8 Bit Whats My Age Again Downlaod

1999 unmarried by Glimmer-182

"What's My Age Over again?"
WhatsMyAgeAgain.jpg
Single by Blink-182
from the anthology Enema of the State
Released Apr 13, 1999
Recorded Jan–March 1999
Genre Pop punk
Length 2:26
Label MCA
Songwriter(s)
  • Marking Hoppus
  • Tom DeLonge
Producer(s) Jerry Finn
Blink-182 singles chronology
"Josie"
(1998)
"What'southward My Age Again?"
(1999)
"All the Small Things"
(2000)

"What's My Historic period Again?" is a song past American rock band Blink-182. It was released in April 1999 as the atomic number 82 unmarried from the group's 3rd studio album, Enema of the State (1999), released through MCA Records. "What'due south My Age Again?" shares writing credits between the band's guitarist Tom DeLonge and bassist Mark Hoppus, just Hoppus was the master composer of the song. Information technology was the band's first single to feature drummer Travis Barker. A mid-tempo pop punk song, "What's My Age Again?" is memorable for its distinctive, arpeggiated guitar intro.

The vocal lyrically revolves around the onset of historic period and maturity, and the failure to implement changes in one'due south behavior. Hoppus declined to label the song as autobiographical, but admitted that he spent his twenties acting young. The trio recorded the song with producer Jerry Finn. It was originally titled "Peter Pan Circuitous", an innuendo to the pop-psychology concept, but the record label found the reference obscure and adjusted the title. The vocal's signature music video famously features the ring running nude on the streets of Los Angeles. It received heavy rotation on MTV and other music video channels.

Information technology became 1 of the band'south all-time-performing singles, peaking at number 2 on Billboard 'south Mod Rock Tracks chart in the U.S. for ten weeks. The song placed at number three in Italy and number 17 in the United Kingdom. Primarily an airplay hit, the vocal was the ring's first to cross over to pop radio, hitting number 58 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song received positive reviews and has been called a classic pop punk track; NME placed information technology at number 117 on its list "150 Best Tracks of the Past 15 Years" in 2012.[1]

Background and writing [edit]

Bassist and vocalizer Mark Hoppus initially equanimous the song equally a joke.

Blink-182, consisting of bassist Marking Hoppus, guitarist Tom DeLonge, and drummer Scott Raynor, formed in the early on 1990s, and by the terminate of the decade, had reached commercial success with their second album, 1997's Dude Ranch. Its pb single, "Dammit (Growing Upward)", became one of the most-played U.S. modern rock hits of 1998,[two] sending its parent album to a aureate certification and bringing the members newfound notoriety and wealth. With his first advance from major-characterization MCA, Hoppus purchased a abode in the band's hometown of San Diego, California. Hoppus adult "What'southward My Age Again?" while sitting on the floor and playing guitar in his kitchen/living room.[3] He was attempting to play the song "J.A.R." by Greenish Mean solar day, which has a distinctive intro on bass guitar. While practicing playing the riff, Hoppus came upwards with a new vocal derived from his failure to perform the part correctly.[4]

Though he initially developed it equally a vulgar joke song,[v] he felt it had potential as a regular tune. Hoppus claims it took him five minutes to write. He later presented the vocal to the ring while rehearsing at DML Studios in Escondido, California, where they had booked time for two weeks to write new songs.[6] Earlier that year, Raynor had been expelled from the group and replaced with percussionist Travis Barker, previously of the ska-punk act the Aquabats. He and DeLonge plant the limerick agreeable and further developed it in the rehearsal space. The story in the song is not strictly autobiographical, but its cardinal theme resonated with Hoppus, who spent his twenties by his own admission "acting similar a jackass teenager".[7] Barker agreed, afterward commenting: "[Mark] was a grown man but kept acting like a kid."[6] Many Glimmer songs center on maturity—"more specifically, their lack of information technology, their attitude toward their lack of it, or their eventual broad-eyed exploration of it" according to writer Nitsuh Abebe.[8]

Composition [edit]

"What's My Age Again?" is credited to Tom DeLonge and Mark Hoppus.[nine] Though Barker helped write the songs on Enema of the State, only Hoppus and DeLonge received songwriting credits, as Barker was technically a hired musician, not official band fellow member.[10] The song is two minutes and twenty-8 seconds long. The song is composed in the key of G-flat major and is set in time signature of common time with a driving tempo of 158 beats per minute. Hoppus' vocal range spans from Db3 to Gb4.[11] It follows a I–Five–half-dozen–IV chord progression, common across several genres of music. The band utilize the progression in numerous other singles; music educator and writer Dan Bennett claims the progression is sometimes called the "pop-punk progression" because of its frequent use in the genre.[12] The song is incredibly cursory compared to well-nigh singles; inside one infinitesimal, almost two full verses and a chorus have been completed, and it in full runs two minutes and twenty-six seconds.[3]

The song opens with a tricky, arpeggiated guitar role, following the song's chords in playing the root of each chord. The office has been considered tricky to perform; given its quick, articulated nature, it can be difficult to skip over the strings properly.[three] Hoppus's bass line, which has been compared to the Pixies' song "Debaser",[13] situates on the root notes of each chord.[12] The vocal's offset verse item an intimate relationship gone amiss. Hoppus sings of wearing cologne in hopes to impress a girl on a weekend date. Upon returning home, foreplay ensues, during which the protagonist begins watching television set.[14] This prompts his insulted partner to get out, leading into the song's chorus, in which Hoppus sings that "nobody likes you when yous're 23." Hoppus was 25 when he wrote the song, and simply included the lyric to rhyme. The song utilizes power chords in its chorus, and substitutes the arpeggiated intro for palm-muted power chords in the succeeding poesy.[iii]

Each chorus is lyrically singled-out, which was i of Hoppus'south original goals; he felt this approach kept the vocal interesting and advanced the story in a creative way. Hoppus had once read that "the best art is the evolution of familiarity": an artist introduces an idea, a listener connects with it, and the creative person slightly alters the original idea to retain a familiar feeling.[iii]

Recording and production [edit]

"What's My Age Again?" was the trio's showtime single with drummer Travis Barker.

After further development, the group presented it to producer Jerry Finn. A veteran engineer, Finn came to fame mixing Light-green Solar day's breakthrough album Dookie (1994). Finn was suggested by the label as an option for producing Enema of the State; the band got along with him immediately, and continued to work with him on their future projects. Finn would advise and make adjustments where necessary, though in the instance of "What'south My Age Again?", he had little notes. Past the time Hoppus presented the song to his bandmates, the first verse and chorus were written, with its second verse and bridge section needing farther work. Hoppus and DeLonge crafted an instrumental bridge that went on for eight measures, which all agreed felt as well long.[3] Finn assisted in shortening the section, and the group recorded a demo at DML Studios.

Within the new twelvemonth, the group recorded the vocal proper. The drums on Enema of the State were tracked at Mad Hatter Studios in North Hollywood, a space one time owned by jazz musician Chick Corea. Hoppus remembered that Finn was meticulous in recording the kit, spending hours on microphone placement, also every bit picking compressors and at which rate they would run.[3] Barker recorded his drum portions, also every bit the rest of the anthology's twelve songs, in eight hours.[15] From at that place, Hoppus and DeLonge recorded their bass and guitar tracks at multiple studios throughout Los Angeles and San Diego.[ix] The band brought in session musician Roger Joseph Manning Jr.—best known for his career in the band Jellyfish and work with Beck—to add keyboard parts in the background of the vocal.[16]

The song originally concluded afterward its terminal chorus. While recording, Hoppus liked how the arpeggiated chord progression continued over the rhythm guitar line in the last chorus, and wished to extend its length to highlight this element. In the pre-digital recording environs, this required the squad to "bounce" the mix from the analog record recorder (a 24 runway 2-inch record) to another record, and splice the recordings together. With recording complete, the vocal was sent to engineer Tom Lord-Alge, who mixed the song at his Southward Embankment Studios facility in Miami Beach, Florida.[17] Lord-Alge had had previously remixed the Dude Ranch singles "Dammit" and "Josie" for radio, and would work with the group frequently in the futurity. Lord-Alge added subtle touches, including a panning outcome for the title phrase in the terminal chorus.[3]

Release and chart performance [edit]

The song's title originally referenced fictional children's graphic symbol Peter Pan.

The working title for the song was "Peter Pan Complex",[xviii] referencing the pop psychology concept of an developed who is socially young. Executives at MCA Records were uncertain that listeners would connect with the title, given it goes unmentioned in the song's lyrics. Previously, the label had appended parentheses to its two stateside singles from Dude Ranch: "Dammit (Growing Upwardly)" and "Josie (Everything's Gonna Be Fine)". The label was also concerned almost litigation from the Walt Disney Company, who held rights to the name post-obit their film adaption.[3] The ring disliked the suggestion,[19] but given the creative liberty MCA had afforded them throughout recording, agreed to the modify. Hoppus subsequently conceded the new title made more sense and "feels right".[3] Band direction and label executives saw a potent single in "What's My Age Once again?" although DeLonge felt otherwise: "I didn't understand information technology, because up to that point, nosotros hadn't had a large single."[19]

Commercially, "What's My Age Over again?" became one of the band'south all-time-performing singles. It was picked as the lead single from Enema of the State. It was offset serviced to radio in April 1999, and premiered on KROQ-FM, an influential Los Angeles alternative station. Hoppus remembered the grouping were finalizing mixing the album when the song debuted.[20] The song did best on Billboard 's Modern Stone Tracks chart; the song first entered the nautical chart during the week of May 8, where information technology debuted at number 21.[21] It commencement hit the height five during the week of June five,[22] and hit number two on July 24,[23] where information technology remained for ten weeks behind the Cherry Hot Chili Peppers' "Scar Tissue".[24] The vocal crossed over to mainstream radio in mid-1999, where it debuted at number 71 on the Billboard Hot 100 on July 17.[25] Information technology later peaked at number 58 in the outcome dated October 23.[26] The song had previously peaked at number 51 on the Hot 100 Airplay chart on September 11.[27] In the United Kingdom, the vocal was released twice, beginning on September twenty, 1999, and once again on June 26, 2000, following the success of "All the Small Things.[28] [29] The 2000 re-release peaked at number 17 on the UK Singles Chart.[30]

Disquisitional reception [edit]

The truth is that information technology was always a little strange for grown men to be writing songs about prom dark and other high-schoolhouse pitfalls, but "What'southward My Historic period Again?" works then well considering it tackles that strangeness head-on. Aside from featuring Blink'south most recognizable riff this side of "Dammit", the song is an honest, relatable assessment of what it feels like to be dragged kick and screaming into adulthood. It's rock and roll equally escape, aye, but also as a kind of backpedaling. Let the rock bands of the '70s champion sex activity and drugs; these guys but want to remember what it feels like to exist kids once more.

—Collin Brennan, Consequence of Sound [31]

Carrie Bell at Billboard deemed the song a "peppy punk canticle"[seven] while Spin columnist Jeffery Rotter chosen it an "platonic tonic for back-to-school nausea."[32] A Kerrang! writer chosen the song "ridiculously infectious,"[33] while the New Musical Limited (NME) derided the song as "more than mindless, punk-pop guitar thrashing from the world's current favorite American brats ... on the plus side, the song — much like Blink-182's career, we hope — only lasts for two-and-a-one-half minutes."[30] Stephen Thompson, writing for The A.V. Club, complimented its tricky sensibility, remarking, "you'll never go broke creating an anthem for immature mail service-adolescents, even working within a well-worn genre."[34]

Later reviews have subsequently been positive. Jon Blisten of Beats Per Minute deemed it one of the record'southward "finest songs," calling it a "twisted, self-depreciating test of man-children."[35] In 2014, Chris Payne of Billboard called it "the quintessential Glimmer manifesto — the story of a twenty-something who nevertheless acts similar a kid."[36] The website Issue of Sound, in a 2015 summit 10 of the ring's all-time songs, ranked information technology as number six, with writer Collin Brennan observing that its title is "the question underpinning the unabridged Glimmer ethos".[31]

Music video [edit]

Filming [edit]

The opening shot depicts the band running nude downwardly 3rd Street in Los Angeles.[37]

The music video for "What's My Age Again?", directed past Marcos Siega, features the band running in the nude through the streets of Los Angeles, as well as through commercials and daily news programs.[38] Information technology was filmed shortly after completing the anthology, and was co-directed by Brandon PeQueen. Siega and PeQueen developed the thought from the ring's onstage antics; Barker would oftentimes strip down to his boxers due to estrus, while Hoppus would sometimes disrobe entirely, with only his bass guitar roofing his genitals.[39] Siega had known the band for many years at that indicate, having seen them play minor clubs years before.[40] He partially credited the idea to a belatedly-night talk show segment about a streaker. Hoppus and DeLonge were immediately receptive to the thought; Barker less and so. "My brain kept going to the sort of anti-establishment punk rock ethic that I associated them with. Just non in an aggro way. They ever came across to me equally doing it with a flash," Siega later on recalled.[sixteen]

The group wore flesh-colored Speedos for nearly scenes.[41] The clip features a cameo appearance by porn star Janine Lindemulder, the model featured on the cover of Enema of the State.[42] Barker remembered that motorists "kept staring at us and honking their horns," and that the unabridged filming took nearly fifteen hours. "They virtually got into accidents," Hoppus told Rolling Stone.[43]

Popularity [edit]

The video first began receiving airplay in early May 1999, debuting on U.South. television set channels MTV, MTV2 and The Box.[44] The video was MTV'due south second-virtually played video for the calendar week catastrophe August 1,[45] and remained a popular video on the channel for over two years.[46] The video was nominated for Best Alternative Video at the 2000 MVPA Awards,[47] merely lost to Foo Fighters' "Larn to Fly".[48] The band referenced the clip at the 1999 Billboard Awards, which opened with a prune of the band streaking through Las Vegas,[49] as well as through appearances on Total Request Live and the scripted sitcom Two Guys, a Daughter and a Pizza Identify.[50] Entertainment Weekly author Chris Willman called the video "ubiquitous".[14]

Marcos Siega, the video's director, in 2014.

The video gave the band a reputation for nudity,[38] leading many critics to pigeonhole them as a joke act.[14] "It became something of an boundness every bit band members grew up," wrote Richard Harrington of The Washington Post.[50] "You lot know, when we were filming the video for "What's My Age Again?" the whole naked affair was only funny for similar ten minutes. Then, I was the guy standing naked on the side of the street Los Angeles with cars driving by me giving me the finger and shit. It's funny watching the video at present, but at the time, it stopped beingness funny ten minutes in, and it definitely wasn't funny 3 days into it," recalled Tom DeLonge.[38]

This reputation would lead the band members to take control of their marketing and image, as DeLonge subsequently commented in 2014:

Nosotros were so naïve that we would run around naked, but they'd make information technology all glossy and put it on posters and make it look like nosotros really were some kind of erotic boy ring or some shit. We were coming from the punk scene, merely the characterization fashioned a whole thing around u.s.a. that we didn't fifty-fifty understand; we were just kinda caught upward in it. So it took usa a little bit to dig out of that and come up back to who we actually were. And it's hard to exercise that once people spend millions of dollars making y'all into something visually that we weren't.[51]

Legacy [edit]

"What'due south My Age Again?" has endured as amid the band's most pop songs, and has widely been considered a watershed moment for popular punk as a genre. Several of the group's contemporaries ranked the song amongst the most genre's well-nigh influential, including Jack Barakat of All Time Low, Pierre Bouvier and Chuck Comeau from Simple Program, and Tyson Ritter of the All-American Rejects.[52] Rolling Stone 's Nicole Frehsée wrote that, "For a new generation of emo fans and bands, Blink'southward irreverent, upbeat take on punk rock with hits like "What's My Age Again?" and "All the Small Things" was hugely influential."[53] Twenty years after the vocal'south release, Hoppus noted that fans often decorate birthday cakes on their 23rd altogether with the lyric "Nobody likes you when you're 23", which he felt was an honor.[3] The band afterward paid homage to the song'southward infamous video in the music video for their 2016 unmarried "She'south Out of Her Mind". The clip sees modernistic-day social media personalities running in the nude in Los Angeles. Lindemulder'southward identify in the video was taken by player and comedian Adam DeVine.[54]

The Hollywood Reporter 's Mischa Pearlman, in a review a 2013 concert by the grouping, wrote that the song "visibly infects every member of the audience. Because it'south a song that recalls the reckless abandon of youth, and the abandon of growing up."[55] Although the magazine gave the song a scathing review upon its initial release,[30] NME placed it at number 117 on its list "150 Best Tracks of the Past fifteen Years" about xiii years later, writing, "Few songs capture the urge of wanting to act stupid and exist young besides as this 2000 unmarried does. [...] This is everything pop punk does well. Its guitar riffs seem to have been soaked in Relentless and its chorus makes you want to bound around the room. It'southward been imitated thousands of times since, but nothing's come close to this..."[56]

By the late 2000s, guild promoters in the U.K. created nights based around lasting appreciation of the popular punk genre, including i named afterwards "What's My Age Again?", described every bit a night celebrating "popular-punk, youthful abandon and teenage riot".[57] British radio station BBC Radio i accept a section on one of their shows named after the single and using it equally the theme song. Greg James originated the game on his drivetime prove, and has moved it to The BBC Radio one Breakfast Show. The game sees Greg pitted against an opponent, typically a beau Radio 1 DJ/presenter or celebrity guest. In the game, three listeners phone in and talk to the competitors, who take it in turns to ask questions, then effort to guess the listeners' age.

On March 26, 2019, the song was lauded by Princeton professor of music Steven Mackey during an interview between Hoppus and Mackey given at Princeton University.[58] Mackey praised the lyrics by saying, "it'south very much this portrait of this kind of 23 year quondam... Peter Pan complex", noting his enjoyment of the structure of the song, also as its tone. Mackey stated, "subsequently the second chorus there's this instrumental interruption. And in that location's a lot of instrumental breaks in blink, which I really like. This one in particular, information technology goes to a minor fundamental. All of a sudden, information technology'southward kind of melancholy. And when they come out of that instrumental break, and I hear the balance of the words, information technology's sort of like... I feel like, wow, was that a moment of reflection? So it's like, 'Ah, fuck it. Whatever.' It has that feeling. It sort of deepens it for me."[59]

Mashup [edit]

"What'south My Age Over again? / A Milli"
Single by Blink-182 and Lil Wayne
Released Baronial 23, 2019 (2019-08-23)
Genre
  • Pop punk
  • rap rock
Length two:25
Characterization Columbia
Songwriter(due south)
  • Mark Hoppus
  • Travis Barker
  • Tom DeLonge
  • Dwayne Carter
  • Ali Shaheed Muhammad
  • Kamaal Ibn John Fareed
  • Shondrae Crawford
Glimmer-182 singles chronology
"Darkside"
(2019)
"What's My Age Again? / A Milli"
(2019)
"I Really Wish I Hated Y'all"
(2019)
Lil Wayne singles chronology
"Be Like Me"
(2019)
"What'southward My Age Again? / A Milli"
(2019)

In May 2019, the band recorded a live mashup of the song with hip hop creative person Lil Wayne, to promote their joint headlining tour.[60] The rails combines "What's My Age Again? and Wayne's 2008 single "A Milli". The duo after released a joint digital unmarried featuring a studio version of the mashup in Baronial of that year.[61] The track features Matt Skiba, who replaced founding guitarist Tom DeLonge in 2015, performing backing vocals and guitar. A press release promoted the new version, which was released to promote the second leg of the same tour, as a "new accept on the rails."[62]

The Fader contributor Jordan Darville noted that Wayne altered a lyric from his original verse, substituting the term "crackers" for "bitches".[63]

Credits and personnel [edit]

Original version [edit]

Credits adjusted from the liner notes of Enema of the State.[ix]
Locations

  • Recorded at Signature Sound, Studio West, San Diego California; Mad Hatter Studios, The Bomb Factory, Los Angeles, California; Conway Recording Studios, Hollywood, California; Big Fish Studios, Encinitas, California
  • Mixed at Conway Recording Studios, Hollywood, California; South Embankment Studios, Miami, Florida

Personnel

Mashup version [edit]

Credits adapted from the YouTube video for "What's My Age Again?" / "A Milli". Barker is credited with songwriting on this edition, equally opposed to his original credits for Enema of the State.[64]
Personnel

Blink-182
  • Mark Hoppus – bass guitar, vocals, songwriting
  • Matt Skiba – guitars, vocals
  • Travis Barker – drums, percussion, songwriting

Additional musicians

  • Shondrae Crawford – songwriting
  • Tom DeLonge – songwriting
  • Kamaal Ibn John Fareed – songwriting
  • Ali Shaheed Muhammad – songwriting
  • Lil Wayne – vocals, songwriting

Production

  • Matt Malpass – engineer
  • Rich Costey – mixing engineer
  • Chris Athens – mastering engineer

Charts and certifications [edit]

References [edit]

Footnotes [edit]

  1. ^ "150 Best Tracks Of The By fifteen Years". Nme.Com. Retrieved Jan 12, 2012.
  2. ^ "The Year in Music 1998: Hot Modern Rock Tracks" (PDF). Billboard. December 26, 1998. p. YE-84.
  3. ^ a b c d e f thou h i j chiliad DeMakes, Chris (October 19, 2020). Chris DeMakes a Podcast. Ep. 21: Mark Hoppus discusses blink-182's "What'due south My Historic period Over again?". Spotify.
  4. ^ Aniftos, Rania (Oct ten, 2020). "Blink-182's Mark Hoppus Reveals the Green Day Song That Inspired 'What's My Age Again?'". Billboard . Retrieved November 2, 2020.
  5. ^ "Blink-182: Inside Enema". Kerrang! (1586): 24–25. September 16, 2015.
  6. ^ a b Barker & Edwards 2015, p. 122.
  7. ^ a b Bell, Carrie (August fourteen, 1999). "The Modern Historic period". Billboard. Vol. 111, no. 33. p. 99. Retrieved June 1, 2014.
  8. ^ Nitsuh Abebe (September 25, 2011). "Sentimental Teaching". New York. Archived from the original on September 6, 2012. Retrieved September v, 2012.
  9. ^ a b c Enema of the Land (liner notes). Blink-182. United States: MCA. 1999. 11950. {{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  10. ^ Barker & Edwards 2015, p. 119.
  11. ^ "Blink-182 What's My Age Again? – Digital Canvass Music". Music Notes. EMI Music Publishing. Retrieved April 20, 2011.
  12. ^ a b Bennett, Dan (2008). The Total Rock Bassist, p. 63. ISBN 978-0739052693
  13. ^ "Tape Social club: Revisiting Blink-182′south 'Enema of the State'". Wondering Sound. October xiv, 2014. Retrieved December 12, 2014.
  14. ^ a b c Willman, Chris (February 25, 2000). "Nude Sensation". Entertainment Weekly. New York City: Fourth dimension Inc. (527). ISSN 1049-0434. Archived from the original on January 27, 2013. Retrieved January 7, 2013.
  15. ^ Barker & Edwards 2015, p. 123.
  16. ^ a b Siegel, Alan (July 31, 2019). "Don't Grow Up, Blow Upwardly: The Rise of Blink-182". The Ringer. Archived from the original on July 31, 2019. Retrieved July 31, 2019.
  17. ^ Tingen, Paul (April i, 2000). "Tom Lord-Alge: From Manson To Hanson". Audio on Sound.
  18. ^ Hoppus, Mark (2000). Blink-182: The Mark Tom and Travis Prove 2000 Official Program. MCA Records. p. 14.
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  30. ^ a b c Shooman 2010, p. 69.
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  39. ^ Barker & Edwards 2015, p. 124.
  40. ^ "Marcos Siega: The Stone Guy". MTV News. 2000. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
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  49. ^ Shooman 2010, p. 71.
  50. ^ a b Richard Harrington (June 11, 2004). "Seriously, Blink-182 Is Growing Up". The Washington Post . Retrieved February 25, 2014.
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  54. ^ Brittany Spanos (Oct xx, 2016). "Picket Blink-182 Recreate 'Age' Video in 'She's Out of Her Heed' Clip". Rolling Stone . Retrieved October 21, 2016.
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Sources [edit]

  • Barker, Travis; Edwards, Gavin (2015). Can I Say: Living Big, Cheating Expiry, and Drums, Drums, Drums. William Morrow. ISBN978-0-06-231942-5.
  • Hoppus, Anne (October 1, 2001). Blink-182: Tales from Beneath Your Mom. MTV Books / Pocket Books. ISBN0-7434-2207-4.
  • Shooman, Joe (June 24, 2010). Glimmer-182: The Bands, The Breakdown & The Return. Independent Music Printing. ISBN978-1-906191-ten-8.

External links [edit]

  • Music video on YouTube

herrerahalle1987.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What%27s_My_Age_Again%3F

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