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OK Human
OK Human
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OK Human
Studio album by
ReleasedJanuary 29, 2021 (2021-01-29)
Recorded2018–2020[1][2][3]
Genre
Length30:27
Label
ProducerJake Sinclair
Weezer chronology
Weezer
(2019)
OK Human
(2021)
Van Weezer
(2021)
Singles from OK Human
  1. "All My Favorite Songs"
    Released: January 21, 2021

OK Human is the fourteenth studio album by American rock band Weezer, released on January 29, 2021 by Crush Music and Atlantic Records. Featuring a baroque-pop influenced sound, inspired by albums such as Harry Nilsson's Nilsson Sings Newman (1970) and the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds (1966), the album was recorded entirely with analogue equipment and features a 38-piece orchestra. The album was preceded by the lead single "All My Favorite Songs", released on January 21, 2021. The album received generally positive reviews from critics. OK Human is the first of two Weezer albums to be released in 2021, followed only four months later by Van Weezer.

Background

[edit]

Work on OK Human began as early as 2017, when the band decided to make an album that combined rock instrumentation with an orchestra.[4] Producer Jake Sinclair suggested that they hire a 38-piece orchestra and also gave Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo the album Nilsson Sings Newman to listen to, on which singer Harry Nilsson covered songs by Randy Newman.[5] They had just finished production on the album when they got an offer to join bands Green Day and Fall Out Boy on the Hella Mega Tour for the summer of 2020.[4][6] This prompted them to start work on another album, Van Weezer, which featured music that would translate better to a stadium tour, but when the COVID-19 pandemic delayed the tour, they decided to switch around the release dates of the albums once again.[6]

Cuomo first mentioned OK Human prior to the release of Weezer (The Black Album) in a February 2019 interview with the Los Angeles Times. He called the album "piano-based" and "very eccentric" and said that he had recorded strings for the album at Abbey Road Studios.[2] In May 2020, Cuomo commented during a Zoom call that he estimated OK Human was "75% done", but that he did not anticipate the album being released in 2020.[7] The album was planned to be released following their intended fourteenth album, Van Weezer, but when the album suffered a year-long delay following the COVID-19 pandemic,[8] the band hinted that they were shifting their focus to completing OK Human first.[9] On November 17, 2020, the band announced the completion of OK Human during a Q&A session following a livestream performance.[10] On January 18, 2021, the band announced a release date of January 29 with the release date of the lead single, "All My Favorite Songs" on January 21.[11][12]

The album's title is a play on the 1997 Radiohead album OK Computer.[13] The cover art was illustrated by Mattias Adolfsson.[14]

Composition

[edit]

Musically, OK Human has been described as orchestral pop,[15][16] chamber pop,[17] baroque pop,[18] pop,[19] and pop rock.[16]

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?7.3/10[20]
Metacritic75/100[21]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusicStarStarStarStarHalf star[19]
Consequence of SoundB−[22]
ClashStarStarStarStar[23]
Entertainment WeeklyC−[24]
Exclaim!8/10[25]
Kerrang!StarStarStarStar[26]
The Line of Best Fit6/10[27]
NMEStarStarStar[15]
Pitchfork5.8/10[28]
Rolling StoneStarStarStarHalf star[29]

OK Human received generally favorable reviews. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional publications, the release received an average score of 75, based on 21 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[21] Aggregator AnyDecentMusic? gave the album a 7.3 out of 10, based on their assessment of the critical consensus.[20]

Writing for AllMusic, Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote a highly positive review of the album, stating that the album "offers a singular, complete listening experience unlike anything else in their catalog."[19] Similarly, R.A. Hagan, writing for Clash Music, praised the album for being "more careful, sincere, and delicately crafted" than the band's previous two studio albums, Pacific Daydream and the Black Album.[23] Aaron Mook of Chorus.fm recommended the album, calling it "a left-field masterpiece that comes dangerously close to reaching the heights of the band's early career."[30]

However, publications like Entertainment Weekly and Pitchfork were more critical of the album. Writing for Pitchfork, Ian Cohen wrote that the album felt "as impersonal as water-cooler small talk".[28] Eli Enis wrote for Entertainment Weekly that "the fleeting moments of authenticity are hidden beneath a pile of hokey one-liners, spotty vocal performances, and awkward arrangements that rely on the accompanying orchestra to provide all of the emotional depth", but still noted that "it's arguably the darkest and most personal record that Cuomo has written since his fans' beloved Pinkerton."[24]

Other music critics were more ambivalent in their judgement of the album. Writing for Consequence of Sound, Tyler Clark concluded; "Chalk it up to the unpredictability of 2021; despite the creative and cultural headwinds into which it was released, OK Human lands as a surprisingly charming collection of pop tunes whose imperfections add to rather than detract from the experience."[22] In the review for The Line of Best Fit, Alex Wisgard stated that "Weezer’s greatest misses may come from their frontman’s visceral desperation to stay relevant, but it’s a relief to hear them take chances and risk failure in such a new way. The album might just be OK, but it’s been a long time since Weezer have dared to be this human."[27]

Track listing

[edit]

All tracks are written by Rivers Cuomo, except "All My Favorite Songs", written by Cuomo, Ashley Gorley, Ben Johnson and Ilsey Juber.

No.TitleLength
1."All My Favorite Songs"3:22
2."Aloo Gobi"3:03
3."Grapes of Wrath"2:50
4."Numbers"3:20
5."Playing My Piano"2:36
6."Mirror Image"1:17
7."Screens"2:11
8."Bird with a Broken Wing"3:51
9."Dead Roses"2:17
10."Everything Happens for a Reason" (Instrumental)0:23
11."Here Comes the Rain"2:27
12."La Brea Tar Pits"2:50
Total length:30:27

Personnel

[edit]

Adapted from AllMusic.[31]

Charts

[edit]
Chart performance for OK Human
Chart (2021) Peak
position
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[33] 129
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[34] 43
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[35] 69
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[36] 35
Hungarian Albums (MAHASZ)[37] 11
Irish Albums (IRMA)[38] 54
Scottish Albums (OCC)[39] 11
Swedish Physical Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[40] 13
Swedish Vinyl Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[41] 9
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[42] 32
UK Albums (OCC)[43] 91
US Billboard 200[44] 41
US Top Alternative Albums (Billboard)[45] 5
US Top Rock Albums (Billboard)[46] 6


References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
OK Human is the fourteenth studio album by the American rock band , released on January 29, 2021, through Crush Music and . The album marks a departure from Weezer's typical guitar-driven sound, featuring orchestral arrangements with a 38-piece ensemble instead of electric guitars, creating an intimate, aesthetic. Inspired by Brian Wilson's work on the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds (1966) and Harry Nilsson's Nilsson Sings Newman (1970), OK Human was conceived as early as 2017 as an orchestral project, with arrangements by composer Rob Mathes. The 12-track record, clocking in at approximately 30 minutes, explores themes of isolation, technology, and personal reflection amid the COVID-19 pandemic, with lead single "All My Favorite Songs" featuring a collaboration with indie pop singer/songwriter AJR. The album received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised its lush instrumentation and emotional depth as a return to Weezer's more experimental roots, though some noted its subdued energy compared to the band's rockier output. It debuted at number 41 on the Billboard 200 chart.

Background and development

Conception and influences

The conception of OK Human originated in 2017, when Weezer frontman Rivers Cuomo and producer Jake Sinclair began exploring a project that blended the band's rock foundations with orchestral arrangements, diverging from their signature guitar-centric sound. Sinclair suggested the idea during sessions following Weezer's self-titled White Album, envisioning an intimate setup featuring piano and strings to evoke a sense of emotional depth. A primary influence was Harry Nilsson's 1970 album Nilsson Sings Newman, which Cuomo discovered on Sinclair's recommendation and which inspired the decision to forgo electric guitars entirely in favor of a full orchestral backing. This choice aligned with Cuomo's ambition to craft a record, drawing on Weezer's legacy of genre experimentation and specifically referencing Brian Wilson's orchestral techniques from era, such as those heard on . To balance the introspective tone of OK Human, Cuomo and the band decided to develop it alongside a contrasting hard rock companion album, Van Weezer, which paid homage to 1980s metal influences and was recorded in tandem to provide a yin-yang dynamic in their output. Initially, Van Weezer took precedence as preparation for Weezer's slot on the Hella Mega Tour with Green Day and Fall Out Boy, but the COVID-19 pandemic postponed the tour from 2020 to 2021, allowing OK Human to move forward with its original timeline intact.

Songwriting

The songwriting for OK Human was primarily handled by Weezer frontman , who composed all tracks except "All My Favorite Songs," co-written with , Ben Johnson, and . The process unfolded over several years, from initial ideas in through completion in 2020 amid the , allowing Cuomo to infuse personal reflections into the material. Drawing from his longstanding practice of maintaining a vast digital archive of demos and lyric fragments—organized via custom computer scripts—Cuomo refined ideas from this repository to craft the album's core structures. Weezer's collaborative dynamic played a role in early stages, with band members reviewing and shaping demos to ensure cohesion. This approach emphasized melodic frameworks tailored for symphonic enhancement, prioritizing simple, hook-driven progressions with soaring choruses designed to evoke emotional resonance, or "tingles," even in subdued settings. Songs were kept deliberately brief, averaging around 2:30 in length across the 12 tracks, to support the album's compact 30:27 runtime and foster a of intimacy without excess. Thematic variety emerged through contrasts in mood and form, incorporating introspective ballads like "Playing My Piano" and "Bird with a Broken Wing" alongside more upbeat pieces, which deepened the album's exploration of and connection—elements rooted in Cuomo's personal journaling habits that inform much of his output. These choices aligned with the project's orchestral influences conceived earlier, prioritizing emotional layering over traditional rock bombast.

Recording and production

Studio work

The recording of OK Human took place primarily in Los Angeles-area studios, including 4th Street Recording in Santa Monica and Big Bad Sound, spanning from late 2018 through late 2020 under the production of Jake Sinclair, who had previously collaborated with on their 2016 self-titled album (also known as the White Album). Basic tracks featuring the band's vocals, bass, , and keyboards—performed without electric guitars to emphasize an intimate, piano-driven sound—were captured live to analogue tape, lending the sessions a warm, vintage aesthetic reminiscent of mid-20th-century pop recordings. Sessions faced interruptions when Weezer paused work in 2019 to focus on their heavy metal project Van Weezer, but the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 altered plans significantly; the cancellation of their allowed the band to reconvene with masks and safety protocols, resuming and completing the core recordings during the summer lockdown period. This shift from touring obligations extended the overall timeline, enabling Sinclair to guide the band toward a cohesive, grid-free approach that prioritized organic band interplay over quantized precision. Sinclair handled both engineering and mixing duties, focusing on maintaining the live-room energy of the ensemble while integrating subsequent orchestral elements recorded separately, with strings at in and other elements at in . The process drew from initial songwriting demos as foundational blueprints, allowing the band to build upon Cuomo's home-recorded sketches in the studio environment. Finalization occurred in November 2020, just months before the album's release, after which Joe mastered the tapes at Sterling Sound.

Orchestration

The orchestration of OK Human prominently features a 38-piece orchestra comprising strings, woodwinds, brass, and harp, contributing to the album's chamber pop texture and eschewing traditional rock instrumentation such as electric guitars. The orchestral arrangements were primarily handled by Rob Mathes, who served as arranger and conductor for the strings, horns, and woodwinds, ensuring a lush, intricate scoring that draws on baroque influences for its elaborate counterpoint and melodic embellishments. This approach aligns with Rivers Cuomo's vision of creating an orchestral pop record centered on piano and strings, inspired by the stripped-down intimacy of works like the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds, to foster a sense of human connection amid isolation. Arrangements were customized for individual tracks to enhance emotional dynamics without overwhelming the vocals. For instance, in "Bird with a Broken Wing," swelling string sections build a soaring, uplifting crescendo that underscores the song's themes of resilience, providing a symphonic lift to Cuomo's delivery. Similarly, "Numbers" incorporates harpsichord-like keyboard elements alongside orchestral strings, evoking a chamber feel that complements the track's introspective rhythm and adds textural depth through layered woodwinds and harp flourishes. These tailored scorings emphasize conceptual elegance over density, prioritizing seamless integration with the band's - and acoustic-driven foundations recorded at studios including The Village Studios, 4th Street Recording, and Big Bad Sound. The orchestra was recorded analog, with strings at in , , and other sections at in , where sections were multi-tracked to amplify richness and spatial immersion while maintaining clarity in the mix. This technique allowed the orchestral layers to blend fluidly with Weezer's pre-recorded tracks, creating a cohesive that evokes the warmth of vintage without digital artifacts. The result is a production that highlights the orchestra's role as an equal partner, enhancing the album's intimate yet expansive atmosphere.

Musical content

Style and genre

OK Human is primarily classified as , , and , with elements of . The album comprises 12 tracks and runs for a total of 30:27, delivering a concise collection of melodic compositions. Its sound draws from orchestral pop traditions, featuring intricate arrangements that prioritize emotional depth and harmonic richness over aggressive instrumentation. A defining sonic feature is the complete absence of electric guitars, replaced by a 38-piece that emphasizes , strings, and percussion to create a lush, intimate atmosphere. This mimics traditional rock elements like power chords and solos through horns and violas, resulting in symphony-backed arrangements that feel both experimental and nostalgic. Tracks showcase stylistic diversity within this framework, including the waltz-like balladry of "Playing My Piano," which unfolds with orchestral melodrama, and the upbeat "Aloo Gobi" for a playful, rhythmic flair. In contrast to Weezer's earlier power pop-driven albums, OK Human represents a bold shift toward subtlety and experimentation, highlighting melody through refined, orchestra-enhanced structures rather than guitar-heavy riffs. Positioned as a companion to the band's simultaneously developed rock-oriented Van Weezer, it underscores a deliberate duality in their 2021 output, favoring introspective orchestration over high-energy distortion.

Lyrics and themes

The lyrics of OK Human center on themes of isolation, relationships, , and the yearning for human connection, deeply influenced by the pandemic's disruptions to daily life. Rivers Cuomo's writing captures the emotional weight of , portraying a world where personal detachment amplifies broader societal disconnection. In interviews, Cuomo described the album as exploring "feeling isolated, alienated and secluded," making it resonate with listeners forced into similar circumstances during the global health crisis. This thematic core is amplified by the pandemic's context, where everyday routines like family interactions and use become sources of both comfort and melancholy. Cuomo employs a confessional style that blends humor with melancholy, drawing from his personal experiences to create short, vignette-like songs that evoke without tidy resolutions. Tracks reference mundane aspects of family life, such as playing ping-pong with his wife and children or resenting Zoom interruptions, highlighting a newfound closeness amid while underscoring the anxieties of routine existence. Pop culture nods, including literary allusions to works like and , add layers of ironic escape from reality, as in "Grapes of Wrath," where Cuomo sings of audiobook immersion as a "blanket on my life" during isolation, subtly addressing through escapist reading. The album's emotional narratives often pivot between self-pity and wry observation, reflecting Cuomo's introverted perspective thriving in seclusion yet craving deeper bonds. Representative tracks illustrate these motifs vividly. "All My Favorite Songs" laments lost love and the alienating role of technology, with lines like "All my favorite people make me feel so bad" evoking pandemic-era relational strains and digital detachment. "Grapes of Wrath" confronts social inequality indirectly through its title and themes of denial and literary retreat, portraying as a state of "classical denial" amid global unrest. "Bird with a Broken Wing" symbolizes and irrelevance, as Cuomo explained writing it from a place of feeling "irrelevant," using the metaphor of a grounded predator to explore and fragile human resilience without resolution. These vignettes unify the , prioritizing emotional rawness over narrative closure and tying personal introspection to collective experiences.

Release and promotion

Announcement and singles

On November 17, 2020, Weezer first teased the completion of OK Human during a Q&A livestream session following a short performance set at the 32nd Annual Supercomputing Celebration in San Diego. The band revealed full details about the album, including its title, artwork, and January 29, 2021 release date, on January 18, 2021, via social media and official channels. This announcement created a deliberate element of surprise, with only about 10 days between the reveal and the album's launch, allowing minimal pre-release promotion while building anticipation. The lead single, "All My Favorite Songs" (featuring ), was released on January 21, 2021, eight days before the album's arrival. Accompanying the track was an official directed by Colin Read, which prominently featured 5 smartphones in a narrative centered on a teenager's digital escapism and interactions with , effectively integrating for the device. The song achieved significant radio success, reaching number one on the Alternative Airplay chart dated July 24, 2021, marking Weezer's fifth leader on the ranking. The second single, "Grapes of Wrath," was issued on January 29, 2021, coinciding directly with the album's release through Atlantic Records. Unlike the lead single, it launched without a dedicated music video at the time, though a promotional clip directed by the band was later released on April 14, 2021, to mark the 82nd anniversary of John Steinbeck's novel of the same name.

Marketing and commercial release

OK Human was released on January 29, 2021, through Crush Music and , available in standard digital download, , and vinyl formats, with the vinyl edition following on February 12, 2021. The album's rollout featured limited promotional efforts, constrained by the brief 11-day announcement-to-release window and ongoing restrictions that curtailed traditional touring and in-person events. Promotion centered on digital and virtual channels, including teasers via that highlighted the album's impending arrival and options, alongside a key interview series with conducted by on , where Cuomo discussed the project's orchestral vision and creative process. The album was positioned as the "soft," introspective counterpart to Weezer's simultaneously developed companion, , creating a dual-release concept that contrasted orchestral intimacy with metal energy to appeal to diverse fan interests. The packaging evoked vintage orchestral album aesthetics through its intricate, whimsical cover illustration by artist Mattias Adolfsson, featuring densely detailed, fantastical scenes reminiscent of sleeves from the mid-20th century. Due to limitations preventing live performances at launch, the initial rollout substituted with virtual experiences, including an 2021 livestream concert at featuring the and the Youth Orchestra Los Angeles, serving as a debut performance for the full album.

Reception

Critical reviews

Upon its release, OK Human received generally favorable reviews from critics, earning a Metacritic score of 75 out of 100 based on 21 reviews. It also holds an average score of 7.3 out of 10 on AnyDecentMusic?, reflecting broad approval for its experimental approach. AllMusic commended the album's orchestral innovation, describing it as a departure featuring "soft orchestral balm and sweet melancholic undertow" that provides a singular listening experience, awarding it 7.5 out of 10. Similarly, Paste Magazine praised its emotional depth, noting how the orchestral arrangements enhance Rivers Cuomo's vulnerability and turn simplistic lyrics into a heartfelt exploration of solitude, rating it 7.0 out of 10. In more mixed assessments, criticized the album for lacking edge, portraying it as Cuomo's tribute to orchestral-pop influences like and the Beach Boys' but ultimately feeling like conventional fare augmented by strings, scoring it 5.8 out of 10. highlighted uneven execution, pointing to lazy lyricism and disjointed pacing that undermine the elegance of the instrumentals, assigning a C grade. Across reviews, critics appreciated the album's ambition in blending orchestral elements with Weezer's melodic pop sensibilities, often citing its sincerity and catchiness as strengths amid the pandemic's isolation themes. However, some faulted it for feeling lightweight and overly whimsical compared to the band's harder-edged rock catalog. The album garnered positive mentions in year-end lists, including Music's coverage of notable releases. The "All My Favorite Songs" received a for Best Rock Song at the .

Commercial performance

OK Human debuted at number 41 on the US Billboard 200 chart in the week ending February 13, 2021. The album also entered at number 5 on the Top Alternative Albums chart and number 6 on the Top Rock Albums chart, reflecting strong genre-specific interest despite the modest overall ranking. It generated 9,000 pure album sales in its first week, marking Weezer's twelfth top 10 entry on the Top Album Sales chart at number 6. Internationally, the album achieved modest chart success, peaking at number 35 on the German Albums Chart in its debut week. In the , it reached number 91 on the Official Albums Chart, spending one week in the top 200. The release's performance was impacted by limited promotional efforts amid the ongoing , as well as competition from Weezer's subsequent album , which appealed more broadly to the band's rock-oriented fanbase and debuted higher on multiple charts later that year. On streaming platforms, OK Human garnered over 10 million streams in its first month, largely propelled by the lead single "All My Favorite Songs." Long-term, the has not received any RIAA certifications, though it has maintained steady fan engagement within Weezer's extensive catalog, accumulating more than 62 million total streams as of late 2025.

Credits

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."All My Favorite Songs"Cuomo/Gorley/Johnson/Juber3:22
2."Aloo Gobi"Cuomo3:03
3."Grapes of Wrath"Cuomo2:50
4."Numbers"Cuomo3:20
5."Playing My Piano"Cuomo2:36
6."Mirror Image"Cuomo1:17
7."Screens"Cuomo2:12
8."Bird with a Broken Wing"Cuomo2:40
9."Makes Me Again"Cuomo2:24
10."The End of the Game"Cuomo2:31
11."Cactus"Cuomo2:37
12."Endless"Cuomo1:28
All tracks are published by E.O. Smith Music. The standard edition contains no bonus tracks, and there are no regional variations. Digital platforms include explicit versions where applicable.

Weezer

  • – lead vocals, piano
  • – acoustic guitar, organ, backing vocals
  • – bass, backing vocals
  • Pat Wilson – drums, percussion

Additional musicians

  • AJR (Jack Met, Ryan Met, Adam Met) – backing vocals (track 1)
  • 38-piece orchestra, conducted by David Campbell

Production

  • Jake Sinclair – producer, mixing
  • Suzy Shinn – vocal producer
  • David Campbell – string arranger
  • Rob Mathes – woodwind arranger

Technical staff

  • Jonathan Allen – recording engineer
  • Brian Fombona – engineer
  • Maureen Sickler – engineer
  • Paul Pritchard – engineer
  • Carlos Albrecht – recording, mixing engineer
  • Pete Lyman – mastering engineer (Infrasonic Mastering)

Artwork

  • Mattias Adolfsson – artwork
All core performances are by the band members, with guest contributions on "All My Favorite Songs" and support from the orchestral ensemble.

References

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