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The Catalog o' Riffs: Difference between revisions

Clarified last known entries
(Rendered "COR" as "C.O.R." for consistency with Alone compilations.)
(Clarified last known entries)
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<blockquote>''By the beginning of 1999, I had not managed to write any songs in which I felt any confidence, despite having devoted almost all of my time and energy to the effort since August, 1997. My band-mates each were pursuing other projects. Weezer's manager and record company rep stopped calling me regularly. Friends and family grew distant. I encouraged the space so that I could be alone. I determined that with enough concentration and effort, I could analyze my way out of the predicament I imagined myself to be in, the predicament of "poor songwriting". For the first time since I was a teenager, I now allowed myself to analyze my writing process in detail. I began to think of my writing sessions as experiments from which I could learn whether or not they turned out good. I disciplined myself to write a steady stream of these song-experiments, giving each a number, and keeping a log of my work called "The Catalog o' Riffs." I analyzed a large number of writing methods, varying what seemed to be every possible facet of the process: the order of the steps (guitar, melody, lyric, beat, riff, etc.); the tempo; the feel; the level of distortion on the guitar; whether I was composing aloud or in my head; the time of day; my emotional state; whether I had eaten or not; the number of drinks I had imbibed, if any. My goal was to ascertain the one method by which I could write the best songs.<br><br>The music I produced cycled through various styles, from extremely abrasive to light and folky, but in accord with my new post-Pinkerton values, almost none of the lyrics had any personal meaning. Many of the results appealed to me, but frustratingly, I did not feel satisfaction or confidence in any one of them for long. In the back of my mind, I kept thinking, maybe I should write a song with personal meaning–after all, that was what had always worked for me in the past (in the sense that it had generated songs that I loved). But the relatively low sales and critical reviews of the uber-personal Pinkerton convinced me that I had to learn to write songs that worked without personal meaning; I had to construct songs that were so compositionally perfect that no one could deny them. This was how I saw Nirvana's and Oasis's songs, the lyrics of which seemed largely impersonal and incomprehensible to me. So I kept trying.''</blockquote>
<blockquote>''By the beginning of 1999, I had not managed to write any songs in which I felt any confidence, despite having devoted almost all of my time and energy to the effort since August, 1997. My band-mates each were pursuing other projects. Weezer's manager and record company rep stopped calling me regularly. Friends and family grew distant. I encouraged the space so that I could be alone. I determined that with enough concentration and effort, I could analyze my way out of the predicament I imagined myself to be in, the predicament of "poor songwriting". For the first time since I was a teenager, I now allowed myself to analyze my writing process in detail. I began to think of my writing sessions as experiments from which I could learn whether or not they turned out good. I disciplined myself to write a steady stream of these song-experiments, giving each a number, and keeping a log of my work called "The Catalog o' Riffs." I analyzed a large number of writing methods, varying what seemed to be every possible facet of the process: the order of the steps (guitar, melody, lyric, beat, riff, etc.); the tempo; the feel; the level of distortion on the guitar; whether I was composing aloud or in my head; the time of day; my emotional state; whether I had eaten or not; the number of drinks I had imbibed, if any. My goal was to ascertain the one method by which I could write the best songs.<br><br>The music I produced cycled through various styles, from extremely abrasive to light and folky, but in accord with my new post-Pinkerton values, almost none of the lyrics had any personal meaning. Many of the results appealed to me, but frustratingly, I did not feel satisfaction or confidence in any one of them for long. In the back of my mind, I kept thinking, maybe I should write a song with personal meaning–after all, that was what had always worked for me in the past (in the sense that it had generated songs that I loved). But the relatively low sales and critical reviews of the uber-personal Pinkerton convinced me that I had to learn to write songs that worked without personal meaning; I had to construct songs that were so compositionally perfect that no one could deny them. This was how I saw Nirvana's and Oasis's songs, the lyrics of which seemed largely impersonal and incomprehensible to me. So I kept trying.''</blockquote>


The first entry was a song called "I Want You". The last one that was made public on Cuomo's website was #398 "The Ruler's Back" on [[October 1]], 2002. The [[Recording History]] on [[weezer.com]] was still including the catalog numbers with the songs up until to the recording of ''[[Make Believe]]'', making #672, "Sappy Sweet" (which later became the piano intro to "[[All My Friends Are Insects]]"), the last known entry. Additional entries have since been made known via ''[[The 4 and 5 Star Demos of Rivers Cuomo]]'' in [[2008]] and [[2010]], as well as filenames listed on the [[riverscuomo.com demos|demo storefront]] on [[riverscuomo.com]] in [[2020]].
The first entry was a song called "I Want You". The last one that was made public on Cuomo's website was #398 "The Ruler's Back" on [[October 1]], 2002. The [[Recording History]] on [[weezer.com]] was still including the catalog numbers with the songs up until to the recording of ''[[Make Believe]]'', making #669, "[[Beverly Hills]]", the last known entry for several years until the release of ''[[Alone IX: The Make Believe Years]]'' in [[2020]]. Additional entries have since been made known via ''[[The 4 and 5 Star Demos of Rivers Cuomo]]'' in [[2008]] and [[2010]], as well as filenames listed on the [[riverscuomo.com demos|demo storefront]] on [[riverscuomo.com]] in [[2020]]. The song "[[Sappy Sweet]]" (which later became the piano intro to "[[All My Friends Are Insects]]"), from [[2004]], is the last presently-known entry, at #672.


It is unknown whether the dates indicate the day a song was written or when a demo recording was made.
It is unknown whether the dates indicate the day a song was written or when a demo recording was made.


[[Teenage Victory Songs]], a music cricticsm blog reviewing all of Weezer's output, designates Weezer's just-below-best material as "The Grand Playlist" in reference to Cuomo's archive.
[[Teenage Victory Songs]], a music criticism blog reviewing all of Weezer's output, designates Weezer's just-below-best material as "The Grand Playlist" in reference to Cuomo's archive.
==List of songs by C.O.R.#==
==List of songs by C.O.R.#==
''Note: Because C.O.R. information is collated from multiple sources, there are occasionally discrepancies. The following key indicates where each song title is referenced.''
''Note: Because C.O.R. information is collated from multiple sources, there are occasionally discrepancies. The following key indicates where each song title is referenced.''