"The Good Life" | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Weezer | ||||||
from the album Pinkerton | ||||||
Released | October 29, 1996 | |||||
Format | CD, cassette, vinyl | |||||
Recorded | September 1995 – June 1996 | |||||
Genre | Alternative rock, power pop, emo | |||||
Length | 4:17 | |||||
Label | DGC | |||||
Writer(s) | Rivers Cuomo | |||||
Producer(s) | Weezer | |||||
Weezer singles chronology | ||||||
|
||||||
|
Professional ratings | |
---|---|
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic |
"The Good Life" is a song by American alternative rock band Weezer. It was released in October 1996 as the second single from the band's second album Pinkerton as well as an EP in Australia. It was rush-released by the record company to try to save the commercially failing album, but was not successful.
In 1996, Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo underwent a corrective operation for his leg and was in a leg brace. The brace was debilitatingly painful and inspired the lyrics to the title song. It can also be noted that the inside picture in the CD's booklet is an X-ray of Rivers' leg brace.
The B-sides of this single/EP are notable as they are derived from the unreleased Weezer concept album, Songs from the Black Hole. The release includes two live acoustic tracks and the song "I Just Threw Out the Love of My Dreams", a collaboration with Rachel Haden of that dog. on lead vocals. The live songs were taken from a set played by the band at Shorecrest High School near Seattle. The school had won a contest and got Weezer to play during lunch in 1997. A very young Daniel Brummel of Ozma can be seen in the upper right side of the EP's cover.
The song's music video, directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, features a pizza delivery girl (played by Mary Lynn Rajskub) on her route, highlighting the monotony of her job. The music video is noted for its use of simultaneous camera angles appearing on screen as a fractured full image in a technique jokingly described by Weezer bassist Scott Shriner on the band's March 2004 DVD Video Capture Device as being "so innovative, I've never seen it since." Blink-182's video for their November 2004 single "Always" used a similar technique. The video's directors would go on to cast Mary Lynn Rajskub as Pageant Assistant Pam in their first feature-length motion picture Little Miss Sunshine.