Various artists — Never Give Up: Celebrating 10 Years of The Postal Service
Big Worm — Bench All-Stars
Code 22 — Going Soft: The Acoustic Album!
Eureeka — Polysynthetic Fields
Tom Skinner — Tom Skinner
Tweezer
10 p.m. Tuesday
Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewing Company
50 Penn Place
belleislerestaurant.com
840-1911

If fans, however, would rather not drop 50 bucks to see Rivers Cuomo and company playing in the flesh, there exists an alternative — pun intended.
And that is Tweezer, a local Weezer tribute band that will take the stage Tuesday night at Belle Isle Restaurant & Brewing Company.
Throughout the past several years, Tweezer’s shows at Belle Isle have become a homecoming of sorts, said drummer Kris Monier. The bar’s booking agent usually leaves a spot open each November for the act.
The group agrees that Weezer’s freshman and sophomore efforts — the 1994 self-titled “blue” album and 1996’s Pinkerton, respectively — are the most canonical in Weezer’s catalog, so songs from both can be expected to compose most of the tribute band’s set list. Although the progression of albums thereafter haven’t compared, said Tweezer lead guitarist Danny Black, he added that “the core love is still there.”
Tweezer manages to squeeze in radio hits from Weezer’s double-decade discography, as well as requests.
“We play all — if not most, if not some — of your favorite Weezer songs,” said guitarist and lead vocalist Blake Fischer.
Tweezer formed in 2002, playing its first show at a coffee shop. Fischer said the act initially served as a vehicle for the four members to pay homage to one of their favorite bands when most of them were not performing in the now-defunct Minutes Too Far.
Monier said Tweezer also provides an excuse for them to hang out and catch up, since they no longer rehearse or play the songs they wrote together.
In his self-admitted guise as the Cuomo of the group, Fischer said a Tweezer show offers ample opportunity for them to act like rock stars, meaning that sometimes, the drinks are on the audience. And according to him, the adage that “The more you drink, the better we sound” certainly applies.
On occasion, Monier said, a listener unfamiliar with songs like “Buddy Holly” and “Hash Pipe” will catch Tweezer’s act and tell the band to stick in there, that it might turn into the next big thing.
“We usually don’t have the heart to tell them we’re in a cover band,” Monier said.