Weezer: "I'm very anxious right now about what it means to be human"
"Not everyone knows what the La Brea Tar Pits are? OK, yeah, I mean they're quite well known here in LA, but I guess it makes sense that they wouldn't b...
"Not everyone knows what the La Brea Tar Pits are? OK, yeah, I mean they're quite well known here in LA, but I guess it makes sense that they wouldn't be elsewhere." Rivers Cuomo, the driving force behind rock legends Weezer, is giving Upset a quick California history lesson before talking through the final track on 'OK Human', the band's fully orchestral new album. "There are sabre-tooths and woolly mammoths, and all kinds of animals got trapped in the tar and starved to death. And in some cases, a woolly mammoth would get stuck there, and the sabre-tooth would come along and say, 'Oh great, I'm gonna go eat this guy', and he wades in, and then he gets stuck, and they both die together."
"All those animals ended up extinct," Cuomo continues. "So I think it was a metaphor for me feeling like the world has evolved beyond me and I'm going extinct, and no matter what I try to do, I'm just stuck here in this tar."
Music has changed enormously since Weezer's Happy Days-spoofing video for 'Buddy Holly' reached the masses through its inclusion on Microsoft's Windows '95 CD-ROM, downloading Cuomo's melodic loser-rock into millions of households. Since then, Weezer have both delighted and divided their fanbase with their plentiful and often baffling output, hit singles 'Island in the Sun' and the sarcastic jock-rock of 'Beverly Hills' bothering radio stations and keeping the quartet in demand on the live circuit. So far, rather than sinking into the tar, Weezer have kept their heads above the surface by finding new angles to deliver the catchy melodies and crunching guitars that brought them fame.





