Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Alone: The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Released
  
December 18, 2007

Length
  
45:49

Release date
  
18 December 2007

Label
  
Geffen Records

Recorded
  
1984, 1992–2007

Artist
  
Rivers Cuomo

Producer
  
Rivers Cuomo

Alone: The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb9

Alone The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo (2007)
  
Alone II The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo (2008)

Genres
  
Alternative rock, Power pop, Indie rock, Emo

Similar
  
Rivers Cuomo albums, Power pop albums

Alone: The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo is a compilation album by Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo, released on December 18, 2007. It is available as a digital release, CD release and 12" vinyl (released on January 8, 2008). The album features home demos that Cuomo has recorded from 1992-2007.

Contents

"The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo" leaked online on December 12, 2007. When released, it opened with sales of 14,000, and debuted at #163 on the Billboard Top 200. The album also topped the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart. The album had sold 43,000 copies as of December 2008. It was followed by Alone II: The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo (2008) and Alone III: The Pinkerton Years (2011).

Background

Rivers Cuomo has long been known by fans to have recorded a great deal of unreleased material, nearly 800 songs in his lifetime. This material was recorded with Weezer, earlier bands, and self-recorded demos. Despite the large amount of unreleased material that has been made available by Cuomo on the internet, large chunks of his work remain unheard by fans. These include certain demos for The Blue Album, various songs from the scrapped Songs from the Black Hole project, over a hundred songs he composed and demoed throughout 1999 (songs which he has described as ranging from "drone-y Romantic," "abrasive dissonance" and "riffy pop-rock") and well over a hundred songs that didn't make the cut for Make Believe.

Cuomo brought up the idea for the compilation album to his record company in 1998. However, they discouraged him from the idea because they didn't want to "dilute the Weezer name" by putting out less polished material. It was not until 10 years later that Cuomo pushed harder for the collection and it gained enough support for a release.

There were some legal issues between Cuomo and Geffen about releasing the album:

[Legal issues] [were] a big part of it because the record company owns all of my demos under Weezer's contract, and my argument was that they aren't Weezer recordings; they're not part of the Weezer record deal, this is my own stuff, I should own this. So we had to negotiate for a long time to reach an agreement as to the legal ownership of the records but we agreed enough that we were able to move forward and put it out.

Song selection

When deciding on the track listing, Cuomo listened to a great deal of his past recordings. He described choosing the songs to be very difficult. However, he knew very early in the process to include "Blast Off!" and other tracks from the aborted Songs from the Black Hole because of the well-known high demand from fans for these songs. "I knew 'Blast Off' and some of these other Songs from The Black Hole had to be on there, because for years Weezer fans have been wanting to hear these songs, and I knew if I put out the album without these songs on there, they would hunt me down and kill me." Cuomo also considered releasing the entire Songs from the Black Hole album, but felt it wasn't right considering most of the songs have been released anyway, either as songs on Pinkerton or otherwise:

I thought about it for a long time. I thought maybe I should release it as The Black Hole and put the demos in the right order, but like I said, it was never finished, so it wouldn't really stand up, like it wouldn't be a very good listen... It was a very tough decision, but in the end I concluded that this is the best possible CD I could put out, given all the material I have. This is the best listen and this is what I want to give to the world.

Music videos

On January 6, 2008, Cuomo announced on his MySpace blog that he would be making a video for the song "Blast Off!" The video, which also features Alone track "Ooh," premiered on January 11, 2008 on Yahoo!

On March 19, 2008, a music video for "Lover in the Snow" was released via Rivers' MySpace page.

Reception

Alone was positively received by critics. Highly praising the album, Allmusic gave the album four and a half stars out of five, stating, "...Alone will stand as an idiosyncratic gem in his catalog, showcasing him at his eccentric best." Pitchfork Media gave Alone a positive review, stating "[The Album] remind[s] us why we fell for dorks with horn-rimmed glasses and flying-V guitars in the first place,' and that, 'If nothing else, Alone reminds us that a lot of those over-ambitious, silly-on-paper ideas often blossomed in Cuomo's hands, and [that] there was more to Weezer in their early days than just crisp power-pop and cute videos.'" Popmatters claimed that the album featured "some of the strongest material that Cuomo has ever recorded."

Additional archival recordings

On December 27, 2007, Cuomo stated "I would love to put out at least one more, I'm talking with the record company (now) to figure out what's the best way for me to get more of this stuff out, and if they're gonna be involved or not. But it's certainly my hope to put out as much of this stuff as I can."

Track listing

All songs written by Rivers Cuomo, except where noted.

Track origins

All information is taken from the liner notes.

  • Tracks 1-6 were recorded before the release of the band's debut album, Weezer (The Blue Album).
  • Tracks 7-9, 11-12 were demos for Songs from the Black Hole, recorded in 1994 and 1995.
  • Track 10 was recorded in 1995, originally intended for the movie Angus. The song was rejected by the film's producers. Weezer's "You Gave Your Love to Me Softly" was chosen instead.
  • Tracks 13-14 were recorded in 1997 ("Lover in the Snow") and 1998 ("Crazy One") during Weezer's hiatus between Pinkerton and Weezer (The Green Album).
  • Track 15 was considered for Weezer (The Red Album), but was ultimately omitted from the album.
  • Track 16 was recorded in 2003 with members of Sloan.
  • Track 17 is a recording of Rivers Cuomo and his friends talking about his favorite band Kiss in Summer 1984.
  • Track 18 was written for Make Believe.
  • Changes from earlier versions

  • "Lover in the Snow" was edited down from a previous version that leaked to the internet several years ago. Its total running time is 3:16, while the older version clocked in at 4:23. Only a few repeated sections of the song are edited.
  • "Blast Off!" originally had the first part of the song "Who You Callin' Bitch?" but was edited to make the songs separate. There are also noticeable edits within the song, namely being the omission of the word "fine" in the second verse.
  • Personnel

    All information is taken from the liner notes.

  • Rivers Cuomo – vocals, guitar, percussion, bass, piano, clarinet, photography
  • Patrick Wilson – drums on "Lemonade".
  • Sloan (Chris Murphy, Patrick Pentland, Jay Ferguson, Andrew Scott) - guitar, bass, drums on "Little Diane".
  • Karl Koch - photography
  • Todd Sullivan - A&R
  • Stephen Marcussen - mastering
  • Stewart Whitmore - digital editing
  • Rich Mouser - digital editing
  • Robert Fisher - photography
  • Julie Kramer - photography
  • Beverly Shoenberger - photography
  • Songs

    1Ooh0:47
    2The World We Love So Much3:39
    3Lemonade2:31

    References

    Alone: The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo Wikipedia