Those Damned Blue-Collar Tweekers

"Those Damned Blue-Collar Tweekers"
Song by Primus
from the album Sailing the Seas of Cheese
ReleasedMay 14, 1991 (1991-05-14)
RecordedJanuary 1991
StudioFantasy (Berkeley, California)
Genre
Length5:20
LabelInterscope
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Primus

"Those Damned Blue-Collar Tweekers" is a song by the American rock band Primus. The song opens with Larry LaLonde on guitar and a reserved bassline from Les Claypool, from there alternating between his trademark slap bass and a quiet section for the vocals.

The song's narrative describes several different trades that the town's blue collar tweekers engage in, but, like many of the other story-telling songs in Primus's catalogue, lacks any clear, single meaning and leaves plenty of ambiguity in its lyrics. The song is about truck drivers and "blue-collar workers" using methamphetamine.

I was born in a suburb by the East Bay, a rural, almost redneck environment. I grew up on the blue-collar side of town. My father was a mechanic, both my uncles are mechanics, my grandfather was a mechanic. That song is not derogatory at all. It’s very much me. A tweaker is someone who is strung out on methyl amphetamines, otherwise known as crank. There’s a reference in there to a guy who hung Sheetrock, and that’s how he got through the day. He’d snort up speed to keep up with the younger guys.

Les Claypool