We’ve written about Andrew W.K. before. We felt that it was a reasonably accurate account of the things that were awesome about the man, but there are so many things that we missed out on or have happened since, that we’ve had to rectify it with this post in front of you.
The very first thing we should mention is that Andrew W.K. has a Twitter. Go on, follow him. Yes, now. Yeah, I’ll wait while you create an account. Of course there was no reason to have one before, who the hell would you follow? Well, now there is a reason. You too, can wake up to your Twitter application of choice, and see this:

Continue reading: Andrew W.K. Part(y) II
The first time I heard about Andrew W.K. I was somewhere outside of Glenrothes on a stagecoach Citylink bus. It was a Friday and I was 18. I hadn’t as yet heard any of his music, although admittedly at that point I hadn’t heard much music at all, but from what I could gather from Kerrang magazine he was young, apparently musically gifted and THE NEXT BIG THING in metal. At the time I was younger, musically inept and horribly eager to learn about anything my new group of “mosher” friends were interested in. Years later this article would be the only thing that I had permanently filed away in my memory from my brief flirtation with heavy metal journalism, apart from a story I read on another bus journey about Slipknot being pelted with Mars Bars by the angry fans of another band during a gig.
I always hated Slipknot and was obviously gratified other people felt the same way.
I wouldn’t actually hear his music until another Friday night a few weeks later. This time I was slumped ungraciously in front of a friends television, perusing his music channels. I had none of my own, living as I was between University halls of residence and a selection of sofas scattered around Dundee. And it was here that I heard Party Hard for the first time. It was, like the article in Kerrang, interesting in a way I couldn’t quite pin down. There was something about the man and his music (apart from his seemingly never ending legs, unwashed jeans and wet straggly hair), that was fascinating and judging by the way that the song followed me around different club nights for months afterward and filled dancefloors every week it indicated that other people thought so too. Party Hard was essentially a song that did what it said on the tin — insert CD, crank volume, rock out. The followup song She is Beautiful and the video (which I still believe to be an accurate portrayal of a day in the life of Mr W.K.) was the same. I couldn’t figure out why I liked him and I certainly couldn’t begin to understand why the hell I thought he was so cool.
Continue reading: Andrew W.K.