Weezer
Weezer can be booked through this site. Weezer entertainment booking site. Weezer
is available for public concerts and events. Weezer can be booked for
private events and Weezer can be booked for corporate events and
meetings through this Weezer booking page.
Unlike most middle agents that would mark
up the performance or appearance fee for Weezer, we act as YOUR agent in
securing Weezer at the best possible price. We go over the rider for
Weezer and work directly with Weezer or the responsible agent for
Weezer to secure the talent for your event. We become YOUR agent,
representing YOU, the buyer.
In fact, in most cases we can negotiate for
the acquisition of Weezer for international dates and newer promoters
providing you meet professional requirements.
Weezer Biography
As one of the most popular groups to emerge in the post-grunge
alternative rock aftermath, Weezer received equal amounts of criticism
and praise for their hook-heavy guitar pop. Drawing from the heavy
power pop of arena rockers like Cheap Trick and the angular guitar
leads of the Pixies, Weezer leavened their melodies with doses of '70s
metal learned from bands like Kiss. But what set the band apart was
their geekiness. None of the members of Weezer, especially leader
Rivers Cuomo, were conventional rockers -- they were kids that holed up
in their garage, playing along with their favorite records when they
weren't studying or watching TV. As a result, their music was infused
with a quirky sense of humor and an endearing awkwardness that made
songs like Undone (The Sweater Song), Buddy Holly, and Say It
Ain't So into big modern rock hits during 1994 and 1995. All the
singles were helped immeasurably by clever videos, which may have made
the songs into hits, but they also made many critics believe that the
band was a one-hit wonder. Perversely, Cuomo began to feel the same
way, and decided that the band would not rely on any visual gimmicks
for their second album, 1996's Pinkerton. Simultaneously, Cuomo took
control of the band, making them into a vehicle for his songwriting.
While the album didn't sell as well as their 1994 eponymous debut, it
did earn stronger reviews than its predecessor. Cuomo's assumption of
the leadership of Weezer wasn't entirely a surprise, since he had been
the band's primary songwriter since their inception in 1993. Raised in
Massachusetts, Cuomo moved out to Los Angeles to go to college in the
late '80s. During high school, he had played with a number of metal
bands, but once he arrived in college, he became interested in
alternative and post-punk music. By 1993, he had formed Weezer with
bassist Matt Sharp and drummer Patrick Wilson. Over the course of the
next year, they played in the competitive Los Angeles club scene,
eventually landing a deal with DGC during the post-Nirvana alternative
signing boom. Three days before the band began recording their debut
with producer Ric Ocasek, they added guitarist Brian Bell. Upon
completing the record, Weezer went on hiatus temporarily -- Cuomo was
studying at Harvard when their eponymous debut record came out. With
the support of DGC and a striking, Spike Jonze-directed video, Undone
(The Sweater Song) became a modern rock hit in the fall of 1994, but
what made Weezer a crossover hit was Buddy Holly. Jonze created an
innovative video that spliced the group into old footage from the
sitcom Happy Days and the single quickly became a hit, making the album
a multi-platinum hit as well. By the time the album's final single,
Say It Ain't So, was released in the summer of 1995, the group had
gone on hiatus, with Cuomo returning to Harvard. During the time off,
Sharp and Wilson formed the new wave revival band the Rentals, who had
a hit later that year with Friends of P. During the hiatus, Cuomo
became a recluse, disappearing at Harvard and suffering writer's block.
When Weezer reconvened in the spring of 1996 to record their second
album, he had written a loose concept album that featured far more
introspective material than their debut. Ironically, the band sounded
tighter on the resulting album, Pinkerton. Released in the fall to
generally strong reviews, the album failed to become a hit, partially
because Cuomo did not want the band to record another series of clever
videos. Grudgingly, the remainder of the band contented themselves to
be a supporting group for Cuomo, largely because each member had their
own solo project scheduled for release within the next year. DGC,
however, had the band make one last chance at a hit with The Good
Life, but by the time the single was released, MTV and modern rock
radio had withdrawn their support not only to Weezer, but their style
of guitar-driven punk-pop in general. Shortly after the tour in support
of Pinkerton was completed in 1997, it appeared as though Weezer had
fallen off the face of the planet. Stung by the public's initial dismal
reaction to their sophomore effort (ever-fickle Rolling Stone named
Pinkerton the Worst Album of 1996), the band took time off to regroup
and plan their next move. Unhappy with the sluggish rate of the
reassessment period, Sharp left the group to concentrate more fully on
the Rentals, fueling rumors that Weezer had broken up. But a funny
thing happened during Weezer's self-imposed exile -- while their
copycat offspring were falling by the wayside (Nerf Herder, Nada Surf),
a whole new generation of emocore enthusiasts discovered Weezer's
diamond-in-the-rough sophomore effort for the first time, and their
audience grew despite not having a new album in the stores.
Once Weezer's members wrapped up work on side projects (Bell: Space
Twins, Wilson: the Special Goodness), the band recruited former Juliana
Hatfield bassist Mikey Welsh to take the place of Sharp and began
working on new material. Before they could enter the recording studio
to record their third release, Weezer tested the waters by landing a
spot on the 2000 edition of the Warped Tour, where they were
consistently the day's highlight. Hooking up again with the producer of
their 1994 debut, Ric Ocasek, Weezer recorded what would be known as
the Green Album (a title given by fans since it was their second to
be self-titled). Issued in May of 2001, the album was an immediate hit,
debuting at number four on Billboard and camping out in the upper
reaches of the charts for much of the spring/summer, during which such
songs/videos as Hash Pipe and Island in the Sun became radio and
MTV staples, reestablishing Weezer as one of alt-rock's top dogs.
During their tour that summer, Welsh fell ill and was replaced by Scott
Shriner, also of the band Broken. That fall and winter the group busied
themselves with touring with bands like Tenacious D and recording their
next album Maladroit, which arrived a year after the Green Album.
Just before Maladroit's release, former bassist Matt Sharp sued Weezer,
seeking compensation and songwriting credit for songs such as Undone
(The Sweater Song), El Scorcho and The Good Life. The band
eventually reconciled with Sharp, though he didn't rejoin, and Weezer
continued on with the lineup of Cuomo, Bell, Wilson, and Shriner. The
limited edition live EP Lion and the Witch appeared in May 2002, and
Maladroit's Keep Fishin' was released as a single. Most of 2003 was
spent on side projects. Cuomo did some hired-gun songwriting, Bell's
band the Space Twins put out End of Imagining, and Wilson's Special
Goodness project issued Land, Air, Sea. In 2004 Weezer returned to the
studio, working with Rick Rubin on their fifth full-length album. Make
Believe appeared in May 2005, prepped by the single Beverly Hills. ~
Stephen Thomas Erlewine & Greg Prato, All Music Guide
Written by Stephen Thomas Erlewine