Link to the music video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NU9JoFKlaZ0&t=104s

The album American Idiot was released on September 21, 2004, and is now around 20 years old

Twenty years has gone so fast

Wake me up when September ends

What the song was about:

One of the songs in American Idiot, “Wake Me Up When September Ends”, is not entirely related to the album’s central narrative.[6][7] The song was inspired by the death of lead singer Billie Joe Armstrong’s father in September 1982.[5] On the day of his father’s funeral, Armstrong reportedly ran home, locked himself in his room, and when his mother came to check on him, he told her to wake him up when September ended,[8] and held onto the song title for several years after.[9] In an interview with the Howard Stern Show, Armstrong said that he initially avoided writing a song about his father for years, until he “[had] a breakthrough” and created “Wake Me Up When September Ends” in his honor.[

What the music video was about:

Bayer envisioned the video as a mini-movie,[50] wanting to create something unlike other music videos that he felt were predictable.[49] Bayer brought the idea of an Iraq War-themed video to the band after interviewing soldiers who had signed up to fight after being persuaded by a television advertisement.[51] Bayer also said that he wanted the music video to be more political than the album’s other music videos, saying that he “wanted kids to talk about the war,” and felt that MTV had not spread awareness of the conflict and its consequences on soldiers.[13] Although it was not the song’s original meaning, Armstrong felt it was appropriate.[52] Bayer and his crew spent a month casting actors for the roles and conducted rehearsals, which was uncommon for music videos.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wake_Me_Up_When_September_Ends#Music_video

  • Funderpants @lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    For me, this is one of the best albums of my lifetime. Perfectly timed in 2004, a great rock opera with an interesting story to tell from front to back. It’s an album where the vinyl experience, where you can’t skip or shuffle, is used to full effect. If you haven’t heard this album, or haven’t heard it in a long time, or haven’t heard it back to front with a critical ear to the text and subtext, we’ll, go listen right now.

    • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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      1 month ago

      I just keep hearing how green day has “gone woke” (because they changed their lyric to "I’m not a part of the maga agenda). Like, where the fuck were they for the last 20 years?! Green Day has always been against authoritarianism

  • AmidFuror@fedia.io
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    1 month ago

    Dookie is 30. On the Saviors tour which just ended, Green Day played the Dookie and American Idiot albums in their entirety over about 2.5 hours (plus some bonus songs).

    I’m aging myself more by saying I know 4-5 songs from American Idiot but almost all of Dookie.

  • 𝔼𝕩𝕦𝕤𝕚𝕒@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I like nearly every song on American Idiot. I recognize they had a body of work before, but this was my first CD, so it was something I listened to over and over. It seems so unusual to me buying other CDs through the years (in general) and finding out only 1 or 2 songs of the 13+ was ever famous. Contrasted to American Idiot with at least 4 major songs on it. (American Idiot, Boulevard of Broken Dreams, Holiday, Wake me up when September Ends), it made me feel like the disk was even more special for that.

    It is the only CD I have replaced multiple times due to scratching from age - I’m on my fourth CD. I take better care of them than I used to, so it will be one I will always have, even as physical media fades.

    I liked Wake Me Up When September Ends for the sound way back when, but now I like it for how it speaks to loss and how we heal over time, but never forget.