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Happy Hour: Difference between revisions

5 bytes removed ,  15 January 2023
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for some reason it said weekend woman instead of happy hour
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m (for some reason it said weekend woman instead of happy hour)
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In an October 2017 NPR interview Rivers said that the verse lyrics were written using "free-association." He knew that the chorus was going to be about wanting a "happy hour" and that the verses were to depict the narrator's bleak life. The "20-ton weight" was described by Rivers as the "ultimate buzzkill" that first came to mind when writing the verse lyrics.
In an October 2017 NPR interview Rivers said that the verse lyrics were written using "free-association." He knew that the chorus was going to be about wanting a "happy hour" and that the verses were to depict the narrator's bleak life. The "20-ton weight" was described by Rivers as the "ultimate buzzkill" that first came to mind when writing the verse lyrics.


The official YouTube video for "Weekend Woman" features art by Spanish artist [http://laprisamata.es/ LAPRISAMATA], whose art also appears in the videos for "[[Beach Boys]]" and "[[Weekend Woman]]". A different music video, starring Pete Wentz of the band Fall Out Boy, was originally filmed for the song, but was scrapped. The footage was later repurposed for the single "[[Midnight]]", before the song was scrapped. The footage was repurposed again and was finally used as the music video for the ''[[Weezer (The Black Album)|Black Album]]'' track "[[Can't Knock The Hustle]]" [https://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/rock/8500614/weezer-rivers-cuomo-data-driven-approach-interview?utm_source=twitter].
The official YouTube video for Happy Hour features art by Spanish artist [http://laprisamata.es/ LAPRISAMATA], whose art also appears in the videos for "[[Beach Boys]]" and "[[Weekend Woman]]". A different music video, starring Pete Wentz of the band Fall Out Boy, was originally filmed for the song, but was scrapped. The footage was later repurposed for the single "[[Midnight]]", before the song was scrapped. The footage was repurposed again and was finally used as the music video for the ''[[Weezer (The Black Album)|Black Album]]'' track "[[Can't Knock The Hustle]]" [https://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/rock/8500614/weezer-rivers-cuomo-data-driven-approach-interview?utm_source=twitter].


In a [[2019]] episode of ''Making Records with Eric Valentine'', producer Butch Walker stated the opening lyrics referring to Stevie Ray Vaughan originally made explicit reference to Vaughan being high on cocaine [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFGVMrcjSpA], but were later changed.
In a [[2019]] episode of ''Making Records with Eric Valentine'', producer Butch Walker stated the opening lyrics referring to Stevie Ray Vaughan originally made explicit reference to Vaughan being high on cocaine [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFGVMrcjSpA], but were later changed.
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