Trigger Happy

Album: Off The Deep End (1992)
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Songfacts®:

  • In this style parody of the surf-rock genre, Weird Al takes a shot at gun enthusiasts with itchy trigger fingers. "I just thought it would be fun to juxtapose a Beach Boys/Jan & Dean type surf riff with a song about a gun nut," he explained in the liner notes to his 1994 Permanent Record compilation.

    "I think the song's pro-gun control sentiment is fairly obvious, but one day I was doing an interview in Canada on a call-in talk show, and somebody called in and said 'Oh, I think it's great that you wrote this song, because I love guns, I got a lot of guns and I think it's great that you'd write a song like that.' Not wanting to explain the irony to someone who's heavily armed, I simply said 'Thank you very much!'"
  • This was featured on Yankovic's seventh studio album, Off The Deep End, which is known for the single "Smells Like Nirvana," his parody of Nirvana's hit "Smells Like Teen Spirit." A Top 20 hit in the US, the album was a much-needed boost for his career after UHF, a movie he wrote and starred in, flopped at the box office.
  • The lyrics contain a couple of movie references. The line "You better ask yourself, do you feel lucky, punk?" was inspired by Clint Eastwood's famous line from the 1971 film Dirty Harry. Eastwood, who plays the title detective, says a similar phrase as he holds a robber at gunpoint with .44 Magnum that may or may not be out of bullets.

    In the third verse, Al mistakes his dad for a drug-crazed Nazi and shoots him, only to criticize him for getting upset because "it's just a lousy flesh wound" - a reference to the 1975 comedy Monty Python And The Holy Grail when the Black Knight insists his lopped of arms are just a flesh wound.
  • Author Lily Hirsch, who took a scholarly approach to Yankovic's song catalog in her 2020 book, Weird Al: Seriously, used this song as an example of how the funny man sneaks political commentary into his work while maintaining "plausible deniability." She explained in a 2022 Songfacts interview: "The song takes aim at gun ownership and there is a hard juxtaposition between the happy, surfer sound and the lyrics, from the point of view of a gun nut. That clash is meant as commentary and criticism. As Al told me, he's not really a fan of guns. But there's always 'plausible deniability' in parody. And listeners can and have missed the point. There are even those who have viewed that song as some sort of celebration of gun ownership."
  • Off The Deep End is also significant for being Yankovic's first self-produced album. All of his previous works were produced by Rick Derringer of The McCoys.

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