost” album that just so happens to feature “Lost” actor Jorge Garcia on the cover . Do you want to see a Pinkerton tour? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Weezer

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Are Weezer Planning A Pinkerton Tour?

Buzz Break: Weezer Would Like to Be Your New Driveshaft

Weezer Say New LP Will Have ‘More Raw Rock Energy’

Still-untitled album due in September. By Kyle Anderson Weezer Photo: Geffen Weezer once let five years lapse between albums (1996’s Pinkterton and 2001’s Weezer, a.k.a. The Green Album ), but lately the group has become one of the more prolific outfits in rock. Less than a year removed from 2009’s Raditude, Weezer will put out their still-untitled eighth studio LP on September 13. According to frontman Rivers Cuomo, it won’t be business as usual for the veteran band. “There’s definitely going to be more raw rock energy on this one,” he told The News-Times, a paper based out of Danbury, Connecticut, not far from where Cuomo grew up. “I’ve spent the entire morning trying to come up with a name for the record. How does Heavy Mental sound?” The new album will mark the band’s first release away from Geffen Records, which originally signed Weezer and has put out all of their previous releases. “We don’t know what format these recordings are going to come out on,” Cuomo told MTV2’s “Subterranean” last year. “Is it going to be an old-fashioned CD put out by a record label? Is it going to be something that is only online? Is it going to be a shorter album — eight songs — or is it going to be a longer album — 20 songs? We don’t know. When the time comes, we’ll see what’s behind the next door.” Weezer’s eighth album also promises to have the same collaborative spirit as Raditude, which featured contributions from Lil Wayne, Dr. Luke and the All-American Rejects. Cuomo already said he was working with Ryan Adams , and other potential contributors include Katy Perry (with whom Rivers worked on her album Teenage Dream ) and Paramore singer Hayley Williams (who joined Weezer onstage at a Florida show in January for a rendition of the classic “Say It Ain’t So”). No matter what the album ends up sounding like or how it gets out into the world, Cuomo will have plenty to write about. In the past year, he has turned 40 years old, survived a harrowing tour bus accident and ventured into the world of sleeved blankets with the “Wuggie.” Related Artists Weezer

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Weezer Say New LP Will Have ‘More Raw Rock Energy’