Weezer

The Black Album

4.2

excellent Review by Rowan5215 STAFF

March 2nd, 2019 | 203 replies by

Release Date: 03/01/2019 | Tracklist Review Summary: do somethin' kinda unique to me

I know I covered this idea in the comments section of this site a few times, but here it is a review thesis so we're clear: Rivers Cuomo has always been a pop songwriter. Sometimes he screamed his pop melodies and lyrics over abrasive and messy production, sometimes he layered on power pop harmonies and crunchy guitar, sometimes he hired pop producers and studied Spotify playlists to make his pop music sound like top 40 chart pop. In some ways, that makes the latter the truest sound he's tried, but the problem was it removed that strange doublethink it took to listen to the very best Weezer songs - the one where you clamour for the crunchy guitar and the big rock instrumentals knowing the huge disconnect between them and the lyrics and melodies.



Doublethink was one of the first words I associated with listening to The Black Album, although honestly it might not be enough. How do you hold with "High as a Kite"'s effervescent, utter elation as it goes into the shady narcissistic groove of "Living in L.A."？ How do you reconcile "Piece of Cake", a piano-based bit of loveliness that sounds like a cut from The White Album that's not by Weezer, sitting beside "I'm Just Being Honest"'s self-aware over-produced slickness？ How on god's green fucking earth did the band who made Pinkerton give us "Byzantine"？



Astonishingly, every one of Black's ridiculous discursions into the many dimensions of pop today – or rather, Rivers Cuomo's reflections on said – is held together and made borderline cohesive by three things. On the surface, Dave Sitek's production is the best Weezer have had since embracing pop. Whilst Pacific Daydream washed out Brian Bell's guitar in favour of vocals and buzzing electronics, Black is fully replete with every sound Weezer could think to chuck on it, from "Too Many Thoughts in My Head"'s crazy funk guitar to Pat's double-tracked kits and looping beats to the labyrinthine, breathtaking basslines. That's the second thing, the sheer musicality of the four members of this band. Scott Shriner could have held this together on his lonesome: it's like he spent all his recording time in the corner of the studio, chasing Rivers' songs in whorls and eddies with his bass, cornering ideas like a hunter. Bell, freed from the beach pop stylings of White and the minimal guitar demands of Pacific Daydream, absolutely lets loose, imbuing even the simplest songs with deceptively complex notes and patterns. Where the previous two records were largely sanded down to the basics, Black is like a tough game of jenga, all odd ends and bits jutting out everywhere. You're more likely to hear an Old Testament reference or an Egypt metaphor over some funk guitar than dedications to happy hour on this bizarre, self-effacing album.



The album title and aesthetic might have geared you to expect the opposite of White – some aggressively anti-pop monstrosity with six minute songs and rambling structures, an album of "The Angel and the One". As great as that sounds, this is more of a Pacific Nightmare, taking that album's glossy production and massive hooks and twisting them into something secluded and introspective. If there's any White comparison it's with "Jacked Up", the tension between the catchy piano melody and the dark lyrics being a clear basis for the template here, but that doesn't even begin to cover all this album's weird shit. Case in point: "Byzantine", a Laura Jane Grace co-write of breezy beach pop which kicks off with "I want Neil Young on your phone, speaker in the morning / and fuck him if he just can't see" and builds to the most genuinely romantic and swoon-worthy chorus ever to appear on a Weezer song. Born, in Rivers' words, of turning a bridge he wrote in the early 90s into a 'French-pop 60s thing with a drum machine', it might be a career highlight when the gorgeous hook hits. And though "California Snow" is undoubtedly one of the worst Weezer closers, and "The Prince Who Wanted Everything" sounds like the gratingly repetitive theme tune for a 90s sitcom, both at least deserve nods for being some of the most experimental material from this band since Red. "Prince" builds itself around a chugging guitar like a lost song from an earlier era while "California Snow" starts with a downright heart-stopping beginning, an aggressive glacial wall-of-synth over an anguished wail that wouldn't sound out of place on Disintegration, before immediately sinking itself with some godawful half-rapped verses. The Red Album is actually a pretty accurate comparison point - the albums don't sound even remotely alike, but distinguish themselves from the other self-titleds via willingess to throw everything and some bad rapping on an album with no thought for fan expectation.



So we've established that the log line of 'Pacific Daydream, but ten steps further' was by and large not a Rivers mislead. Thematically, though, the anti-White comparison is a lot more apropos, which brings us to the third and most subtle thing tying these disparate sounds together: a concept which wasn't at all apparent from the initial singles. We're a record-breaking four songs in before Rivers starts talking about a girl on "Living in L.A." but it's an essential part of the narrative. Rivers' relationships with others remains one of Weezer's most reliable narrative go-to's, whether it's with girls ("L.A.", "Byzantine"), his fanbase ("Zombie Bastards", "I'm Just Being Honest", "High as a Kite") or the competition-driven music industry where it's all too easy to lose yourself ("Can't Knock the Hustle"). Black immerses itself in the confusing, option-paralysis information overload of our current world and how that damages the relationships we make, most obviously on the outstanding "stayed up reading Mary Poppins / overwhelmed by Netflix options" couplet. Taken as a whole, it's the story of a relationship which gets distorted by work, big-city competitiveness and drugs but finds itself again in the lovely "Byzantine"; the oddly optimistic mirror of White's happy-go-lucky fling which didn't survive the summer. That goes to show that even doused in black paint, distorted beyond recognition or trying for some reason to spit bars, Weezer still maintain the ability to surprise, and even brush with something transcendental in a bridge here – oh, say, "High as a Kite" - or a chorus there. After years of wrong turns and disappointments, isn't that all we really ask for？



Tweet



Recent reviews by this author Bright Eyes Down in the Weeds, Where the World Once Was Mike Shinoda Dropped Frames, Vol. 1 Hayley Williams Petals For Armor Big Thief Demos Vol. 1 - Topanga Canyon, CA - Feb 2018 Enter Shikari Nothing Is True and Everything Is Possible Andy Hull Born of You (Demos: 2008-2010) I know I covered this idea in the comments section of this site a few times, but here it is a review thesis so we're clear: Rivers Cuomo has always been a pop songwriter. Sometimes he screamed his pop melodies and lyrics over abrasive and messy production, sometimes he layered on power pop harmonies and crunchy guitar, sometimes he hired pop producers and studied Spotify playlists to make his pop music sound like top 40 chart pop. In some ways, that makes the latter the truest sound he's tried, but the problem was it removed that strange doublethink it took to listen to the very best Weezer songs - the one where you clamour for the crunchy guitar and the big rock instrumentals knowing the huge disconnect between them and the lyrics and melodies.Doublethink was one of the first words I associated with listening to, although honestly it might not be enough. How do you hold with "High as a Kite"'s effervescent, utter elation as it goes into the shady narcissistic groove of "Living in L.A."？ How do you reconcile "Piece of Cake", a piano-based bit of loveliness that sounds like a cut fromthat's not by Weezer, sitting beside "I'm Just Being Honest"'s self-aware over-produced slickness？ How on god's green fucking earth did the band who madegive us "Byzantine"？Astonishingly, every one of's ridiculous discursions into the many dimensions of pop today – or rather, Rivers Cuomo's reflections on said – is held together and made borderline cohesive by three things. On the surface, Dave Sitek's production is the best Weezer have had since embracing pop. Whilstwashed out Brian Bell's guitar in favour of vocals and buzzing electronics,is fully replete with every sound Weezer could think to chuck on it, from "Too Many Thoughts in My Head"'s crazy funk guitar to Pat's double-tracked kits and looping beats to the labyrinthine, breathtaking basslines. That's the second thing, the sheer musicality of the four members of this band. Scott Shriner could have held this together on his lonesome: it's like he spent all his recording time in the corner of the studio, chasing Rivers' songs in whorls and eddies with his bass, cornering ideas like a hunter. Bell, freed from the beach pop stylings ofand the minimal guitar demands of, absolutely lets loose, imbuing even the simplest songs with deceptively complex notes and patterns. Where the previous two records were largely sanded down to the basics,is like a tough game of jenga, all odd ends and bits jutting out everywhere. You're more likely to hear an Old Testament reference or an Egypt metaphor over some funk guitar than dedications to happy hour on this bizarre, self-effacing album.The album title and aesthetic might have geared you to expect the opposite of– some aggressively anti-pop monstrosity with six minute songs and rambling structures, an album of "The Angel and the One". As great as that sounds, this is more of a, taking that album's glossy production and massive hooks and twisting them into something secluded and introspective. If there's anycomparison it's with "Jacked Up", the tension between the catchy piano melody and the dark lyrics being a clear basis for the template here, but that doesn't even begin to cover all this album's weird shit. Case in point: "Byzantine", a Laura Jane Grace co-write of breezy beach pop which kicks off with "I want Neil Young on your phone, speaker in the morning / and fuck him if he just can't see" and builds to the most genuinely romantic and swoon-worthy chorus ever to appear on a Weezer song. Born, in Rivers' words, of turning a bridge he wrote in the early 90s into a 'French-pop 60s thing with a drum machine', it might be a career highlight when the gorgeous hook hits. And though "California Snow" is undoubtedly one of the worst Weezer closers, and "The Prince Who Wanted Everything" sounds like the gratingly repetitive theme tune for a 90s sitcom, both at least deserve nods for being some of the most experimental material from this band since. "Prince" builds itself around a chugging guitar like a lost song from an earlier era while "California Snow" starts with a downright heart-stopping beginning, an aggressive glacial wall-of-synth over an anguished wail that wouldn't sound out of place on, before immediately sinking itself with some godawful half-rapped verses.is actually a pretty accurate comparison point - the albums don't sound even remotely alike, but distinguish themselves from the other self-titleds via willingess to throw everything and some bad rapping on an album with no thought for fan expectation.So we've established that the log line of ', but ten steps further' was by and large not a Rivers mislead. Thematically, though, the anti-comparison is a lot more apropos, which brings us to the third and most subtle thing tying these disparate sounds together: a concept which wasn't at all apparent from the initial singles. We're a record-breaking four songs in before Rivers starts talking about a girl on "Living in L.A." but it's an essential part of the narrative. Rivers' relationships with others remains one of Weezer's most reliable narrative go-to's, whether it's with girls ("L.A.", "Byzantine"), his fanbase ("Zombie Bastards", "I'm Just Being Honest", "High as a Kite") or the competition-driven music industry where it's all too easy to lose yourself ("Can't Knock the Hustle").immerses itself in the confusing, option-paralysis information overload of our current world and how that damages the relationships we make, most obviously on the outstanding "stayed up reading Mary Poppins / overwhelmed by Netflix options" couplet. Taken as a whole, it's the story of a relationship which gets distorted by work, big-city competitiveness and drugs but finds itself again in the lovely "Byzantine"; the oddly optimistic mirror of's happy-go-lucky fling which didn't survive the summer. That goes to show that even doused in black paint, distorted beyond recognition or trying for some reason to spit bars, Weezer still maintain the ability to surprise, and even brush with something transcendental in a bridge here – oh, say, "High as a Kite" - or a chorus there. After years of wrong turns and disappointments, isn't that all we really ask for？ user ratings (335) rate it Awful - 1 Very Poor - 1.5 Poor - 2 Average - 2.5 Good - 3 Great - 3.5 Excellent - 4 Superb - 4.5 Classic - 5 2.4

average other reviews of this album Daisy99 (2.5)

Weezer going through motions. Again....



resident shit music stan (2.5)

Identity crisis personified...



Drbebop (3)

More like The Grey Album...



related reviews

The Teal Album

Pacific Daydream

The White Album

Everything Will Be Alrigh recommended by reviewer Weezer Pacific Daydream

discussion On 27 Music Lists

