Weezer's Japanesque 2nd Album

Licensing

In the band’s second album “Pinkerton,” Weezer promotes its Japanophilic sense most notably in three of their songs: “Across the Sea,” “El Scorcho,” and “Falling For You.” What immediately sets this album off as a product of Japanophilia is its cover, which appears to be something taken from an ukiyo-e print and mass-produced to be used as the CD sleeve. Prior to the release of the album, Weezer also released their “El Scorcho” single, which most assuredly inspired the album cover of “Pinkerton.” In Weezer’s single release, we see on the cover what could be described as a Japanese woman in traditional attire and holding an umbrella, almost as though the picture were taken sometime in one of Japan’s more traditional ages. We also see the half-revealed CD, which has representational pictures of using chopsticks, just to add to its Japaneseness.
At a deeper level, the lyrics of the three tracks I listed contain references to Japanese things, authenticating this album’s direct correlation with the already exoticized portrayal of Japan. The lyrics within the above mentioned songs make reference to things such as “stationery” (Across the Sea) that could only be found in Japan, to “[those] god damn Japanese girls, [who] do it to me every time…,” (El Scorcho) possibly in reference to some bitter past occurrences, but nevertheless with reference to Japanese ‘things.’ In the beginning of “Falling for You,” a Japanese woman mutters something before the bass and guitar come in, though to this date, I do not have a clue what the woman says. I have also looked through some online lyrics websites, but they only note Cuomo’s, lead singer of Weezer, opening lyrics.

Album Type

other

Tags

SwiftSpyRunner — Last modified Jun 28 2021 1:49 a.m.


Login or register
to contribute to the Nikkei Album

Welcome to the NEW Nikkei Album!

We've launched Nikkei Album in beta, so everyone can now start uploading and creating their own albums. There may be things that don't work quite right yet. Please email us to report any errors.

Browse the Nikkei Album

Get updates

Sign up for email updates

Journal feed
Events feed
Comments feed

Support this project

Discover Nikkei

Discover Nikkei is a place to connect with others and share the Nikkei experience. To continue to sustain and grow this project, we need your help!

Ways to help >>

A project of the Japanese American National Museum


The Nippon Foundation