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==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
===History=== | |||
"Hash Pipe" was the first single released from the band's long-awaited third album, ''Weezer'', and the only one of the so-named "[[Summer Songs of 2000]]" to appear on the album (although "[[Dope Nose]]" and "[[Slob]]" would later appear on the band's fourth album, ''[[Maladroit]]''). As a songwriting experiment, [[Rivers Cuomo]] consumed a mixture of tequila and ritalin to compose the song "[[Dope Nose]]," before repeating the same process a few nights later to write "Hash Pipe".<ref>"I Was a Scientist, This Was an Experiment" ''[[iTunes Originals: Weezer]]''</ref><ref>Eliscu, Jenny. "Rivers Cuomo's Encyclopedia of Pop". ''Rolling Stone''. 20 June 2002. https://web.archive.org/web/20070310202917/http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/5933454/rivers_cuomos_encyclopedia_of_pop Archived by ''Wayback Machine'' Retrieved 2 October 2007</ref><ref name="freshair" /> | "Hash Pipe" was the first single released from the band's long-awaited third album, ''Weezer'', and the only one of the so-named "[[Summer Songs of 2000]]" to appear on the album (although "[[Dope Nose]]" and "[[Slob]]" would later appear on the band's fourth album, ''[[Maladroit]]''). As a songwriting experiment, [[Rivers Cuomo]] consumed a mixture of tequila and ritalin to compose the song "[[Dope Nose]]," before repeating the same process a few nights later to write "Hash Pipe".<ref>"I Was a Scientist, This Was an Experiment" ''[[iTunes Originals: Weezer]]''</ref><ref>Eliscu, Jenny. "Rivers Cuomo's Encyclopedia of Pop". ''Rolling Stone''. 20 June 2002. https://web.archive.org/web/20070310202917/http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/5933454/rivers_cuomos_encyclopedia_of_pop Archived by ''Wayback Machine'' Retrieved 2 October 2007</ref><ref name="freshair" /> | ||
{{Rivers Cuomo quote|"For a couple of years there, well - I've always been an analytical person, but for a couple of years, I just got really analytical in keeping track of every detail of the process of writing a song and intentionally varying individual elements to see what the result would be. But sometimes these experiments were indistinguishable from how any other rock person would write a song. For example, in mid-2000, I - somehow my experiments evolved to a point where step one was take a pill of Ritalin. Step two was take three shots of tequila. Step three was go out in the backyard, sit down on a chair. Step four was close your eyes and imagine the song. And thats how I wrote 'Hash Pipe'."|''Fresh Air with Terry Gross'' interview, 2009<ref name="freshair">"Home Recordings From Weezer Frontman" ''Fresh Air with Terry Gross'', NPR. 22 January 2009. https://freshairarchive.org/guests/rivers-cuomo</ref>}} | {{Rivers Cuomo quote|"For a couple of years there, well - I've always been an analytical person, but for a couple of years, I just got really analytical in keeping track of every detail of the process of writing a song and intentionally varying individual elements to see what the result would be. But sometimes these experiments were indistinguishable from how any other rock person would write a song. For example, in mid-2000, I - somehow my experiments evolved to a point where step one was take a pill of Ritalin. Step two was take three shots of tequila. Step three was go out in the backyard, sit down on a chair. Step four was close your eyes and imagine the song. And thats how I wrote 'Hash Pipe'."|''Fresh Air with Terry Gross'' interview, 2009<ref name="freshair">"Home Recordings From Weezer Frontman" ''Fresh Air with Terry Gross'', NPR. 22 January 2009. https://freshairarchive.org/guests/rivers-cuomo</ref>}} | ||
Cuomo told ''Entertainment Weekly'' in 2001 that the song was a "totally insane song about a homosexual transvestite prostitute,"<ref>Brunner, Rob. "Older & Weezer" ''Entertainment Weekly'' (issue #597). 25 May 2001. https://web.archive.org/web/20140225152833/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,256491_4,00.html [[Entertainment Weekly interview with Rivers Cuomo - May 25, 2001|Weezerpedia mirror]]</ref> adding that the label was very reluctant to release a song like "Hash Pipe" as the album's lead single. "They wanted something more straight-up," said Cuomo, "Man, it was a huge fight. I got up in a meeting with all the executives and I was screaming." The label wanted to release "[[Don't Let Go]]" instead, but Cuomo was adamant that "Hash Pipe" be the single. Cuomo would, ultimately, be vindicated when the song became one of the band's biggest hits | Cuomo told ''Entertainment Weekly'' in 2001 that the song was a "totally insane song about a homosexual transvestite prostitute,"<ref>Brunner, Rob. "Older & Weezer" ''Entertainment Weekly'' (issue #597). 25 May 2001. https://web.archive.org/web/20140225152833/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,256491_4,00.html [[Entertainment Weekly interview with Rivers Cuomo - May 25, 2001|Weezerpedia mirror]]</ref> adding that the label was very reluctant to release a song like "Hash Pipe" as the album's lead single. "They wanted something more straight-up," said Cuomo, "Man, it was a huge fight. I got up in a meeting with all the executives and I was screaming." The label wanted to release "[[Don't Let Go]]" instead, but Cuomo was adamant that "Hash Pipe" be the single. Cuomo would, ultimately, be vindicated when the song became one of the band's biggest hits. | ||
The guitar riff was at least partially inspired by [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oysMt8iL9UE the theme song] from the [[Wikipedia:Peter_Gunn|television series ''Peter Gunn'']], composed by [[Wikipedia:Henry_Mancini|Henry Mancini]]. The theme has proven to be much more enduring than the show, and has appeared in many TV shows and films, both in its original recording as well as cover versions. Cuomo has stated in several interviews, at the time of the single's release, that he stole the riff from ''Spy Hunter'',{{citation needed}} a popular arcade video game from the 80s which featured a digitized version of the ''Peter Gunn'' theme. Some fans have speculated that the riff was influenced by the song "He Shot Himself Up" by The Shods, as Cuomo is a friend of Shods frontman [[Kevin Stevenson]], who had previously accompanied Cuomo during [[Homie]] shows in [[1997]], more than two years before "Hash Pipe" was written. | The guitar riff was at least partially inspired by [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oysMt8iL9UE the theme song] from the [[Wikipedia:Peter_Gunn|television series ''Peter Gunn'']], composed by [[Wikipedia:Henry_Mancini|Henry Mancini]].{{Citation needed}} The theme has proven to be much more enduring than the show, and has appeared in many TV shows and films, both in its original recording as well as cover versions. Cuomo has stated in several interviews, at the time of the single's release, that he stole the riff from ''Spy Hunter'',{{citation needed}} a popular arcade video game from the 80s which featured a digitized version of the ''Peter Gunn'' theme. Some fans have speculated that the riff was influenced by the song "He Shot Himself Up" by The Shods, as Cuomo is a friend of Shods frontman [[Kevin Stevenson]], who had previously accompanied Cuomo during [[Homie]] shows in [[1997]], more than two years before "Hash Pipe" was written. | ||
The opening lyric "I can't help my feelings, I go out of my mind" appears to be a direct quote of [[the Beatles]] song "[[Wikipedia:You_Can%27t_Do_That|You Can't Do That]]" from 1964. | The opening lyric "I can't help my feelings, I go out of my mind" appears to be a direct quote of [[the Beatles]] song "[[Wikipedia:You_Can%27t_Do_That|You Can't Do That]]" from 1964. | ||
There is some dispute among fans over the song's correct lyrics and, as no official lyric sheet has been released, they remain up for debate. Examples of disputed lyrics are "eyes wide"/"ass wide"/"eye swipe"/"ass wipe" and "big cheese"/"big G's." | |||
"Hash Pipe" was performed live during the summer of 2000, and is considered one of the so-called "[[Summer Songs of 2000]]." A band demo of the song appeared as part of a semi-official "''SS2K''" album distributed by Cuomo to fans in [[2002]]. Cuomo sings "kiss me" instead of "kick me" on the second line of the chorus in this version, and has continued to sometimes sing it this way when performing the song in concert. | |||
===Release=== | |||
"Hash Pipe" peaked at #2 on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart, #24 on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Tracks chart and #16 on Billboard's Canadian Singles Chart. The video for the song was nominated for Best Rock Video at the 2001 MTV Video Music Awards, and was nominated for High Times magazine's "Pot Song of the Year" in 2001. | |||
"Hash Pipe" was banned from UK airplay by Radio One{{Citation needed}} due to the reference to drugs in the title (hashish). The title was sometimes rendered as "H*** Pipe" or edited to say "pipe pipe"<ref>[[Karl's Corner - 05/04/2001]]</ref> on MTV. A variation of the song that replaces the words "hash pipe" with "half-pipe" was created and appeared on a promotional CD in Europe. | |||
The | |||
The original, full-length ''Green Album'' studio version is no longer in print, and was subsequently replaced by a shorter edit. This edit cuts the first chorus in half (ending after "eyes wide"), and both ascending bridge sections were removed from the end of the second and third choruses. This edit summarily replaced the original studio versions on re-pressings of the album, and is heard on the edited "Hash Pipe" video on the DVD ''[[Video Capture Device]]''. | |||
Three official remixes of the song were released in 2001. "Kick Me" and "Under Glass" remixes were created by musician [[Wikipedia:Chris Vrenna|Chris Vrenna]] and released on the "Hash Pipe" 12" remix single (Weezer's first 12" single). The single also featured a remix by musician [[Jimmy Pop]], which was also released on multiple international single releases, as well as a one-track CD-R promo in the UK. The two Vrenna remixes were released on Weezer's [[weezer.com|official website]] in 2001 as 128k MP3s with no record noise. | |||
The | |||
Drummer [[Patrick Wilson]] is featured on the single's cover artwork holding a pack of Natural American Spirit cigarettes. The retail and promo versions of this cover has the brand's logo blurred out due to copyright issues. On the European retail single CD the blurred out logo was replaced with the song title and the Weezer logo. An alternate cover of the retail single shows then-bassist [[Mikey Welsh]] pushing a skateboard upon which a life-size cardboard cutout of Rivers Cuomo is standing, photographed during the [[Yahoo! Outloud Tour]]. | |||
===Covers=== | |||
The song has been covered by [[Phantom Planet]] in concert and by [[Wikipedia:Richard Cheese|Richard Cheese & Lounge Against the Machine]] at one of their live shows. Following Weezer's cover of "[[Africa]]" by Toto in [[2018]], Toto responded by releasing their own cover of "Hash Pipe".<ref>Toto - Topic "Hash Pipe" ''YouTube''. 3 August 2018. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOoC-Gflass</ref> | |||
==Personnel== | |||
*[[Rivers Cuomo]] – lead guitar, lead vocals | |||
*[[Patrick Wilson]] – percussion | |||
*[[Brian Bell]] – rhythm guitar, backing vocals | |||
*[[Mikey Welsh]] – bass guitar, backing vocals | |||
*[[Ric Ocasek]] - producer | |||
==Music video== | ==Music video== | ||
{{Karl Koch quote|Impressed by how the bands looked in his other videos, [[Marcos Siega|Siega]] was sought out and asked to avoid referring to the lyrics in his treatment. Sumos were brought up, and immediately approved. Rock!|''[[Video Capture Device]]'' liner notes}} | |||
The video for the song was directed by [[Marcos Siega]], the first of several Weezer videos that he would direct. The premise of the video shows Weezer playing while a group of sumo wrestlers engage in activity. At one point in the video, the wrestlers appear as stand-ins for the band, complete with instruments, miming to the song. In the video, guitarist [[Brian Bell]] employs a maneuver in which he bends backwards, taking the guitar with him, then thrusts his legs in the direction he's bending. This is affectionately known among Weezer fans as "[[The Impossible Bend]]". According to the mini book that accompanies ''[[Video Capture Device]]'', Siega was specifically asked to avoid referring to the lyrics of the song in the video. | |||
Rivers Cuomo would later make a cameo appearance alongside one of the sumos from the "Hash Pipe" video in Siega's video for "[[Murder (You Know It's Hard)]]" by [[Wikipedia:The Crystal Method|The Crystal Method]]. | |||
<youtube>_9BGLtqqkVI</youtube> | |||
==Formats and tracklists== | ==Formats and tracklists== | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
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**Natural American Spirit logo is replaced with song title and the Flying =W= | **Natural American Spirit logo is replaced with song title and the Flying =W= | ||
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**Some labels erroneously say "Teenage Victory Song" on both sides of the record | **Some labels erroneously say "Teenage Victory Song" on both sides of the record | ||
|} | |} | ||
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==Audio== | ==Audio== | ||
===Album release=== | ===Album release=== | ||
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Oh, come on and kick me | Oh, come on and kick me | ||
Oh, come on and kick me | Oh, come on and kick me | ||
Come on and kick me | |||
You got your problems | You got your problems | ||
I got my eyes wide | I got my eyes wide | ||
You got your big G | You got your big "G"s | ||
I got my hash pipe | I got my hash pipe | ||
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Of men that don't bother with the taste of a teat | Of men that don't bother with the taste of a teat | ||
Oh, come on and kick me | |||
Oh, come on and kick me | |||
Come on and kick me | |||
You got your problems | |||
I got my eyes wide | |||
You got your big "G"s | |||
I got my hash pipe | I got my hash pipe | ||
</poem> | </poem> | ||
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<references /> | <references /> | ||
[[Category:Weezer songs]] | [[Category:Weezer songs]] | ||
[[Category:Rivers Cuomo songs]] | |||
[[Category:Catalog O' Riffs]] | |||
[[Category:Weezer singles]] | [[Category:Weezer singles]] | ||
[[Category:Allmusic track picks]] | [[Category:Allmusic track picks]] | ||