Rock-star programmer: Rivers Cuomo finds meaning in coding
âHi, Iâm Rivers from the band, Weezer,â Rivers Cuomo says with a slight smile and a wave. He turns away from the camera for a bit, before launching into his best infomercial pitch. âImagine youâre on tour, and youâre sitting in your dressing room or your tour bus. Youâre backstage. You have stage fright, youâre stressing out. Youâre pacing back and forth. And then on top of that, your tour manager is constantly calling you, asking you logistical questions.â
As far as internet pitch videos go, itâs not the most universal. If anything, the three-minute clip loses any hope of populist appeal by the end. In a final shot, the singer in a maroon SpaceX hoodie is the last up the ramp onto a private jet. The plane door closes revealing a Weezer flying âWâ logo.
âDownload Drivetimes now, on GitHub,â Cuomo adds in voice-over. âThis is CS50X.â
Itâs not the most polished app pitch video, and Cuomoâs elevator pitch could probably do with a bit of refining before approaching venture capitalists about a seed round. As far as final projects for online programming courses go, however, itâs something to behold. The images alternate between pages of code, Google spreadsheets and POV shots as he takes the stage for a co-headlining tour with the Pixies.
It helped earn Cuomo a 95 in the class.
But while, in its current configuration, the Drivetime tour scheduling tool might have limited appeal, the musicianâs final project from Harvardâs follow-up course, CS50W, is immediately apparent for an army of fans who have followed his quarter-century-plus career. This week Cuomo dropped more than 2,400 demos totaling more than 86 hours. Spanning 1976 to 2015, the songs range in quality from tape-recorded sketches to more polished fare. Some would eventually find their way onto Weezerâs 13 albums, or assorted side projects. Others wouldnât be so lucky.
Available through Cuomoâs âMr. Riversâ Neighborhoodâ site, the tracks are gathered into nine bundles, each available for $9 a piece. âBy the way,â Cuomo writers at the bottom of a disclaimer, âthis market is my final project for a course Iâm taking in web programming.â
For half-a-decade, the platinum-selling rock star has been moonlighting as a computer programming student.
âI was always a spreadsheet guy,â Cuomo tells TechCrunch. âAround 2000, I think I started in Microsoft Access and then Excel. Just keeping track of all my songs and demos and ideas. Spreadsheets got more and more complicated to the point where it was like, âWell, Iâm kind of almost writing code here in these formulas, except itâs super hard to use. So maybe I should actually do programming instead.â â
It would be an odd side hustle for practically any other successful musician. For Cuomo, however, itâs the next logical step. In the wake of the massive success of Weezerâs self-titled debut, he enrolled as a sophomore at Harvard, spending a year living in a dorm. He would ultimately leave school to record the bandâs much-loved follow-up, Pinkerton, but two more more enrollments in 1997 and 2004 found the musician ultimately graduating with an English BA in 2006.
CS50 found Cuomo returning to Harvard â at least in spirit. The course is hosted online by the university, a free introduction to computer science.
âI went through some online courses and was looking for something that looked appealing and so I saw the Harvard CS50 was very popular,â Cuomo says. âSo I was like, âWell, Iâll give this a shot.â It didnât take immediately. The first week course was using Scratch. I donât know if you know that, but itâs like kind of click and drag type of programming, and youâre making a little video game.â
A six-week course stretched out for six months for the musician. That same year, the musician â now a father of two â played dozens of shows and recorded Weezerâs 10th album, the Grammy-nominated White Album.
âWhen we hit Python halfway through the course,â Cuomo says, âI was just amazed at how powerful it was and intuitive it was for me, and I could just get so much done. Then by the end of the course, I was writing programs that were really helping me manage my day-to-day life as a traveling musician and then also managing my spreadsheets and managing my work as a creative artist.â
For Cuomo, productivity has never been much of an issue. The band has two albums completed beyond this yearâs Black Album, and heâs already begun work on two more follow-ups. What has seemingly been a bigger issue, however, is organizing those thoughts. Thatâs where the spreadsheets and database come in.
The âthousandsâ of spreadsheets became a database, cataloging Cuomoâs own demos and work he was studying from other artists.
âFor years it seemed like kind of a waste of time or an indulgence,â he says. âI should be writing a new song or, or recording a song rather than just cataloging these old ideas, but Iâve found that, years later, Iâm able to very efficiently make use of these ancient ideas because I can just tell my Python program, âHey, show me all the ideas I have at 126 BPM in the key of A flat that start with a third degree of the scale and the melody and are in Dorian mode and that my manager has given three stars or more to.â â
He admits that the process may be lacking in some of the rock and roll romanticism for which fans of the bands might hope. But in spite of drawing on pages of analytics, Cuomo insists thereâs still magic present.
For Cuomo, productivity has never been much of an issue. Given his level of productivity, however, organizing all of those thoughts can get tricky. Thatâs where the spreadsheets and database come in.
âThereâs still plenty of room for spontaneity and inspiration in what we traditionally think of as human creativity,â Cuomo explains. âOne of my heroes in this realm is Igor Stravinsky. Thereâs a collection of his lectures called âThe Poetics of Music.â And he had a note in that collection. He said he has no interest in a composer thatâs only using one of his faculties, like a composer that says, âI am only going to write what pops into my head spontaneously when Iâm in some kind of a creative zone. I wonât use any of my other tools.â
âHe says, âNo, I prefer to listen to the music of a composer whoâs using every faculty at his disposal, his intuition, but also his intellect and his ability to analyze and categorize and make use of everything he has.â I find that those ended up being the most wild and unpredictable and creative compositions.â
And thereâs been no shortage of compositions. Cuomo says the band has two albums completed beyond this yearâs Black Album, and heâs already begun work on two more follow-ups. After decades of feeling beholden to the 18-month major label album release cycle, the singer says that after the Demos project, he has a newfound interest in finding more ways to release music directly to fans.
âI donât feel like Iâm really good at understanding the big-picture marketplace and how to make the biggest impact in the world,â he says. âMy manager is so good at that, but I just told them like, âHey, this feels like something here. First of all, itâs really fun. The fans are really happy. Itâs super easy for everyone involved.â The coding part wasnât easy, but for everyone else, itâs a couple of clicks and youâve got all this music, and itâs a cheap price, and thereâs no middleman. PayPal takes a little bit, but itâs nothing like a major label. So, this could be something. And thereâs just something, it feels so good when itâs directly from me to the audience.â
For now, computer science continues to take up a major chunk of his time. Cuomo estimates that heâs been spending around 70% of his work hours on programming projects. On Wednesday nights, he helps out with programming for a meditation site (another decades-long passion), and he plans to take Harvardâs follow-up CS50M course, which centers around developing for mobile apps.
There are, however, no immediate plans to quit his day job.
âI canât see me getting a job at a startup or something or maintaining somebodyâs website,â he says. âBut maybe the line between rock star and web developer is getting blurred so that musicians will be making more and more use of technological tools. Besides just the music software, weâll be making more and more use of means of distribution and organization and creativity thatâs coming out in the way we code our connection to the audience.â
Source: techCrunch
Rock-star programmer: Rivers Cuomo finds meaning in coding