Buddy Holly: Difference between revisions

→‎Overview: Added Alone liner notes
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"Buddy Holly" is one the most-well known Weezer songs. The version of the song that appears on ''Alone'' features some differences from the finished album version. It is in a slower tempo, the melody is somewhat different, and the short synth sections during the verses are different.
"Buddy Holly" is one the most-well known Weezer songs. The version of the song that appears on ''Alone'' features some differences from the finished album version. It is in a slower tempo, the melody is somewhat different, and the short synth sections during the verses are different.
===Writing===
===Writing===
In the liner notes for ''[[Alone]]'', Cuomo explained how he was inspired to write the song after a friend from his choir lent him a Korg keyboard.  The lyrical inspiration derived from an incident in which the other members of Weezer were making fun of Cuomo's friend, Kyung He. Cuomo talks about how he originally didn't want to include the song on the album, but was convinced by producer [[Ric Ocasek]]. Cuomo also talks about the writing process of the song, stating that originally, the chorus lyrics were "You look just like Ginger Rogers/Oh-oh/I move just like Fred Astaire."
In the liner notes for ''[[Alone]]'', Cuomo explained how he was inspired to write the song after a friend from his choir lent him a Korg keyboard:
I was in the Santa Monica College Choir and I met a kid named Steve Graff who lent me his Korg Keyboard. Inspired by its goofy synth sounds, I decided to write some new-wave influenced songs.
  The chorus melody, though, I came up with as I was walking through the lawns of the campus. The melody was in time to my steps: "ooo-we-ooo I look just like Buddy Holly." The lyrics I struggled with, trying to find the right reference point. An early version read, "ooo-we-ooo you look just like Ginger Rogers. Oh-oh I move just like Fred Astaire."
The life-situation that inspired the lyric was an incident in which the Weezer guys were making fun of my friend Kyung He (also in the Santa Monica College Choir). They were the "homies dissin' my girl".
I rarely wrote lyrics about tension between me and the guys in the band because I thought it would be awkward for us all to perform those songs together. In this case, though, it didn't seem like a big deal.
Obviously, this track is kind of slow compared to how it ended up on the Weezer record. [Even on the Weezer record we recorded it pretty slow. We sped it up during mastering.] I've always like big, fat, heavy guitar sounds and when I write a song with a sound like that I end up digging in and playing real slow. It isn't 'til we hear a song back on tape that we realize, "hey, that's a little dirgy."


==Single release==
==Single release==