Happy Hour: Difference between revisions
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| This track = "Happy Hour"<br> (4) | | This track = "Happy Hour"<br> (4) | ||
| Next track = "[[Weekend Woman]]"<br> (5) | | Next track = "[[Weekend Woman]]"<br> (5) | ||
| Last single = "[[ | | Last single = "[[Feels Like Summer]]"<br> (2017) | ||
| This single = "Happy Hour"<br> (2017) | | This single = "Happy Hour"<br> (2017) | ||
| Next single = | | Next single = | ||
}} | }} | ||
"'''Happy Hour'''" is the | "'''Happy Hour'''" is the second single, and the fourth track from ''[[Pacific Daydream]]''. The song was released on October 18th. | ||
==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
It was announced on the [[Weezer]] twitter page that Happy Hour would be the fifth and final song released before the release of [[Pacific Daydream]]. When debuted live, it was ended with an instrumental known as "[[I'll Love You Everyday]]". | It was announced on the [[Weezer]] twitter page that Happy Hour would be the fifth and final song released before the release of ''[[Pacific Daydream]]''. It was also pushed to radio as the album's second single. When debuted live, it was ended with an instrumental known as "[[I'll Love You Everyday]]". | ||
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. | ||