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:

PIPE PARTY

Con­tinue read­ing: Andrew W.K. Part(y) II

Andrew W.K.

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.

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