I've met him twice: Once after his 50 state motivational speaking tour, and another time at a meet-and-greet. He couldn't POSSIBLY be cooler. Polite, friendly, unpretentious, . . . the list goes on. I've never met anyone more worthy of fandom than Andrew W.K. He is my absolute favorite celebrity for LIFE.
He was one of the first people i told that I was trans and he told me I was beautiful and that being myself is the most party thing i can do. Love that man
Its funny Chris jericho is the nicest n coolest celebrity i ever met, literally chilled w me n my brother at an indy show he was only at for a meet and greet, but sat w us in the crowd fo the whole 3 hour show just kickin w us when we was like 12 years old
I briefly worked for him around 2011. He is the real deal. I don’t really care for his music much, but he is everything his persona stands for, and seriously good dude.
Andrew W.K. personally called me on Christmas day to thank me for buying his second album. His live shows were like nothing else I've ever experienced, just unbridled, unapologetic positivity. He will always be one of my heroes!
Saw W.K. live in a small church. He played about an hour of mellow piano, then climbed on the pews growling at us, ran back to the stage, ripped a sheet off a drum machine, and broke into an ear shattering encore of party songs. I love this man.
I met Andrew W.K. at Ozzfest right as Party Hard was starting to get big. He had fans at his merch table who wanted to get his autograph. He didn't sign autographs. He spoke with everyone as individuals and wrote us all paragraphs. He is the epitome of "built different".
Fascinating to think that all that music, image and positivity was created by someone just trying their fucking hardest to drag themselves out of a life of depression. It’s actually quite moving.
Andrew WK's character was/is actually very original. And we shouldnt be surprised that sometimes stage performers dramatize themselves and eventually dont turn out to fully be who you think they are.
@@dixienormus6941 it's fun party music for boozing rock and metal fans, it's not that deep or subtle or introspective, and isn't meant to be, I listen to some bands whose audience are under 100, but I will always put on a bit of 00's Andrew W.K. if I'm drinking with my mates.
I met Andrew WK at his club, Santos party house in NYC. He said he wanted a place where anybody could get in and rock out. AWK was a breath of fresh air for this scene.
I once was in NYC for a day due a flight delay on my layover. I made a point to head to Santos.... but it was closed that day and shut down a month later.... I'm so jealous.
Andrew's appearance on ATHF needs to be mentioned. He helped get Frylock through cancer depression and lifted the spirits of Carl, Meatwad and Shake with a powerful joyous kick to the face
I wish that I could have a sliver of that positivity as I'm going through clinical depression through over 16 years of fighting cancer and being told that my situation will never change and I'll suffer this for the rest of my life. I feel like I'm in a prison filled with utter cruelty with nowhere to turn for help and absolutely no escape. I've never felt so lonely and so disconnected from the world in all my life. I have no hope for normal life, this cancer has taken so much from me if I didn't have my wife and boys I would off myself now.
The Andrew WK gig I went to in London some time around 2010 is the greatest show I’ve ever ever been to. I had tweeted asking if anybody wanted to go with me, and when nobody did, Andrew replied and said he’d put me on the guest list if I went on my own. So if course I did. I was worried about going alone, because I’d just started new meds that I can’t drink with, (the typical loner’s crutch), and a lot of the fun of gigs is having an experience with your friends, but I needn’t have worried. That small room at the Kings College Student Union was one big Party, where everybody became fast friends for several hours. The entire crowd shouted every word, the audience faced each other rather than the stage and moshed with arms around strangers. Half the audience was on the stage while the other half were catching the constant roll of stage-divers and crowd surfers. Every single person was grinning from ear to ear, because that man knows how to command a room and throw a Party. The power was cut because of curfew, which had been smashed through at least twice, but the entire room sang entire songs for at least another hour, until the police came to kick us all out, when the now 300+ piece A Capella band, including Andrew and his team, continued on the street for at least another hour. I have never ever known an event like that, and all down to the pure joy powered by a man who knows how to throw a Party and Loves music with a capital M.
Never a fan musically, but I met Andrew wk as a teenager at warped tour. In too long of a scenario to write out, I was struck by how nice and genuine of a person he was to all the kids, but especially to the sweaty, half drunk half hungover and very pissed off teenage girl that I was at that moment. Just a really nice dude.
I was at an Andrew W.K. show maybe 15 years ago (now I feel old saying that). AWK himself pulled me onto the stage and someone behind me pushed me up to help. They pushed me into the air so fast that my head slammed into a PA speaker above the stage, splitting my forehead open. AWK stopped the show, with me on stage bleeding intensely, to ask if I was okay. He took off his bandana and tied it to my head to stop the bleeding (sounds gross now but there were no rules in 2008). I gave the thumbs up and AWK picked the song up where they left off and I stayed on stage to dance with everyone else that was up there. The whole crowd cheered, it was really awesome. The next day, my mom yelled at me and took me to the ER where they had to give me 13 stitches and restructure the top of my nose so it would still function. PARTY HARD! (but stay safe)
I got my eyelid detached within 3 minutes of entering a limp bizkit show by an 18 year old who didn't understand that moshing wasn't sprinting at people and headbutting them
I've got an autographed Andrew WK poster from when I saw him at age 12 with my older brothers. He wrote "Rock n roll can never die because music never cannot live!"
My buddy was in a band that played at the same show as Andrew. My buddy was wearing white pants and white t shirt. He made small talk with Andrew by saying, "Dude, you stole my look." Andrew replied, "Oh man, I'm sorry." Completely genuine. My buddy said he was the nicest guy ever.
This is why I love this channel. Wouldn’t normally pay more than 5 minutes of attention to Andrew WK, but I saw the channel, and knew it would be good. Nice job!
With you on that one. To be honest, I probably would have skipped over it if it were any other channel. I'm not trying to rag on the guy personally or anything, but Andrew W.K. didn't really warrant the amount of attention he tried too hard to get.
His album "You're not alone" helped carry me through some severely depressive periods in my life. Even when I'm feeling good I love listening to the titular song. I owe him a lot and hope he's doing well.
I fucking love Andrew WK and I have argued, with complete sincerity, that I Get Wet is a masterpiece rock record. I wish more people would aspire to his style, we'd likely all have a lot more fun with our lives.
Don’t know much about this guy but the title I get wet.i remember training day where alonso asks someone if they get wet.referring to taking crystal meth.is that what this title means?
I’ve always said that Andrew WK blended punk and pop, but it wasn’t “pop punk” it was a punk/pop amalgam that only he could produce. His music has always been an influence for me.
I interviewed him over the phone for about an hour back in ~2014. He was really nice but unexpectedly bristled at certain questions like when I asked him about being in a band with one of his teachers back in high school. He also at one point made some inscrutable comment about wearing a wig outside (he was on the phone with me while walking outside). But I didn’t pursue that further because I kind of felt he was pulling my leg or that he was doing it to not be recognized in public. At one point our conversation was interrupted by a toddler getting away from its parent and walking up to him in the park and for a good two minutes he was cooing at it and kind of playing with it while making small talk with its mom. The question that got him to talk the most was when I asked him about pizza. He positively gushed about that and went on and on.
Get Ready to Die is the song I want to hear at the beginning of a cycling sprint or a steep hill climb. The instant adrenaline and heart rate increase is absolute perfection. I've come to tears at the end of this song after nearly falling off my stationary bike from overexertion. Andrew WK made a conscious decision to always be positive and spread that positivity to the world without compromise and never allow cynicism to deter his goals.
This is insane. I haven't heard the name Andrew WK since early 2000s and now I know one of the coolest little bits of musical history. Thanks! I'll add him to my 2000s rockstalgia playlist.
I'm really irritated by this idea that irony is the rule instead of the exception. It makes me think of that joke from The Simpsons: "Hey, this isn't faux dive, this is a DIVE!" Or in this case, "This isn't over-the-top in an ironic way, this is just over the top!" Andrew WK is right, toxic cynicism is real.
I got to meet Andrew at an album signing after a free show at my local record shop. I caught a pic at the end of the show and he signed it. At the signing he talked to my daughter and loved that this was her first concert. He miss heard her name and thought we named her “soda”. We had a big laugh together. Great dude. Always inspired when his music comes on.
When I heard Andrew WK for the first time it was a life changing experience, I was trying to get out of a dark hole for years, and finally found the strength in those lyrics. It was the push I needed. I'll be forever grateful.
A key element missing form this is the Ann Arbor noise "Trip Metal" scene. Andrew W.K. would not have quite the same undercurrent of dissonance without the groundwork laid by Wolf Eyes.
Andrew W.K. made a Japan-only Gundam 0079 tribute album, and it is absolutely amazing. Anyone that has that much love and respect for the Universal Century is all right by me.
You should look into Devin Townsend one day. He created a lot of the heaviest, most negative / nihilistic music with an explosive wall of sound. Then he flipped it, and now mostly makes extremely positive yet still extremely heavy music.
@@JoelCarli Heavy Devy is one of the more complex and musically diverse artists out there, with an extensive and prolific catalog of amazing albums. From singing for Steve Vai to Strapping Young Lad to The Devin Townsend Band to The Devin Townsend Project to his myriad solo projects and offerings, his catalog is an incredible trip across a dizzying array of styles and sounds. The "nihilistic" stuff referenced in the OP is mostly from when he was in Strapping Young Lad. He was going through some seriously dark personal shit during that time, and it definitely permeated the music. Fortunately for him (and us music fans), he overcame his demons intact. He still has his demons, but he has figured out how to control them and use them for good. Honestly, any Heavy Devy album is a good place to start, as every album is good in its own way and for its own reasons. He has lots of official videos from across most of his different projects. He has numerous albums on his YT channel. After listening to them, you find that different albums fit different moods. For a quick crash course on all things Devin, I highly recommend watching The Retinal Circus; a live performance from 2012 that contains music from all of his various projects up to that point. Really, all of his professionally produced and released live video recordings (TRC, Live from Royal Albert Hall, Live from Plovdiv) do a great job at showing the different facets of Devin Townsend, and all are available to watch for free here on YT. If you want to dive a little deeper into the musical mind of Devin Townsend, I recommend the original four part Devin Townsend Project, consisting of the albums Ki, Addicted, Deconstruction (my personal favorite) and Ghost. According to the man himself, the many sounds of Devin Townsend generally fall within four overall "styles". Each album intentionally reflects a particular "style", performed by a different band of supporting musicians. The two Ziltoid albums are their own distinct and highly entertaining endeavor. They are everything that makes Heavy Devy good, with heaping portions of sarcasm, wit and 50s-era radio showmanship, and are quite fun. Devin Townsend is mostly known for being a longstanding member of the metal scene. What surprises a lot of people is how good he is at making mellow, ambient, atmospheric, progressive music, which he is equally as prolific at. The man is a remarkable talent: a tremendously competent guitarist/musician/artist with admirable work ethics, a great vocalist/frontman with a five octave range, and a genuinely good dude.
The truth in the end is that there is no illusion, the music and personality of Andrew W.K. shows that, perception is reality, and positivity and all other emotions are under our control, in short to believe in yourself is to believe in yourself, a true breath of fresh air in a rather post-ironic time we are living in, so ironic that we can't believe sincerity anymore.
I’ve watched many of these awesome docs,but this one brought tears to my eyes , I’ve been to 3 Andrew W.K shows & the energy was amazing , I miss A.W.K
It did the same to me. I think I thought that he was a man trying his hardest to drag himself out of depression by throwing as much positivity out to world as possible. It felt beautiful.
The Andrew W.K. enigma is pretty clearly intentional. His awkward interviews are pure gold. His Undercover version of silent night is my favorite Christmas song. please do yourself a favor and check it out.
I was in my first year of college when Party Hard blew up, and I absolutely loved his energy and positivity. At the time, I saw him more as a persona than an artist, but the minute you played the first few notes, I rocked out and was immediately transported back to my college years. I think he was exactly the person we needed post 9/11, given how muddled the music landscape and the political environment was back then. I don't know if he's ever done work with The Darkness, but the powers of the two of them together?! Brilliant.
Great video! But there was stuff you guys missed. He released an album last year then cancelled all of his festival tours, deleted all social media and websites, and married Kat Dennings. He is an enigma.
something missing from the early section of the video was that Andrew WK attended Community High School which was known for being a refuge for arty kids, and having a world class Jazz program and produced musicians who would go on to play in Blue Traveler and The Von Bondies along with countless underground artists. As noted in the recent book -- The Job of Musicians is Not to Create Music but to Create Culture”: An Examination of Ann Arbor’s Underground Music Scene in the 1990s. by J.J. Griffin IV -- Community High School was at the center of the Ann Arbor underground music scene in the 90s..
@No Touchy it is the authors masters thesis so more like a 'up its ass with required academic word play' title... still it is one of the few looks at the music scene that Andrew WK grew up in......
Part of me thinks Andrew WK is a cheesy, over the top clown. But another part of me loves that he is. As someone who spent a lot of time in negative spaces where gatekeeping and elitism is the norm, I've tried to find more positivity in things I enjoy, so Andrew WK fits that well
@No Touchy You mean "elite" the way Fox News uses "elite". What this dude is talking about (I assume) is how toxic punk culture was back then. If your band got a video on MTV, phhhhht, sellouts. If you had a song on the radio, phhht, not real punk. Bought something at Hot Topic? What is that mall goth bullshit, you fucking poser? Even though 70% of the "cool" bands were complete trash, people would rather fling shit at anything they thought might possibly make any money, whether or not it was actually good. It was annoying and exhausting, and Andrew WK was a breath of fresh air. I was at one of the shows on his first Warped Tour in Harriet Island Park in Minneapolis, and everyone (including myself) was looking down their noses at him when the show started. By the end, he'd won almost everyone over, and we were all dancing around like little kids spazzing out on Mountain Dew and Corn Pops. You can put as much money as you want into getting a band exposure, but if I Get Wet hadn't been such a fun, catchy album, it wouldn't have succeeded anyway. People aren't going to buy music they don't like no matter how often it's on TV. Super don't understand these people who insist that nobody liked it, but also insist that it was all about the money. Makes no sense.
I remember getting lost down the Steev Mike/Andrew W.K. rabbithole in the early-to-mid 00s, one of the greatest and weirdest musician-oriented conspiracy theories of all time.
He's an inspiration. As someone who struggles with depression and relies on music (along with meds) to seek comfort, his message really resonates with me.
His recfent album, "God Is Partying" was very good. Some deep meaning songs on there, that deserve an audience. I saw him in Dublin just over 20 years ago. I met him outside the venue after the show and he was absolutely sound out. I remember him outside his tour bus, and looking inside, I saw there was a collection of X Files videos. Which was nice. Great video.
I met Andrew in Calgary in 2002. He spoke sincerely, personally with everyone in line to meet him at the end of the show. When I somehow said something about having to leave right after because I had university classes the next day, HE ASKED ME QUESTIONS about what I was studying. When he hugged me before I moved on, it was a real hug, like from your best friend. I have felt bad his other albums havent been as successful as I Get Wet. Music is worth living for is pretty rad though, probably my last favourite newer release from him. Definitely check it out.
This dude has always aimed to create this music that is LOUDLY positive, aggressively positive, motivational even. I think he finally perfectly executed that concept with the album Youre Not Alone, it’s so good
The first time I ever saw or heard of AWK, was SNL with The Rock. It was a great show and I watched back on VHS several times. It was the band that was me and my wife’s ‘band that’s ours’. Not mine or hers, but ours. And then we saw him live in Orlando. It was amazing. Then again in Tampa. Great shows, excellent music, party-positive hard core party atmosphere. Love it. Thanks Andrew for great memories.
I have never spoken with him personally, but back around 2015 I worked with his tour manager and booked his hotel rooms for his tour. His requests were always modest and it was easy to find the right lodging for him because he kept it so simple and humble. Basically proximity to the venue and a place to park. It was like if one of your everyday friends also happened to be a rock star.
Andrew W.K. is an absolute sweetheart! I've never gotten to meet him, but back when he had social media I sent him a tweet and he tweeted me back and followed me. We interacted a few times and he was always just lovely. The world is a better place because he's in it and sharing his art and himself with us. 🥰
I remember he became an on the air host for Cartoon Network and I was as able to rediscover him after forgetting about Party Hard. I think he’s a really nice dude that spreads positivity and an insane urge to Party Hard.
I am a bit younger than most in this comment section because I first knew of him during the CN real era and didn't see any notice of anyone mentioning it until I read your comment.He definitely stood out terms of his image and music and never knew much about him or his music until I watched this video.Sure he comes across as cheesy but I loved what he and his music have done for many people.
I went to an Andrew WK concert in 2003 when I was living in the netherlands and after the show he stayed around to write a personal message on everyone's ticket. It was a small show like only 40 people but so awesome as he invited everyone to jump on stage during We Want Fun. Such a cool guy and so glad I got to meet him then. I still have that ticket btw
I had no idea there was so much going on with Andrew W.K. I always saw him as a 1 hit wonder that had 1 kinda stupid but fun song. I just thought he was some crazy party guy. But he's actually a really talented musician. He's always had a fan base, but I don't think many people know him beyond the hit. Maybe he's had more hits in the US and UK.
Not really, here in the UK he had like one other kinda popular single with "She Is Beautiful" but "Party Hard" gets played at every rock club across the country to this day and it always gets people moving
@@wereowl9369 thanks, but if youre telling me that you actually like that song, then you are lying. Theres nothing to like. Theres barely any riffs, and barely any melody in the singing.
Having listened to him and seen him live, he truly comes off as a guy who just genuinely wants people to live their best life and try not to let mundane things get them down. Very uplifting and inspiring act to see. Hearing him speak about it in between set bits was a treat and he delivers 110% of that energy he's branded himself on. One of the most memorable shows I've been to.
I used to co-direct/produce a cable access show in Alabama called Tuscaloosa Monorail that featured mainly local bands, a few touring bands, nobody famous, (though we did almost have St. Paul and the Broken Bones before they became somewhat well-known.) One day the host of the show calls me up and says, out of the blue, that he'd called Andrew WK's management and asked for an interview while he was touring through Georgia and they'd said yes. We couldn't feature any of his music but Mr. WK was incredibly nice and gave it his all, especially considering we aired after midnight and had practically no viewers. Apparently after the interview he told our host that he'd actually been having a rough few days and that doing this kinda weird interview with non-indistry types really cheered him up.
How in the world was a show named Tuscaloosa Monorail not the biggest thing around in its day?! I certainly would have done an appearance. (Not even of local fame anywhere though so not a great win for the mighty T.M. but I would have turned up)
I forgot it's actually on youtube: th-cam.com/video/HNRcgX_kiYE/w-d-xo.html If you go to 25:00 Andrew tells a story about how one of his bandmates once pulled a guy's head off during a fight.
Interesting character I had no idea! But you know, you should totally do a video on Killing Joke or Godflesh, two highly underrated but influential UK bands!
I always put Andrew W.K. In his own category. He’s a true one of a kind. When “I Get Wet” came out, it was a fresh breath of air in a sea of crap “bro” music at the time. It still goes down as one of my favorites and his interviews always make me smile.
Andrews first album is one of the best metal albums ever made. It is so unique in its approach and intention, it opened up a new aesthetic path in metal that still has barely been explored.
@@wienersmcbutts well I listened 2 of the so called hits and they sucked. It just doesnt work. Theres no good riffs or good melodies. And the whole "party" thing doesnt really go together with metal.
@@freebee8221 Listen to Babalon, a new track this video doesn't mention. It's a banger. Although idk how you can listen to Party Hard or We Want Fun and not just have a good time
I'm all for positivity. But If you're gonna do the 'anyone who doesn't like this is a hater of anything positive', I gotta call BS. Positivity isn't all you need. the music still has to be good, or are we going to get a video about the history of William Hung and 'She Bangs', because he was positive as hell?
I saw a video of Andrew WK airdruming to Napalm Death's "Harmony Corruption" ... Yes, the whole record. Since then i have nothing but absolutw respect for the man.
I really liked his music and positive messages in his music back in the 2000s. Still listen now and it always brings me up emotionally to a better level.
The Hives front man said when you play one good riff for a long time, people get excited. When you play it longer let than they are used to, they lose their minds! The beginning of “Party Hard” proves that.
I might argue it set the stage for other 'party hard' acts like LMFAO, who are very similar in musical vibe, albeit in a different genre. Even more recent artists like Little Big and Eskimo Callboy owe some amount of the general acceptance of their weirdness and musical fusion to Andrew WK, I think.
Having been in a band and essentially living at our local music venue from the early 90's through the early 2000's, I can't say that Andrew WK was at the top of anybody's album list: except for me and my girlfriends who were hooked instantly and memorized the entirety of I Get Wet in a week. From there we would just cruise around and play that album on full blast any chance we could get. Despite anyone else's opinion on his music, everyone respected him and those who had met him had nothing but positive things to say. I associate so many spectacular, joyous and hilarious memories with every single one of those songs. "We do what we like and we like what we do!!!": Love you Andrew WK!
David Bowie would be more than proud.I saw AWK do a sit down talk over 10 years ago and it made me love him even more. Who gives a fuck about reality anymore anyway? "Music is worth living for" and AWK is an inspiration to us all!
Great video essay. I love Andrew. He's legit. Interviewed him twice and always found him intentional and thoughtful. I even wrote a comic book titled Söngr and incorporated him into the story as a core character. Andrew even gave me his blessing to include him in it.
oh man I found this video and braced for a hit piece. Ive met him numerous times. he might be my favorite human outside of my own family. just a cool dude. everything you'd hope he'd be.
Me and a best friend met at 19, we bonded over our middle school love of Andrew wk. 10 years later his sister manages a record store he was doing an in store appearance for, she called us asking to bring him a 6pack of local beer… turned out it was for his manager, but still got to meet him again. exciting beer run none the less
Hard rock isn’t normally my genre so I missed getting into Andrew WK back in the day but thanks to your video I’ve found out how fun his music is and what a positive message he has. Thanks!
I looooove Andrew WK! He is uplifting and motivational! Seen him at Download 2018 and I would see him again in a heartbeat! I can't stop listening to Babalon, his vocals are only getting better!
I love Andrew WK. He is truly one of the kindest people I have ever met. He has so much love for his fans, and surprisingly, he has an insane memory for names. When I was a junior in high school, I emailed his manager for a photo pass to his Asbury Park, NJ show in 2003. Not only did they reply, Andrew made it a point to give me full access and allowed me to use the flash if I wanted to. At the show, the press photographers were given only the first three songs, but I was allowed to stay. It was just such a moving gesture from him. They even dropped me and my friend off at the nearest exit to our town after the show, haha. I've had so many amazing memories from Andrew shows, the lecture series, and fan events. Truly such an inspirational and genuine person full of passion. His bandmates have also always been such amazing people to see perform and meet. I have really never met anyone that put so much effort into being present and available for their fans at shows. Anyway, thanks for the great video!
This popped up on my feed just after I Googled Party Hard to use in a montage and I have so much more respect for this dude, I was a kid when his work came out and had no other clue other than great songs but wow
I was a huge fan of "I Get Wet", I still listen to it when I'm in a bad mood and just want to cheer up. Someone in high school gave it to me, they said, he's meh. and all of the songs sound the same. I was like, yeah, but if the song is pumping positivity for 45 minutes, I can deal with that. I finally got to see him live about 5 years later at the masquerade in atlanta. I was informed by a white t shirt wearing gentleman, that you havent been to an andrew wk concert if you havent touched Andrew. Literally 20 seconds into the first song, the whole crowd surged the stage, me included, and we all just danced and partied with the band while two defeated and sand security guards looked up. The band never stopped and we danced on stage with the band and it was wild. One of the most fun shows ive ever seen. I touched his elbow, can confirm hes a real person.
One of the only celebrities I truly want to meet. Andrew W.K. seems like such a complex person disguised as a simple party guy. I love how he is such an intense performer.
This doc was brilliantly composed and written *chefs kiss* The imagery from the start was crisp and pungent in its kick and aptitude. Just appreciating the composition of the video it’self, props!
Didn't expect to see Deafheaven in a comments section about Andrew WK, but I could definitely see their Infinite Granite and Sunbather albums in a very similar light.
I remember first hearing We Want Fun on the first Jackass movie and that video of them partying after the movie is one of my favourite feel good moments.
I saw him live once. Lots of kids, like 8 years old. He had extra microphones, guitarist Jimmy was guiding kids onto the stage, lowering mic stands, so the kids could sing along.
Great vid (again) . Every now and again Rock N Roll needs to go to a quiet room , sit down and think what's this all about? When it comes up with the correct answer it comes out playing a song like Party Hard.
I had the pleasure to interview Andrew WK for a cover story right before "I Get Wet" came out. He was such a nice person, spending plenty of time with me and signing his photo with a long, thoughtful message. I wish I got to see him live!
I've met him twice: Once after his 50 state motivational speaking tour, and another time at a meet-and-greet. He couldn't POSSIBLY be cooler. Polite, friendly, unpretentious, . . . the list goes on. I've never met anyone more worthy of fandom than Andrew W.K. He is my absolute favorite celebrity for LIFE.
I had meet n greet passes for Megadeth only to confirm that yes, Dave Mustaine is a dick.
He was one of the first people i told that I was trans and he told me I was beautiful and that being myself is the most party thing i can do. Love that man
I used to have his email and wrote him a couple times. He always responded. Hes the fucking man!
Its funny Chris jericho is the nicest n coolest celebrity i ever met, literally chilled w me n my brother at an indy show he was only at for a meet and greet, but sat w us in the crowd fo the whole 3 hour show just kickin w us when we was like 12 years old
@@varicosevisage4794That's awesome.
I briefly worked for him around 2011.
He is the real deal. I don’t really care for his music much, but he is everything his persona stands for, and seriously good dude.
yeah some people are simply who they say they are.
Man, this is such a feel good comment.
Employed as a sound tech?
...says Steve Mike.
I had the same experience, hes cool and nice as fuck and is legitimately the same in private as he is when hes in public, hes a trip
Andrew W.K. personally called me on Christmas day to thank me for buying his second album. His live shows were like nothing else I've ever experienced, just unbridled, unapologetic positivity. He will always be one of my heroes!
Saw W.K. live in a small church. He played about an hour of mellow piano, then climbed on the pews growling at us, ran back to the stage, ripped a sheet off a drum machine, and broke into an ear shattering encore of party songs. I love this man.
I met Andrew W.K. at Ozzfest right as Party Hard was starting to get big. He had fans at his merch table who wanted to get his autograph. He didn't sign autographs. He spoke with everyone as individuals and wrote us all paragraphs. He is the epitome of "built different".
Fascinating to think that all that music, image and positivity was created by someone just trying their fucking hardest to drag themselves out of a life of depression. It’s actually quite moving.
It’s just a shame the music was so irrefutably awful
@@dixienormus6941 meh it’s got its place, certainly not for me.
Andrew WK's character was/is actually very original. And we shouldnt be surprised that sometimes stage performers dramatize themselves and eventually dont turn out to fully be who you think they are.
I've met and kept on touch with him in my high school years. He was a cool dude. And his music is just fun. Not meant to be much more than that.
@@dixienormus6941 it's fun party music for boozing rock and metal fans, it's not that deep or subtle or introspective, and isn't meant to be, I listen to some bands whose audience are under 100, but I will always put on a bit of 00's Andrew W.K. if I'm drinking with my mates.
I met Andrew WK at his club, Santos party house in NYC. He said he wanted a place where anybody could get in and rock out. AWK was a breath of fresh air for this scene.
I once was in NYC for a day due a flight delay on my layover. I made a point to head to Santos.... but it was closed that day and shut down a month later.... I'm so jealous.
@@ramonstein5183 your so cringe , I'm embarrassed for your parents 🤭
@@mb9284 gen porridge huh?
@@mb9284 gen orridge, is basically a modern day witch.
@@mb9284 they died to be exact.
Andrew's appearance on ATHF needs to be mentioned. He helped get Frylock through cancer depression and lifted the spirits of Carl, Meatwad and Shake with a powerful joyous kick to the face
Yes he will forever party in ATHF
Thx.
I wish that I could have a sliver of that positivity as I'm going through clinical depression through over 16 years of fighting cancer and being told that my situation will never change and I'll suffer this for the rest of my life. I feel like I'm in a prison filled with utter cruelty with nowhere to turn for help and absolutely no escape. I've never felt so lonely and so disconnected from the world in all my life. I have no hope for normal life, this cancer has taken so much from me if I didn't have my wife and boys I would off myself now.
Dude, yes! I thought of that episode the instant I saw this video!
A better guest was Danzig.
The Andrew WK gig I went to in London some time around 2010 is the greatest show I’ve ever ever been to. I had tweeted asking if anybody wanted to go with me, and when nobody did, Andrew replied and said he’d put me on the guest list if I went on my own. So if course I did. I was worried about going alone, because I’d just started new meds that I can’t drink with, (the typical loner’s crutch), and a lot of the fun of gigs is having an experience with your friends, but I needn’t have worried. That small room at the Kings College Student Union was one big Party, where everybody became fast friends for several hours. The entire crowd shouted every word, the audience faced each other rather than the stage and moshed with arms around strangers. Half the audience was on the stage while the other half were catching the constant roll of stage-divers and crowd surfers. Every single person was grinning from ear to ear, because that man knows how to command a room and throw a Party.
The power was cut because of curfew, which had been smashed through at least twice, but the entire room sang entire songs for at least another hour, until the police came to kick us all out, when the now 300+ piece A Capella band, including Andrew and his team, continued on the street for at least another hour.
I have never ever known an event like that, and all down to the pure joy powered by a man who knows how to throw a Party and Loves music with a capital M.
What a beautiful story. That legit brings a tear to my eye. Thank you.
Never a fan musically, but I met Andrew wk as a teenager at warped tour. In too long of a scenario to write out, I was struck by how nice and genuine of a person he was to all the kids, but especially to the sweaty, half drunk half hungover and very pissed off teenage girl that I was at that moment.
Just a really nice dude.
He seems like a wholesome dude whenever i see something with him. Dude even hosted a cartoon network show about blowing stuff up
I was on that show, can confirm, he is a really awesome, funny, humble man
That’s the only thing I know him from. Didn’t know dude was still sound
That was my childhood man wow
@No Touchy do you feel better?
@@holyshit128 I don't think anything is going to make them feel better.
I was at an Andrew W.K. show maybe 15 years ago (now I feel old saying that). AWK himself pulled me onto the stage and someone behind me pushed me up to help. They pushed me into the air so fast that my head slammed into a PA speaker above the stage, splitting my forehead open. AWK stopped the show, with me on stage bleeding intensely, to ask if I was okay. He took off his bandana and tied it to my head to stop the bleeding (sounds gross now but there were no rules in 2008). I gave the thumbs up and AWK picked the song up where they left off and I stayed on stage to dance with everyone else that was up there. The whole crowd cheered, it was really awesome. The next day, my mom yelled at me and took me to the ER where they had to give me 13 stitches and restructure the top of my nose so it would still function. PARTY HARD! (but stay safe)
hell yeah. cool story!
This is the epitome of partying hard my man
I got my eyelid detached within 3 minutes of entering a limp bizkit show by an 18 year old who didn't understand that moshing wasn't sprinting at people and headbutting them
Interviewed him in 2004. Legit once of the nicest people I've ever met
I've got an autographed Andrew WK poster from when I saw him at age 12 with my older brothers. He wrote "Rock n roll can never die because music never cannot live!"
My buddy was in a band that played at the same show as Andrew. My buddy was wearing white pants and white t shirt. He made small talk with Andrew by saying, "Dude, you stole my look."
Andrew replied, "Oh man, I'm sorry." Completely genuine.
My buddy said he was the nicest guy ever.
This is why I love this channel. Wouldn’t normally pay more than 5 minutes of attention to Andrew WK, but I saw the channel, and knew it would be good. Nice job!
Same.
yeah love the deep dives.
With you on that one. To be honest, I probably would have skipped over it if it were any other channel. I'm not trying to rag on the guy personally or anything, but Andrew W.K. didn't really warrant the amount of attention he tried too hard to get.
Agreed
Literally same 😂
His album "You're not alone" helped carry me through some severely depressive periods in my life. Even when I'm feeling good I love listening to the titular song.
I owe him a lot and hope he's doing well.
I fucking love Andrew WK and I have argued, with complete sincerity, that I Get Wet is a masterpiece rock record. I wish more people would aspire to his style, we'd likely all have a lot more fun with our lives.
I agree whole heartedly
P R E A C H
Don’t know much about this guy but the title I get wet.i remember training day where alonso asks someone if they get wet.referring to taking crystal meth.is that what this title means?
@@darrenstopper1806yes. And no. That's what the expression commonly refers to, but AWK has denied intent of that meaning behind the lyrics.
I’d argue it’s much more of a genius work of consumable pop music than actual rock.
I’ve always said that Andrew WK blended punk and pop, but it wasn’t “pop punk” it was a punk/pop amalgam that only he could produce. His music has always been an influence for me.
I interviewed him over the phone for about an hour back in ~2014. He was really nice but unexpectedly bristled at certain questions like when I asked him about being in a band with one of his teachers back in high school. He also at one point made some inscrutable comment about wearing a wig outside (he was on the phone with me while walking outside). But I didn’t pursue that further because I kind of felt he was pulling my leg or that he was doing it to not be recognized in public. At one point our conversation was interrupted by a toddler getting away from its parent and walking up to him in the park and for a good two minutes he was cooing at it and kind of playing with it while making small talk with its mom. The question that got him to talk the most was when I asked him about pizza. He positively gushed about that and went on and on.
Andrew knows, bad pizza is like bad pussy - it ain't ever THAT bad.
who doesn't love pizza, I'll remember that one.
@@nomernomznomz6015 im lactose intolerant so as long as it a margherita pizza pie.
i prefer donuts..
Ingwie don't like donuts
Get Ready to Die is the song I want to hear at the beginning of a cycling sprint or a steep hill climb. The instant adrenaline and heart rate increase is absolute perfection. I've come to tears at the end of this song after nearly falling off my stationary bike from overexertion. Andrew WK made a conscious decision to always be positive and spread that positivity to the world without compromise and never allow cynicism to deter his goals.
It's probably my favorite awk song ever
Pogacar should listen to him.
@@goldenretriever6261 He'd miss the top of the mountain and run into the clouds I fear. It would be the end of him.
@@mrrodriguezHLP hahaha
Love that song!!
Andrew WK created ABSOLUTE CHAOS on wikipedia. No one knew how to handle him. I am still a bit lost on the topic of that guy.
This is insane. I haven't heard the name Andrew WK since early 2000s and now I know one of the coolest little bits of musical history. Thanks! I'll add him to my 2000s rockstalgia playlist.
I'm really irritated by this idea that irony is the rule instead of the exception. It makes me think of that joke from The Simpsons: "Hey, this isn't faux dive, this is a DIVE!" Or in this case, "This isn't over-the-top in an ironic way, this is just over the top!"
Andrew WK is right, toxic cynicism is real.
david foster wallace will never not be relevant
@@alonedownthere47 What do you mean by that?
I got to meet Andrew at an album signing after a free show at my local record shop. I caught a pic at the end of the show and he signed it. At the signing he talked to my daughter and loved that this was her first concert. He miss heard her name and thought we named her “soda”. We had a big laugh together. Great dude. Always inspired when his music comes on.
When I heard Andrew WK for the first time it was a life changing experience, I was trying to get out of a dark hole for years, and finally found the strength in those lyrics. It was the push I needed. I'll be forever grateful.
A key element missing form this is the Ann Arbor noise "Trip Metal" scene. Andrew W.K. would not have quite the same undercurrent of dissonance without the groundwork laid by Wolf Eyes.
I really expected a mention of my favorite noise rock group turned meme aggregator
Thank you! It was a good video and I did learn some stuff but was baffled by Wolf Eyes not being mentioned!
Also here for the "where were Wolf Eyes" comment. Great vid otherwise tho. As always
Well now I know not to finish the video
Lmao no
Andrew W.K. made a Japan-only Gundam 0079 tribute album, and it is absolutely amazing. Anyone that has that much love and respect for the Universal Century is all right by me.
I wish that was available to buy
Andrew WK was, and still is, a phenomenon which defies description.
You should look into Devin Townsend one day. He created a lot of the heaviest, most negative / nihilistic music with an explosive wall of sound. Then he flipped it, and now mostly makes extremely positive yet still extremely heavy music.
Any recommendations? I've only ever had circumstantial exposure to his work.
And just a bonus reaction that breaks down some of what he does.
th-cam.com/video/b3gZMuFLTFY/w-d-xo.html
@@JoelCarli Kingdom, deadhead, and juular stick out in mind for the Devin Townsend era. OMFG, Love?, and Detox for the Strapping Young Lad era.
@@Terribleguitarist89 Many thanks! :) I'll check those out!
@@JoelCarli Heavy Devy is one of the more complex and musically diverse artists out there, with an extensive and prolific catalog of amazing albums. From singing for Steve Vai to Strapping Young Lad to The Devin Townsend Band to The Devin Townsend Project to his myriad solo projects and offerings, his catalog is an incredible trip across a dizzying array of styles and sounds. The "nihilistic" stuff referenced in the OP is mostly from when he was in Strapping Young Lad. He was going through some seriously dark personal shit during that time, and it definitely permeated the music. Fortunately for him (and us music fans), he overcame his demons intact. He still has his demons, but he has figured out how to control them and use them for good.
Honestly, any Heavy Devy album is a good place to start, as every album is good in its own way and for its own reasons. He has lots of official videos from across most of his different projects. He has numerous albums on his YT channel. After listening to them, you find that different albums fit different moods. For a quick crash course on all things Devin, I highly recommend watching The Retinal Circus; a live performance from 2012 that contains music from all of his various projects up to that point. Really, all of his professionally produced and released live video recordings (TRC, Live from Royal Albert Hall, Live from Plovdiv) do a great job at showing the different facets of Devin Townsend, and all are available to watch for free here on YT. If you want to dive a little deeper into the musical mind of Devin Townsend, I recommend the original four part Devin Townsend Project, consisting of the albums Ki, Addicted, Deconstruction (my personal favorite) and Ghost. According to the man himself, the many sounds of Devin Townsend generally fall within four overall "styles". Each album intentionally reflects a particular "style", performed by a different band of supporting musicians. The two Ziltoid albums are their own distinct and highly entertaining endeavor. They are everything that makes Heavy Devy good, with heaping portions of sarcasm, wit and 50s-era radio showmanship, and are quite fun.
Devin Townsend is mostly known for being a longstanding member of the metal scene. What surprises a lot of people is how good he is at making mellow, ambient, atmospheric, progressive music, which he is equally as prolific at. The man is a remarkable talent: a tremendously competent guitarist/musician/artist with admirable work ethics, a great vocalist/frontman with a five octave range, and a genuinely good dude.
I have always had a theory that AWK is actually Weird Al's little brother. That makes more sense to me than any of the half cooked rumours.
You forgot to mention that he started his own political party back in.....2015? It was called The Party Party. Not even kidding.
The truth in the end is that there is no illusion, the music and personality of Andrew W.K. shows that, perception is reality, and positivity and all other emotions are under our control, in short to believe in yourself is to believe in yourself, a true breath of fresh air in a rather post-ironic time we are living in, so ironic that we can't believe sincerity anymore.
I’ve watched many of these awesome docs,but this one brought tears to my eyes , I’ve been to 3 Andrew W.K shows & the energy was amazing , I miss A.W.K
Why does this comment make it sound like he died lol
It did the same to me. I think I thought that he was a man trying his hardest to drag himself out of depression by throwing as much positivity out to world as possible. It felt beautiful.
The Andrew W.K. enigma is pretty clearly intentional. His awkward interviews are pure gold. His Undercover version of silent night is my favorite Christmas song. please do yourself a favor and check it out.
I'm going to have to look this up now
Great rec! It's like a cross between Randy Newman and Warren Zevon
Musicians like Andrew WK are literally screaming into the ether begging the universe to not be killed by suicide.
I was in my first year of college when Party Hard blew up, and I absolutely loved his energy and positivity. At the time, I saw him more as a persona than an artist, but the minute you played the first few notes, I rocked out and was immediately transported back to my college years. I think he was exactly the person we needed post 9/11, given how muddled the music landscape and the political environment was back then. I don't know if he's ever done work with The Darkness, but the powers of the two of them together?! Brilliant.
The Darkness and Andrew WK is the combo I never knew I needed badly.
Great video! But there was stuff you guys missed. He released an album last year then cancelled all of his festival tours, deleted all social media and websites, and married Kat Dennings. He is an enigma.
Dude wtf. I had to look this up myself. Haha
something missing from the early section of the video was that Andrew WK attended Community High School which was known for being a refuge for arty kids, and having a world class Jazz program and produced musicians who would go on to play in Blue Traveler and The Von Bondies along with countless underground artists. As noted in the recent book -- The Job of Musicians is Not to Create Music but to Create Culture”: An Examination of Ann Arbor’s Underground Music Scene in the 1990s. by J.J. Griffin IV -- Community High School was at the center of the Ann Arbor underground music scene in the 90s..
@No Touchy it is the authors masters thesis so more like a 'up its ass with required academic word play' title... still it is one of the few looks at the music scene that Andrew WK grew up in......
Andrew WK is like half my snowboarding playlist
Andrew WK in the gym makes the weights 50% lighter.
Part of me thinks Andrew WK is a cheesy, over the top clown. But another part of me loves that he is. As someone who spent a lot of time in negative spaces where gatekeeping and elitism is the norm, I've tried to find more positivity in things I enjoy, so Andrew WK fits that well
the world could use some un ironic clowns
Yeah well said, there's something to love about him.
@No Touchy yikes
@No Touchy You mean "elite" the way Fox News uses "elite". What this dude is talking about (I assume) is how toxic punk culture was back then. If your band got a video on MTV, phhhhht, sellouts. If you had a song on the radio, phhht, not real punk. Bought something at Hot Topic? What is that mall goth bullshit, you fucking poser? Even though 70% of the "cool" bands were complete trash, people would rather fling shit at anything they thought might possibly make any money, whether or not it was actually good. It was annoying and exhausting, and Andrew WK was a breath of fresh air. I was at one of the shows on his first Warped Tour in Harriet Island Park in Minneapolis, and everyone (including myself) was looking down their noses at him when the show started. By the end, he'd won almost everyone over, and we were all dancing around like little kids spazzing out on Mountain Dew and Corn Pops. You can put as much money as you want into getting a band exposure, but if I Get Wet hadn't been such a fun, catchy album, it wouldn't have succeeded anyway. People aren't going to buy music they don't like no matter how often it's on TV. Super don't understand these people who insist that nobody liked it, but also insist that it was all about the money. Makes no sense.
So both parts of you who consider Andrew WK thinks he's a cheesy clown.
I remember getting lost down the Steev Mike/Andrew W.K. rabbithole in the early-to-mid 00s, one of the greatest and weirdest musician-oriented conspiracy theories of all time.
Ya I harken back to the innocent days of yesteryears conspiracy theories. Qanon is just such a bummer in comparison.
I'm really still confused about all that.
Do you know if the stuff like the book the ex girlfriend found was real or not?
That and John Titor were such ample party-talk fuel back in the day.
He's an inspiration. As someone who struggles with depression and relies on music (along with meds) to seek comfort, his message really resonates with me.
Bad ass.
His recfent album, "God Is Partying" was very good. Some deep meaning songs on there, that deserve an audience. I saw him in Dublin just over 20 years ago. I met him outside the venue after the show and he was absolutely sound out. I remember him outside his tour bus, and looking inside, I saw there was a collection of X Files videos. Which was nice. Great video.
AWK's music hits all of my exact sweet spots and I find him fascinating as an artist and a person. I loved this deep dive, thank you for it.
I met Andrew in Calgary in 2002. He spoke sincerely, personally with everyone in line to meet him at the end of the show. When I somehow said something about having to leave right after because I had university classes the next day, HE ASKED ME QUESTIONS about what I was studying. When he hugged me before I moved on, it was a real hug, like from your best friend. I have felt bad his other albums havent been as successful as I Get Wet. Music is worth living for is pretty rad though, probably my last favourite newer release from him. Definitely check it out.
This dude has always aimed to create this music that is LOUDLY positive, aggressively positive, motivational even. I think he finally perfectly executed that concept with the album Youre Not Alone, it’s so good
The first time I ever saw or heard of AWK, was SNL with The Rock. It was a great show and I watched back on VHS several times.
It was the band that was me and my wife’s ‘band that’s ours’. Not mine or hers, but ours.
And then we saw him live in Orlando. It was amazing. Then again in Tampa.
Great shows, excellent music, party-positive hard core party atmosphere.
Love it. Thanks Andrew for great memories.
Maybe do a video of "Before stone Roses, how MADCHESTER became madchester". That would be nice
I have never spoken with him personally, but back around 2015 I worked with his tour manager and booked his hotel rooms for his tour. His requests were always modest and it was easy to find the right lodging for him because he kept it so simple and humble. Basically proximity to the venue and a place to park. It was like if one of your everyday friends also happened to be a rock star.
I've seen him twice, once at Leeds, once in Pompey. I broke my nose at Leeds, and my arm in Pompey. Can't wait to go see him again.
Andrew W.K. is an absolute sweetheart! I've never gotten to meet him, but back when he had social media I sent him a tweet and he tweeted me back and followed me. We interacted a few times and he was always just lovely. The world is a better place because he's in it and sharing his art and himself with us. 🥰
I remember he became an on the air host for Cartoon Network and I was as able to rediscover him after forgetting about Party Hard. I think he’s a really nice dude that spreads positivity and an insane urge to Party Hard.
I am a bit younger than most in this comment section because I first knew of him during the CN real era and didn't see any notice of anyone mentioning it until I read your comment.He definitely stood out terms of his image and music and never knew much about him or his music until I watched this video.Sure he comes across as cheesy but I loved what he and his music have done for many people.
I went to an Andrew WK concert in 2003 when I was living in the netherlands and after the show he stayed around to write a personal message on everyone's ticket. It was a small show like only 40 people but so awesome as he invited everyone to jump on stage during We Want Fun. Such a cool guy and so glad I got to meet him then. I still have that ticket btw
I had no idea there was so much going on with Andrew W.K. I always saw him as a 1 hit wonder that had 1 kinda stupid but fun song. I just thought he was some crazy party guy. But he's actually a really talented musician. He's always had a fan base, but I don't think many people know him beyond the hit. Maybe he's had more hits in the US and UK.
Not really, here in the UK he had like one other kinda popular single with "She Is Beautiful" but "Party Hard" gets played at every rock club across the country to this day and it always gets people moving
Iv only heard party hard and that song sucks
@@freebee8221 hah nice bait
@@wereowl9369 thanks, but if youre telling me that you actually like that song, then you are lying. Theres nothing to like. Theres barely any riffs, and barely any melody in the singing.
@@freebee8221 ;)
Andrew is one of the nicest guys on the planet… he goes out of his way to make every fan feel appreciated, in a way that I’ve never experienced since.
This is awesome. When he lost the TH-cam polll I was concerned. Thank you guys for making this.
Having listened to him and seen him live, he truly comes off as a guy who just genuinely wants people to live their best life and try not to let mundane things get them down. Very uplifting and inspiring act to see. Hearing him speak about it in between set bits was a treat and he delivers 110% of that energy he's branded himself on. One of the most memorable shows I've been to.
I used to co-direct/produce a cable access show in Alabama called Tuscaloosa Monorail that featured mainly local bands, a few touring bands, nobody famous, (though we did almost have St. Paul and the Broken Bones before they became somewhat well-known.) One day the host of the show calls me up and says, out of the blue, that he'd called Andrew WK's management and asked for an interview while he was touring through Georgia and they'd said yes. We couldn't feature any of his music but Mr. WK was incredibly nice and gave it his all, especially considering we aired after midnight and had practically no viewers. Apparently after the interview he told our host that he'd actually been having a rough few days and that doing this kinda weird interview with non-indistry types really cheered him up.
How in the world was a show named Tuscaloosa Monorail not the biggest thing around in its day?!
I certainly would have done an appearance. (Not even of local fame anywhere though so not a great win for the mighty T.M. but I would have turned up)
I forgot it's actually on youtube: th-cam.com/video/HNRcgX_kiYE/w-d-xo.html
If you go to 25:00 Andrew tells a story about how one of his bandmates once pulled a guy's head off during a fight.
Interesting character I had no idea! But you know, you should totally do a video on Killing Joke or Godflesh, two highly underrated but influential UK bands!
I'd definitely watch a Godflesh doc
Huge yes for Killing Joke!!
Godflesh all the way!
Killing Joke is amazing and ridiculously influential; we absolutely need a documentary on them
Hell yes. Both bands are amazing. Streetcleaner melted my face the first time I heard it!
I always put Andrew W.K. In his own category. He’s a true one of a kind. When “I Get Wet” came out, it was a fresh breath of air in a sea of crap “bro” music at the time. It still goes down as one of my favorites and his interviews always make me smile.
I’ve gotten to meet quite a few musicians over the years due to work, Andrew stands out as one of my favorite people.
He always seemed like like such a down to earth dude. I was happy to hear he engaged Kat Dennings, as she always seemed weird, but grounded.
Andrews first album is one of the best metal albums ever made. It is so unique in its approach and intention, it opened up a new aesthetic path in metal that still has barely been explored.
Oh c'mon. His music sucks. He doesnt have any good songs.
@@freebee8221 yeah, you really sound like the type of person who actually listened to them all
@@wienersmcbutts well I listened 2 of the so called hits and they sucked. It just doesnt work. Theres no good riffs or good melodies. And the whole "party" thing doesnt really go together with metal.
@@freebee8221 Listen to Babalon, a new track this video doesn't mention. It's a banger.
Although idk how you can listen to Party Hard or We Want Fun and not just have a good time
I'm all for positivity. But If you're gonna do the 'anyone who doesn't like this is a hater of anything positive', I gotta call BS. Positivity isn't all you need. the music still has to be good, or are we going to get a video about the history of William Hung and 'She Bangs', because he was positive as hell?
I saw a video of Andrew WK airdruming to Napalm Death's "Harmony Corruption" ... Yes, the whole record. Since then i have nothing but absolutw respect for the man.
That’s still one of my favorite things on TH-cam. I sent that to everyone I know haha. They too, thought it was awesome.
Nice work on this! Well narrated, no stock footage, lots of rare footage, and covering lots of new ground.
When I saw AWK live, I had the biggest smile on my face the whole set. It was amazing. I love him.
'If things stop feeling alright - just play it again, but louder'
excellent and true
I really liked his music and positive messages in his music back in the 2000s. Still listen now and it always brings me up emotionally to a better level.
The Hives front man said when you play one good riff for a long time, people get excited. When you play it longer let than they are used to, they lose their minds! The beginning of “Party Hard” proves that.
I might argue it set the stage for other 'party hard' acts like LMFAO, who are very similar in musical vibe, albeit in a different genre.
Even more recent artists like Little Big and Eskimo Callboy owe some amount of the general acceptance of their weirdness and musical fusion to Andrew WK, I think.
Having been in a band and essentially living at our local music venue from the early 90's through the early 2000's, I can't say that Andrew WK was at the top of anybody's album list: except for me and my girlfriends who were hooked instantly and memorized the entirety of I Get Wet in a week. From there we would just cruise around and play that album on full blast any chance we could get. Despite anyone else's opinion on his music, everyone respected him and those who had met him had nothing but positive things to say. I associate so many spectacular, joyous and hilarious memories with every single one of those songs. "We do what we like and we like what we do!!!": Love you Andrew WK!
He’s performance at Gathering of the Juggalos was awesome he’s smacking bottles away that people are throwing at him
Weird that he even went to that event
“This is for you.”
FOR YOU !!!
I feel like one of the only people on here who hasn't met Andrew WK.
You're not alone
David Bowie would be more than proud.I saw AWK do a sit down talk over 10 years ago and it made me love him even more. Who gives a fuck about reality anymore anyway? "Music is worth living for" and AWK is an inspiration to us all!
Great video essay. I love Andrew. He's legit. Interviewed him twice and always found him intentional and thoughtful. I even wrote a comic book titled Söngr and incorporated him into the story as a core character. Andrew even gave me his blessing to include him in it.
Dude hooked Kat Dennings at the end of the day, so like...
oh man I found this video and braced for a hit piece. Ive met him numerous times. he might be my favorite human outside of my own family. just a cool dude. everything you'd hope he'd be.
Me and a best friend met at 19, we bonded over our middle school love of Andrew wk. 10 years later his sister manages a record store he was doing an in store appearance for, she called us asking to bring him a 6pack of local beer… turned out it was for his manager, but still got to meet him again. exciting beer run none the less
Hard rock isn’t normally my genre so I missed getting into Andrew WK back in the day but thanks to your video I’ve found out how fun his music is and what a positive message he has. Thanks!
I looooove Andrew WK! He is uplifting and motivational! Seen him at Download 2018 and I would see him again in a heartbeat! I can't stop listening to Babalon, his vocals are only getting better!
I love Andrew WK. He is truly one of the kindest people I have ever met. He has so much love for his fans, and surprisingly, he has an insane memory for names. When I was a junior in high school, I emailed his manager for a photo pass to his Asbury Park, NJ show in 2003. Not only did they reply, Andrew made it a point to give me full access and allowed me to use the flash if I wanted to. At the show, the press photographers were given only the first three songs, but I was allowed to stay. It was just such a moving gesture from him. They even dropped me and my friend off at the nearest exit to our town after the show, haha. I've had so many amazing memories from Andrew shows, the lecture series, and fan events. Truly such an inspirational and genuine person full of passion. His bandmates have also always been such amazing people to see perform and meet. I have really never met anyone that put so much effort into being present and available for their fans at shows. Anyway, thanks for the great video!
Fuck, watching this video is just such an amazing journey down memory lane.
I’ve watched a few of your docs now, and I’m very impressed with you subject matter and delivery, sir. Excellent work!
This popped up on my feed just after I Googled Party Hard to use in a montage and I have so much more respect for this dude, I was a kid when his work came out and had no other clue other than great songs but wow
Im so glad I got back into Andrew WK. He's brilliant
I met him once at a talk he did at Oxford University, fucking cool awesome and lovely guy. He is genuinely super lovely, even just to meet briefly.
Wait, do people not know how hard the man has worked?! I mean to create even 1 perfect album is not simple. "I get wet" is a masterpiece
I was a huge fan of "I Get Wet", I still listen to it when I'm in a bad mood and just want to cheer up. Someone in high school gave it to me, they said, he's meh. and all of the songs sound the same. I was like, yeah, but if the song is pumping positivity for 45 minutes, I can deal with that. I finally got to see him live about 5 years later at the masquerade in atlanta. I was informed by a white t shirt wearing gentleman, that you havent been to an andrew wk concert if you havent touched Andrew. Literally 20 seconds into the first song, the whole crowd surged the stage, me included, and we all just danced and partied with the band while two defeated and sand security guards looked up. The band never stopped and we danced on stage with the band and it was wild. One of the most fun shows ive ever seen. I touched his elbow, can confirm hes a real person.
We need a part 2! WK is a fascinating person.
One of the only celebrities I truly want to meet. Andrew W.K. seems like such a complex person disguised as a simple party guy. I love how he is such an intense performer.
Utterly delighted you did Andrew WK :)
This doc was brilliantly composed and written *chefs kiss*
The imagery from the start was crisp and pungent in its kick and aptitude.
Just appreciating the composition of the video it’self, props!
Saw him at warped tour, couldn't stop smiling.
Deafhaven is another positive heavy group.
Didn't expect to see Deafheaven in a comments section about Andrew WK, but I could definitely see their Infinite Granite and Sunbather albums in a very similar light.
I remember first hearing We Want Fun on the first Jackass movie and that video of them partying after the movie is one of my favourite feel good moments.
2 mins in, unsure if this is an April fools gag.
it's not!
I saw him live once. Lots of kids, like 8 years old. He had extra microphones, guitarist Jimmy was guiding kids onto the stage, lowering mic stands, so the kids could sing along.
I've got a brick signed by him lol. I've seen him play piano live, he's legit. What a dude, we need more people like him in this world
I f'n miss Andrew WK. I really hope he comes back
Great vid (again) . Every now and again Rock N Roll needs to go to a quiet room , sit down and think what's this all about? When it comes up with the correct answer it comes out playing a song like Party Hard.
Nice turn of a phrase. You should be a journalist
I had the pleasure to interview Andrew WK for a cover story right before "I Get Wet" came out. He was such a nice person, spending plenty of time with me and signing his photo with a long, thoughtful message. I wish I got to see him live!