Whatsername

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"Whatsername"
"Whatsername" cover
Song by Green Day
from the album American Idiot
Released 21 September 2004
Recorded 23 February 2003-January 2004
Genre Punk rock, Pop Punk
Length 4:15
Label Reprise
Writer(s) Billie Joe Armstrong, Tré Cool, and Mike Dirnt
Producer(s) Rob Cavallo and Green Day
American Idiot track listing
Homecoming
(12)
"Whatsername"
(13)

Whatsername is the 13th track of the Green Day album American Idiot. It is 4 minutes and 15 seconds in duration. Whatsername is also a character from the same album's plot. The song has a key signature of D, beginning with an overall tonality of B minor which modulates to the relative major of D after the bridge. The song is played in drop D tuning, and is the only song on any Green Day album to be played using drop-D.

Whatsername is the main love interest of Jesus of Suburbia. Interestingly, Jesus of Suburbia either never knew her name, or could never remember it (as referenced in the track "Whatsername"). He meets her on July the 4th, and details this in "She's a Rebel."

In the next song, Extraordinary Girl she goes out with him, but they start to drift apart, possibly because Whatsername doesn't like that Jesus is now St. Jimmy.

In Letterbomb, Whatsername sends Jimmy a letter. According to Jimmy, Jesus's alter ego, "she said 'I can't take this place, I'm leaving it behind.' She said, 'I can't take this town, I'm leaving you tonight.'

Whatsername is a rebel, and the "missing link on the brink of destruction." In the track "Whatsername," Jesus of Suburbia mourns her leaving him. In this song, there appears to be a play on words. Jesus can't remember Whatsername's name, so he calls her Whatsername, as shown -- "I remember the face but I can't recall the name, now I wonder how Whatsername has been..." It should also be noted that throughout the album's lyric booklet a name is scratched out and replaced by "Whatsername", which implies that he's been trying to forget about her all these years.

Although Jesus is clearly sad that she is gone he displays a certain anger at, or at least an attempt to forget, her. As shown in "I made a point to burn all the photographs." And he also has a somewhat detached feeling from her as though he used to care but now has given up all hope, "did she ever marry oh-whatshisface" as though it is a matter of small interest.