R O C K P I L E M A G A Z I N E
Who's afraid to rock?
Rockpile's Alyson Mead joins WEEZER in the studio for a
behind-the-scenes
peek at New Album#2
It's an unseasonably wet night in West Hollywood. Cars shush by
in the rain, quietly taking people to their destinations. This
makes two unusual
occurrences in one night--the quiet and the weather--both so very
un-Los Angeles. If I didn't know better, I'd assume an earthquake
was going
to rip the ground open next and swallow us all for a litany of
forgotten sins. But I'm on my way to visit Weezer in a local
studio where the
band is working on its fifth record, the follow-up to this year's
Maladroit (due to be released early this summer). Given the
circumstances, I want
to believe the gods are on my side. My belief in divine
providence is confirmed once inside, where a 27-inch television
blares VH-1's *Beat
the Geeks*. A music-minded geek is about to lose his medal on the
quirky game show--an already ironic choice of programming for the
band best
known for perfecting the nerdy chic. I point it out to Brian
bell, guitarist and all-around personable guy, who remarks,
"Oh yeah, it goes with our
geek rock aesthetic."
Welcome to the world of
Weezer
Weezer's fans are numerous and proud, an army of self-described
misfits,unafraid to carry the flag of loserdom. In fact,
Maladroit was named
by a fan in a contest held on the band's website. "I thought
Rivers came up with the name," admits Bell. "It was
definitely
better than Weezer Red or Weezer III. He told me it
was a fan's idea. Sometimes I'm the last to know."
MALADROIT (adj.) lacking in adroitness, unskillful, awkward,
bungling, tactless (from Webster's Encyclopedic Unabridged
Dictionary of the English
Language). "The songs on Maladroit are different
from the last record, kind of
a cross between our Green record and Pinkerton,"
says Bell. "They're pretty loose because we weren't too
careful about perfection. At the
same time, they're perfectly structured songs." Watching
Weezer work, it becomes obvious the boys like to go on vibe
and feeling as much as concrete notes and lyrics. You won't find
them doing 30 vocal takes on one errant syllable. They do like to
sing their
vocals all at one time, which is a rarity these days--unless
you're in TLC or Destiny's Child (few of us are so blessed). The
effect lends
a party-like atmosphere to many of the record's tracks, and it
wouldn't be Weezer if there wasn't a party somewhere nearby.
"The Stones probably did that," notes bassist Scott
Shriner. "The Beatles probably did that while they even
played together. Maybe we can do that
next year."
"It really adds an energy and really lifts everyone's
spirits to be
singing in real time," adds Bell. "The Blue
record was like that,and the first record, the Green
record. Pinkerton I barely even
remember."
"That's because you were all on drugs," Shriner laughs,
quickly adding,
"I wasn't around back then." Bell shakes his head.
"There were some black days then," he smirks with a wry
chuckle. "I
don't know how we made that record."
"I don't like how you're living your life
Get yourself a wife
Get yourself a job
You're living a dream
Don't you be a slob."
--"Slob" from Maladroit
Cuomo, the diminutive but (these days) fully bearded genius
behind the Los Angeles band's songs says only his "cyber
girlfriends" can take him
away from his music-centered life, or influence his prodigious
output in any way. He moves about the studio calmly, a
non-bloated and far
more focused Brian Wilson, exchanging very few words with the
engineers and his fellow band mates. His low-key charm and sly
humor has clearly
become infectious. When a mic goes out during one take, he jokes
about the number of U-87s he's blown so far, claiming,
"Those other mics were
evil."
While their laconic manner and collegiate chic (think two-tone
sneakers and baseball shirts under polyester overshirts or
well-worn ski jackets),
the guys take it all in stride. There is a distinct energy
pervading their space, a quiet sense of confidence things will
eventually get done.
A deep friendship lingers underneath respect a (dare I say it)
professionalism shows how serious they are about making music.
Tonight they're recording
an as-yet unnamed song the band wrote earlier in the afternoon.
" think it had the name of a number earlier," laughs
Bell. It's this
combination of discipline and abandon defining Weezer's charm.
"You made your sacrifice
Now I'm going to pay the price
Tell me what to do
Tell me what to do
Tell me what to do"
--Title To Be Announced.
Most rock band studios are festooned with beer bottles and the
requisite hoochies, but scattered waters and one seriously
picked-over fruit plate
are the only vices evident in Weezer's functional room. Chad, the
engineer, presides over a huge board while Karl, the band's
webmaster and honorary
"fifth member," sits on the couch doing his daily
update of the site and returning some e-mails about royalty
payments and the band's upcoming
U.K. and Japanese tour dates.
When I ask about Maladroit's recording process and the
seemingly endless barrage of new songs, Bell explains Weezer is
naturally self-motivated.
"There weren't any deadlines on us by the record
company," he elaborates. "But instead of soaking up sun
and drinking pina coladas, or whatever
people do in Miami, we were basically in a recording prison
compound. We weren't allowed to leave the parking lot."
"We couldn't leave until we got certain things worked
out," adds Shriner. "It felt like a year and a half,
but I think it was really six days."
"I'm just a regular white guy who's afraid to rock."
--Mad Kow
"Welcome to the big rock show," laughs Chad after one
particularly rollicking take of another brand new song. Truly,
Weezer's sound has gone heavier
since last year's Green record, which reset the bar for
the short, tight, radio-ready pop song. "Dope
Nose"--the advance single from the
new record--features even louder guitars and soaring solos
sounding more arena than emo, more riff than noodle. The single's
solo goes aerial
in a particularly Rick Nielsen fashion, and Weezer seems to
practically name-check bands in brief musical interludes
throughout the record.
But it's the sex, the disappointment and exploitation, the
collective darkness of Los Angeles seeping into track after track
and making this
former garage outfit pack such a punch. Part of this move away
from their earlier, more navel-gazing sound might
stem form the addition of Shriner on bass last year. The tall and
practiced ax-wielder has an open, friendly smile and an
anything-for-rock demeanor.
Wearing a leather vest over a t-shirt, sporting numerous tattoos
and a large skull ring on one hand, he's the seeming opposite of
Cuomo and
the other members, at least in the fashion sense. Somehow his
influence fits right into the direction Weezer has been headed in
the past two
records.
Since Cuomo is constantly pushing himself to write new material
and the band's goal is to release and tour behind a record
"yearly or bi-yearly,"
Bell and Shriner must help to flesh out Cuomo's creations.
"We go in with nothing, and we have the ability to extract
all these hooks and
cool parts in songs that weren't there before," says the
roughest looking Weezer bassist. "Though Rivers comes in
with most of the songs, he's
said that he wants to start doing some of my songs and Scott's
songs soon." Despite the focus on thicker textures and
ball-outs, snarly guitar sounds,
there are two ballads on the new record, which should make more
than one hardcore Weezer fan happy. No longer will they have to
peep the
B-sides of obscure British seven-inch singles to find songs like
"Death and Destruction," which could simultaneously be
about the coming together
or falling part of a relationship under the influence of outside
forces. Though power chords open the song, they dissolve into
shimmering wave
of plucked strings and abrupt lines of softly sung vocals and
three lightly strummed closing chords. It's a song right at home
in any one of the
past five decades of music, and it proved how effective Cuomo can
be when he allows his feelings to show. While the frontman isn't
recalcitrant,
what he shares is rarely enough to help you really understand the
process behind his songs.
"The music is there when I calm down," Cuomo reflects.
"The lyrics come when I get upset."
"Every time I call you
You find some way to ditch me
So I learn to turn and look the other way."
--"Death and Destruction" from Maladroit
"That had some positive energy, some positive chi,"
remarks Cuomo after another take of a song written just
yesterday. Of course, even when
you see his face, you can't tell if he's kidding. Nothing on it
moves, no features twitch or quiver. There are just his eyes,
sweeping back
and forth, taking everything in. One can't avoid the conclusion
Cuomo is luck to have music with which to express his
feelings--using anything
else would prove too clumsy, too bewildering. For now, humor and
music seem to be all the tools Cuomo and company need for
communicating.
Meanwhile, the singer has given the official "OK" on
this latest song. "It clocks in at a meaty 2:26," notes
Chad from behind the mixing board.
"That's an opus magnum," laughs Cuomo, clearly enjoying
every minute of this. And why shouldn't he? The three-minute pop
song is overrated anyway.